from the WorkingLife blog:
The Coming Deep Cuts In Wagesby Jonathan Tasini
Tuesday 16 of March, 2010
There is a lot of talking about the coming debt burden on companies:
Maybe they should have, because 2012 also is the beginning of a three-year period in which more than $700 billion in risky, high-yield corporate debt begins to come due, an extraordinary surge that some analysts fear could overload the debt markets.
With huge bills about to hit corporations and the federal government around the same time, the worry is that some companies will have trouble getting new loans, spurring defaults and a wave of bankruptcies...
...The period from 2012 to 2014 represents payback time for a Who’s Who of private equity firms and the now highly leveraged companies they helped buy in the precrisis boom years.
The biggest include the hospital owner HCA, which was taken private in 2006 by a group led by Bain Capital and Kohlberg Kravis & Roberts for $33 billion, and has $13.3 billion in debt payments coming due between 2012 and 2014. Another buyout led by Kohlberg Kravis, for the giant Texas utility TXU, has $20.9 billion that needs to be refinanced in the same period.
And who do we think will be asked to assume the burden of the leveraged buyouts and gambling-gone-bad? The workers. Because of companies can't get new loans, the first thing that will happen is a wave of severe cuts in wages--on a population that already has not seen real wage hikes in decades, compared to productivity.
The talk of recovery is not dealing with the real world of people.
http://www.workinglife.org/blogs/view_post.php?content_id=14766