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By Martin LaMonica
Posted on ZDNet News: Apr 27, 2004 4:44:00 PM

IBM faced calls to change its pension program and complaints over its plans to hire overseas workers during its annual meeting Tuesday.

Big Blue also said it plans to raise its dividend by 12.5 percent to 18 cents per common share and announced it has signed an extension, worth $575 million, to a professional services contract with Morgan Stanley.

At the annual meeting in Providence, R.I., Alliance@IBM, a union of IBM communications workers, issued a statement that called on the company to stop the practice of hiring workers outside the United States.

IBM has said it plans to hire about 15,000 employees worldwide in 2004 to be spread evenly across the United States, Europe and Asia. The company also has said that it will transfer about 3,000 jobs overseas from the United States this year.

Lee Conrad, the national coordinator for the Alliance@IBM, said his union is troubled by IBM's plans to hire overseas. "This raises serious concerns about the long-term job prospects for workers in the United States," he said in a statement.

Alliance@IBM secretary James Mangi also submitted a proposal to review executive compensation to determine if the current executive pay structures "create an undue incentive to make short-sighted decisions."

Also on the agenda at the meeting were proposals by shareholders to change IBM's pension plan to allow employees to "choose the promised pension and retirement medical insurance" offered before the company made changes to the plan in 1999.

Other proposals called on IBM to adopt a "thorough set of human and labor rights standards for China" and to regularly disclose its political contributions.

In the company's proxy statement, IBM rejected the shareholder proposals.

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  • Most Recent of 21 Talkback(s)
IBM outsourcing
I find it laughable that IBM shareholders are whining about outsourcing when 121 people in my town are losing their jobs because the accounting function is being outsourced to IBM. There is an additional group in Houston losing their jobs as well, but I don't have a count.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: JamesParker Posted on: 05/12/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
You think?  rapson | 04/27/04
Get over it Offshore Outsourcing is here to stay  Kamakazii | 04/27/04
Look past the end of your nose  WhoIsDaMan | 04/27/04
Not quite right  voska | 04/27/04
...but close enough for practical purposes  WhoIsDaMan | 04/27/04
Sorry but no.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/27/04
Use common sense  voska | 04/27/04
I see you know little or nothing about manufacturing.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/27/04
Markups are a sham  AbsolutelyNot | 04/27/04
Look at the reality  AbsolutelyNot | 04/27/04
short vs. long term  PA-ITGuy | 04/27/04
No. 1, it's not as cheap as it used to be.  Taz_z | 04/28/04
you get what you pay for  PA-ITGuy | 04/28/04
Correction  Taz_z | 04/28/04
But others found the hidden costs not worth it  Sadler_z | 04/28/04
Depneds who does the study.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/27/04
Let's spread a bit of that wrath around, shall we?  Yen_z | 04/27/04
I agree, it applies to many companies.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 04/27/04
You have no clue...  computer_man | 04/27/04
Shareholders voice concerns  Selki003 | 05/01/04
IBM outsourcing  JamesParker | 05/12/04

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