The Mercury News

Booking.com to cut thousands of workers after COVID-19 travel hit

- By Olivia Carville

Booking Holdings is the latest online travel giant to eliminate thousands of jobs after the coronaviru­s pandemic hammered the industry.

As much as 25% of employees at Booking.com, the company’s biggest business, will be cut, the company said in a statement Tuesday. That’s about 4,000 workers. The reductions will be implemente­d globally.

Chief Executive Officer Glenn Fogel discussed the move during a video call with workers, saying the past five months represente­d “the largest social and economic crisis of our lifetime.”

The pandemic has hit Booking’s business hard and the wider travel industry remains under “significan­t pressure,” the CEO added. “In my heart, for a long time, I hoped that this would not happen. However, nothing can mitigate the impact this crisis has had, and will continue to have, on both the travel industry and our business.”

The continued spread of Covid-19 has drasticall­y reduced tourism, while halting most business trips in favor of video conferenci­ng and other remote work. Airlines have announced huge job cuts, hotels have closed down and the online part of the industry has not been spared.

Airbnb and TripAdviso­r eliminated a quarter of their workforce earlier this year, and last week, Expedia Group Inc. reported an 82% revenue decline in the second quarter, with CEO Peter Kern saying it was “likely the worst quarter the travel industry has seen in modern history.”

Read more: Airbnb Layoffs Expose Inequities in a Two-Tiered Workforce

Booking received government aid in Europe earlier this year. When the company applied, it was criticized by politician­s and the media. Without that support, the company believes there would have been more job cuts, a spokeswoma­n said.

“While we have worked hard to save as many jobs as possible, we believe we must restructur­e our organizati­on to match our expectatio­n of the future of travel,” she added.

The Norwalk, Connecticu­t-based company, which operates in more than 65 countries, has five major brands and a workforce of about 26,000.

The brand Booking.com represents most of the operations, employing about 17,500. Due to different rules that govern workforce downsizing around the world, Booking said it will work alongside labor organizati­ons and other groups to finalize its plan in the coming weeks and months.

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