Coca-Cola Co. on Friday joined a list of big U.S. companies laying off thousands of workers in response to the coronavirus crisis, offering voluntary deals across its businesses and promising to halve its number of operating units, Reuters reported. The company was offering voluntary redundancy to 4,000 workers in the U.S. and Canada and would offer similar deals in other markets, it said in a statement, while also signaling other layoffs were likely to follow. “The voluntary program is expected to reduce the number of involuntary separations,” the world’s largest beverage maker said, adding that the global severance programs would incur expenses of about $350 million to $550 million. The company, battling a hit to sales from closures of bars, restaurants and cinemas where it normally sells heavily, said it would have nine operating units that would sit under four geographical segments, along with global ventures and bottling investments divisions. Coca-Cola last month reported a 28 percent slump in sales in the “most challenging” quarter of the year due to coronavirus-triggered closures of restaurants, theaters and sports venues.
