Coca-Cola
Trade name of a sweetened, carbonated drink, originally made with coca leaves and flavoured with cola nuts, and containing caramel and caffeine. Invented in 1886, Coca-Cola was sold in every state of the USA by 1895 and in nearly 200 countries by 2000.
| With the increased US business presence in nations in the developing world, US imperialism became known as Coca-Colonialism. In 1999, the Coca-Cola company suffered a bad year, involving a contaminated batch of carbon dioxide in Belgium and a recall of products stored in a French cannery. The French government blocked the company's effort to take over the Orangina company, which produces a popular orange soda. At the end of 1999, the chairman and chief executive M Douglas Ivester resigned, and was replaced by Douglas Daft. |
| In January 2000 the company announced that it would be making 6,000 redundancies, cutting away 21% of its employees, as part of a restructuring programme. This is the largest reduction in the company's 113-year history. The cuts involved 2,500 jobs at the headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, 2,700 overseas, and 800 elsewhere in the USA, and make an estimated saving of $300 million. |
| In November 2000 Coca-Cola agreed to pay US$192.5 million to settle a discrimination suit filed by black employees concerning their pay, promotions, and evaluations. Although it denied racial discrimination, the company will pay US$113 million in cash to the workers, US$43.5 million to adjust current salaries, and US$36 million to monitor its employment practices. |