KEY POINTS
  • Companies are slowly reinstating their dividends and stock buyback programs after suspending them due to the coronavirus pandemic.
  • Critics of the practices say they keep the company from investing long term in its own business and can cause wage stagnation for its workers.
  • Some of the companies that are planning to return more cash to shareholders have laid off employees or permanently cut jobs.
Shoppers stand in line to enter a Foot Locker Inc. store at the Queens Center shopping mall in the Queens borough of New York, U.S., on Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2020.

Dividends and stock buyback programs are slowly returning, but for some companies, the reinstatement of these plans follows layoffs and permanent job cuts.  

In March and April, the coronavirus pandemic spurred many companies to put their share buyback programs on pause and suspend or slash their dividend payments. In the case of some companies, like airlines and restaurant chains, the measure was part of a scramble for cash as the crisis threw their businesses into turmoil and demand collapsed. In the second quarter of 2020, dividend payments fell to their lowest level in more than a decade, and Bank of America estimated that buybacks plunged about 90%.