British education publisher Pearson today unveiled plans to axe 4,000 jobs, or ten per cent of its global workforce, to combat weak demand, sending its share price surging.
Pearson, which last year sold the Financial Times daily business newspaper and a 50-per cent stake in The Economist Group to focus on education, announced the radical restructuring in a trading update.
"We have undertaken a rigorous, bottom-up review of our markets, our operations and our financial plans," it said in a statement.
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The firm hopes to implement the "majority" of the 4,000 job cutbacks by the middle of this year, completing the cull by the end of 2017.
The overhaul sent the company's share price spiking 14.8 per cent to 754.50 pence, topping the leaderboard on London's FTSE 100 index, which rose 0.4 per cent in early afternoon deals.
Pearson also slashed its full-year earnings forecast again, after a similar downgrade in October.