The Socialist

The Socialist 19 May 2005

Public health not private profit

Public health not private profit

More bad news for economy

Hands off incapacity benefit

Standing for socialism at Blackheath High

Football: Fans protest at billionaire’s takeover

Desperate smears on George Galloway

E=mc2 - how Einstein changed our understanding of the universe

Revolt and repression in Uzbekistan

USA: Time to mobilise and fight back

The curse of long working hours

Royal Mail privatisation threat after workers deliver record profits

Firefighters urge union to face up to challenges

Week-long strike at London Met

Calls for an end to trade union passivity at Amicus conference

 
 
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Royal Mail privatisation threat after workers deliver record profits

ROYAL MAIL bosses are planning to borrow £2 billion from the government so that they can partly privatise the company by giving shares to the workforce.

A Royal Mail worker and Communication Workers’ Union (CWU) member

At the same time last year’s profits have been declared as £537 million, out of which £200 million will be paid back to postal workers in the form of £1,074 bonuses. These profits have been made as a result of cost savings across all parts of the business. 33,000 jobs have been got rid of, and in the Letters part of Royal Mail, single daily delivery and the mail centre review have led to ‘efficiency’ savings, with the removal of 1,250 walks.

The "Share in Success" bonuses are one way in which Royal Mail bosses are sweetening up the workforce to accept privatisation. In the "Be in to Win" scheme, employees are offered the chance to win new cars or holidays worth up to £2,000 if they do not take any sick absence for six or 12 months.

In this year's pay round, Letters staff will receive 50% of cost savings made by their local office, and Post Office Ltd counters staff have "unlimited potential for exceeding targets".

If this sounds all too good to be true - it is! Compare the wages earned by postmen and women, counter staff and other front-line workers with the huge salaries and bonuses of senior managers. Chief executive Adam Crozier for instance ‘earned’ £3 million last year. The £537 million profits are what has been stolen from the workforce - and the management are kindly handing less than half of it back in the form of a ‘bonus’.

All this is a prelude to the government and Royal Mail preparing to privatise the industry by the back door. They are trying to soften us up so that we accept that if we are given a few shares we will all have an interest in the business.

This is nonsense. In practice, this will not result in workers' democracy but in big investors snapping up the shares at bargain-basement prices. The average postal worker will be tempted to sell their shares to supplement their low wages.

In Russia, after the restoration of capitalism, all the state-owned companies were split up and every citizen given vouchers. But unemployment was rising so fast that many workers immediately sold their vouchers to big investors such as Abramovich, who rapidly cornered the oil and gas industry.

Workers in BT and British Gas under Thatcher in the 1980s were also handed free shares - most of them looked on it as a bonus. They never had illusions that they ‘owned’ these companies - so it will be with Royal Mail.

The CWU quite correctly is opposing this back door privatisation. We should fight back by means of mass action, showing we refuse to be conned. If the government go ahead with this then the CWU should organise action against privatisation, starting with a one-day strike. It is in the interests of all workers to keep Royal Mail in the public sector.


In this issue

Public health not private profit

More bad news for economy

Hands off incapacity benefit

Standing for socialism at Blackheath High

Football: Fans protest at billionaire’s takeover

Desperate smears on George Galloway

E=mc2 - how Einstein changed our understanding of the universe

Revolt and repression in Uzbekistan

USA: Time to mobilise and fight back

The curse of long working hours

Royal Mail privatisation threat after workers deliver record profits

Firefighters urge union to face up to challenges

Week-long strike at London Met

Calls for an end to trade union passivity at Amicus conference


 

Home   |   The Socialist 19 May 2005   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Royal Mail:

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleStrike action to defend Royal Mail jobs

triangleCWU conference - unanimous call for 24-hour general strike

triangleLondon postal workers vote 'Yes' for strike action

triangleCWU conference: Support joint union action on 30 June

triangleIn brief

Profits:

triangleAirwave jobs strike

triangleBosses get pay-offs, workers get layoffs

triangleMarx was right

trianglePublic services

Privatisation:

triangle'Save Heatherwood Hospital' campaign yielding results

triangleThem & Us

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

CWU:

triangleSecond strike on Monday at TV Licensing

triangleBuilding a workers' political alternative to the establishment parties

triangleLondon trade unions public meeting - all welcome

Shares:

triangleWales: New challenges for socialists

triangleFootball: Fans protest at billionaire’s takeover

triangleLongbridge: Phoenix Directors Feather Their Own Nests