The Socialist

The Socialist 14 December 2011

Tories speak for the rich, not for us

The Socialist issue 698

Tories speak for the rich - not for us


Hands off our NHS!

Unacceptable! Draconian sentences for Dundee 'Facebook riot' teenagers

Striking to defend pensions

No progress at climate conference

Them & Us

Why I joined the Socialist Party


Stand up to the Con-Dem government


Inside Job: Capitalism is a failed system: support the socialist fightback

TV review: Britain's great housing scandal exposed


All out now to stop the sites!

Pensioners and workers - united fight needed

Occupy London tours Canary Wharf

Action after N30

Langdon school strike

Public sector pensions - where now?

Tax workers on strike

Workplace news in brief


"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

Kazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!


Cameron's drugs problems

Attacks on Tupe rights hit hard

Building bosses and their blacklist

 
 

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Public sector pensions - where now?

Fran Heathcote, PCS DWP national organiser, personal capacity

The high court ruled on 2 December that the government was entitled to switch the measure of inflation used for calculating pensions etc from the traditionally higher retail prices index (RPI) to the consumer prices index (CPI).

Chancellor George Osborne claimed CPI was more 'appropriate'. But the unions have always said it was a deficit reduction measure and therefore unlawful under social security legislation which does not allow the government to use national economic situations when deciding the best estimate of price increases.

The switch to RPI, announced in June 2010 without any consultation or negotiation, was challenged by a judicial review brought about by six unions - the FBU, NASUWT, POA, PCS, Unison and Unite.

All of the judges agreed that deficit reduction was the motivation, but two of them said it was right to take public finances into account. The figures in September put RPI at 5.6% and CPI at 5.2% and the government intends to use CPI in 2012 for the first time to calculate pension increases, resulting in a loss of about 15%. Ministers have so far refused to even negotiate on this issue.

The unions involved are pleased that the argument that the chancellor was motivated by deficit reduction was accepted and intend to urgently lodge an appeal on this issue.

The focus of our campaign now though has to be on fair pensions for all. We need to escalate the action with as much unity with other unions, both public sector and private as possible.

We need to engage as many other unions as possible into calling on the TUC to name the day for the next strike. Escalation could mean simply getting more unions on board. Given the successful strike of private sector Unilever employees, there is real potential for public sector and private sector workers to stand together under the banner Fair Pensions For All.


In this issue


Socialist Party feature

Tories speak for the rich - not for us


Socialist Party news and analysis

Hands off our NHS!

Unacceptable! Draconian sentences for Dundee 'Facebook riot' teenagers

Striking to defend pensions

No progress at climate conference

Them & Us

Why I joined the Socialist Party


Socialist Party editorial

Stand up to the Con-Dem government


Socialist Party reviews

Inside Job: Capitalism is a failed system: support the socialist fightback

TV review: Britain's great housing scandal exposed


Socialist Party workplace news

All out now to stop the sites!

Pensioners and workers - united fight needed

Occupy London tours Canary Wharf

Action after N30

Langdon school strike

Public sector pensions - where now?

Tax workers on strike

Workplace news in brief


International socialist news and analysis

"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

Kazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!


Readers' Comments

Cameron's drugs problems

Attacks on Tupe rights hit hard

Building bosses and their blacklist


 

Home   |   The Socialist 14 December 2011   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Pensions:

trianglePCS conference votes for more joint action against cuts

triangleNHS GMB members vote No to pensions deal

triangleIt's our NHS - Let's fight for it!

triangleWhy prison officers joined the protests

triangleSolidarity against far-right thugs

triangle10 May sees united strike - but teacher unions shirk their responsibilities

Public sector:

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleDon't accept the misery of austerity

trianglePublic sector

triangleInterview: 'get organised to support workers in struggle'

Unions:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleA strategy to stop austerity and bring down the government of the super-rich

triangleThe main parties

Government:

triangleThe Queen's Speech - What readers thought

triangleThe phone-hacking scandal: profits, power and corruption

triangleWales TUC - Oppose all cuts!

PCS:

triangleBrighton: PCS conference - Socialist Party public meeting

triangleM10: Angry workers walk out across the country

triangleTransport department workers vote to strike over cuts

DWP:

triangleDWP tells young people to bail out big business

triangleInterview with a jobcentre worker

triangleMy impressions of the Work Programme