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Germany: Embezzlement scandal at telecom giant Mannesmann
By Ludwig Niethammer
27 March 2003
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Charges laid by the Düsseldorf state attorneys office
against five captains of German industry and the head of Germanys
giant engineering trade union IG Metall, Klaus Zwickel, have led
to a storm of media coverage.
Earlier this month the state attorneys office confirmed
that the six accused were former directors or members of the board
of the telecommunications giant Mannesmann. They were Deutsche
Bank head, Josef Ackermann; trade union IG-Metall chief, Klaus
Zwickel; former chairman of the board, Klaus Esser; his predecessor,
Joachim Funk; erstwhile chairman of the joint trade-union committee,
Jurgen Ladberg; and a former managing director, Dieter Droste.
In a 460-page indictment they were accused of several counts of
gross embezzlement, a punishable offence which could attract sentences
of up to 10 years prison.
The legal investigation has resulted in a roll-call of those
comprising the so-called new economy ending up before
the courts. The take-over battle of Mannesmann by the British
mobile telephone company Vodafone dominated headlines for weeks
in the spring of 2000. Eventually an amicable agreement
was stitched up and Vodafone swallowed up Mannesmann for the record
sum of 180 billion euros (paid for in shares).
Prior to a deal being reached, high-ranking managers and directors
had awarded each other settlements and premiums worth millions
of deutsche marks, actions which the state attorneys office
has now found to constitute embezzlement. Moreover, company employees
were made to pay for the cost of the take-over. After the merger,
Mannesmanns labour-intensive industrial sections were liquidated
or disposed of. Vodafone was only interested in the Mobilfunksparte
(D2) that the centuries-old steel concern had acquired several
years earlier and which now, thanks to the boom in the new
market, comprised the largest portion of the enterprises
value.
Germanys financial and economic elite have condemned
the two-year investigation and reacted with horror to the laying
of criminal charges. The Deutsche Bank immediately declared, Another
nail in Germanys coffinwho would still be prepared
to accept a directorship if he has to reckon with the possibility
of ending up in jail?
The former head of Mannesmann, chief Klaus Esser, defended
himself arguing that because he was responsible for value of the
companys shares increasing by 100 billion euros, it was
perfectly routine to grant himself 30 million euros. Consequently,
he had little sympathy for the envy and ill-will being displayed
by the poorly paid investigators.
Deutsche Bank chief Ackermann said he was unable to comprehend
the biting criticism which the size of the bonus payments attracted
in the media. In Switzerland, his country of origin, and in other
countries, managers salaries and premiums in the millions
were taken for granted, he commented.
The investigators were not swayed by these arguments and even
the Düsseldorf Ministry of Justice, which could have halted
the prosecution, gave the state prosecutors a green light to continue.
An intervention by the Justice minister would have seemed too
much like collusion between the ruling Social Democratic Party
(SPD) administration and their friends in the managerial layers
of the unions and the banks.
Political interests
There are political considerations at stake in putting a brake
on the blatant abuses of the speculative boom of the 90s.
The unabashed and unrestrained self-enrichment by some company
heads is extremely embarrassing for federal and state administrations
under conditions of declining wages, growing unemployment and
savage cuts to social services.
In the face of a growing social downturn, sections of the ruling
elite fear the development of a broader social movement questioning
the entire social and economic system. The scale of the antiwar
demonstrations of February 15 would undoubtedly have heightened
such concerns. The Düsseldorf courts obviously had such considerations
in mind and concluded that the time had come to discipline several
top managers who were too greedy. Their efforts to at least preserve
the appearance of social fairness are unmistakable.
The line they adopted was prepared by sections of the media
and some SPD and conservative CDU/CSU politicians. Former SPD
leader Oskar Lafontaine wrote in his regular column in Bild,
The salaries and remuneration in the leading layers are,
as the case of Mannesmann proves, organised criminality. That
they are rewarded with tax cuts is scandalous. He demanded
that million dollar severance payments be banned and that directors
of large companies be made liable to instant dismissal.
Even the CSU (Christian Social Union) head and Bavarian chief
minister, Edmund Stoiber, commented on the difficulty of selling
the free market in the light of such massive pay-outs.
Notwithstanding, the rate of cuts to social spending will continue.
In fact, the prosecution of the Mannesmann heads serves to some
extent as a fig leaf to cover up even sharper attacks against
the working population.
Throughout the 90s, the governing SPD-Green Party placed
their hopes on the endurance of the share market boom. Accordingly,
Chancellor Schroeder and the then minister of the NRW, Wolfgang
Clement, welcomed the Mannesmann-Vodafone merger, assisting the
enterprise with billions in tax breaks.
This short-sighted political strategy of the SPD-Green coalition
has proved a complete debacle. The result has been 5 million out
of work, a growing public debt and the destruction of the social
security system. Share-holder capitalism has produced a tiny layer
of super-rich with the rest of society left to pay the consequences.
While the majority of the population finds the situation unbearable
and sent the SPD at the latest elections into the political wilderness,
the federal government has heightened the crisis, reacting with
even more savage attacks on social conditions.
The role of IG-Metall
The fact that union chief Klaus Zwickel and another IG-Metall
leader, Jurgen Ladberg, are implicated in the Düsseldorf
criminal probe is of particular interest. Together they sat on
the four-member special committee which was established to govern
the corporate boards internal affairs. This committee dished
out exorbitant settlements and bonus paymentsestimated to
total over DM 250 millionto managers and pensioned-off board
members.
The state attorneys office declared in their indictment
that they were strongly persuaded that a majority of the financial
transactions, negotiated in great haste before the take-over was
effected, served exclusively to enrich of the favoured parties
and acted as a conscious violation of social wealth.
They were not convinced by the protestations of Mannesmanns
former head, Esser, that he was entitled to his bonus (he received
DM 60 million altogether). They accused Esser and his predecessor
Funk of being open to the highest bidder. Both allowed
themselves to be paid off in the course of Vodafones
friendly take-over.
However, not only Esser and Funk, who between them pocketed
DM11.3 million, were royally rewarded. According to the report,
various others, not on the board of directors were
also given money: Dr. Kurt Jurgen Kinzius, DM3.7 million;
Peter Gerard, DM2.7 million; Albert Weismuller, DM2 million; Lars
Berg, DM1.5 million. Eighteen long-departed board members
were paid out over DM61 million. The committee simply worked out
the remaining life expectancies and paid these sums, together
with generous rises, as up-front advances.
Without the agreement of Zwickel and Ladberg this orgy of enrichment
would not have been so easily carried through. The investigators
ascertained that all involved had relied on details of the deal
remaining a secret. This applied above all to Zwickel. Esser was
assured, the investigators confirmed, that the trade union representatives
adopted a more prudent attitude on the board of directors than
the more belligerent one they adopted before the public. Such
a method had worked well for 50 years.
A regional union head, commenting in Stern on the charges
against Klaus Zwickel, reached a similar conclusion, There
will be no fallout for Zwickel in IG-Metall because all our hands
are dirty ... every one of us has been involved at some time in
some disgrace and we are still able to continue our work. Thats
the way it goes.
Countless workers experience this for themselves on a daily
basis when they lose their jobs, their wages are cut and social
conditions are destroyed. The unions work hand in hand with the
employers and the SPD-Green coalition government. Occasionally,
they mouth a brief opposition, as at present over the issue of
the proposed removal of special protection against dismissal,
only a short time later to renew their subservience to government
and big business representatives.
See Also:
War and the dismantling of the welfare
state
German Chancellor Schröder attacks the socially disadvantaged
[26 March 2003]
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