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Britain: Royal Mail plans worker buyout
By Keith Lee
9 June 2004
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The Royal Mail, according to an article in the Times
of May 28, is currently discussing the idea of selling a substantial
part of its postal business to its employees. The move is seen
as a partial privatisation from inside the business in order to
head off a full privatisation being pushed by the government appointed
postal regulator, Postcomm.
An adviser to the Royal Mail has been involved in discussions
with major banks. Alongside private cash from banks, workers would
be able to buy shares to the value of 51 percent of the government-owned
company.
The Times names Richard Gillingwater as a key adviser,
an experienced banker who now works for the government as a civil
servant. Gillingwater is head of the Shareholder Executive that
liaises with a number of government departments and finally reports
to the Cabinet Secretary.
The Shareholder Executive was created to maximise returns
on operations owned by the Government or in which it has an interest,
such as Royal Mail, British Nuclear Fuels, British Energy, the
National Air traffic System and the Royal Mint.
The fact that a partial privatisation solution of the post
office is being discussed at such high levels of government is
due to the sensitive political nature of a privatisation before
a general election.
The Labour government has been preparing for privatisation
for some time. It set up Postcomm, the Postal Services Commission,
to regulate the postal market. This has increased pressure on
Royal Mail to open up its national monopoly, demanding that 30
percent of a market worth £1.5 billion is opened to competition.
Postcomm has targeted the most profitable end of the market.
It consists of large business users mailing out 4,000 items or
more. Banks, government departments and mail order firms send
out 2.5 billion to 5 billion items of mail a year.
Postcomm, in a second phase, has released a further 30 percent
of the market from April 2004, so that rival postal operators
are now allowed to handle bulk mailing of 500-1,000 items.
By 2006, all restrictions on market entry will be done away
with entirely, enabling people to send and receive letters using
firms other than Royal Mail for the first time in more than 300
years.
Postcomms chairman John Corbett said, Complete
liberalisation could be brought forward by one or even two years
depending on how successful the first stages proved. Licenses
will be for seven years and then indefinite.
Royal Mail recently signed an historic deal with UK Mail, which
ended its 300-year-old monopoly and allowed UK Mail to use the
Royal Mails infrastructure to deliver bulk mail.
In the last six months Royal Mail has scrapped the second delivery
system and launched the single delivery service at the cost of
an estimated 30,000 jobs.
While the Times headline portrays the worker buyout
as a plan to beat privatisation it is nothing of the sort. Workers
who buy shares will have no say in how their company
will be run, as the shares are non-voting shares. They will only
be lending credence to what is privatisation by another name.
Real control of the business will be with management and big capital
investors in the form of the banks. Even a partial privatisation
would result in a massive increase in the destruction of jobs
and working conditions.
The task of selling the worker buyout is falling to the Communications
Workers Union (CWU), which functions as an appendage of Royal
Mail management. The CWU has worked overtime to suppress growing
opposition to privatisation. It has collaborated with Royal Mail
to implement its restructuring process, so much so that in 2001
strikes in the industry were at a ten-year low.
While the union has put no formal response, it has claimed
to be taken by surprise over the moves towards partial privatisation.
But according to the Times, the Chairman of Royal Mail,
Allan Leighton, has held talks with the CWU over the buyout proposal.
CWU Deputy General Secretary Dave Ward has complained of a
lack of collaboration. He said, We need to map out together
a vision for the industry we can all sign up to and agree to work
towards.... We cannot continue to have an industry directed by
four competing factions, with a fifthCWU representing
the workforce with most to lose.
Put in clearer language, the CWU is asking for a role in managing
the proposed privatised venture, in return for which it will do
its utmost to prevent any opposition from its members to attacks
on working conditions by what will inevitably be portrayed as
the workers own company.
See Also:
Britain: Labour government
steps up moves to privatise the postal services
[26 July 2001]
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