imageRoyal Bank of Scotland releases its quarterly results to the City after two shocking days for the workers where earlier this week RBS announced that 3,700 jobs are to be cut from UK branches.

Whilst large areas of the business are to be separated and sold off, including insurance, card payments, and over 320 branches, with no guarantees for the jobs of the tens of thousands of employees involved.

This is in addition to the 9,000 global job losses announced in April across RBS’s manufacturing division – the “back-office” operation of call centres, data processing and IT.

4,500 of these losses will be in the UK, and 600 have already gone in the UK IT department (roughly 20% of staff).

Piling on the pain, RBS’ decided in August to freeze the value of its “final salary” pension scheme at current levels of pay. With negligible recognition of any future pay rises.

This has been what the Government’s £45.5 billion bail-out has meant for call-centre agents, processing clerks and operational staff. Despite the bank’s image, the vast majority of the workers impacted by these attacks are low-paid and vulnerable.

Where has the money gone? Most of the money has been used to stop RBS going bankrupt, by improving liquidity and providing reserves of capital to offset against bad debt.

Yet the Government has stubbornly refused to intervene in the running of the bank, to leverage their 84% stake to make the bank serve society’s interests through and beyond the recession.

Even now, Alistair Darling will not guarantee that the Government’s modest targets for lending to families and small businesses will be met.

It is less well known that RBS plans to spend £10 billion over the next 5 years in a huge and highly risky investment programme to reduce operational costs through further job losses. RBS is targeting cost reductions of £2.5 billion per year, and it would seem to be our public money that is funding this aggressive attack on vital jobs, at a time of high and growing unemployment.

Jerry Hicks said “It is RBS’s workforce who are paying the price for the banking crisis, not the banking ‘fat cats’ who are already popping champagne bottles across the City again, while their staff will have to fight to protect their jobs, pensions and conditions.”

Unite is calling for a “Yes” vote in a consultative ballot over industrial action to stop the pension freeze, following on from a 98% vote amongst Barclays staff to protect their own pensions.

Jerry Hicks calls on the Government to “stop this jobs massacre by nationalising the bank, making it a public utility to serve the public interest, and one that continues to provide employment across the community. It has never been more obvious that we need a bank driven by social need rather than private greed.”

Jerry Hicks: Can be contacted on: Tel: 078 178 279 12

One response to “RBS: Low-paid Workers Pay The Price For "Fat Cat" Banking Crisis says Jerry Hicks”

  1. Iam amazed at the reports of the descriptions of the nominees for the position of the General Secretary of the Unite Union. The United Left candidate(if correctly informed the group was formed some six months prior to the hustings meeting on the 5.9.2009) is from a “hard left” background. All as I can say is that is correst when it suits him.

    I could say a whole lot more but I think the background of certain nominees speak for themselves in the absence of any known facts profered from Len McCluskey. Just who is his script writer?

    Mr McCluskey actually spouts socialist viewpoints also when it suits him. But deeds are few and far between unless he is the beneficiary of some byproduct of his deed. He talks knowingly about unemployment and how to get people back into the workforce in the full knowledge that his own son, for quite some time, is part of that army of unemployed. And what words of comfort has Mr McCluskey for his son in his predicament? Very little actually. He likes to keep his distance in case the matter is touched upon. On the rare occasions he has made contact he states that his position as the next General Secretary of the Unite Union is a foregone conclusion! Well there is democracy for you, or not as the case may be. All that effort and expense, rules and votes and the decision of the secretary elect was made long, long ago. 1991 all over again.

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