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BT say they're sorry

BT's chief executive has apologised to shareholders for the £134 million loss suffered by the company in 2008-2009. "It has been a really difficult year" he says. But nowhere near as difficult as the situation for BT's workforce, facing 15,000 job losses. Bernard Roome, a member of the Communication Workers Union national executive, explains what is really happening.

BT's senior management have failed to secure contracts which will provide them with a profit. Over the past three to five years they've gone round the world agreeing contracts with major companies. Now they have found that although they have been creating revenue, the costs of managing these contracts have meant they have ended up with serious losses, particularly in their Global Services division.

What they have decided to do is use the last quarter of this year, using the present economic recession as the reason, to write down most of their losses, so that next year they will be seen to be in a stronger position.

The reality of the situation is that BT have been more interested in managing the City's expectations than they have been in providing services to customers. If BT was in the public sector, their responsibility would be to their customers - to provide reasonable, inexpensive services for them.

BT have been picking up major contracts for large multinational companies on the basis that they were a global telecoms and IT provider. Although they received what seemed to be considerable revenue from these contracts, the actual costs of running the contracts were either initially not taken into account or escalated as the contracts were implemented.

In the end it's not the senior managers who suffer. They go away, most of them with golden handshakes. The workers have had to manage these contracts - and nobody is saying they haven't been managed well - and their reward is their jobs gone.

The agency staff who will lose their jobs may not be BT employees but many of them are CWU members. While BT can say the job cuts are not all from full time employees in the UK, quite a lot of the agency workers have been working for BT for many years, yet despite this BT are showing no loyalty to them whatsoever.

BT have made a commitment to try to avoid compulsory redundancies. But the danger is that there will be a harsher management style to ensure that more people are managed out of the business anyway.

The jobs will go between now and the end of March next year. But they also announced 10,000 job cuts last year and 15,000 people went. So that is 30,000 jobs gone from BT in two years.

This will always be a problem while the company's prime concern is to give the City and its shareholders what they want. It should be a service industry providing communication and IT services, not delivering profits to the City. While the staff have been told there will be a pay freeze this year, BT still intend to pay a dividend to the shareholders.


In this issue

We need workers' MPs on a worker's wage


Socialist Party editorial

Swindling MPs are detached from reality


Socialist Party workplace news

Reinstate Rob Williams!

Thousands march for jobs in Birmingham

Visteon workers' victory march


No2EU

Why socialists oppose the EU

No2EU - yes to democracy


International socialist news and analysis

Sri Lanka: The guns fall silent but the tragedy continues

End Gaza blockade


Socialist Party feature

Tiananmen 1989: Seven weeks that shook the world


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs fortnight of action

Enthusiastic reception for Youth Fight for jobs


Education

Don't close our schools!

Charlotte Turner

Kings College, London

Lewisham Bridge rooftop protest


Socialist Party news and analysis

BT say they're sorry

Welsh-speaking worker bullied by boss

PCS conference gathers

Construction workers walk out

Union organisation necessary to defend working conditions

Workplace news

Fast news


 

Home   |   The Socialist 20 May 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

BT:

Fighting against outsourcing, defending working conditions at British Telecom

CWU national conference: Fighting for jobs and working conditions

£2.5 bn profit, but BT still announces pay freeze

Stop bullying at BT

BT: reluctant vote for pension cuts

Jobs:

Youth Fight for Jobs national demonstration

Youth Fight For Jobs - Young People Fighting For a Future

Fighting for a future

Pay:

British Airways merger plan poses new threat to workers

Brighton bin workers score quick victory

Global:

More evidence of climate change: Socialist planning needed

A global crisis, and the particular crisis in Britain