• Paul Nowak Paul Nowak

    Last week Alice blogged about the impact of the announcements in the autumn statement on public sector workers.

    Of course most of the headlines were grabbed by the Chancellor’s announcement that he would impose two years of 1% pay-caps on public sector workers at the end of the current two year pay freeze (three years if you work in local government). At a stroke this announcement managed to undermine the ongoing negotiations around public sector pensions (which in part are about significant contribution increases in the context of a pay freeze); confirm the government’s intention to cut the living standards of public sector workers by 16.5%; and signal his seeming contempt for collective bargaining and fair negotiations. Having days earlier called on public sector unions to ‘get back around the negotiating table’ over pensions, the Chancellor effectively pulled the table away from them when it came to public sector pay.

    Of course whether or not the government can hold to its 1% cap remains to be see. Previous governments of different political persuasions have struggled to maintain medium-term pay/incomes polices, particularly against the backdrop of turbulent economic conditions. Both Edward Heath and Jim Callaghan can testify to that.

    But perhaps just as important as the announcement of the 1% cap, was the Chancellor’s call for Public Sector Pay Review Bodies to look at how public sector pay can be made ‘more responsive to local labour markets’.

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  • Owen Tudor Owen Tudor

    I’ve got a post over at Policy Network on why Labour has gone a bit wobbly over the Robin Hood Tax, and what it might take to get the opposition to return to the fold on the issue.

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  • Owen Tudor Owen Tudor

    For Conservative eurosceptics, the old adage that you should never miss the opportunity presented by a crisis is certainly true of the current Eurozone crisis. Angela Merkel’s proposal to make changes to the EU’s treaty base has encouraged Iain Duncan-Smith to demand a referendum, and others have insisted that David Cameron could bargain his support for the ‘repatriation of powers’ (which is almost always code for allowing the Government to take away workers’ rights to paid holidays, health and safety, equal pay for temporary or agency workers, decent treatment when the business or public service you work for is sold, etc etc). So far, Cameron is reported to have rejected both approaches, on the rather sensible grounds that both calls miss the point about the crisis Europe faces. But the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) has warned Europe’s leaders that reforming the structure of the EU is not the answer to the crisis, and that they need to take steps now to stimulate growth and create jobs, instead of tinkering with the treaty.

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  • Philip Pearson Philip Pearson

    UN Climate Change Conference, DurbanAs Ministers begin to arrive for the second, high level segment of these talks, what will the UK’s Environment Secretary Chris Huhne bring in his bag?

    What a weekend! Over there, UK Ministers and advisers have reaped an NGOs whirlwind, accusing the PM of leading the “most environmentally destructive government to hold power in this country since the modern environmental movement was born.” Over here in Durban, on Saturday, 20,000 people marched for Climate Justice and Green Jobs, led by the South African labour movement.

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  • Owen Tudor Owen Tudor

    The Robin Hood Tax campaign continues to pick up support in the UK and abroad. Here are the latest endorsements….

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  • Owen Tudor Owen Tudor

    The World Bank demonstrated that deregulatory neo-liberalism is alive and well, but turned its back on evidence-based policy making this week, when it published a report calling for countries to dismantle or reduce laws requiring severance payments for redundant workers … despite finding absolutely no evidence that these payments had any negative effects on employment levels or recruitment!

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  • Anne Demelenne Anne Demelenne
    On Friday, Belgian trade unions staged a national demonstration in Brussels against austerity. FGTB General Secretary Anne Demelenne explains [translated from original in French] why they were protesting.

    On 2 December all three Belgian national trade union centres - the FGTB, the CSC and the CGSLB – organised a national demonstration. Why? Because the draft budget bill for 2012 has just been finalised by the negotiators of the future government (Belgium hasn’t had one for over a year now) and it contains austerity measures we cannot support.

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  • Stewart Brown Stewart Brown
    World AIDS DayFBU Executive Council member Stewart Brown, who represents the FBU on the TUC LGBT Committee and helped negotiate the 2010 ILO Recommendation on HIV/AIDS and the World of Work, addressed the TUC World AIDS Day event on 1 December. Here are some extracts from his speech:

    Next year the expected numbers of people living with HIV in the UK will reach 100,000, and yet the United Kingdom government wants to cut funding for local HIV/AIDS community groups. Trade unions around the world will be using World AIDS Day as a focus to promote action on HIV and AIDS in the workplace and to call for renewed international commitment to tackle the pandemic, which is responsible for some 5,000 deaths every day.

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  • Web links

    Web links for 2nd December 2011

    2nd December 2011 — Filed under: Web links

    • CIPD asks how many public sector jobs will go when you add up the latest forecast from the Office for Budget Responsibility, the 2010 cuts and the extra cuts planned for 2015-6. The November OBR forecast is for 710,000 jobs lost in the public sector; 140,000 jobs were lost in 2010-11, producing a total of 850,000 jobs lost by 2017, 15% of the public sector workforce at the start of 2010. CIPD says this is "unprecedented in UK economic history"

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  • Economics

    Just how safe is the UK’s AAA rating?

    2nd December 2011 — Filed under: Economics

    Duncan Weldon Duncan Weldon

    Just how safe is the UK’s AAA rating?

    I ask because if I worked for a Ratings Agency I would currently be going through the OBR’s new forecasts and asking myself again and again, how long can I continue to give this country the top rating?

    Consider the facts. The OBR has rather helpfully (in Box 4.4) provided some international comparisons of the UK’s debt and deficit position. As they note:

    Relative to the main European countries, the UK deficit remains high in 2013. The UK’s Treaty debt levels are now close to the euro area average.

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