http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11258649The government is to go ahead with the privatisation or sale of Royal Mail.
Business Secretary Vince Cable made the commitment after receiving updated recommendations from the businessman Richard Hooper.
His latest report says the universal postal service can only be maintained by an injection of private sector money and expertise.
The CWU trade union said the plan would devastate the postal service and lead to higher postal charges.
'Failed politics'
Mr Cable said: "Royal Mail is facing a combination of potentially lethal challenges - falling mail volumes, low investment, not enough efficiency and a dire pension position.
"We will come forward with new legislation in the autumn. It will draw heavily on Hooper's analysis and recommendations and the government's wider objectives, including the need for employees to have a real stake in the future of the business," he added.
Royal Mail welcomed the report.
"Royal Mail needs a way of getting access to capital, a resolution of the legacy pension deficit and a strikingly different regulatory approach which allows us to compete fairly in an increasingly tough and shrinking market," said a spokesman.
But the CWU's general secretary, Billy Hayes, said privatisation would lead to higher prices for customers and job losses for staff.
"It's the failed politics of history which brought disruption to Britain's utilities and railways and astronomical prices for consumers," he said.
"Dangerously in this case, we fear the government may also be plotting to seize the pension assets."
Pension problem
Mr Hooper's report says industrial relations have improved at the Royal Mail in the past two years and some modernisation of sorting and delivery services has taken place.
But he argues that only the private sector can provide the money necessary to continue the modernisation process, at a time when the government is strapped for cash and the Royal Mail cannot generate enough extra cash itself.
And he envisages that this will involve closing half of the current 64 big "mail centres" that distribute letters and packets to local sorting offices.
A key feature of the latest recommendations, like those first published in December 2008, is that the Royal Mail's pension scheme, which currently has a deficit of £8bn, should be taken over by the government to relieve the company of making huge extra contributions.
The pension problem is mentioned more than 40 times in Mr Hooper's latest 50-page report.
"The introduction of private sector capital is by itself far from sufficient to secure the future of the universal postal service," Mr Hooper said.
"Its future depends just as much on resolving the closely connected issues of the pension deficit and the need to transform postal regulation."
Worsening outlook
Last year, the Labour government abandoned its plans, inspired by Mr Hooper's first report, to find a private sector partner for the Royal Mail via a partial sale.
Mr Hooper said that in 20 months since that report, the Royal Mail's position had become worse.
The decline in the number of letters being sent has accelerated and will not be offset by more parcels being sent, for instance, to internet shoppers, he argued.
"Without serious action, Royal Mail will not survive in its current form," he said.
He demanded urgent changes to preserve the universal service under which letters are delivered for the same charge regardless of their destination in the UK, six days a week.
Staff shares
A new feature of his proposals, supported by the coalition government, is that staff should be given a stake in the company if it is sold or privatised.
"It is important that any future employee ownership scheme should be taken forward with the aim of achieving the culture change that is needed within Royal Mail," he said.
"Employee shares could be a powerful force in supporting the company's modernisation and future success."
The government said that the Post Office network would not be included in its forthcoming privatisation plans.
Mr Hooper is a former deputy chairman of the telecoms regulator Ofcom.
Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
- RuleBritannia
- Cupid is a cunt!
- Posts: 1630
- Joined: Mon Feb 22, 2010 9:55 pm
- About me: About you
- Location: The Machine
- Contact:
Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
RuleBritannia © MMXI
- klr
- (%gibber(who=klr, what=Leprageek);)
- Posts: 32964
- Joined: Wed Mar 04, 2009 1:25 pm
- About me: The money was just resting in my account.
- Location: Airstrip Two
- Contact:
Re: Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
If this is going to be anything like the railroad privatisation ...
God has no place within these walls, just like facts have no place within organized religion. - Superintendent Chalmers
It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson

It's not up to us to choose which laws we want to obey. If it were, I'd kill everyone who looked at me cock-eyed! - Rex Banner
The Bluebird of Happiness long absent from his life, Ned is visited by the Chicken of Depression. - Gary Larson



- Warren Dew
- Posts: 3781
- Joined: Thu Aug 19, 2010 1:41 pm
- Location: Somerville, MA, USA
- Contact:
Re: Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
And here I was wondering what the "Royal Mall" was.
Re: Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
Lets have a fucking riot for fuck sake, the Tory bastards.
“I wish no harm to any human being, but I, as one man, am going to exercise my freedom of speech. No human being on the face of the earth, no government is going to take from me my right to speak, my right to protest against wrong, my right to do everything that is for the benefit of mankind. I am not here, then, as the accused; I am here as the accuser of capitalism dripping with blood from head to foot.”
John Maclean (Scottish socialist) speech from the Dock 1918.
John Maclean (Scottish socialist) speech from the Dock 1918.
- Rum
- Absent Minded Processor
- Posts: 37285
- Joined: Wed Mar 11, 2009 9:25 pm
- Location: South of the border..though not down Mexico way..
- Contact:
Re: Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
Well it is the mail bit they are privatising, not post offices. They will remain in public ownership.
Re: Toffs to privatise the Royal Mail
I think you mean closed ,don't you ?Rum wrote:Well it is the mail bit they are privatising, not post offices. They will remain in public ownership.




Give me the wine , I don't need the bread
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 14 guests