Tesco – every billion helps!

By Councillor Mick Murphy EMPLOYERS AND the government are using the economic crisis to push through cuts in workers wages and working conditions. Senior managers in modern industry, many of whom have MBAs, are well versed in managing during a crisis and lately their training is being put to good use in so far as they are taught to never waste a good crisis. In almost every company the top brass have taken their cue from the downturn and are attacking any and all conditions.

By Councillor Mick Murphy

EMPLOYERS AND the government are using the economic crisis to push through cuts in workers wages and working conditions.

Senior managers in modern industry, many of whom have MBAs, are well versed in managing during a crisis and lately their training is being put to good use in so far as they are taught to never waste a good crisis. In almost every company the top brass have taken their cue from the downturn and are attacking any and all conditions.

A recent and stark example of what companies are trying to do happened at Tesco in Douglas, Cork. Tesco is a giant multinational. Last year it made nearly €3.5 billion in profits. Tesco’s profits are greater than the GDP of 33 countries! Yet in Cork, Tesco management told 18 of its staff that they had to either give up their old terms and conditions which stem from their days working for Quinnsworth, or lose their jobs. Tesco has 12,000 employees in Ireland and if they get away with lowering the pay and conditions of these 18 workers then the rest of the staff will be next.

Dell a hugely profitable multinational is making 1,900 workers redundant to shift their manufacturing operation to Poland for a cost saving of a mere 3%. The human cost in Limerick and the surrounding area is immeasurable.

Luftansa Technik Airmotive workers in Dublin were threatened with closure if they didn’t accept a reduction in their shift premium from 20% to 12.5%. And at SR Technics 1,250 jobs are being lost at a company with work contracts that are full for the next three years!

There are literally thousands of other examples that workers could give from all sectors of the economy of their employers trying to impose detrimental changes to pay and conditions that are simply about maintaining or increasing company profits. The union leaders should not only challenge the employers’ arguments and lies but should be organising to protect wages, conditions and jobs.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Housing crisis

Next Article

Warning - Water charges coming back!

Related Posts

Taxi Drivers: No to slave hours -For a living wage

By Peter Kinsella

BY DE-REGULATING the taxi industry in 2000, the Fianna Fail/PD government sentenced thousands of taxi drivers and their families to years of unnecessary economic hardship and strain.

Taxi drivers today are working 16 hour days and are still unable to earn a living wage. There are 14,000 taxis in Dublin, more than New York that has ten times the population! This is the neo-liberal market gone mad.

Fight cuts in Dublin Bus and Bus Eireann

SHOCK, ANGER and disbelief probably best describe the feelings of Dublin Bus workers at the announcement that 290 workers are to be sacked over the next while. Along with the job losses, over 120 buses, nearly ten per cent of the fleet, are to be axed. On top of this, the company is refusing to pay the increases due under the last partnership deal. Bus Eireann are using similar arguments to sack 300 workers.