By Margot Miller
Thousands of workers are losing their jobs across all sectors of the UK economy.
The
losses belie the latest figures, hailed a miracle achievement by Prime
Minister David Cameron, registering unemployment as dropping to a
seven-year low of 5.5 percent. The figures only register the growth in
low-paid, part-time, temporary and zero-hours contract jobs as the
government drives people into cheap-labour employment in welfare to work
programmes.
The latest onslaught of redundancies come before austerity measures,
planned by the newly-elected Tory government comprising tens of
billions of pounds in further spending cuts, have begun to be
implemented.
Following
the loss of 90,000 public-sector jobs in the last parliament, resulting
in the lowest employment in the sector since the Second World War, a
further 100,000 jobs are set to go over the next five years.
On
Monday, rail freight-company DB Schenker announced plans to cut 234
jobs, mainly across the north of England. The firm plans to close its
depot in Worksop and merge depots in Gateshead and on Teesside. Jobs may
go at DB Schenker’s headquarters in Doncaster and at sites in Carlisle
and Warrington.
On
June 17, joint administrators Baker Tilly announced that 55 of the 79
employees at the Dobson & Crowther Limited printing company, based
in Llangollen, Wales, would be laid off.
In
April, Tullis Russel, a papermaker based in Fife, Scotland, went into
receivership. Some 325 workers were made redundant at the company formed
in 1809. This month, almost all the remaining workforce was made
redundant, totaling some 475 jobs lost. The administrators cited
weakening global demand for printed materials, rising raw material costs
and the strengthening of sterling against the euro.
Also
in Scotland, hundreds of workers at two nuclear plants due to be
decommissioned face redundancy. There are 238 workers at the Hunterston A
plant near Ayrshire and 422 at the Chapelcross plant near Dumfries.
These losses are part of 16,000 jobs to be axed at 12 nuclear plants in
the UK.
UK
retail giant Boots announced it is to axe 700 jobs, half of which will
be from their headquarters in Beeston, Nottingham, which employs 4,000.
Boots, founded in 1849, has 60,000 employees across a chain of 2,500
stores. The redundancies follow the merger last December between
Alliance Boots and the US-based pharmacy group Walgreens.
Workers
at the Wigan site of breadmaker Hovis face 48 redundancies. Owned
jointly by the Gores Group and Premier Food plc, Hovis employs 3,800
people nationally at 10 bakeries, six flour mills and two regional
distribution centres. The job cuts follow 900 redundancies made since
November 2012, after the closure of four sites nationally. Two years
ago, workers at the factory struck in a dispute over the use of agency workers and zero-hour contracts.
High
street bank National Westminster is to close 11 branches across Wales
and replace them with mobile van branch services to the rural districts.
The bank cited the increased use of Internet and telephone banking for
the closures, due in September.
These follow the announcement
earlier this month by HSBC Holdings bank that around 8,000 jobs are to
be lost in the UK as part of major global restructuring operation. Some
25,000 jobs are to be lost internationally, with a further 25,000
threatened.
The
insurance sector is not spared, with market leader Aviva to shut three
offices by the end of 2016. These currently employ a workforce of 780 in
Salisbury, Stretford and Salford. More job losses are to follow in
Dorking, Exeter and Manchester over the next 18 months.
20
workers out of a remaining workforce of 98 face redundancies at the
Ensus bio-ethanol plant near Redcar, in the north east of England. The
plant uses wheat to create bio-ethanol, which is added to petrol. The
remaining protein and grain is used to make thousands of tonnes of
animal feed and carbon dioxide for soft drinks.
The
factory, part of the German Crop Energus group and considered vital to
the UK meeting renewable fuel targets, was closed four months ago, after
bio-ethanol prices were hit by lower oil prices and falling demand in
Europe.
Next
month, 200 out of 700 jobs are to go at the Kellingley coal mine near
Knottingley, Yorkshire. Kellingley, along with Thoresby, are two of the
UK’s three remaining pits and face complete closure in the next year.
Thoresby employs 600 miners. In 1983, just prior to the year-long
miners’ strike, there were 174 deep pit coal mines in the UK, employing
180,000.
Huge
cuts to education are planned by the Conservative government. On June
4, Chancellor George Osborne announced almost a billion pounds in cuts
to the budgets of the Department for Education and the Department for
Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS). Both departments were instructed
to make £450 million in savings in the 2015-16 financial year. A
Treasury statement disclosed there would be “savings in higher education
and further education budgets in BIS, and savings in the administration
of arms lengths bodies in the Department for Education.”
Job
losses in the sector are proceeding apace ahead of these cuts. Some 25
lecturers face redundancy at Sheffield College. Staff struck for 24
hours on June 10, in an ongoing dispute over job losses precipitated by
£3 million in cuts to government funding. Earlier this year, 15 staff
were made redundant.
London
Metropolitan University plans to shed 165 academic and support posts.
This month, teaching and support staff staged a one-day strike in
protest.
At
Exeter University, more than 200 jobs, including academic posts and
support staff, out of a total workforce of almost 4,400, are being shed.
At
the University of Birmingham, 49 staff in the Neuroscience and
Pharmacology departments at the Medical School and 59 Engineering
Department employees are threatened with redundancy.
Earlier this year, 700 job cuts
were announced in six of the newly-formed private Community
Rehabilitation Companies (CRCs) run by Sodexo. The CRCs were set up in
April as a result of the privatisation of the UK’s probation services.
The Guardian
reported that an increase in “non-standard employment” (temporary jobs,
zero hours contracts, self-employment and part-time work) accounted for
all net jobs growth in the UK since 1995.
This
is part of a growing international phenomenon. According to the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 50 percent of all
new employment in its 34 member countries, also since 1995, comprised
non-standard jobs, which it declared was a contributory factor in
growing inequality.
Poorly
paid jobs, record numbers of families reliant on food banks, and little
investment characterise the British economy. At the other pole, vast
amounts of wealth are being accumulated through rampant financial
speculation.
The
Bank of England recently reported that any growth in employment in the
past two years was confined to growth in lower skills occupations.
Youth
unemployment remains high, with 943,000 young adults aged between 16
and 24, for the period January to March 2015, classed as not in
education, employment or training.
The
trade unions play a critical role in facilitating these job losses.
After not lifting a finger over the last five years in the face of mass
austerity, the unions have begun where they left off before the general
election. In just the first few weeks since the Conservatives election
victory, they have already sabotaged national disputes by rail workers, probation staff and steel workers.
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