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the institute for employment studies Restructuring in the UK finance sector Stefanie Ledermaier Warsaw, 30 September 2013
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Role of the sector and impact of the crisis London is Europe’s most important financial centre and important contributor to the UK economy (around 9% of GDP) Banking sector hit hard by the crisis: ● banks facing bankruptcy ● nationalisation of major banks ● government capital injections ● changes to the regulatory and supervisory system of the UK financial sector
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Impact of the crisis on employment in the sector The crisis has resulted in the estimated loss of around 187,000 jobs in the UK finance sector, or 25% of the sector’s workforce All major UK banks have implemented large-scale redundancies – still ongoing Consultation on redundancies follows legal provisions. There are statutory minimum levels for redundancy payments, but a majority of employers offer higher payments Alternatives to redundancy include “natural wastage”, retraining, redeployment, shorter working week
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Managing restructuring in the finance sector Collective bargaining takes place at company level in the sector (25% rate of unionisation and 20% collective bargaining coverage in the sector) No specific role for the state Restructuring measures include: ● Wage reductions ● Offshoring and outsourcing ● Voluntary redundancies Increased incidence of social dialogue in the banking sector in recent years, due to a need to engage in response to the crisis
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Positive and negative aspects of restructuring Positive aspectsNegative aspects Good overall relationship and communication process between management and employee representatives No employee representatives/bad relationship between employee representatives and management Advance notice of potential restructuringNo notice of restructuring Timely and inclusive information of employee representatives Minimal information on restructuring Timely consultation of employee representatives, in good faith (ie consultation takes on board employee representative views) Minimal consultation on restructuring Negotiation over restructuring processNo negotiation over restructuring process Active skills development policyNo or limited skills development Restructuring package negotiated with the involvement of employee representatives, including aspects such as internal redeployment, reskilling, working time flexibility and other measures designed to avoid redundancy No negotiated package and no measures put in place to avoid redundancies Where redundancies are inevitable, help is given to redundant employees to help them increase their employability and find alternative work: eg outplacement services. No help given to redundant workers to help them find alternative employment: overreliance on severance packages
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Difficulties around restructuring Trade unions protest against: ● Job losses ● Lack of redeployment opportunities, due to geographical location, or skills mismatch ● Reductions in terms and conditions such as holiday entitlement and sick pay ● Closure of final salary pension schemes ● Increased use of temporary workers
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Positive examples of restructuring: Cambridge Building Society (1) Major change programme to improve performance announced in 2007 and implemented in 2008-2009 Number of new positions and a small number of redundancies Formal announcement of the detail of the plan and regular communication through a Change Programme Director and steering committee Measure to limit redundancies included: ● reviewing temporary work ● natural wastage ● early retirement ● voluntary redundancy on enhanced terms
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Cambridge Building Society (2) Closure of 4 branches in 2009 – most staff were redeployed to new positions in other branches nearby Travel costs paid and positions trialled on a six-week basis Small number of redundancies on better than statutory terms and with full consultation Redundant staff also offered outplacement Engagement and performance programme put into place following the restructuring, in order to maintain staff motivation
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Final thoughts UK banking sector has been severely affected by the crisis – substantial job losses and restructuring Within the legal framework, the management of restructuring takes place at company level – there are many good practice examples of employer engagement and meaningful collaboration between the social partners The crisis is not yet over – there are now fears about the future of the Cooperative Bank
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… thank you www.employment-studies.co.uk
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