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BT to cut 10,000 jobs in UK and abroad



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Published Date: 13 November 2008
THE British economy suffered another damaging blow today when telecoms firm BT announced it was cutting 10,000 jobs, mainly among agency workers and sub-contractors.
Scott Reid's Business Blog: Latest job cuts compound the doom and gloom

Union leaders expressed shock at the scale of the cutback and warned they would resist any moves to make compulsory redundancies.

The company said it had already cut 4,000 jobs, leaving a further 6,000 to go between now and March, adding that it was not planning any compulsory redundancies.

The cuts, part of an on-going efficiency programme, will mainly affect BT's indirect labour force including agency workers, contractors and offshore staff, including those based in India.

BT said it was reducing its dependence on consultants and contractors, cutting those jobs by 12% whereas direct staff numbers will come down by 4%.

BT, which has a global workforce of 160,000, said it will achieve the reduction in its direct staff largely through natural turnover, pointing out that reductions in previous years have been through voluntary schemes.

Around 90,000 direct jobs are based in the UK whereas contractors and agency workers are spread between this country and other parts of the world.

The jobs announcement came as BT announced an 11% fall in second quarter pre-tax profits to £590 million. Revenues were 4% higher at £5.3 billion.

Ian Livingston, BT's chief executive, said 7,000 workers left the firm every year so he did not envisage any compulsory redundancies in the latest round of cuts.

The cuts will affect head office functions, support staff and customer services. Mr Livingston said there were now fewer complaints from customers and fewer visits by engineers, so efficiencies could be made.

Asked how long he thought the current economic downturn would last, Mr Livingston replied: "It will get worse before it gets better."

BT had issued a profits warning, with the Global Services division, which provides IT networks to multinational businesses, blamed for the alert after it failed to deliver anticipated efficiency savings.

The job losses add to a week of gloom on the employment front, with thousands of redundancies announced in recent days and official unemployment edging closer to the politically sensitive two million mark after reaching an 11-year high.

Andy Kerr, deputy general secretary of the Communication Workers Union, said he was shocked at the scale of the job cuts.

"It looks like most of the jobs will be going from the UK. We will be meeting BT as a matter of urgency to discuss the job cuts and we will insist on no compulsory redundancies."

BT said its pension fund was £600 million in surplus. The company this week unveiled planned changes including an increase in the retirement age from 60 to 65 and higher contributions from workers.

BT said today the changes, being recommended for acceptance by the union, will reduce costs by around £100 million a year and improve the sustainability of the scheme.

The firm reported that revenues were 3% higher in the six months to September 30 at £10.48 billion. As previously warned, the problems at Global Services mean BT expects to see a small decline in underlying earnings for the full year.

BT Retail revenues were maintained at £2.13 billion in the second quarter, helped by a 12% rise in broadband. The company said it remained the UK's most popular broadband supplier after 69,000 net additions in the second quarter left it with 4.6 million customers.

BT Vision, the company's recently launched television service, now has 340,000 customers, it added.

The full article contains 613 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 November 2008 11:59 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Unemployment
 
1

Another Saturday Night,

13/11/2008 08:21:54
So the slogan is changed from It's Good To Talk, to It's Good To Walk.
2

Ewan Oosami,

13/11/2008 09:00:39
Great news about one of the most hated companies in the UK. No sympathy because of rip-off 0870 numbers and the rip-off line rental. Welcome to the real world BT.
Now lets start on Sky
3

Crank Parent,

Livingston 13/11/2008 09:26:53
This is why BT use contractors - getting rid of them is easy, they have no rights.
4

LKK252,

13/11/2008 09:33:13
#2 - a particularly sympathetic response! No thought given to all those facing redundancy! Obviously made from the cosy comforts of the public sector!
5

thistle do,

here n' there 13/11/2008 09:33:40
Unfortunately it'll be the foot soldiers taking the hit and not the over paid senior management. This company over charges for its services, creates work (BT = Bring Twenty), engages contractors and charges them out at over twice their own rates, wriggles out of its risk obligations, all with a "BT knows" best attitude.
6

Marga,

Edinburgh 13/11/2008 09:38:48
One week to the day after the Glenrothes election...
7

Alan B,

13/11/2008 09:54:11
#Marga

What are you saying that Brown asked companies to hold this news back until after the byelection.

In a similar way that Brown changed the rules for the mpc to allow it to cut interest rates by 1.5% on the day of the election.

8

Ewan Oosami,

13/11/2008 10:02:34
#4 What an ignorant statement - I'm actually retired and my pension is pitiful as it is without having to pay over the odds for these unnecessary phone numbers and a line rental which is 3 times the cost of electricity standing charge.
9

Vlad Tepes,

Snagov 13/11/2008 10:32:11
Please let the excruciatingly annoying couple on their TV ads be the first to go. "Adam, it's over"- good.
10

Scimitar1,

13/11/2008 10:34:12
They are not making redundancies , the very reason they take on agency workers in the first place.

Given the dreary Fraser of Allander report for Scotland it is particularly annoying that Strathclyde Police are using local tax pounds recruiting in Birmingham. So much for retraining the newly unemployed.

http://www.strathclyde.police.uk/recruitment/Events
11

Dark Lochnagar,

13/11/2008 11:21:25
BT have their ripoffs, but they are a much improved company now than 30 years ago. It used to take you weeks to get a phone line installed then. I gave up my BT broadband to go with talk talk for 18 months, because my wife persuaded me we had to save £4 per month. I'll be changing back A.S.A.P.!
12

Scoop in the City,

13/11/2008 13:01:28
#8 You poor pensioner, having to pay for the things that you use. It is people in jobs that generate the taxes that pay your pension - so the less people working (which is what you seem to think is great news), the less money available for pension increases. Stop playing the victim and be responsible for improving your own circumstances. For a start - if you think that you are being ripped off for your phone rental - get yourself a pay as you go mobile and only pay for what you want to use - no rental. PS: you can use your free bus pass (paid for by working people's taxes) to go to the shops to buy it.
13

Scoop in the City,

13/11/2008 13:15:45
And again Ewan #8&2 - I see that you also have Sky TV. And you must have broadband as well as a computer and all the spare time that allows you be ahppy about people losign their jobs. Not really that hard up are you? - you're just a whinger who thinks that the world owes you
14

dedoronron,

livingston 13/11/2008 17:13:48
Given that skilled IT contractors in BT, who took their decision to go contracting in the first place, are pulling £40 to £80 PER HOUR - I find it hard to sympathise with the possibility that some of them will have to ply their trade elsewhere. As for Offshore (eg TATA in India) workers, they've been happy to take UK work that is temporary by nature and not guaranteed forever.
As an aside - I've had BT Broadband for over 3 years and have yet to hit a problem with my service. However they are costlier than eg Sky, (big tip folks) so I called BT to say that I intended moving to another supplier, and was put on to their contracts team who immediately offered me a cut-price deal if I contracted for a minimum 18 months - which was equivalent to 6 months free broadband. Try it !!
15

dedoronron,

livingston 13/11/2008 17:17:14
Concur with VLAD TEPES - send them to room 101 - bring back Busby Ad's !!
16

Ewan Oosami,

22/11/2008 14:59:52
#14 Having paid NI and tax all my life I have paid for my own pension and no doubt your education too (if indeed you had one).
I am far from the only one who considers 0870 numbers a rip-off, you pay well over the national rate often to listen to piped muisc so that the firm you are ringing can make money from your call too. My reference to Sky is that unless you ring their 0870 number you don't get attended to, they are the worst culprits for keeping you hanging on whilst paying 8p a minute. Mobiles are hardly a cheaper alternative especially when others have to pay through the nose to ring you.
Your assertion that you are paying your taxes so I can have a pension is inane - as I said I have paid my taxes throughout my life and am still paying taxes now no doubt supporting some layabout who can't be bothered working or some immigrant who has come here to scrounge. At least I've paid into the system. Have you!

 

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