ROBINSON wrote:I've said before and I will say again, unions need to realise that if a company cannot sustain the current level of employees - for whatever economic reason - then redundancies sadly have to be made so that the company can survive.
50 redundancies out of 150 people is better than going bust and putting all 150 out of work.
How about no redundancies and lower profits for a while?
That would never do would it!
The "Oh dear, profits are down, sack some people that will work" mentality that pervades the simplistic business model we are stuck with these days is ridiculous. It is just total short termism.
I'd imagine your company is private not public so you are not beholden to stock market "sentiment" so if things are not going to so well no one is breathing down you neck asking for instant gratification which usually results in the "sack some people that will work" kind of response.
I have worked for both private and public companies and my experience bares out what I say above. Redundancies in private companies are a last resort. Redundancies in public companies are the first thing anyone thinks of.
One of the biggest private companies was Phones 4 U. When its founder retired a few years ago he was worth over £180m. The profits his company made year on year were never great for the size of it. Around £3m a year but the people who worked for him were all very well paid, never went on strike (because they were well looked after) and they didn't make people redundant if things were not going that well.
How about that for an alternative model?
Seems a darn sight better than the paranoia that requires CEO's of public companies to sack people at the drop of hat because if they ever said it might be an idea to let the share price drop because long term it makes sense to keep trained staff on and whether the storm would see them out of job themselves.
What a bankrupt system we have ended up with.
And guess what? In Germany its more like the Phones 4 U model than we have here and look which country has the largest EU economy.
Tories always have been and always will be self serving economic morons. And that is being polite. I often think a certain N Bevan was more accurate.