Unite criticises latest IBM pension scheme closure proposals as ‘pain for employees and gain for executives’

28 September 2009

Unite, the UK’s largest union, has today criticised the latest IBM proposals announced to the workforce. This follows a backlash by thousands of IBM employees because of its proposals to close the final salary pension schemes to future accrual for existing employees and alter the terms of its early retirement scheme.

The company’s revised proposals include the closure of the final salary schemes to be put back one year to April 2011, limited enhancement of company contributions to the defined contribution money purchase scheme for 2 years for those transferring and retention of current death benefit and ill health provisions.

Whilst these show some changes from the original proposals, the changes of substance still remain including closure of the defined benefit pension schemes to future accrual from April 2011 and the early retirement changes to apply from April 2010.

Unite is still predicting that between 700 and 1000 people may opt for early retirement prior to April 2010 when the new early retirement provisions apply. The union calculates that typically people in their mid 50’s could lose up to £200,000 with more in some cases as a result of these changes from the retirement pension they had expected to draw before the company’s announcement in July.

In Fujitsu, another company proposing closure of its final salary defined benefit pension scheme, Unite is organising an industrial action ballot following an earlier consultative ballot in which 87 per cent of members voted in favour of strike action and 96 per cent in favour of industrial action short of a strike.

Peter Skyte, Unite national officer for IT and communications, said: “The latest IBM proposals, whilst modifying some of the detail and mitigating some of the impact in the short term, do little to alter the substance of the company’s original proposal and still propose the closure of the defined benefit pension scheme and replacement with a vastly inferior money purchase scheme.

“Bizarrely the National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF) announced the award of a pension quality award to IBM earlier this week, which only rubs salt into already suppurating wounds of long serving IBM employees.

“These proposals and current forecasts of increased IBM profit margins this year demonstrate all too clearly that one IBM employee’s pensions pain is an IBM executive’s pay and bonus gain.”

IBM CEO Sam Palmisano is reported to have a total wealth in excess of $115m including a pension balance of over $40m. $20m of this was added last year alone. IBM's operating margin is expected to grow to 18.5 per cent in 2009 up from 16.1 per cent last year.

IBM has around 18,000 employees throughout the UK. The company has several defined benefit pension plans which it is seeking to close and is nearing the end of a 60 day consultation period with a Pension Consultative Committee of employee representatives including Unite members.

IBM has major sites in Portsmouth, Hursley (Winchester), Warwick, London, Greenock and the North West.

ENDS

For further information contact Peter Skyte on 07768 931302, Brian Gallagher 07957 995947 or Ashraf Choudhury in the Unite Press Office on 020 7420 8914 or 07980 224761.