by Suff » 27 Oct 2013, 09:29
Only because the company stood firm and "contemplated" closing the plant if the workers didn't recognise that they were better off working.
You have to have lived in Scotland with the Labour strongholds and the corruption to understand working attitudes to companies, profits and pay. Some of the very worst of the 1970's Union attitudes are still alive and well in Scotland.
If I were one of the contract workforce in Grangemouth, who are not in the Union, I would be seriously annoyed with my Employee Unionites. I suspect that Ineos will work harder to remove the remainder of the employees and replace them with contractors.
This attitude that a company making profits is somehow bad is just so wrong. These people have no touch with reality. A company which does not make money does not survive. If it does not survive, then you, as an employee, do not have a job.
Many people find it hard to do joined up thinking. High petrol prices and high airline taxes and a reduction in truck activity due to the economic recession means that less fuel is being used. As supply grows to meet demand, then it must shrink when demand drops. In the EU, employment laws make it hard to shrink. Therefore, in the end, the least flexible, or the one with the least government money; goes out of business.
That is not an environment in which you start demanding wage rises or better “conditions” in your employment.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.