The CBI is on a collision course with trade unions over the ongoing dispute across the Civil Service – after calling for even more government cost-cutting.
The employers’ body has told the government that, far from backing down in the face of industrial action, it should axe even more jobs.
Now the CBI is heading for a showdown with the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) tomorrow (Wednesday), when both sides stage key conference events on reform in the public sector.
Delegates at a CBI conference in London will discuss future cutbacks and savings while PCS members will vote on further industrial action against current cost-cutting at the union’s annual conference in Brighton.
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The CBI last week wrote to the Treasury with its plans for further reforms to public services in the forthcoming 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review. Among other things, it called for:
- the government to save money through greater sharing and relocation of costly or overlapping back-room functions
- public sector pay and pensions to be overhauled to create better incentives for staff to raise their performance levels
- as much of the unfunded public sector pension liability as possible to be removed from the Treasury.