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Opinionopinion

Industrialist's claims on JLR pay talks were just another stumbling block

Jaguar Land Rover management and unions this week reached a new two-year pay deal, with a rise of 4.5 per cent in the first year of a two-year deal, plus a bonus payment of £825 per worker.

Lord Bhattacharyya

It’s hugely welcome news that Jaguar Land Rover management and unions this week reached a new two-year pay deal, as I fully expected them to do.

JLR revised its offer, with a pay rise of 4.5 per cent in the first year of a two-year deal, plus a bonus payment of £825 per worker. In the second year, workers will receive the higher of either three per cent or the Retail Price Index measure of inflation plus 0.5 per cent.

Around 15,000 members of JLR’s British workforce of over 26,000 will benefit from the deal, according to Unite, and the deal will now need to be approved in a ballot.

It’s good news all round. It’s good for the firm which is investing heavily in new products and technology. It’s good for the workers who have pulled out all the stops to work flexibly and to help the firm get costs down. And it’s good news for the Government, as more pay means more spending in the economy and more tax receipts.

Given that this deal was in the offing – agreement was reached late last week – it makes recent comments on the situation by Lord Bhattacharyya all the more bizarre.

In comments in last week’s Post, Bhattacharyya claimed that the pay ‘dispute’ might force JLR to shift investment overseas. He went on to say the union’s approach to the pay negotiations smacked of the “bad old days” of industrial relations, arguing that “what we are seeing is a glimpse of what used to happen in the past. Do we really want to go back to the past?”

The peer argued that other countries, including the United States, Hungary, Poland and Middle East states, were making “substantial and very tempting offers” to JLR to invest there.

He argued that “JLR has made what appears to be a generous offer. Yet in return they find themselves embroiled in negotiations by newspaper and public opinion”.