Lloyds to cut a further 1,200 jobs

12 April 2012

Banking giant Lloyds has been accused of "betraying" the taxpayer after plans were revealed to cut another 1,200 jobs.

Unite said it was "Groundhog Day" because of the number of job loss announcements made by the company, estimating 8,200 staff had now been told they were losing their jobs this year.

The union called for a freeze in the expansion of work done abroad by the bank because of the "uncertain future" faced by UK employees.

National officer Rob MacGregor said: "The 1,200 job losses announced today show the betrayal of taxpayers' support to maintain Lloyds Banking Group. What is the justification for 8,200 staff to be cut in the last three months while Lloyds continues to perform considerable work out of the country?

"We appear to have Groundhog Day where thousands of staff each week are told that they are to lose their jobs, yet LBG remains a state-owned bank. Unite views the weekly cull of jobs a disgraceful approach by this taxpayer supported financial institution.

"Today staff in the IT, life and pensions and operations departments face the reality that LBG is operating centres abroad while they are told that their jobs are redundant. It is essential that these taxpayer funded institutions are radically overhauled to ensure that the sector's corporate governance regime is fit for purpose."

The union complained that staff were living under a cloud of uncertainty because of a series of job loss announcements by Lloyds since its merger with Halifax Bank of Scotland.

The job losses follow moves to combine former HBOS and Lloyds TSB group operation functions, including IT and collections. Lloyds is also bringing together support functions for the life, pensions and investment businesses which will impact divisions such as marketing, finance and sales operations.

Group operation staff in locations including Edinburgh, Southend and Halifax will be affected, while insurance division cuts will be made largely across offices in Edinburgh, Bristol and Leeds.

The bank stressed 370 of the job cuts would be through the release of contract and agency staff and added it was also creating 180 permanent jobs across the merged group operations function.

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