Royal Mail ‘won’t be privatised’
A privatised Royal Mail is off the agenda, sources close to business secretary Lord Mandelson have said.
The comments come ahead of a report on the Royal Mail expected this week which will set out plans to modernise the service.
But early warnings of privatisation – sparked by comments made by Lord Mandelson before he became business secretary – appear to have been inaccurate.
“Our concern is to save the Royal Mail and secure its future, not privatise it,” government officials said.
“We have a manifesto commitment to a publicly-owned Royal Mail and we will not be setting that aside.”
However, other sources suggest private companies may be given some limited role in the institution.
This week’s report – by Richard Hooper, former deputy chairman of media watchdog Ofcom – is expected to say a universal service should be maintained an letter delivered six days a week across the country.
But it is also likely to raise concerns about Royal Mail’s pensions deficit, which is likely to have doubled from its £3.4 billion level in 2006.
The Conservatives are warning the government may be planning to ‘raid’ the £22 billion pension fund to make it look as though government borrowing figures are lower.
The report comes as the Communication Workers Union presses ahead with a strike this Friday in mostly north-western post offices, threatening the Christmas mail.