Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Royal Mail bosses got £10m bonuses for 'efficiency drive'

The measures that have angered workers into strike vote brought executives multimillion pound rewards

Brian Brady,Whitehall Editor
Sunday 11 October 2009 00:00 BST
Comments
Royal Mail faces a strike this week by postal workers over job security and working conditions
Royal Mail faces a strike this week by postal workers over job security and working conditions (AFP/Getty)

Your support helps us to tell the story

As your White House correspondent, I ask the tough questions and seek the answers that matter.

Your support enables me to be in the room, pressing for transparency and accountability. Without your contributions, we wouldn't have the resources to challenge those in power.

Your donation makes it possible for us to keep doing this important work, keeping you informed every step of the way to the November election

Head shot of Andrew Feinberg

Andrew Feinberg

White House Correspondent

Royal Mail bosses have split more than £10m in "performance-related bonus" payments for pushing through the efficiency measures that have helped to push the organisation towards a national strike, it emerged yesterday.

A total of 13 current and former executives at the Government-owned company have been rewarded for hitting a series of targets to modernise key elements of the business, including Royal Mail and the Postal Service.

Chief executive Adam Crozier has been awarded a total of £2.4m in performance bonuses since arriving at the company in 2003. The figure boosted his £3.6m salary over the period by two-thirds – but it does not include a series of further perks that have added millions to his pay package during his time at the troubled company.

A Labour MP condemned the executives yesterday for taking so much money out of a struggling company – and complained that they were "rewarding themselves for failure".

Details of the hefty rewards for the tiny group of executives at the Royal Mail Group emerged as more than 140,000 postal workers this week prepare to take strike action over job security and working conditions.

The Royal Mail caused uproar last year when it revealed that Mr Crozier received a package worth more than £3m – about 180 times a typical postman's salary – at a time when he was pushing to close 2,500 post offices.

An investigation by The Independent on Sunday has revealed that Mr Crozier is not the only beneficiary of the company's success in forcing through changes deemed "absolutely essential" by senior managers. Since 2002/3, Royal Mail Group has paid its executive board members – who typically number between four and six at a time – a total of more than £22m in salaries alone. But the executives received £10.7m in performance-related bonuses.

The bonus bill has risen from £616,000, shared between seven executives and the former non-executive chairman Allan Leighton in 2002/3, to £1.03m split by just four individuals last year.

Royal Mail made an operating profit of £321m in the year to 31 March, but it was the first time in 20 years that all four parts of the business had been profitable.

Geraldine Smith, the Labour MP leading the campaign against any privatisation of the service, said: "At a time when they are telling us how perilous the Royal Mail's position is, they should not be taking millions of pounds out of the company. Anyone can make people redundant or cancel the second delivery."

A Communication Workers Union (CWU) spokeswoman said: "It's a disgrace that managers who are running down the business take unwarranted reward when they impose change on a low-paid workforce. These managers are failing to address the problems that postal workers face and failing to modernise the business effectively."

A Royal Mail spokeswoman said: "Pay for Royal Mail executives is set out completely transparently every year in the annual report, including for the year ended 31 March 2009, when Royal Mail more than doubled its profits in spite of the sharp drop in the market and tough economic conditions."

What the Royal Mail board members got

2002-03

Allan Leighton, former non-executive chairman

Salary £129,000

Bonus £889,000

Adam Crozier, chief executive

Salary £3,612,000

Bonus £2,467,000

Alan Cook, director

Salary £1,046,000

Bonus £473,000

Ian Duncan, director

Salary £925,000

Bonus £429,000

Mark Higson, director

Salary £848,000

Bonus £313,000

Former directors

David Burden

Salary £821,000

Bonus £428,000

Ian Griffiths

Salary £1,000,000

Bonus £262,000

Tony McCarthy

Salary £1,369,000

Bonus £641,000

David Mills

Salary £818,000

Bonus £322,000

Marisa Cassoni

Salary £963,000

Bonus £340,000

Elmar Toime

Salary £541,000

Bonus £178,000

Jerry Cope

Salary £318,000

Bonus £113,000

John Roberts

Salary £561,000

Bonus £185,000

2008-09

Adam Crozier

Salary £633,000

Bonus £453,000

Alan Cook

Salary £282,000

Bonus £166,000

Ian Duncan

Salary £325,000

Bonus £186,000

Mark Higson

Salary £428,000

Bonus £231,000

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in