RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘american’

New York Yankees Are In Good Shape

When the Yankees open up the second half of the season on Friday, they’ll do it with a three-game series against the American League Central-leading Tigers — a series that, judging by New York’s first-half performance, will probably get them …

Stephen Josephson: Have We Learned Anything? The Effect of the Recession on the Future American Psyche

It seems as if a subset of people are actually achieving a fundamental shift from acquiring stuff to focusing on family, friends and keeping it simple.

Amex halts pension payments for UK

US-owned firm blames downturn as it suspends contributions to employees’ stakeholder scheme for 18 months

More than 6,000 UK staff at American Express were today contemplating a meagre retirement income after their US-owned employer told them it was suspending pension contributions for the next 18 months.

The company said payments to its occupational retirement scheme were unaffordable in the current economic downturn, though the situation would be kept under review.

Until this month American Express paid a core contribution of 3% of salary into the stakeholder scheme, with a pledge to match contributions of up to 6%.

The largely non-unionised workforce has accepted the deal, which applies to July salary payments.

Stakeholder pensions are personal retirement plans created by the government as a cheap alternative to trustee-based schemes.

Employers are under no obligation to make a contribution and have no responsibility for the success of the stockmarket-invested plans. Most have gone down in value by more than 30% over the last year, following a sharp decline in share values.

The company’s staff are based mainly in Sussex at centres in Brighton and Burgess Hill, with a headquarters in London’s Belgravia.

Much of the recent debate on pensions has focused on the affordability of guaranteed schemes, enjoyed mainly by public sector workers and older workers in the private sector. In these employers typically pay contributions worth more than 20% of salary.

Steve Webb, the Liberal Democrats’ pensions spokesman, said the company was undermining an already inadequate pension plan. “The danger is that employers are in a race to the bottom and are taking advantage of a situation that offers staff no protection.

Independent pensions consultant Ros Altmann said the choice commonly put before many employees was between cuts in pay, hours or pensions. “It is obvious that most workers, and especially younger workers, will opt to preserve their incomes,” she said.

“It’s part of a wider picture where employers have less and less involvement in pensions and individuals are left to look after their own retirement. The American Express scheme is already poorly funded and will have seen its value fall like other stockmarket-based schemes.

“It all makes for a pretty grim picture with confidence in pensions crumbling by the day,” she said.

Like other major US finance companies American Express has benefited from the taxpayer bailout to protect it from collapse. In the last quarter of 2008 its profits collapsed 79% on the same period a year before to $172m (£105m), but recovered in the first three months of 2009 to $443m.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Amex halts pension payments for UK

US-owned firm blames downturn as it suspends contributions to employees’ stakeholder scheme for 18 months

More than 6,000 UK staff at American Express were today contemplating a meagre retirement income after their US-owned employer told them it was suspending pension contributions for the next 18 months.

The company said payments to its occupational retirement scheme were unaffordable in the current economic downturn, though the situation would be kept under review.

Until this month American Express paid a core contribution of 3% of salary into the stakeholder scheme, with a pledge to match contributions of up to 6%.

The largely non-unionised workforce has accepted the deal, which applies to July salary payments.

Stakeholder pensions are personal retirement plans created by the government as a cheap alternative to trustee-based schemes.

Employers are under no obligation to make a contribution and have no responsibility for the success of the stockmarket-invested plans. Most have gone down in value by more than 30% over the last year, following a sharp decline in share values.

The company’s staff are based mainly in Sussex at centres in Brighton and Burgess Hill, with a headquarters in London’s Belgravia.

Much of the recent debate on pensions has focused on the affordability of guaranteed schemes, enjoyed mainly by public sector workers and older workers in the private sector. In these employers typically pay contributions worth more than 20% of salary.

Steve Webb, the Liberal Democrats’ pensions spokesman, said the company was undermining an already inadequate pension plan. “The danger is that employers are in a race to the bottom and are taking advantage of a situation that offers staff no protection.

Independent pensions consultant Ros Altmann said the choice commonly put before many employees was between cuts in pay, hours or pensions. “It is obvious that most workers, and especially younger workers, will opt to preserve their incomes,” she said.

“It’s part of a wider picture where employers have less and less involvement in pensions and individuals are left to look after their own retirement. The American Express scheme is already poorly funded and will have seen its value fall like other stockmarket-based schemes.

“It all makes for a pretty grim picture with confidence in pensions crumbling by the day,” she said.

Like other major US finance companies American Express has benefited from the taxpayer bailout to protect it from collapse. In the last quarter of 2008 its profits collapsed 79% on the same period a year before to $172m (£105m), but recovered in the first three months of 2009 to $443m.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Amex halts pension payments for UK

US-owned firm blames downturn as it suspends contributions to employees’ stakeholder scheme for 18 months

More than 6,000 UK staff at American Express were today contemplating a meagre retirement income after their US-owned employer told them it was suspending pension contributions for the next 18 months.

The company said payments to its occupational retirement scheme were unaffordable in the current economic downturn, though the situation would be kept under review.

Until this month American Express paid a core contribution of 3% of salary into the stakeholder scheme, with a pledge to match contributions of up to 6%.

The largely non-unionised workforce has accepted the deal, which applies to July salary payments.

Stakeholder pensions are personal retirement plans created by the government as a cheap alternative to trustee-based schemes.

Employers are under no obligation to make a contribution and have no responsibility for the success of the stockmarket-invested plans. Most have gone down in value by more than 30% over the last year, following a sharp decline in share values.

The company’s staff are based mainly in Sussex at centres in Brighton and Burgess Hill, with a headquarters in London’s Belgravia.

Much of the recent debate on pensions has focused on the affordability of guaranteed schemes, enjoyed mainly by public sector workers and older workers in the private sector. In these employers typically pay contributions worth more than 20% of salary.

Steve Webb, the Liberal Democrats’ pensions spokesman, said the company was undermining an already inadequate pension plan. “The danger is that employers are in a race to the bottom and are taking advantage of a situation that offers staff no protection.

Independent pensions consultant Ros Altmann said the choice commonly put before many employees was between cuts in pay, hours or pensions. “It is obvious that most workers, and especially younger workers, will opt to preserve their incomes,” she said.

“It’s part of a wider picture where employers have less and less involvement in pensions and individuals are left to look after their own retirement. The American Express scheme is already poorly funded and will have seen its value fall like other stockmarket-based schemes.

“It all makes for a pretty grim picture with confidence in pensions crumbling by the day,” she said.

Like other major US finance companies American Express has benefited from the taxpayer bailout to protect it from collapse. In the last quarter of 2008 its profits collapsed 79% on the same period a year before to $172m (£105m), but recovered in the first three months of 2009 to $443m.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Eric Deggans: For this wise African American, Sotomayor hearings reveal the heart of race conflict in America

Never have I wanted more to throw a brick through the screen of my television. Watching Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor sit stoically through a…

Kris Allen Grandmother Dies; “The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien” Appearance Cancelled

American Idol champion Kris Allen has been forced to pull out of a scheduled appearance on The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien this Wednesday following the death of his grandmother.
“I know I was supposed to do conan on wed, but there was a death in my family,” Kris announced on his Twitter Monday.
The Arkansas native, [...]

Jessica Simpson ‘splits with Tony Romo on her b’day eve’

Pop singer Jessica Simpson and American Football star Tony Romo reportedly parted ways on the eve of her birthday.
“She loves Tony. But it’s been difficult lately,” Fox News quoted a source close to the singer as saying.
“He’s busy with his career and she’s getting ready to shoot her show ‘The Price of Beauty.’ They [...]

Nathan Gardels: California’s Crisis of Consumer Democracy

California’s fiscal crisis says as much about the state of the American Dream as it does about the state of California’s economy. And it is…

Andrea Robinson: The American Dream, Reimagined

As Paul Hawken recently reminded the Class of 2009, “The earth is hiring.”

AIG In Talks With U.S. Over Another $250 Million In Bonuses

American International Group’s recent discussions with President Obama’s compensation czar have centered on whether the company should pay about $250 million in promised bonuses that come due during the next nine months.

Kian Tajbakhsh: Iran Arrests First American Citizen

NEW YORK — An Iranian-American scholar whom Iran once accused of fomenting political unrest has been arrested by authorities there for the second time in two years, his family said Friday.

Security forces arrested Kian Tajbakhsh late Th…

Ron Paul: “The American People Are Going to Demand … Honest Money – It’s Happened Many Times in History”

Ron Paul said: When we discover what’s really going on, I think the American people are going to demand the next step, they’re going to demand honest money – it’s happened many times in history.From a brief study of the history of currency, I t…

Aussie rules at SW19

As if one former world No1 turning back the clock last week wasn’t enough. David Duval, the American who had plummeted 881 places down golf’s official rankings, surprised the sport with a second-place finish at the US Open on Monday. A major shock from the Major winner, although that triumph

‘Chevrolet Group’

Is the pending creation of a ‘New GM’ via a spell in Chapter 11 also a good point at which to consider some corporate re-branding? Yes.


It could be a way to jettison some of the negative baggage that comes with maintaining the name of the failed company, while emphasising that the new company really is a full-on fresh start – a new beginning. Hell, there’s a whole new name and the General is really gone.


Unlike Ford, ‘GM’ itself doesn’t figure too much as a brand on yer actual vehicles. It’s primarily a group umbrella brand that is perhaps crying out to be dropped or changed.


A re-branding would also provide an opportunity to elevate a constituent brand – one that is vital and already pre-eminent in the company’s future plans. Chevrolet fits the bill. Chevrolet is a globally crucial brand for New GM. It’s already established as a high performing brand in long-term automotive growth markets like Russia and China. It also has that striking gold bow-tie logo that is surely ready-to-go for corporate branding.


‘Chevrolet Motors’? You could maybe add the word ‘American’, too – highlighting the new company’s geographical origin and that it is actually more than just Chevrolet. ‘Chevrolet American Motors’? Mind you, there has already been an ‘American Motors’, and maybe throwing the word American in there doesn’t quite work for a global company.


Dunno. Maybe Chevrolet Group is the way to go, keeping it simple. Or how about GM2? No, that’s horrendous.


And no, I don’t think Government Motors – a mocking term bandied about by critics of the Obama administrations actions – quite works. 


Anyone else out there got any suggestions?   

ANALYSIS: New GM needs a new name