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Bankers, First Cisl: "Already lost more than 6 thousand jobs"

Alarm from the general secretary of the First Cisl, Romani: "With the agreements signed in December alone we are losing more than 6.000 jobs in Italian banks" - And the inevitable restructuring, accompanied however by the Solidarity Fund for redundant workers, is not still over – All the numbers in the sector

Bankers, First Cisl: "Already lost more than 6 thousand jobs"

“The Tar, blaming the mayor Raggi wrong, has certified that in Italy the barrels at the end of the year are indispensable, but, if to know the victims of the New Year's fires it will be necessary to wait until January 6.000st, the count of the December barrels inside the the Italian banking sector is already defined: we have lost more than 2016 jobs in just one month": this is the comment by Giulio Romani, general secretary of First Cisl, the first trade union in the Italian financial sector, on the flurry of redundancy agreements signed in the last month of XNUMX.

The Research Office of First Cisl estimates that the agreements signed in December alone will produce an overall output of 6.690 workers from now on. “This – says Romani – without counting the UniCredit industrial plan, also presented in December, which cancels a further 3.900 jobs. The very bitter icing on the cake - continues Romani - is that while we were preparing for the rite of the ball, in Cariferrara the year ended at a negotiating table, because they would expect to kick out another 400 people to heal the damage caused by incompetent managers , commissioners of the Bank of Italy and government decrees which, little by little, reduced the bank to poverty”.

In detail, the analysis by the Research Department of First Cisl highlights 2.750 exits decided in December in Ubi, 1.800 in the newly formed Banco Bpm group, 780 in Bnl, 600 in Monte dei Paschi, 300 in Crédit Agricole, 230 both in Popolare di Vicenza than in the Credito Valtellinese. “For 2017 – concludes the general secretary of First Cisl – the hope is that we will be able to rediscover the ability to think of development as a tool to create employment and not to destroy it, that banking models will be redesigned to really assist the economy and families and, finally, that a job be returned to those who have lost it, starting with the workers of Hypo Alpe Adria Bank, who are the most recent helpless victims of this absurd trend of making those who work pay their bills”.

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