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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian bank merger signals a new round of job cuts and
branch closures
By Janine Harrison and Terry Cook
31 March 2000
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this version to print
The Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) announced a $A9.4
billion takeover bid for Colonial Mutual earlier this month. If
it proceeds, the merger will be the biggest in the country's corporate
history and is likely to trigger a new round of bank restructuring
as Australian banks scramble to expand in order to survive on
the world market.
Justifying the merger with Colonial, CBA's management spoke
of the dangers of being left behind their far larger rivals in
Europe, the US and Japan. CBA chief executive David Murray warned
that Australian banks were in danger of becoming a branch
office for the rest of the world if government restrictions
on further mergers were maintained.
With global convergence and limitations in the long term
for growth in Australia, it's important for us to converge further
the activities of banking and financial services and to do more
outside Australia. This merger will enable us to accelerate our
growth rate and to use our capital better. It will diversify our
revenue both globally and domestically.
The CBA was willing to pay a high premium for these benefits.
To outbid rival offers from the National Australia Bank (NAB)
and ANZ, the CBA increased its offer four times in the matter
of a few days and ended up paying an amount 16 times Colonial's
forecasted annual earnings.
The newly-merged entity will have 10.5 million customers, assets
worth $220 billion and $83 billion in funds management. The CBA
gains a footing in 12 new countries throughout Asia and Europe
and will now replace the NAB as Australia's largest domestic bank.
It will control over 30 percent of the domestic banking market
and also become the country's second biggest insurer.
What made Colonial attractive was its substantial international
network combined with a strong presence in fund management and
insurance. Traditional branch banking is no longer sufficiently
profitable. To be competitive banks are seeking to expand into
more lucrative fields servicing the needs of large corporations
or wealthy individuals.
If the merger goes ahead, the CBA will earn 58 percent of its
revenue from traditional banking rather than the current 92 percent.
Revenue from life insurance and funds management will increase
from 3 percent to 36 percent.
The merger is likely to spark a flurry of takeovers by leading
Australian banks on a far more extensive scale than that of 1981,
when most of the current major banks were established through
mergers of smaller institutions.
Already there is speculation that NAB is preparing a merger
deal with leading insurance and finance company AMP, which would
create a bank three times larger than the CBA-Colonial merger.
Other likely targets for take-over include the Bank of Western
Australia, Suncorp-Metway and St. George. The ANZ and NAB have
stakes of 8 percent and 9 percent respectively in St. George.
But these mergers are small compared to amalgamations taking
place internationally. The recent Deutsche-Dresdner Bank merger
created the world's largest bank, with a balance-sheet total of
nearly 2.5 trillion marks [$A2 trillion] and a stock market value
of around 150 billion marks ($A120 billion). Japan's Tokai and
Asahi Banks amalgamated to form Japan's second, and the world's
third largest bank, with assets of 107 trillion yen ($A1.65 trillion).
As a result, the Australian government's four pillars
policyprohibiting mergers between the Big Four
banksis increasingly coming under pressure. Put in place
supposedly to encourage competition on a national level, it is
viewed as irrational by Australian banks that now have to compete
on an international level.
But if the Howard government ditches the four pillars
policy it faces a voter backlash, particularly among its supporters
in rural areas where it is already under pressure over the loss
of jobs and services. A number of smaller towns no longer have
any bank branches, forcing residents to travel substantial distances.
Mergers between the big four would certainly lead
to a new round of bank branch closures.
Over the past decade, cost-cutting has already led to substantial
job shedding. More than 7,000 jobs were slashed and 400 branches
closed after the merger of the State Bank of Victoria with the
CBA in 1991. Similarly, when Westpac took over the Bank of Melbourne
in 1997, 30 branches were shut in Victoria and 1,000 jobs destroyed.
The CBA has closed down 660 branches since 1994 and at the
end of last year announced that it would close a further 500 branches.
Bank management indicated this month that after the takeover of
Colonial a further 2,500 jobs and 300 branches would go, to make
an annual saving of $300 million. The main areas affected would
be rural and regional New South Wales and Tasmania.
The Finance Sector Union (FSU) estimates that impending mergers
could result in the slashing of 10,000 jobs and the closure of
a further 1,000 branches over the next few years. It can safely
be predicted, however, that the FSU will mount no campaign to
defend jobs. Its previous responses have always been to declare
that job losses were inevitable and to issue pleas
for voluntary redundancies and natural wastage.
Following the announcement of the Commonwealth-Colonial deal,
FSU secretary Tony Beck issued a hollow appeal to the Howard government
to stand up and be counted and to act in the
interests of the community and jobs by stopping this merger.
Even if Howard did stand up and stop the merger for
electoral purposes, the relentless drive for bank restructuring
would continue.
It is not mergers and large banks as such that are the problem,
but the fact that they are privately owned. Economies of scale
could provide both decent working conditions for bank workers
and proper services for ordinary people. But under a social system
based on the market and the drive for profit exactly the opposite
takes place.
See Also:
The Deutsche Bank/Dresdner Bank merger:
a struggle for worldwide market domination
[18 March 2000]
Australian banks return record
profits and axe thousands of jobs
[18 February 2000]
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