Poste italiane
SPA | |
Traded as | BIT: PST |
Industry | Postal services, Financial services |
Headquarters | Rome, Italy |
Key people | Francesco Caio (CEO) Luisa Todini (Chairman) |
Services | Postal Services, Financial Services, Insurance Services |
Revenue | €28 billion (2014)[1] |
€212 million (2014)[2] with a debt of €4 billion[3] | |
Owner |
Ministry of Economy and Finance (65%) Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (35%) |
Number of employees | 143655 (2013) |
Website | Posteitaliane.it |
Poste italiane Spa is a company that is owned by the Italian government.
Besides providing core postal services, Gruppo Poste Italiane offers integrated products, such as postal savings, communication, logistics and financial services in Italy.
The group offers a wide range of postal products, from express mail services to a broad selection of financial products.
Gruppo Poste italiane subsidiaries include: SDA Express Courier which provides express mail and package delivery; Postecom managing Internet services; BancoPosta Fondi offering life insurance and investment solutions, Postel offering hybrid electronic mail and document processing, and PosteMobile, a mobile virtual network operator.
History
1862-1990
Inheriting the setting of "Poste di Sardegna" - the corresponding service of the Kingdom of Sardinia - after the unification of Italy mails took in companies postal service of the kingdoms annexed and formed an organization via a national law on 5 May 1862 n. 604 (the so-called postal reform). With this rule the stakes were organized as a central administration of the state. The rule of 1862 picked up and adjusted the material, especially the methods of collection, sorting, transport and delivery of postal items and the establishment of ancillary services for registered and insured mail, return receipts and money orders.
Subsequently, with the Royal Decree 5973 of 10 March 1889, the Directorate General of Posts and Telegraphs was separated from the Ministry of Public Works and thus transformed into the Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs, in charge of providing Italy with a network of offices to forward and receive mail and telegrams, to make and receive telephone calls, and to carry out financial transactions and asset management. It also for a time worked as branch offices for the nascent electric services.
In 1917 the service giro was founded (since 2000 commonly known as BancoPosta), for a few years called the Royal Mail. They also arranged for the opening of Italian post offices abroad.
In 1924, during the Fascist period, the Ministry of Posts and Telegraphs (hence the abbreviation "PT") was transformed into the Ministry of Communications and became an important center of power, even for its ability to control its citizens, to put service of the complaint. The service network was expanded with the acquisition and implementation of new logistics facilities. New buildings in the Functionalist style were built in the major provincial capitals (e.g. Palermo, Forlì, La Spezia).
With the development of telephony and radio, the ministry incorporated the State Company for telephone services (ASST) and the nascent EIAR (RAI future, at first only radio, then television).
1990-2000
In the early 1990s Italian public administration and postal service were deemed irrecoverable from the perspectives of efficiency and profitability. The budget deficit was endemic as the increase in personnel costs, which in 1986 absorbed about 93% (including 16% for pensions) of then current revenue. Productivity per employee from 1970 to 1985 was reduced by 24% at the expense of the quality of services provided by generating a deficit situation even more critical.
In 1994 in Germany about 80% of mail was delivered within the day after dispatch, while in Italy the comparable statistic was less than 20%. (In 1989 the average time for mail delivery was 8.5 days).
The obvious gap in the quality of Italian postal services compared to the rest of Europe tried embankment with an intervention of reform under Decree-Law n . 487 of 1 December 1993, converted by Law no. 71 of 29 January 1994 led to a transformation of the Italian Post Office by an independent company to a public business, by providing an additional step in SpA by 1996 (implemented after 28 February 1998). The transformation process was assumed in the management of the Italian Post Office the adoption of the principle of production efficiency, the recovery of the quality of services and the economic and financial recovery.
This led to the gradual reduction of the deficit of 4,500 billion lire in 1993, through policies to reduce production costs (80% of which was due to staff), an increase in revenues from the sale of services to the PA, a reordering of the tariff system, reaching in 2001 a net profit.
In February 1998 the Ministry of the Treasury ( The Prodi government ) appointed Corrado Passera, CEO of the newly formed Italian Poste SpA. The business plan of Corrado Passera 1998 to 2002 created a cutting staff of 22,000 units. On the other hand, according to some trade union leaders, there has been a casualization of contracts for new recruits, cases of widespread harassment and resignation to the super- workload, because of an excess of staff cuts that would have pushed miss even proportions of the workforce necessary.
From the point of view, the Solidarity Fund has been in long-term savings on labor costs as well as lowering the average age of the staff. For 10 years, a state fee and a deduction in payroll for new employees have funded the last two years of missing contribution to the early retirement of thousands of employees. The transaction, at no cost to the company, has replaced these outputs with staff under 24 years old with three-year contracts of apprenticeship.
2000-2010
In 2000, a 20% stake in the share capital of the company Bartolini was acquired by the Italian Post Office through its subsidiary, SDA Express Courier, resulting in the formation of the Consortium, Logistics and Parcels between the three companies for the sorting of parcels throughout the country. This agreement was also the subject of a challenge by the rival companies in court, but it ended in favor of the consortium.
Poste Italiane has also adopted a system of control rooms that can monitor in real time the post office, the logistics network and security of digital communications and transactions, an area in which he also works with governing bodies national, international agencies and universities and research centers . Of particular importance have acquired in these years of the financial products and services, first of all the Postepay prepaid card. Introduced in late 2003, Postepay achieved early success, especially among the young, conquering and maintaining first position at European level among pre-paid cards .
2010-present
On 16 May 2014 the Italian government approved the sale of stakes of up to 40 percent in Poste Italiane.[4]
The company is going to close 455 office in 2015 due low profit,[5] it was a decision taken by the CEO of Poste Italiane Spa, Francesco Caio. There will be a total amount of 13000 postal office in Italy in 2015. The "Ministero delle Finanze", that now owns 61,8%% of Poste Italiane Spa, shared about 40% to Milano Stock Exchanged.
Critics
The actual CEO of Poste Italiane Spa, Francesco Caio, has been criticized due its high salary, he earn 1 million € per year, compared to the poor company results.[6]
See also
References
- ↑ Annual Results (PDF), GruppoPostaitaliane, 31 December 2014, p. 4, retrieved 25 April 2015
- ↑ http://postandparcel.info/64287/news/companies/profits-slump-at-poste-italiane-as-it-undergoes-profound-transformation/
- ↑ http://www.posteitaliane.it/resources/editoriale/pdf/Bilanci-risultati/Annual_results_for_the_year_ended_31_december_2014.pdf
- ↑ UPDATE 1-Italy approves sale plans for post office, air traffic control
- ↑ http://www.forexinfo.it/Poste-Italiane-il-piano-di
- ↑ http://www.huffingtonpost.it/2015/04/22/poste-francesco-caio-stipendio_n_7115336.html
External links
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