KEY POINTS:
An independent inquiry into the use of "foreign workers" at the Lindsey oil refinery has rejected claims that the wages they were paid undercut British employees.
Acas, the arbitration service, has also found no evidence that the law was broken when a subcontractor hired workers from Italy and Portugal. The move caused a walkout last month at Total's refinery in Lindsey, Lincolnshire, and a wave of wildcat strikes across Britain, as Prime Minister Gordon Brown came under pressure to honour his 2007 pledge to create "British jobs for British workers".
Acas, whose report on the dispute will be published this week, is reluctant to "take sides" and will acknowledge genuine trade union concerns about jobs going to foreign workers.
But the lack of evidence of wages being undercut at Lindsey will be seen as a setback for unions. They have accused companies of seeking "cheap labour" by paying foreign workers less than required under Britain's industry-wide agreements between employers and unions on pay and conditions.
The Acas findings may allow employers to put the spotlight on allegations that poor productivity among British workers persuades some firms to recruit from the continent.
"This is not about pay, it is about productivity," one industry source said yesterday.
There are claims that IREM, the Italian subcontractor that hired Italian and Portuguese workers at the refinery, won the 200 million ($548 million) construction contract after a British firm, Shaw, pulled out because it feared poor productivity would make it unprofitable.
The Business Secretary, Lord Mandelson, and Skills Secretary, John Denham, are to announce a study of skills and productivity to ensure British firms win as many engineering construction contracts at home as abroad. It will be led by Mark Gibson, director-general of business support in Lord Mandelson's department.
Unions say the European Union's directive on workers posted abroad allows employers to pay less to foreign workers than their British counterparts. The directive says posted workers should not receive less than the law requires - in Britain, the national minimum wage - but unions want it beefed up to include more generous industry-wide agreements. Many Labour MPs are sympathetic.
But ministers claim that unions want to use the controversy to win a legal right to strike, without the threat of being sued for damages, to uphold industry agreements. Ministers say that would mean a fundamental change to the industrial relations laws brought in by Margaret Thatcher.
The Government has promised to consider the issue after the EU has reviewed the workings of the directive.
The strike at Lindsey was called off after Total agreed that about 100 jobs would go to British workers.
- INDEPENDENT