hidden pixel

Eef the Manufacturers Organisation Information

EEF, the manufacturers' organisation, (formerly the Engineering Employers' Federation) works with manufacturing, engineering and technology-based businesses in the UK.

EEF is the largest sectoral employers' organisation in the UK. It aims to build an environment in which manufacturing businesses can evolve, innovate and compete in a fast-changing world.

It delivers services at national level and local level through a network of regional offices throughout England and Wales.

Contents

Purpose

EEF provides businesses with advice, guidance and support in employment law, employee relations, health, safety, climate and environment, information and research and occupational health.

It also delivers internationally-recognised training and consultancy in the UK and overseas.

EEF’s services help businesses manage compliance with their ethical and legal obligations, improve performance and gain competitive advantage.

Through offices in London and Brussels, EEF provides political representation on behalf of UK business in the engineering, manufacturing and technology-based sectors: lobbying government, MPs, regional development agencies, MEPs and European institutions.

History

EEF was formed in 1896 as the Engineering Employers' Federation and merged in 1918 with the National Employers' Federation.[1] A history of the EEF[2] cited in [1] states that the original purpose of the EEF was "collective action to protect individual firms and local associations, the preservation of the ‘power to manage’, and the maintenance of industrial peace through established procedure." The EEF funtioned as a 'Union' of Employers and negotiated from this stance with Trades Unions, for instance "twice, in 1897-8 and 1922, the Federation organised nationwide lock-outs. Procedural agreements for the avoidance of disputes were made with the unions at the conclusion of each of these lock-outs. These agreements provided for local and national joint conferences on disputed matters"[2].

In November 2003 the EEF rebranded itself from the 'Engineering Employers' Federation' to 'EEF The Manufacturers' Association'.[3]

The EEF archive [1] is curated by Warwick University's Modern Records Centre.[4]

Membership

Membership of EEF is corporate: organisations and companies are members, not the individuals that represent them.

Board Members

Terry Scuoler Chief Executive, EEF

Martin Temple CBE Chairman, EEF

Simon Charlick, Finance Director, EEF

John Peel OBE

Barrie Williams

Phil Elliot

Peter Wilson Managing Director, Crane Ltd

John Tissiman MBE Chairman, Edward Pryor & Son Michael Kirk OBE

Alan Wood CBE Chief Executive, Siemens

Gareth Jenkins Managing Director, FSG Tool & Die Ltd

Niels Vinther Managing Director, Grundfos Manufacturing Ltd

Grahame Nix OBE Deputy Managing Director, Marshall of Cambridge Aerospace

Tony Hammersley Manufacturing Director, TEV Ltd

Ian Fowler Managing Director, WH Rowe Ltd

Mark Pickering Director of Operations, Warwick Manufacturing Group

Senior personnel

Stephen Radley Chief Economist, EEF

Gary Booton Director of Health, Safety, Climate & Environment, EEF

Peter Schofield Director, HR and Legal, EEF

Caroline Gumble Human Resources Director

David Ost Region Director, North West, EEF

Alan Hall Region Director, North East, EEF

Terry Slater Region Director, South West, EEF

David Seall Region Director, South East, EEF

Martin Wassell Region Director, Midlands, EEF

References

  1. ^ a b c [1], EEF Archive home page
  2. ^ a b [2], The Power to Manage, E. Wigham, Macmillan 1973
  3. ^ [3], Press Release
  4. ^ [4] University of Warwick Modern Records Centre

External links

· · Economy of the United Kingdom
World economy
Companies Co-operatives · Employee-owned companies · FTSE 100 Index · FTSE 250 Index · FTSE Fledgling Index · FTSE SmallCap Index · Government-owned companies
Currency, governance and regulation Bank of England (Governor of the Bank of England) · Budget · Company law · Competition Commission · Department for Business, Innovation and Skills · Financial Services Authority · Gilts · HM Revenue and Customs · HM Treasury (Chancellor of the Exchequer) · Monetary Policy Committee · Office for Budget Responsibility · Office of Fair Trading · Office of Gas and Electricity Markets · Pound sterling (Banknotes · Coinage) · Taxation · UK Debt Management Office · UK Financial Investments Limited · UK Statistics Authority · UK Trade & Investment
Financial services Baltic Exchange · Banking · Canary Wharf · The City · Euronext.liffe · Glasgow International Financial Services District · Insurance (Lloyd's of London) · LCH.Clearnet · London Interbank Offered Rate · London Metal Exchange · London Stock Exchange (Alternative Investment Market)
History 1926 general strike · 2008 bank rescue package · 2009 bank rescue package · Agricultural Revolution · Big Bang · Black Wednesday · Corn Laws · Economic geography · Free trade · Gold standard · Great Depression · Industrial Revolution · Late-2000s recession · List of recessions · Long Depression · Marshall Plan · Nationalization · Navigation Acts · New Imperialism · Panic of 1796–1797 · Privatization · Second Industrial Revolution · Winter of Discontent
Nations, regions and cities
England Birmingham (Big City Plan) · Bristol · Cornwall · Croydon (Croydon Vision 2020) · Devon · Expansion plans for Milton Keynes · Fishing · Leeds · List of counties by GVA · Liverpool · London (East London Tech City · London Plan) · M4 corridor · M11 Corridor · Manchester · Reading · Sheffield · Silicon Fen · Thames Gateway · Tourism · Transport
Northern Ireland Belfast · Transport
Scotland Aberdeen · Agriculture · Edinburgh · Fishing · Oil and gas · Renewable energy · Silicon Glen · Tourism · Transport · Whisky
Wales Cardiff (Cardiff Bay) · Swansea · Tourism · Transport
People and labour Billionaires · Businesspeople · Demography · Income (Poverty) · Labour law (Equal opportunities · Minimum wage · Working Time Directive) · Pensions · Trade unions (Trades Union Congress) · Youth unemployment
Sectors Agriculture · Construction · Education · Energy (North Sea oil · Renewable energy) · Forestry · Gambling · Healthcare · Internet · Manufacturing (Aerospace · Automotive · Pharmaceuticals) · Media (Cinema · Television) · Mining · Science and technology · Telecommunications · Tourism · Transport (Aviation)
Trade and business organisations Business and employer associations · British Bankers' Association · British Chambers of Commerce · Confederation of British Industry · EEF the manufacturers organisation · Federation of Small Businesses · Industry trade groups · Institute of Directors · UKPA
Category

Categories: Business and employer associations of the United Kingdom

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sat Sep 17 05:09:15 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.