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| Thursday, 18 July, 2002, 11:35 GMT 12:35 UK Economy 'paying high cost' of strike ![]() The 3m Tube commuters are not the only ones affected As commuters face travel chaos amid Thursday's Tube strike, the capital's business and tourism industries are counting the economic cost of the action. The London Chamber of Commerce says the disruption is causing companies at least �9m per day due to time lost getting to work and cancelled meetings. And Dirk Patterson, spokesman for the chamber said it will cause "incalculable" damage to the city's tourism.
Mr Patterson said the long-term damage to the economy will also be high. "There will be people who stop investing in London, international businesses who relocate, because they just think London does not work," he said. The chamber is also worried about the tourism industry. Popular tourist sites have seen drastically reduced numbers of visitors on Thursday. Mr Patterson said 14 million tourists a year visited London, a number which would be severely reduced because of the strike.
He said: "People are saying 'don't bother going to London, its a mess, they cannot run their transport system'. "We are already hearing reports of people going home right across the world, from America to far flung parts of Asia saying to their homelands: 'don't go to London'. "It is very damaging indeed." Jeopardising safety Mr Patterson said 87% of chamber members want to see a no strike agreement reached, to avoid a repetition of Thursday's day of action. The Rail Maritime and Transport (RMT) union, which called the strike, is against government plans to bring in private engineering companies to modernise the Tube. It claims using private companies to do maintenance work will be safety in jeopardy. Mr Patterson said: "Of course we agree safety is paramount. "But we want to see a no strike agreement and sensible discussion being the way forward with these matters." He said the chamber believed the RMT union had "hijacked" the issue for their own ends. |
See also: 18 Jul 02 | England 17 Jul 02 | UK 16 Jul 02 | England Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top England stories now: Links to more England stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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