LONDON--The chairman of Carillion said he took "full and complete" responsibility for the construction firm's collapse, which has put thousands of jobs on the line and left creditors, suppliers and pensioners facing losses of millions of pounds.
Employing nearly 18,000 people in Britain, Carillion failed on Jan. 15 when its banks halted funding, triggering Britain's biggest corporate demise in a decade and forcing the government to step in to guarantee vital public services. The failure ignited a row over Britain's outsourcing of public services to private companies, and whether in the case of Carillion it was run for the benefit of shareholders and bosses, and not its staff or customers.
Philip Green chaired the construction and support services firm from 2014 until it was put into liquidation after the government refused to bail it out. "My responsibility is full and complete -- not necessarily culpability but no question about full responsibility," he told a committee of lawmakers on Tuesday in parliament.
Green said the company was unable to reduce debt built up from previous acquisitions, and was left with no "wriggle room" to cope with a drop in cash flow when four major contracts rapidly deteriorated last year.
Former chief executive Richard Howson, who earned around 1.5 million pounds in the year before he stepped down in July 2017 after a profit warning, said he was "deeply saddened and sorry". He said the group had struggled to collect cash on some of its major contracts, particularly in the Middle East, and that he was spending around 60 percent of his time chasing payments.
The lawmakers asked why the company had increased dividends in 2013 and 2014 when the group's cash flow was under pressure. Howson said the dividends were necessary to demonstrate the board's confidence in Carillion's prospects and help it win new contracts.