173.Section 115 extends certain existing powers of the Post Office (the statutory corporation) and the Crown under the Post Office Act 1969 and the British Telecommunications Act 1981 prior to the Post Office becoming a company. The purpose is to support the Government’s policy of allowing the Post Office greater commercial freedom. The section provides:
for the Post Office to enter into any financial transactions not already empowered by section 7 of the Post Office Act 1969 and the power will include, for example, power to enter into currency swaps required in connection with the business of the Post Office and its expansion outside the United Kingdom;
for the Secretary of State, with the approval of the Treasury, also to make loans direct to any subsidiaries of the Post Office, and not only to the Post Office itself;
for the Secretary of State, with the approval of the Treasury, to make loans in foreign currencies to the Post Office or its subsidiaries. The monies will continue to be issued from the National Loans Fund, but may be issued in sterling or a foreign currency if the loan is to be in that currency;
for the Post Office correspondingly to have powers to borrow in a foreign currency from the Secretary of State;
for the limit on the Post Office’s total indebtedness, as permitted under the British Telecommunications Act 1981 and including borrowing by any subsidiary, to be increased from £1,200 million to £5,000 million and for the removal of the ceiling up to which the limit may be increased, although any increase will still need to be authorised by an affirmative resolution order.