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German public sector workers vote to strike
By Hendrik Paul
12 June 2000
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On June 8 Germany's public sector workers organized in the
OeTV and DAG trade unions voted by a 76 percent majority in favor
of a strike. The workers are demanding a higher wage increase
than that offered by the employers.
The vote rejected a compromise wage deal proposed by arbitrators
who had been brought in to resolve the conflict. The strike, which
is scheduled to begin this week after the Pentecost holidays,
will be the first walkout in Germany's public sector since 1992.
Interior Minister Otto Schily (Social Democratic PartySPD),
representing the public employers, is meeting with trade unions
leaders Tuesday in a last-ditch attempt to avert a strike, which
could bring large sections of public life in Germany to a standstill.
Polling of union members started after the breakdown of arbitration
negotiations between federal, state and municipal public employers
and the two public sector unions, OeTV (Public Service, Freight
and Passenger Transportation Union)the union of "blue-collar"
public sector workersand DAG (German Salaried Employees
Union), which mainly represents office workers. The OeTV and DAG
leaderships were obliged to carry out a strike ballot among their
more than 800,000-strong membership.
The unions had demanded a 5 percent wage hike for the 3.1 million
employees in the public sector, but the employers were only willing
to offer a 0.6 percent increase this year and another 1.7 percent
next year. Since no result was achieved in contract negotiations,
an arbitration commission was appointed, which, as usual, proposed
a "middle-of-the-road" compromise.
The arbitrators proposed increasing pay by 1.8 percent retroactively
as of April 1, and then by a further 2.2 percent 12 months later.
The pay of public sector workers in eastern Germany, where workers
still receive less than their colleagues in western Germany, was
to be increased merely from 86.5 percent to 90 percent of the
west German wage and salary leveland that in three stages.
The commission had nothing more to offer than vague indications
with regard to job trainees, stating that the employers would
"make an effort" to ensure that the number of trainees
is not decreased, and would "work towards" securing
at least 12 months employment for trainees who had completed their
apprenticeship.
Normally, this kind of compromise solution is accepted by both
sides, and peace and quiet reign for the next 12 months, or longer.
Every wage contract signed in Germany incorporates a "keep
the peace" clause (i.e., a ban on strikes) for the duration
of the contract.
There was every indication that the usual pattern would prevail
in this case as well. The unions' chief negotiators, Herbert Mai
of the OeTV and Christian Zahn of the DAG, recommended acceptance
of the compromise to the unions' Combined Collective Bargaining
Committee, which has the final say on wage agreements. But the
Committee unexpectedly turned against its own leadership and rejected
the arbitrators' proposal, thus setting into motion the process
which led to the ballot and vote in favor of a strike.
By rejecting the compromise, the committee, which is made up
of about 200 trade union officials, has both embarrassed the trade
union leadership and demonstrated how far removed the chief negotiators
are from the expectations of the workers they claim to represent.
On the other side of the fence, the strike vote has evoked tirades
and threats from the employers, particularly from SPD and Green
party politicians. These Social Democrats and Greens have declared
that any additional wage increases will not be financed out of
public sector budgets, but by the workers themselves, who can
expect layoffs and a freeze on new employment.
Olaf Henkel, president of Germany's main employers' federation
BDI, took to the stage to warn employees that increased wages
could jeopardize the federal government's cost-cutting efforts.
He was supported by Dieter Vesper of the DIW economic research
institute (which has close ties to industry). Vesper claimed that
even the proposed compromise will indefinitely put off the hiring
of new employees and a halt to workforce reductions in the east
of Germany.
Saxony-Anhalt's state Finance Minister Schaefer (SPD) said
"operationally justified dismissals" (as opposed to
redundancy schemes, closures and hiring reductions) would be necessary.
And the minister president of the same state, Reinhard Hoeppner
(SPD), declared that higher wages would increase pressure to reduce
staff..
Interior Minister Schily, the federal government's chief negotiator,
accused the trade unions of "irresponsibility in the overall
political context". The Greens' budget policy spokesman,
Oswald Metzger, called the unions "short-sighted". Metzger
went on to say that job cuts and hiring freezes were now to be
expected and that this would reduce the unions' membership, and
thus their income from membership dues.
But even the union bureaucrats, who preside over organizations
that are chronically impacted by dwindling membership, are not
so limited in their foresight as to see the future of the trade
unions solely as a matter of dues-paying prospects. While, generally,
they docilely accept the demands put forward by the employers,
they see their main task as warding off and side-tracking the
growth of resistance within the working class.
That is why it would be wrong to interpret the Collective Bargaining
Committee's rejection of the proposed wage package as a genuine
representation of the workers' interests or a return to the trade
union militancy of former times, even if it did humiliate the
top bureaucrats. It was, rather, a knee-jerk reaction to growing
dissatisfaction among organized and unorganized workers (particularly
in the east of Germany), who have lost all patience with years
of stagnant real wages without any prospect of improvement, and
increasing economic insecurity.
Many union officials in the east of Germany no longer feel
they can credibly convey the leadership's policies to local members.
Even some municipal government officials (who are actually on
the other side of this conflict) are talking about the "long
overdue adjustment" of wages in the east to western wage
levels.
Employment in the public sector has long ceased to provide
the special advantages it once did in Germany, such as secure
and decent pay, which even after day-to-day expenditures was enough
to lead a modestly comfortable life. It is, moreover, completely
misplaced for government negotiators to point to budgetary restrictions
when they know full well that huge amounts of money will be forthcoming
when Germany's postal and telecom corporations go public and the
government sells its UMTS telephone licenses. The UMTS sell-off
alone will add as much as 100 billion marks to the government's
coffers. In any event, fewer and fewer people are prepared to
accept the fact that, 10 years after re-unification, wages in
the east of Germany are still 10 percent lower than in the west.
What none of the government or employers' representatives care
to explain is why, if the public treasury is supposedly so short
of funds, the government is extending the most generous tax breaks
to big business, including exempting from taxation the profits
made from the sale of corporate shares.
Such objections are increasingly making it impossible for the
unions to convince workers that the life of austerity ordained
for them by the government or collective wage agreements is acceptable.
This is where the dilemma of the trade unions in general, and
of the OeTV in particular, begins. If a union is no longer able
to obtain workers' support for its collaboration with the employers,
it has no other choice than to place itself at the head of the
protest movement. It ends up calling for a strike that, as OeTV
leader Herbert Mai never tires of repeating, it "really doesn't
want".
Another factor is an inner-union dispute about the planned
merger of the OeTV, the DAG and several other unions to form a
"mega-union" called Ver.di, combining public and private
service sectors. This project, which is being vigorously promoted
by the top union bureaucrats, is meeting with considerable opposition
from mid-level officials, i.e., the group from which the Collective
Bargaining Committee is recruited.
This new large-scale organization would be not so much a service
trade union as a service corporation, fulfilling
in the public sector basically the same role that automobile associations
fulfill for drivers. That would pull the carpet from underneath
the feet of mid-level officialspartly because the merger
would result in union jobs being cut, and partly because the new
organizational structure would leave no room for the mid-level
officials' traditional role as a buffer between the rank and file
and the top union leadership.
Consequently, many union officials see the current wage conflict
as an opportunity to take on the union bosses, without being seriously
interested in the needs of rank-and-file members or having any
perspective as to how these needs are to be met.
While the government is determined to allow no concessions
to the population in this wage conflict, and while workers see
less and less reason why they should tighten their belts even
more, the trade unions, which for decades formed the hinge on
which social consensus hung, have fallen into a profound crisis.
With the gap between conflicting and, ultimately, irreconcilable
interests widening, it is becoming more and more difficult for
them to stay in control of events. If it takes place, a public
sector strike will strain the OeTV to the breaking point.
Eight years ago, OeTV members refused to follow their leadership
and demanded continuation of the 1992 strike in a ballot called
after 11 days of a work stoppage. Only 44.1 percent of them voted
for ending the strike (at least 50 percent was required). The
OeTV president at that time, Monika Wulf-Mathies, nonetheless
brought the strike to an end in an unprecedented display of contempt
for the members' will, even though the walkout had not achieved
the slightest increase in the wage offer (which at 5.4 percent
was nonetheless substantially better than the current norm). Helmut
Kohl, Germany's head of government in 1992, showed his gratitude
to Wulf-Mathies by arranging for her to get one of the best-paid
appointments in Europe, as a European Union commissioner in Brussels.
The trade union bureaucrats are in a sweat about this "Spirit
of 1992 ", as the German weekly Die Zeit calls it.
How long are workers going to follow a trade union that has no
real perspective to offer? Even the strike demands are extremely
modest. The OeTV is asking for a "2 after the decimal point",
which would be only 0.2 percent more than what the employers are
currently offering. And they have no plans for defending existing
jobsjobs that will be cut to finance any further wage increase.
Nor is the OeTV's indignation about the slow progress in adjusting
eastern German wages to western levels convincing. It was the
OeTV that made the establishment of different wage zones possible
in the first place, and it has maintained this "wage apartheid"
ever since.
The OeTV's links to the governing Social Democrats (who include
in their ranks the former union leader Walter Riester, now the
minister of labour and social service) mark it all too clearly
as part of the repressive apparatus that has already carried out
more attacks against the welfare of the population than the conservative
Kohl administration did in 16 years of government.
Assuming the strike takes place, it will be extremely difficult
for the unions to calculate which direction it will take and what
its result will be. However, workers must not limit their search
for a new perspective to opposition to trade union treachery.
They will only succeed in making a clear political break with
the Social Democrats and the trade unions by building a party
that is independent of the twoa party with an international
strategy that opposes both the attacks of global capitalism and
the nationalist obtuseness of the unions, and combats any division
of the working class by promoting the goal of social equality.
See Also:
Germany
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