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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
Norway: unions close down general strike against inequality
By Steve James
11 May 2000
Use
this version to print
Trade union leaders in Norway have called off a general strike
directed against growing inequality. On Wednesday, May 3, 84,600
members of the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO) in
private industry, struck, bringing hotels, ferries, most of country's
daily newspapers and the construction industry to a halt. The
strike followed a 64.6 percent rejection of a 3.5 percent pay
rise across all sections of private industry, which involved a
mere 0.75 kroner hourly increase (about 9 US cents) and one extra
week's holiday by 2002. The offer, agreed between the LO and the
employers federation the NHO, was to last for three years instead
of the usual two.
The strike was due to be joined this week by workers in airlines,
bus companies, haulage, state alcohol shops, service stations,
pharmaceuticals, meat production, bakeries and more newspapers
The trade unions had issued exemptions to key industries and
90 out of 140 applications for exemptions were granted, particularly
in oil and related areas. But auto production across Europe faced
rapid closure. Within days of the strike commencing, Saab of Sweden,
owned by General Motors, ceased production and German-based BMW
was in danger of losing all car production within days, as bumpers
for its models come from the Norwegian Raufoss company.
The marginally increased offer from the NHO, deemed sufficient
to close down the dispute, raises this year's pay increase to
around 1.5 kroner (18 US cents) an hour, one kroner next year,
and concedes an extra four days holiday, two this year and two
next year. The lowest paid workers will get an extra two kroner
an hour. Workers will be balloted on the offer later in May, around
the time when 650,000 public sector workers are due to either
accept a comparable pay agreement or launch another strike.
The scale of the dispute appears to have caught the government,
union leaders and industry by surprise. As late as April this
year, the LO reported that its 18 member unions were not expecting
any problems in delivering another all-industry agreement on pay
and conditionsthe so-called "solidarity alternative.
One leader, Kjell Bjørndalen, president of the Norwegian
United Federation of Trade Unions, part of the LO boasted, "opposition
to this settlement is peanuts compared to what we faced in 1996."
As the ballot grew closer, the LO belatedly realised that workers
were likely to reject the offer and took out full-page adverts
in all the leading newspapers encouraging acceptance. LO leader
Yngve Hågensen held a two-hour press conference, citing
"strategic" reasons for the increase in the duration
of the new pay agreement from two to three years. His efforts
were generally ridiculed.
Underlying the rejection is the growing inequality in Norwegian
society, a reflection of changes in Norway's economy that are
in many ways just beginning. For many years, wage levels have
been set according to "Basic Agreements" between government,
industry and the trade unions. The first such agreement was in
1935, after a general strike in 1931. As in the other Scandinavian
countries, this agreement later acted as a platform for the post-war
integration of the trade unions into the state structures. The
trade union bureaucracy, industry and state collaborated for increased
profitability, social peace and to place certain limits on social
inequality. Norwegian industry imported US assembly-line technology
and was able to steal a competitive march on its rivals. Concessions
made to the working class included a considerable welfare state
and decent public services.
The discovery of oil in the late 1960s provided an enormous
boost to the Norwegian economy, creating large profits, and the
continued expansion of public sector employment. Some of the oil
revenues were diverted into a "petroleum fund," a sort
of national nest egg to provide for welfare payments well into
the twenty-first century. Today, Norway exports 19.9 billion kroner
worth of oil and 3 billion kroner of gas, compared with other
exports worth only 18.6 billion.
This bounty has provided the Norwegian economy with a considerable
buffer against the worst effects of recession. But for business
the dependence on oil ties them too closely to variations in the
world oil price. This is presently around $30 per barrel, but
only a year ago was as low as $10. Nevertheless, following the
recession in the late 1980s and early 90s, in which unemployment
reached around 5 percent, far less than in neighbouring Sweden
and Finland, subsequent basic agreements between industry
and the unions emphasised the need for Norwegian wage increases
to be lower than those of their rivals. According to the Norwegian
government, In the 1994-1997 Long Term Programme, the solidarity
alternative was presented as an overall strategy designed to
reduce unemployment. A main element of this strategy was that
the rise in wages should be lower in Norway than in trading partner
countries while the exchange rate remained stable, so that cost
competitiveness would improve" (emphasis in the original).
Living standards for workers remain relatively good, and comparable
with the best in Europe. Average pay is around 250,000 kroner
per annum (US$33,000). Also, the wage disparity between unskilled
manual workers and academics is relatively low, testifying to
a deeply rooted culture of equality in the working class.
While workers have been restricted to pay increases around
the inflation level, much publicity has recently been given to
the 29 million kroner pension scheme and "golden parachute"
kindly donated to Harald Norvik, CEO of the state-owned oil company
Statoil. Other Statoil directors have received similar packages,
as have the directors of Norsk Hydro. The head of the construction
concern TNC Kvaerner would receive 169 million kroner should he
retire tomorrow. Industrial analysts expect directors' pay to
continue increasing, despite the fact that it has gone up 45 percent
in the last three years.
The trade unions fully accept this. Yvgne Hågensen sits
on the Statoil board and had personally approved Norvik's pay
increase. Hågensen, who will receive a 7 million kroner
pension when he retires from the LO, also sits on the board of
Norge Bank, the central bank. Some recent statements from the
bank are quite illuminating. On March 17, just as the new Labour
government of Jens Stoltenberg took office, the head of Norge
Bank stated, "The economy needs creative destruction to develop.
The tendency may have been for the Norwegian authorities to provide
various type of support to businesses and industries that have
existed for some time."
Elsewhere, the bank explains that Norway has not developed
an IT and telecommunications industry comparable to those of its
Scandinavian neighbours. What this means is that the Norwegian
government is looking for a means to divert resources from social
spending to more profitable activities, a perspective fully shared
by the trade unions.
After the strike vote, all the "social partners"
made token statements criticising corporate pay-outs. Hågensen
spoke at a May Day demonstration scattered with protests against
corporate greed, denouncing pay-outs for which he was personally
responsible. Prime Minister Stoltenberg insisted, "Moderation
must apply to everyone, and a lack of moderation has made a demanding
situation all the more difficult." Stoltenberg was also reported
to be considering guidelines for management pay, similar to Swedish
rules limiting "golden parachutes" to twice annual earnings.
Norvik even offered to hand back a portion of his pay-out.
Their hope is that by making some expressions of remorse and
small concessions they can push through the present wage round,
allowing two years of industrial peace, during which time the
attacks on social spending can be speeded up. Immediately after
the strike was concluded, Stoltenberg promised "billions"
of kroner worth of budget cuts.
See Also:
Norwegian Labour Party, Conservatives
and Progress Party oust Bondevik Government
[15 March 2000]
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