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France: strikes, protests mount against plant closings and
pension cuts
By Alex Lefebvre
11 February 2003
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The worsening economic situation in France has triggered layoffs
and plant closings throughout the country. These, together with
the governments anti-pension offensive, have provoked a
wave of strikes and protests, throwing the Raffarin government
off balance.
Metaleurop, a metals firm operating in the northern French
town of Noyelles-Godault, announced that it was closing its lead-producing
factory there, which employs 830 people in a town of roughly 5,000.
The firm further enraged townspeople and public opinion by refusing
to include any cleanup plan, even though it acknowledges that
the factory has severely polluted the area. Many children in the
region suffer from lead poisoning.
Daewoo-Orion closed its cathode tube plant at Mont-Saint-Martin
in eastern France with a loss of 550 jobs. After resistance to
the closing from workers, the factory burned, leading to a rapid
liquidation and closing of the facility. The press almost universally
labeled the fire suspect, and Prime Minister Jean
Pierre Raffarin added, When a factory burns, one must know
why.
Many other major firms have announced mass layoffs. Arcelor,
the steel maker, will eliminate several thousand jobs as it closes
mills in Belgium and eastern France. Pechiney, the aluminum-producing
and packing company, will fire 600 workers. In Southern France
the Houillères-de-Provence coal mine in Gardanne closed,
citing the need to prepare security measures for the final abandonment
of the mine and the lower price of coal extracted in Africa and
Asia.
LU, the food giant, will destroy roughly 2,000 jobs by closing
biscuit factories in Calais and Evry, promising that it will convert
the facilities into shopping malls and hire back its fired employeesalthough
it is unclear what sort of a pay cut will be involved. GIAT, the
defense contractor that builds the French armys Leclair
tank, is reportedly considering firing 3,000 of its 6,700 employees
as it closes five of its nine industrial facilities. Further job
losses are threatened at the airline Airlib, ACT Manufacturing,
Noos, and Grimaud Logistique.
These layoffs come on top of the recent announcement that 100,000
jobs were lost in France in 2002, in a trend that seems to be
accelerating: 17,700 of these losses came in December alone. These
job loss statistics do not include the present wave of mass layoffs.
The center-left daily Le Monde indicated that government
officials do not expect an improvement of the job situation
in the coming months: the prospects for new hiring are mediocre,
and CEO investment plans are nil.
Workers have responded to layoffs, together with the kickoff
of the governments pension-cutting drive, with a wave of
protests and strikes. Some 2,000 people marched silently in Noyelles-Godault,
some wearing I support Metaleurop workers armbands.
Hundreds of Daewoo-Orion workers marched in Paris under banners
that read, Daewoo is a thief, the state its accomplice.
Miners blocked the entrance to the Gardanne mine. Strikes are
spreading at Air France, Paris public transport, the education
sector, and at newspaper companies.
The Arcelor closings have triggered strikes in Belgium, where
Arcelor is under legal obligation to renovate certain facilities
that it has slated for closure. The Belgian government is divided
over whether or not to press for damages. Arcelor is planning
on firing 1,500 steelworkers in Liège; officials have calculated
that the town will lose a further 5,000 jobs indirectly.
The conservative Raffarin government has responded to the workers
mobilizations and public anger over the layoffs with a shift in
its public rhetoric. In the course of several days, Raffarin has
gone from embracing entrepreneurship, [which] for me, means
values to proclaiming how revolted he is by
the mass layoffs, which his own legal reforms have made easier
by gutting previous layoff legislation.
The mounting opposition has also produced changes in the public
posture of the Socialist Party. The head of one of the openly
pro-business factions of the party, Laurent Fabius, has coined
the term CEO hoodlums to decry what he considers to
be isolated cases of unjust layoffsdespite the fact that
the right wing of the Socialist Party, in the person of Jean-Marie
Bockel, mayor of Mulhouse, was recently proclaiming that social
justice had to be compatible with free enterprise.
While declaring that it cannot oppose the layoffs,
the Raffarin government has announced plans to give jobs to laid-off
workers and funds for regional development in industrial areas
hit hard by layoffs. As an Associated Press release noted, These
measures are not far removed from the methodology of previous
governments. The main difference would seem to be that the
Raffarin government, with its fixation on increasing police and
military spending and cutting taxes for the wealthy, has even
fewer resources for social spending than its predecessors.
However, internal government documents leaked to Le Monde
indicate that the government is not planning on implementing even
these types of measures. The documents argue instead for an attempt
to convince workers that they should welcome losing their jobs.
They stress the need to make workers feel that layoffs are
a source of dynamism in the economy about which they
should not have a defensive attitude. Workers should
be encouraged to undergo job retraining, and financial resources
should be focused on hard-hit sectorssomething
which may be difficult, the documents note, because current
crises involve many sectors, some of which seemed up until recently
to have brilliant futures.
This hopelessness masquerading as policy gives a palpable sense
of a government in crisis, underscored by falling approval ratings
of public officials and repeated press commentaries on the governments
limited economic maneuvering room.
French unions have responded to the crisis by criticizing some
of Raffarins legal moves that make it easier to sack workers.
However, their perspective limits itself to the hope of reinstating
previous laws, so as to return to a period when companies had
somewhat more generous severance packages. For the union leaders,
this latest round of job-cutting is one more regrettable sacrifice
that workers will ultimately have to make in the interests of
corporate profitability.
While visiting a hot-rolled steel facility slated for closure
by Arcelor, Georges Muschiati, general secretary of the CGT, vented
his frustration: The Fensch valley steelworkers did what
they had to in order to make the site profitable. And theyre
going to get screwed again! For the union official, the
workers doing what they had to do meant accepting
decades of job cuts, in which the Lorraine regions steel
industry went from employing 100,000 workers in 1960 to 12,000
today, of which at least 1,500 are now slated to lose their jobs.
See Also:
France: Government greets
New Year with austerity measures
[10 January 2003]
French teachers, parents
march against government cuts
[16 December 2002]
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