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Pay deal in the German public sector
By Peter Schwarz
21 January 2003
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A nationwide strike by three million German public sector workers
was averted at the last minute on January 9. National, state and
local authorities agreed on a wage deal with the public sector
trade union Ver.di that evening. The following day the trade union
pay commission agreed to the agreement, with 106 votes in favour,
18 against and 5 abstentions.
Ver.di threatened to strike after employers rejected a settlement
on January 6 that had been agreed by mediators and accepted by
the trade union side. The latest deal is somewhat less than the
package offered Monday, but substantial enough to allow the chairman
of Ver.di, Frank Bsirske, to save face.
Bsirske defended the settlement with the declaration, We
are approaching the three percent. He had previously insisted
that the union was not prepared to accept any offer less than
three percent. In reality, the deal approximates the zero wage
package insisted on by the employers.
It envisages a wage increase of 2.4 percent for the current
year, with an extra one percent at the beginning and again in
the middle of 2004. A single extra payment will be made to compensate
workers for the last two months of 2002. In addition, wages in
the former East Germany, which still lag behind rates in the west
of the country, are supposed to reach the western rate between
2007 and 2009.
The wage agreement is to run for a total of 27 monthsa
concession regarded as a victory for the employers. On a yearly
basis, the increase amounts to less than two percent, which roughly
parallels current inflation levels. The pay rise is accompanied
by additional concessions. For example, the automatic increase
built into wage rates (based on the age of the employee) will
be halved over the next two years.
In addition, all employees are expected to sacrifice one holiday,
and wages will be paid at the end instead of the middle of the
month. This is equivalent to an additional half-months saving
for the employers.
The agreement deal was preceded by an aggressive, and at times
hysterical campaign against the Ver.di wage demand. German Interior
Minister Otto Schily (SPDSocial Democratic Party) led the
discussions for the employers and repeatedly threatened a zero
wage package plus redundancies. In the middle of the negotiations,
the state government of Berlin, a coalition of the SPD and the
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), withdrew from the national
employers organisation in a move that freed them from having
to accept the result of the national talks.
Business representatives and many newspaper commentaries called
on the employers to accept a strike rather than make any concessions
to the unions. On January 7 the Süddeutsche Zeitung published
a commentary under the headline If Necessary, a Strike.
It said, In the short term it is almost always cheaper to
avoid a strike through economically unreasonable wage concessions,
but in the long term this can have disastrous consequences. Therefore,
it is sometimes better for the economy to hold out in the face
of industrial action rather than come to an agreement too quickly.
The German Institute for Economic Research (DIW), which never
misses an opportunity to warn of dangers to the economy, recommended
that employers take a hard line in the negotiations and declared:
Even a protracted strike in the public service would not
have a significant effect on the economic situation.
The peak of the campaign against public sector workers came
with an article by veteran Social Democrat and former chancellor
Helmut Schmidt. The article appeared on the front page of the
Die Zeit magazine, one day before the final deal, with
the provocative headline Down with Blackmail. Schmidt
declared that there was absolutely no justification for a strike
against the public interest. The national treasury
was empty, he said.
In such a situation, what is necessary is political driveand
courage, the former chancellor wrote. Should the strike
take place and last three to four weeks, as a high-ranking Ver.di
functionary warned, then those in the federal and state governments
have a chance to demonstrate their ability to act. There must
finally be an end to blanket national wage regulations and other
national generally binding tariffs.
Schmidt applauded the decision by the Berlin Senate to quit
the employers federation, because, he went on to say, the
existing system serves only to cement organisational and
bureaucratic power, on both the employers organisations
side and that of the trade unions. He concluded by declaring
that he still had regard for the high value of free trade
unions, but he was opposed to blackmailing the population.
The settlement was praised by a few trade union functionaries,
such as the chairman of the German trade union federation (DGB),
Michael Sommer, who expressed his relief that there would be no
strike. Chancellor Gerhard Schröder also declared his satisfaction
with the deal, which he described as thoroughly reasonable
and just about tolerable from the standpoint of public finances.
In the discussions on the deal itself, Schröder took a
back seat and left the dirty work to his interior minister, Schily.
Schröder is relying on the support of the trade unions for
his plans for the introduction of an extensive cheap labour sector,
combined with cuts in social welfare support.
Most of the trade union rank and file supported the deal through
clenched teeth, convinced that Ver.di would not get much more
even with a strike. However, from the ranks of business, the political
opposition and state and local representatives, a volley of hostile
fire was directed against the settlement.
One of the first to comment was the ex-president of the German
business association, Hans-Olaf Henkel, who declared that the
deal would cost 100,000 jobs. The head of the Free Democratic
Party (FDP), Guido Westerwelle, criticised public authorities
for giving into blackmail by the Ver.di union. The
chair of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Angela Merkel,
indicated her relief that a strike had been avoided, but declared
that the price was too high. The deal was also criticised by leading
representatives of the German banks and financial institutions.
Representatives of the individual states and local authorities
reacted to the deal by declaring that they would implement drastic
reductions in public services, together with additional reductions
in personnel. The mayor of the city of Magdeburg, Lutz Trümper
(SPD), announced that between 400 and 500 posts would be cut by
the year 2006. The business manager of the city and local authority
for the state of Thuringia, Thomas Lenz, said that the deal far
exceeded the budgets of the authorities in the east of the country.
We do not have the money. We have to compensate for every
wage and salary increase by cutting personnel, investments and
services for the general public, he declared.
Numerous cities and municipalities, particularly in the east
of the country, threatened to follow the example of Berlin by
quitting the employers federation and negotiate their own local
arrangement. State-level politicians, including some SPD ministers,
called for similar measures.
The prospect emerges of the dissolution in the public service
sector of nationally agreed wage levels, in favour of local dealsa
development that has been long underway in the private sector.
Local deals are generally regarded as a more efficient mechanism
for putting pressure on workers. In 1995 the wages and conditions
of 72 percent of all workers in the former West Germany were covered
by a blanket agreement. By 1990, this figure had dropped to 63
percent, with just 45 percent of all workers in the former East
Germany covered.
The main argument used by all of those opposed to the public
sector wage deal is that the treasuries are empty.
It is true that the situation for the public purse is catastrophic,
especially for local authorities. They are expected to run a deficit
of 8 billion euros for the coming year, driving total indebtedness
to 94 billion.
This state of affairs, however, is the result of political
decisions taken over the last decade by the governments of both
Schröder and his conservative (CDU) predecessor, Helmut Kohl,
who introduced measures to reduce the financial contributions
made by large companies and rich individuals to the public purse.
As a result, in 2001 the income for local authorities from
commercial taxes plunged by 11.5 percent. At the same time, state
and federal authorities increased their share of income from the
taxes from 20 percent to 30 percent, at the expense of local municipalities.
The growth of unemployment and poverty has also hit local authorities,
with a marked rise in the number of people dependent on social
welfare payments. Such social expenditure has increased by more
than 30 percent over the last ten years. Public expenditure on
personnel, on the other hand, has stagnated since the middle of
the 1990s. In relation to the gross national product, such expenditures
have declined over the past 12 years from 9.5 percent to 8 percent.
Ver.di is well aware of these developments, which it deals
with in its own magazine Publik. But the
union has no alternative to offer. Under pressure from its members
on one side and threats from the business community and public
sector employers on the other, the union strives to intensify
its collaboration with the SPD and Greens, and suppress social
conflict. Many of the union functionaries are members of either
the SPD or, like Chairman Bsirske, the Greens.
The reaction of the SPD-Green government to the stagnating
economy, growing unemployment and increasing international tensions
has been to move sharply to the right and adopt the social programme
of Germanys conservative opposition. The governments
labour minister, Wolfgang Clement, who is notorious for his close
links to business circles, has become the new rising star of the
SPD, while the Green Party is trying to out-trump Germanys
free market liberal FDP on economic issues.
In his article for Die Zeit Helmut Schmidt recalled
an interesting episode from the year 1974. Schmidt had just been
appointed chancellor and had a personal discussion with the chairman
of the public service union at that time, Heinz Kluncker of the
ÖTV. The ÖTV was pursuing a campaign for a significant
increase in wages, but Schmidt threatened to wage a public campaign
against the union. Schmidt writes: The result was an agreement
that was justifiable economically and avoided a destructive strike.
Schmidt forgot to mention that his turn to the right in social
and political matters, which he continued in the ensuing years
and which corresponded to the course taken in many other countries,
opened the way for the right wing: Helmut Kohl in Germany, Ronald
Reagan in the US and Margaret Thatcher in Britain. In similar
fashion today, the SPD and Green Party, with their attacks, supported
by the unions, on wages and job conditions, are creating anew
conditions for the return of the right wing.
Countering this development is a political task. It requires
the construction of a new, genuinely socialist party of the working
class that places the needs of the population as a whole before
the profit interests of big business.
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