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: Austria
Austrias biggest strike in 50 years
By Markus Salzmann
12 May 2003
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On May 5, plans by Viennas right-wing conservative government
to implement drastic cuts in the pension system resulted in the
first major political strike in Austria in over 50 years. About
half a million people took part in the strikefar more than
expected.
Walkouts occurred throughout the public and private sectors.
Printers had already gone on strike and the only newspapers to
appear were supplemental emergency editions. Thousands of strike
actions in the form of workplace meetings and demonstrations paralysed
broad sections of public transport throughout the day. Railway
workers blocked freight trains; many schools and offices remained
closed. Blue and white collar workers in over 500 firms300
of them in the metal and textile industriesparticipated
in the strikes.
Demonstrations broke out in several major cities such as Salzburg,
where about 10,000 demonstrators took part in an evening march
through the city centre. Further protests are planned for May
13. As many as 70,000 teachers intend to stop work, and 5,500
schools will be closed. A mass rally will be held in the federal
capital, Vienna.
The Federation of Austrian Trade Unions (ÖGB) and its
constituent unions had called for the strike. Protest was directed
mainly against reforms to the pension system, planned by the ÖVP/FPÖ
(Austrian Peoples Party/Austrian Freedom Party) government.
The ruling coalition intends to implement massive cuts in pension
benefits for all workers.
Pension benefits are to be reduced on average by about 20 percent.
People retiring in the coming years already have to face a cutback
of around 15 percent. Reductions for younger workers will be even
more drastic.
The proposed reductions result from a change in the way periods
accredited to pension entitlement are calculated. From now on,
pensions are to be assessed after 40 years of work instead of
15, as in the most favourable cases presently. The age for early
retirement and deductions from early retirement pensions will
also be increased in stages up to 2009. At that time, men younger
than 61.5 and women younger than 56.5 will have to keep working
until they are 65 or 60 respectively. If a person nevertheless
retires earlierfor example, because he has lost his jobhe
or she will face hefty deductions for each year short of the official
retirement age. Concurrent with the slashing of state retirement
provision, new opportunities for private old-age insurance are
being explored.
The reform of the pension system constitutes the first stage
in the plundering of the entire social welfare system. The next
step will be a fundamental reform of the health system.
The indignation of Austrian workers is levelled not only at
the pension cuts. Conservatives, right-wingers and social democrats
have been attacking the social security system for more than 10
years. But the ruthless manner in which the government is now
attempting to push the law through parliament in only a few weeks
is inciting intense opposition. It is generally feared that the
attack on pensions heralds a much broader offensive against social
welfare. Previously well-nurtured forms of consensus politics,
directed towards achieving agreement with the trade unions on
all social questions, are to be jettisoned.
Berlins Tagesspiegel newspaper aptly observed:
Never before in Austria has such a serious assault on the
social welfare system been made; never before has the normal period
for appraisal and debate been reduced to a bare four weeks.
And never before has a federal chancellor paid so little attention
to his social partners who have been more or less secretly participating
in government over the past decades.
For its part, the right-of-centre government of Chancellor
Wolfgang Schüssel (ÖVP) is clearly intent on implementing
the cuts, regardless of the mounting opposition. Even Chamber
of Commerce President Leitls warnings that the government
is putting the countrys social stability at risk have had
no effect. In a recent interview, Finance Minister Martin Bartenstein
(ÖVP) arrogantly asserted that the government would not
yield to such coercion from the street; that would not be right
for the country.
The trade union leadership around ÖGB boss Fritz Versetnitsch
(SPÖAustrian Socialist Party) hesitated for a long
time before organising a strike. The trade unions are not opposed
in principle to the pension cuts and would have agreed to the
recommendations of the coalition government if offered an alternative
timetable for implementation. The unions are working out their
own programme of reforms and have offered to cooperate
with Schüssel on several occasions, only to have their recommendations
categorically rejected each time.
Trade union circles continually stressed that no strike would
be directed against the government and that it would not be a
political strike. Verzetnitsch asked the government again on the
Tuesday to resume negotiations with the unions.
The union leaders were determined to confine the strike and
keep it at an apolitical level in order to stave off a general
mobilisation against the government. For the ultraconservative
public service (GÖD) and private industry (GPA) trade unions,
any thought of political action was also out of the question.
Teacher representatives, for example, complained to the GÖD
that the strike had not been organised in a professional
way. The trade union plan consciously avoided simultaneous
strikes at all schools, and originally the protest against the
reform to the pension system was not to be linked to demands for
a better education system.
The opposition partiesSocial Democrats and Greensare
trying to exploit the strike for their own political purposes.
At the same time, they remain silent about the fact that they
themselves have drawn up plans for the dismantling of social services
that differ only in matters of detail from those of the government.
Over the past few days, the SPÖ, Greens and trade union
representatives tried to draw the government back to the negotiating
table. Their concern was not about any change to the pension system;
rather, they were worried about the danger of losing control of
the protests. Alexander van der Bellen, leader of the Greens,
warned the government of a radicalisation of the population.
Representatives of the ÖVP and FPÖ in parliament
will also vote against the draft law, putting a majority for the
governments recommendation in doubt. Above all, FPÖ
delegates, under the influence of their shadow chairman Jörg
Haider, have signalled their opposition. Haider is again sensing
a chance for himself, under conditions where the governmentconstituted
only a few months agocould fall apart with the collapse
of the reform, and Haider could well be in a position to take
the place of the current chairman of the FPÖ and vice-chancellor,
Herbert Haupt.
With a view to their own advantage, the Social Democrats and
Greens are trying to encourage the right-wing opposition around
Haider to pursue their oppositionist stance. Alfred Gusenbauer,
the SPÖ party leader, explained in an interview with the
magazine News: First well talk about how well
go about stopping these pension cuts. If were successful
in that, then therell possibly be a next step, which possibly
could mean new elections. And after that we can talk about further
steps.
Gusenbauer refrained from ruling out cooperation even with
the Haider faction. He spoke about the possibility of the FPÖ
repositioning itself and added: When the people speak, then
all the cards will have to be reshuffled. Haider also indicated
that he was open to such an outcome and declared that he too was
considering other combinations for a parliamentary majority.
See Also:
Austria: New government continues
austerity policy
[19 March 2003]
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