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WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East
Israel: Histadrut suspends general strike against pension
reform
By David Cohen
15 November 2003
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Israels Histadrut trade union federation and the finance
ministry headed by former Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu have
agreed a deal that brings the governments plans to severely
undermine workers pension rights significantly closer.
Under the compromise drafted by the National Labor Court earlier
this month, Histadrut has agreed to lift its threat of a general
strike against the pension reforms for a period of 48 hours, beginning
this week. In return, a court order forbidding the unions to strike
for longer than four hours is to be lifted. No agreement has yet
been reached on the unions call for the reforms to be postponed
by six months, to enable talks on the future of pension funds
to be held. However, Histadrut and the finance ministry are said
to be meeting to formulate a position on the governments
proposals.
Netanyahus plans aim at a historic reform of pension
funds, massive cuts in the payments made by the National Insurance
Institute (NII, the government agency responsible for welfare
benefits), privatisation of key economic areas and mass dismissals
in the public services.
Central to the changes are plans to raise the age of retirement
for all workers to 67 years of age. Presently, women are entitled
to retire between 60 and 65; men can retire at the age of 65.
At these ages, retired workers receive either pension paymentsif
they are covered by one of the private pension fundsor National
Insurance Institute senior citizen allowances (less than $ 400
per month). The government says that the reforms are necessary
to overcome mounting deficits in the pension funds and NII allowances.
The equalising of the pension age does not apply to widows
and widowers. Under the new proposals, the widow of a retired
man will be eligible to receive 60 percent of his pension; in
contrast, the widower of a retired woman will be eligible to receive
just 30 percent of her pension.
The right-wing press had bitterly attacked threats of a general
strike in opposition to the reforms. Writing in the Jerusalem
Post, Uriel Linn, who is currently President of the Federation
of Israeli Chambers of Commerce, and served in the 12th Knesset
as chairman of the Constitution, Law and Justice Committee said:
In a properly functioning democratic polity, however,
the Histadrut should not be able to call a strike whenever it
wants, wherever it wants and for any reason it deems justified.
Countering the right to strike are solid and substantial rights
of the general public, and the two must always be balanced...
the right to strike was never established in Israeli law. That
right has been recognised as part of labor relations in our society,
and established in court rulings. But there are other basic rights
that are explicitly reflected in the states basic laws,
such as the right of ownership, the freedom of employment and
the right of movement. A labor organisation must not abuse these
basic rights.
He added, In many cases the Histadrut challenges the
states decisions through appeals to democratic principles.
They are in fact operating to thwart the democratic process. Instead
of fighting in the Knesset for public opinion, they choose to
directly strike at the business sector and the general public.
Limits should be imposed on strikes in monopolistic services in
the state service.
The reforms come against a background of mounting crisis in
the Israeli economy that has deepened in the past year. Recently
two large companies announced heavy layoffs. Housing and Construction
(Shikun UBinui) announced it would dismiss 430 workers,
while the Blue Square Israel food retail marketing chain has said
it will fire 250 workers and close 10 loss-making stores.
The Haaretz reported, Most of Housing and Constructions
layoffs are to be among management and engineers, with 230 of
them from its subsidiary Solel Boneh (81.7 percent held) and 200
from another construction subsidiary, Herut. The remaining employers
are to take a pay cut of between 5-15 percent, the company announced.
According to the annual report of the National Insurance Institute,
one in five families lives below the poverty line and an average
of almost one in three children live in poverty. This is a total
of 1.32 million people, including 618,000 children, out of a population
of 6.5 million Israelis.
According to the report, the number of people living below
the poverty line rose by 43,000 from 2001, 26,000 of which were
children. The number of children below the poverty line grew from
26.9 percent in 2001 to 28.1 percent in 2002. The poverty line
for a family of four was set in 2002 at $US1,000 a month in disposable
income, after taxes have been deducted and welfare payments received.
The Institute sets the poverty line at 50 percent of the median
disposable income in the economy.
Forty percent of those defined as poor in the report do have
jobs, but their income is not high enough to push them above the
poverty line. More than 50 percent of Israels workers earn
only $US720 a month. In the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip,
60 percent of Palestinian families live below a poverty line of
US $ 60 a month, according to report released earlier this year
by the World Bank.
Yohanan Shtessman, head of the NII, cautioned that without
welfare benefits the number of families living below the poverty
line would almost double to more than 600,000. Without the
benefits Israeli society would fall apart and we would reach a
point of civil war, he warned.
The NIIs report for 2003 will be even gloomier: some
70,000 more Israelis are expected to join the ranks of the poor,
almost 40,000 of them children. This is due in part to the governments
decision to cut welfare benefits, including a 30 percent cut in
income supplements and a 20-25 percent reduction in child allowances.
I promise you that if you dont invest in Israel,
youll be losing a lot of money, Netanyahu told foreign
investors at a Go Europe conference at Tel Avivs
Hilton Hotel at the beginning of the week. Israel is an
amazing investment. Anyone who failed to listen to me half a year
ago has already lost out on a 50 percent gain on the Tel Aviv
Stock Exchange and will continue to lose out if they do not invest
now, Netanyahu stated with confidence.
He praised government plans aimed at reducing expenditures,
including cutting public sector salaries, and reducing allowances
and taxes. All the companies the state of Israel owns will
be put up for sale at one stage or another, the finance
minister vowed, with the exception of the Israel Aircraft
Industries. That one will take a little more time. We shall privatise
the Electric Corporation and the banks, Tnuva [Israels biggest
milk state-owned industry], and first of all the ports,
Netanyahu added.
The Sharon governments assault on Israeli workers living
standards is intimately connected to its brutal offensive against
the Palestinians. The ongoing repression of Palestinian resistance
in the Occupied Territories, including the construction of an
apartheid-style wall between Israel and the occupied areas and
regular army incursions into refugee camps, is being paid for
by plundering the social gains of the working class.
See Also:
Israel: Privatisation drive
follows governments austerity plan
[25 June 2003]
Mass unemployment in Israel,
but austerity plan approved
[24 May 2003]
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