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Israel: Workers struggles intensify despite Histadrut
betrayal
By David Cohen
23 January 2004
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Another wave of strikes, workers struggles and anti-capitalist
demonstrations is being felt in Israel just two weeks after the
Histadrut trade union federation reached an agreement with the
finance ministry ending sanctions in the public sector. The agreement
between the trade union bureaucracy and the government headed
by Ariel Sharon and his Finance Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, was
signed after the Histadrut agreed to mass lay-offs in the public
services and state-owned companies in return for changes in the
governments austerity plan for 2004s budget.
Subsequently the Union of Local Authorities (ULA) renewed its
threats to take strike action in schools, announcing at
the end of the month we will be returning the responsibility for
education services to the government.
At the end of December, workers protested against the cuts
of NIS 0.5 billion from the education budget. That strike ended
with negotiations, which stalemated a week ago. Thousands of municipal
workers and dozens of mayors demonstrated in front of the Finance
Ministry in Jerusalem in protest over Netanyahus plans to
lay off thousands of workers, among them teachers and social workers,
and cut the local authorities budget by more than NIS 2
billion. Among others, municipal workers will not receive the
public, school buses will stop running and welfare services will
be closed.
The ULA is demanding that the government return NIS 1 billion
to the local authorities budgets. Most of the money would
be used to balance the budget deficits of struggling local authorities.
In addition the ULA is demanding that the treasury return NIS
670,000 to education and welfare budgets previously transferred
from government ministries to the local authorities.
Israels general health service has announced the firing
of 350 workers in community clinics. The employees, all of whom
are considered temporary, will be laid off as part of a special
agreement with the union. The services management tried
to fire a larger number of workers due to its NIS 400 million
deficit, but made limited concessions during the year-long negotiations
that included a formal declaration of a workplace dispute. The
350 workers to be fired will join another 600 workers who voluntarily
left the service or took early retirement last year.
The daily Haaretz reported, [the service] preferred
to fire the 350 temporary workers, because their severance costs
were relatively low compared to veteran or tenured workers. The
employees were all hired after 1999, and were included in second-generation
work agreements with lower benefits than veteran workers and with
salaries 22 percent lower than permanent employees. By firing
these workers before they reach permanent employee status ...
[the health service] will reduce its deficit by tens of millions
of shekels in five years.
The struggle continues in the Histadruts Longshoremens
Union, which declared a labour dispute a week agoblaming
the government and the Ports Authority for breaching signed labour
agreements. Technically, 15 days after declaring a labour dispute,
workers have the right to strike.
Adva center, a leading Israeli center for Information
on Equality and Social Justice, published sharp criticism of Netanyahu
and Sharons plan. The budget proposal for 2004, under the
unintentionally ironic title, Plan for the Recovery
of the Israeli EconomyStage Two, is, Adva commented,
a direct continuation of the destructive fiscal policies
promoted by the Sharon governments over the past two years ...
many of the economic measures taken in Israel had little to do
with the need to reduce government spending in the wake of a decrease
in tax revenues: rather, they were a reflection of, firstly, a
right-wing, neo-liberal social and economic agenda, aimed at downsizing
the state, at up fronting the role of big business in political
and social affairs, at debilitating the unions, lowering the cost
of labour and diluting the social support systems.
Under the pretense of the public coffers are empty,
the governments of Israel have been carrying out a right-wing
social revolution, tearing asunder structural and constitutional
arrangements that have been in existence for years, it stressed.
The center argued, The pretense of the public coffers
are empty cannot explain the way in which the Government
chose to cope with the conflict and the terrorist attacks. It
was not a matter of safeguarding home and hearth,
as contended, but rather one of repeatedly re-conquering Palestinian
territories, weakening the Palestinian Authority, holding on to
all the settlements and even expanding them. Despite the fiscal
crisis and the threat of a financial crisis, the Government was
able to find large enough sums of money to increase the defense
budget, to keep a large army busy defending the settlements, and
even to invest billions in a wall, whose cost is far higher than
originally planned, after its location was determined in such
a way as to bite off huge chunks of Palestinian territory. These
measures did not contribute one iota to economic stability.
The report concludes: The acts of the Sharon governments
over the past two years have exacted an enormous price and dealt
a devastating blow to broad sectors of Israeli society. The combination
of a right-wing social and economic policy and an aggressive foreign
policy led to the transfer of a growing portion of the collective
wealth into the hands of the few; an increase in the financial
burdens of the middle class; an increase in the ranks of the poor;
and a weakening of the states ability to maintain a reasonable
balance between rich and poor.
The entire document can be found at http://www.adva.org/Budget2004TwoYearsDestructivePolicies.htm
See Also:
Israel: Histadrut
suspends general strike against pension reform
[15 November 2003]
The political dead
end of Labour Zionism
[5 April 2001]
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