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French government encourages employers jobs blackmail
By Pierre Mabut
9 September 2004
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In recent weeks, French companies have launched a number of
significant attacks on workers jobs and living standards.
These include firms threatening to relocate as a means of imposing
wage cuts, such as auto parts maker Boschs successful effort
to make its employees accept 36 hours work for 35 hours
pay or face the transfer of production to the Czech Republic.
Then there was the hasty dismantling of production lines in
24 hours by Snappon GDX Automotive and their being shipped to
the Czech Republic. The operation took place under the protective
eye of the CRS riot police. The 225 jobs disappeared overnight.
Snappon is an automotive parts manufacturer and a subsidiary of
the US group Gencorp.
Management had previously tried to remove its machinery during
the night of July 15, but was prevented from doing so by barricades
erected by workers. However, on August 26, the firm was armed
with a judges decision to protect the rights of property
and trade without hindrance. Although the judge had also
empowered the works council to legally oppose the firings, le
préfet, the local national state official, conveniently
shelved the matter until Snappon had completed its business of
relocation to the Czech Republic.
The companys relocation is in line with its goal of lowering
production costs (especially labour costs) and remaining close
to its clients such as PSA Peugeot, which is setting up a new
auto production plant in eastern Europe.
Due to President Jacques Chiracs political weakness in
the wake of his partys recent regional and European election
defeats, the government has made a show of concern about the social
cohesion of the country. In reality, the Chirac regime fully
supports French businesses scouring the globe for the cheapest
possible labour and generally being competitive in
the face of global market pressures.
Nonetheless, the right-wing government of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin is coming under increasing pressure from the employers
federation MEDEF (Movement of French Enterprises) to abandon its
social cohesion policy. Ernest-Antoine Seillière,
the head of the federation, speaking at its annual meeting this
month, made it clear that he thought the Chirac-Raffarin policy
was far too easy on the socially deprived, characterising the
governments approach as public assistance in the extreme.
This was a reference to the governments having dropped
its plan, in the face of widespread opposition, to spread a scheduled
increase in the smic (the statutory national minimum wage)
over a two-year period. Seillière launched his broadside
against social welfare in a recent interview published in the
magazine Figaro.
MEDEF is happier with Raffarins attack on the unemployed,
which will oblige the jobless to accept virtually any job anywhere
after six months, on pain of losing some or all of their unemployment
entitlements. Baron Seillière, in the Figaro interview,
is unequivocal on one question: Its better to work
longer and keep ones job than sanctify the 35-hour week
and lose it.
Recently, the government has modified labour legislation enabling
employers to renegotiate union agreements on the 35-hour week
on a plant-by-plant basis, thus paving the way for other Bosch-type
deals. The doctrine that no local agreement could impose worse
conditions on workers than a national agreement, which has been
the basis of labour relations since the war, has been severely
undermined by changes in the Labour Code drawn up by François
Fillon, then the minister of social affairs, labour and solidarity
and now the minister of education.
Seillière underlined at the opening of the MEDEF meeting
that the Bosch companys wage-cutting was a demonstration
of social gains having to give way to economic necessity.
Yet another blow to workers, this time in the poultry industry,
came from Douxthe biggest chicken producer in Europe. On
August 26, the company announced the abandonment of the shorter
working week, cutting the average wage, according to the unions,
by 500 euros a year for workers who are already earning the legal
minimum wage of 7.61 euros an hour.
Elsewhere, the Sediver company, part of the Italian group Vertoarredo,
plans to move production of electric glass insulators to its subsidiaries
in China and Brazil unless the workforce accepts a 25-30 percent
wage reductionwhich, according to the company, would save
150 out of the 294 jobs. Trade union representatives believe that
even with the concessions demanded, the company will close in
two years.
In eastern France, the American manufacturer of electronic
components, Vishay, has decided to close its plant at Colmar,
putting 292 workers out of a job. In order, as the company put
it in its press release, to safeguard competitive activity,
the assembling of diodes will be regrouped on the sites in China
and Hungary, and the activity in Colmar ended.
The Vishay unit at Colmar specialises in diodes and transistors
destined for the auto, computer and household electronic goods
manufacturing sector. The company announcement goes on to explain
its motives for relocation by saying, This specialised division
in diodes is faced with a market characterised by the massive
displacement of electronic manufacturing and component suppliers
to low-cost countries, and more especially Asia, a continuous
drop in retail prices and a strong slowdown of growth is expected
as from 2005.
Workers at Vishay estimate that wage rates are around 40 percent
lower at the sites in the Czech Republic. Originally, the site
was set up in Colmar by the American conglomerate ITT in the 1960s,
employing 600 people. The number of jobs gradually fell until
American Semiconductors took over and merged with Vishay several
years ago.
With the French national unemployment rate standing at 9.8
percent (20 percent for youth) and long-term unemployment steadily
increasing, the unions have made a show of rejecting in principle
any flexibility in the law on the 35-hour week. In practice, however,
a large hole has already been blown in the law, as companies have
the right to negotiate at plant level all the givebacks they are
demanding.
Faced with the consequences of the European Unions eastern
expansion and the broader impact of globalisation, the nationally
based unions are incapable of resisting company blackmail and
the threat of relocation. Their only answer is an appeal for direct
collaboration with the government, insisting that they not be
left out of the process of negotiating away workers jobs
and rights.
At the end of talks with the government this week, the CGC
and CFTC unions, covering mostly middle managers and supervisors,
complained that employers were breaking industrial sector agreements
by directly appealing to workers at plant level in order to undermine
solidarity. The answer, they told the government, was to negotiate
any adjustments at sector level. For his part, the
leader of the Communist Party-dominated CGT trade union, Bernard
Thibault, called for an urgent tripartite meeting of government,
employers and unions to discuss a plan for anti-relocation.
Meanwhile, the bosses leader, Seillière, after
having bemoaned the fact that Raffarins regime had supposedly
given nothing to employers in its three years in office, was promptly
rewarded with a 900-million-euro tax break on company profits
by the government, which has promised to abolish the 3 percent
surtax on profits in 2005.
The same type of jobs blackmail and attacks on workers rights
carried out in France is taking place in Germany, all across Europe
and around the globe. But the trade union leaders ignore the international
reality behind the relocation blackmail: the drive of capital
to seek out the lowest production costs on the planet under conditions
of globalisation. They pretend that some national solution can
be found for this problem and portray the nation-state as a guarantor
of workers social interests.
See Also:
France: ruling parties in
crisis as Chirac and Sarkozy spar
[4 May 2004]
France: May Day demonstrators
protest attacks on social programs
[3 May 2004]
France: Government parties
routed in regional elections
[31 March 2004]
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