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Germany: Public sector strike needs a new political perspective
Statement by the Partei für Soziale Gleichheit (Socialist
Equality Party)
10 March 2008
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The nationwide strikes by public service employees, the strike
by Berlin public transit workers and the still unresolved train
drivers industrial dispute have developed into the largest
strike movement in Germany for several decades.
There is much more at stake than simply a wage increase or
better working conditions. The strikes enjoy an extraordinary
degree of public support despite the long delays and great inconvenience
they cause many people. Most think it is long overdue that at
last someone is standing up to the wholesale social cutbacks and
redistribution of wealth from those at the bottom to those at
the top. What began as an industrial dispute can rapidly turn
into a broad popular movement against the current social conditions.
In the past one and a half decades, a third of all public sector
jobs have been destroyed, some 2.2 million in total. While productivity
is constantly being raised and ever more is demanded of the workforce,
incomes are declining. In carrying through their attacks on the
public sector, the employers rely on the EUs Bolkestein
Directive governing services in the European internal market,
which is increasing the pressure on working people through constantly
depressing labour costs. State enterprises have in part been privatised
and the clearly lower wages and worse working conditions in the
private or semi-private companies are then used to leverage social
dumping.
Before the train drivers began their industrial dispute last
summer, their already low wages had sunk by ten percent in two
years. It is no different for workers employed by the Berliner
Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG, Berlin Transit Company). The contract agreed
two years earlier had drastically worsened working conditions
and workers lost up to twelve percent of their wages. At the same
time, Christmas bonuses were cut and holiday pay eliminated. New
staff receive less than two thirds of the previous wage.
These cutbacks in the state enterprises and in public administration
goes hand in hand with a wave of mass redundancies in the private
sector. Siemens is axing 7,000 jobs, BMW has announced the slashing
of 8,000 jobs, Nokia is closing its factory in Bochum and shifting
production to Romania, Deutsche Telekom has hived off 50,000 staff
into a low-cost in-house company, with lower wages and worse working
conditions. Almost daily, new job reductions and further welfare
cuts are announced.
At the same time, many companies are announcing record profits,
and the mounting wealth in the boardrooms assumes grotesque forms.
Porsche boss Wiedeking took home 54 million in the past
year, Deutsche Bank boss Ackermann pocketed 13 million,
Deutsche Bahn (German Railways) CEO Hartmut Mehdorn earned 3.2
million. The incomes of the chief executives of the companies
listed on Germanys DAX stock exchange have risen by 62 percent
since 2002. The wages and incomes of those further down the social
ladder have sunk by 13 percent since 1992, adjusted for inflation.
A corrupt finance oligarchy is plundering society, refusing
to pay taxes, and living in the lap of luxury while it preaches
sacrifice to everyone else. All the established political parties
lie at its feet. The 2007 reform of corporation tax means taxes
on the ordinary profits of big business were reduced from 25 to
15 percent, with taxes on profits derived from interest and dividends
being cut from 44 to 26 percent. This has led to an estimated
shortfall in government revenue of 10 billion this year.
Now government representatives are saying that the coffers are
empty, and there is no room for any wage increases in the public
service.
Lessons of the 1974 and 1992 strikes
After years of social devastation, the present strike movement
is the beginning of a counter-offensive. If it is to be successful,
it is necessary to draw up a critical balance sheet.
The present situation is not a complete surprise. It is a product
of the policy of social partnership practised for
many years by the trade unions and the employers. Without the
energetic support of the public service union Verdi, wages and
conditions could not have fallen to their present level. The tax
handouts of the rich, which have emptied the public coffers, are
less a result of the years of government under the Christian Democrats
(CDU/CSU) and Free Democrats, and are far more a product of the
Social Democratic Party-Green Party government of 1998-2005.
The two last large public service strikes took place decades
ago.
In 1974, in the midst of a recession, the ÖTV public service
union - one of the forerunners of Verdi - won a wage increase
of 11 percent. In 1971, workers had defended the government of
Willy Brandt (SPD) against a vote of no confidence by the CDU/CSU,
and the following year the SPD achieved its best ever election
result. Many workers set great hopes in the SPD, and called for
higher wages and better living conditions. In the winter of 1973/74
some ten million workers were involved in wages conflicts at one
point or another.
Chancellor Brandt clearly opposed a double-digit wage increase,
but was not able to suppress the wages movement. As a result,
he was soon replaced by Helmut Schmidt (SPD), who relied on the
trade union bureaucracy to beat back the wages offensive. To this
end, Schmidt brought some 15 high-ranking union officials into
his government as ministers or undersecretaries of state. Disillusion
with the rightward development of the SPD under Schmidt opened
the way for the CDU, and the Kohl government could then maintain
power for 16 years (1982-1998).
In the mid 1980s, social conflicts again increased, but in
1989 German reunification opened the way for an ideological campaign
over the alleged triumph of the capitalist free-market economy
enabling the Kohl government to stay in power another decade.
The collapse of East Germany and the other Stalinists regimes
in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union was anything but a triumph
of capitalism or a victory of liberty and democracy,
as proclaimed in all the official propaganda. In reality, the
globalization of production and the rapid development of new technologies
in transport and communications had undermined the foundations
of the nationally oriented Stalinist regimes. However, this development
was not limited to the east, but also undermined the policy of
social reformism, resulting in the rapid rightward development
of the SPD and the trade union bureaucracy - a development that
took place in all countries without exception.
In Germany, this became visible in 1992, in the second great
public service strike. The public sector strike was joined by
workers from Deutsche Bahn, Deutsche Post and even the police
and the white-collar DAG union; with some 330,000 engaged in action
for several days. However, ÖTV chair Monika Wulf-Mathies
(SPD) agreed a rotten compromise. The union leadership did not
want to place the Kohl government in danger under any circumstances.
In a strike ballot, a majority of union members voted against
the result of the negotiations, but nevertheless the union leadership
signed the contract . Two years later, Monika Wulf-Mathies received
her recompense when she was made an EU Commissioner for regional
development. Since 2001, she has headed policy and environment
for Deutsche Post World Net AG, with 380,000 employees one of
the largest logistics corporation in the world.
SPD-Green Party coalition and the trade unions
right turn
When the SPD and the Greens replaced the Kohl government in
1998 they could rely on the support of the German Federation of
Trade Unions (DGB). The service sector unions, which had merged
in 2001 to form Verdi, formed an important support for the SPD-Green
coalition government. In so far as they participated in protests
and demonstrations against the Hartz VI and Agenda 2010 welfare
and labour reforms, they did so in order to keep the situation
under control and prevent a serious struggle developing against
the Schröder government and its anti-social policies. In
autumn 2005, Verdi signed the TvöD (public sector contract),
which meant a drastic worsening of wages and conditions for those
employed by local, regional and national government.
Before the end of the year, when 50,000 workers opposed being
hived off into a cheap wage in-house company by Deutsche Telekom,
Verdi limited the strike to symbolic protests, agreed to the hive
off and forced the workers to accept four hours extra work each
week, while simultaneously their wages were lowered.
Things were no different in the IG Metall and all the other
DGB unions. Union officials and works council representatives
everywhere put their signature to contracts that led to cuts in
wages and benefits. The DGB unions established a veritable contract
cartel, which acts like a straitjacket for the workers. Above
all, this is what the train drivers have experienced in the past
months.
The principal demand of the train drivers union (GDL) was and
is an independent contract agreement. The original
wage demand for a 31 percent increase only became possible after
the GDL quit the contract negotiating body which included Transnet
and the other rail unions. In the past years, these organizations
had agreed to a drastic curtailing of wages and the dismantling
of social conditions.
No sooner had the train drivers launched their strike than
Transnet, with the support of the DGB, began to function openly
as the most despicable form of strike breaker. Provided with financial
support from management, Transnet acts as a kind of house
union and is in close contact with the government through
the auspices of the SPD. Transnet boss Norbert Hansen (SPD) directed
his aggressive attacks against the GDL and with Deutsche Bahn
CEO Hartmut Mehdorn agreed to prevent the GDL achieving any kind
of independence. Under all circumstances, the DGB contract cartel
should be maintained.
Despite the enormous pressure from management, Transnet, the
DGB and government train drivers have not given way so far. Their
struggle is seen by many as a prelude to a rebellion against the
constant welfare cuts, and has the support of many workers and
the general population. The numbers of those resigning from Transnet,
Verdi and the other DGB unions and joining the GDL are increasing.
In light of this situation, Verdi saw itself forced to make
a left manoeuvre. The union has clearly expanded the number of
protest strikes in the past days. But no one should hold any illusions
in Verdi, which is merely trying to let off steam and keep control,
in order to be able to strangle the struggle with a rotten compromise.
In the meantime, a conciliation process has been introduced, meaning
that strikes are outlawed until April. The Verdi leadership will
be doing everything it can in order to further isolate the striking
engine drivers and BVG workers and to undermine the fighting capacity
of public service employees.
A question of perspective
It is impermissible to allow Verdi to keep the initiative and
strangle the movement. Even if the strikers were to receive a
wage rise of a few percent, rapid price rises would mean that
nothing had been won. Moreover, a large cheap wage sector now
exists and both public and private sector employers possess various
ways of circumventing existing contracts or cancelling them.
The present strike movement must become the starting point
for the building of a political movement that opposes the ruling
elite and a social system, which subordinates all areas of life
to the profit principle and the personal enrichment of a minority.
In other words: It is necessary to prepare for a long and systematic
political struggle.
Every union and every party that today accepts the framework
of the capitalist profit system is doomed to failure. Only by
tackling the problem at its roots and striving for a society that
elevates the needs of the population above the profit interests
of big business can a progressive solution be found.
In the present strike movement this requires strict control
over the leadership of the strike, the negotiations commission
and all other trade union committees. No secret negotiations and
talks behind the backs of the strikers!
In addition, committees of action must be developed in order
to control the unions, and enable concerted collaboration with
workers from private industry, students and other sections of
the population. Such committees of action should build on the
traditions of the Arbeiterräte, the revolutionary workers
committees which sprang into being at the beginning of the last
century and played a significant role. The committees of action
must further develop and organize the solidarity that exists in
large parts of the population.
The building of defence and solidarity committees must be linked
to a discussion about a new perspective, which proceeds from the
international character of modern production and the common interests
of all workers world-wide. Such a perspective requires a socialist
transformation of society in which social interests take priority
over the profit interests of the corporations.
The PSG (Socialist Equality Party will support such a struggle
with all its strength. As an international party, we will develop
the links to workers in other countries, where many workers and
their families confront the same problems and are conducting or
have conducted comparable struggles.
Make contact with the World Socialist Web Site and discuss
these questions with your colleagues.
See Also:
German train drivers oppose
contract deal
[9 February 2008]
Germany: Public service workers strike
[8 March 2008]
Berlin transit workers go on strike
[6 March 2008]
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