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The Europeanisation of collective bargaining: Instruments and approaches

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Title: The Europeanisation of collective bargaining: Instruments and approaches


1
The Europeanisation of collective bargaining
Instruments and approaches
  • Vera Glassner
  • European Trade Union Institute ETUI Research
    dept.
  • ETUI Training course
  • Impacts of the European crisis on working
    conditions and workers rights experiences and
    strategies
  • Madrid, 18 January 2012

2
Structure of this presentation
  • Presentation of ETUI and ETUC
  • European system of industrial relations
  • Trade unions initiatives for the transnational
    coordination of collective bargaining

3
The European Trade Union Institute - ETUI
  • 3 Departments
  • Research Applied research on socio-economic
    issues and industrial relations aiming at
    bridging academia and the European trade union
    movement.
  • Education provides the ETUC and its affiliated
    organisations with a European education and
    training service, e.g. training EWC
  • Health Safety Aims at promoting high
    standards of health and safety in European
    workplaces.

4
Work programme 2011 - 2012
  • 5 Priorities of the ETUI
  • Effects of the crisis and strategies to come out
    of the crisis
  • Worker participation
  • Social dialogue
  • Europe2020/ sustainable development
  • Trade union renewal

5
ETUC European Trade Union Confederation
  • Exists in the current form since 1973 to bundle
    TU representation from EC countries and others
    (e.g. EFTA)
  • Today 82 member organisations from 36 countries,
    4 observer organisations
  • Horizontal structure 12 European Industry
    Federations on the European branch level
  • Representing more than 60 million workers in
    Europe

6
Aims of the ETUC
  • European Integration still a goal?
  • Strengthening promoting the European Social
    Model sustainable economic growth improvement
    living working conditions by promoting
  • full employment,
  • social protection, equal opportunities,
  • good quality jobs,
  • social inclusion
  • Open democratic policy-making process

7
European policy-making structure
  • Tripartite Social Summit each spring, to assess
    employment goals set in 2000-2010 Lisbon Agenda
  • European Parliament Liaison with cross-party
    Intergroup of MEPs
  • Participation in advisory bodies, e.g. European
    Economic and Social Committee (EESC) and the EU
    agencies for vocational training, living and
    working conditions, health and safety.
  • Macro-economic Dialogue (1998) Meetings with EU
    Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN),
    the European Central Bank (ECB), the Commission
    and the social partners.

8
European Social Dialogue
  • EU social policy Articles 138-139 of EC Treaty
    Consultation of Soc. Partners by Commission with
    option of conclusion of autonomous agreements
  • Inter-professional level between European
    peak-level organisations of labour (ETUC),
    business (BusinessEurope, UEAPME SMEs) and
    managerial higher staff (Eurocadre, CEC), CEEP
  • Sectoral level in European sector dialogue
    committees for 36 sectors including the public
    sector (local regional governments)

9
Workers Participation
  • European Works Councils (EWCs)
  • Information consultation
  • Negotiation? e.g. Transnational Company
    Agreements
  • Anticipation managment of change
    (restructuring!)
  • Directive 1994
  • for a Community-scale undertaking, gt 1,000
    employees within one Member States gt 150
    employees in each of at least two Member States
  • Recast of Dir. 2009
  • Important aim improved definition of
    transnational undertaking ? enhance
    implementation of Dir.!

10
INSTITUTIONAL SETTING EUROPEAN SOCIAL DIALOGUE
Inter- professional
Actors
ETUC, BusinessEurope, CEEP, UEAPME, Eurocadre,
CEC
Results
3 Agreements implemented by Council
Directive Parental leave (1995), Part-time work
(1997), Fixed-term Contracts (1999) 3
Autonomous Framework Agreements
Telework(02) Work-related Stress(04),
Harassment violence at work (2007), inclusive
labour markets (2010). 2 frameworks of action
Lifelong learning (2002), gender Equality (2005)
(multi)sectoral
Institutions
36 sector committees
Actors
EIF, Europ. Employers Assoc.
Results
Autonomous SP-Agreem. e.g Silica Agreement,
Recommendations, Joint Positions
11
Institutional setting for transnational CB
MNC
Actors
Nation. unions., EIF, Management, EWC
Results
IFAs International Framework Agreements (signed
by GUF global union federation) EFAs European
Framework Agreements (concluded by EWC and/or
EIF) ? By end 2008 ca. 80 agreements signed by
EWCs
12
INSTITUTIONAL SETTING EUROPEAN SOCIAL DIALOGUE
Coordination of collective bargaining (wages,
working time, training, etc.)
National
Institutions
Actors
Exchange of information, common guidelines for
CB policy, including wage-setting
Results
National/sectoral trade unions, ETUC, ETUFs
13
Transnational coordination of (collective
bargaining) CB policies by unions
  • Why unions not employers? No interest in
    transnational coordination of wages working
    conditions!
  • At European inter-sectoral level
  • 1) DOORN GROUP
  • Union confederations from BE, NL, LUX, DE FR
  • Doorn Declaration (1997) avoid
    wage-competition by ensuring wage increases in
    line with price productivity developments
  • 2) ETUC CB coordination guideline (2000)
  • at European sector level Eucob_at_n European
    coordination of CB
  • multi-sectoral (metal, chemical, textiles food
    sector) system for the electronic exchange of CB
    information

14
CB coordination at the Europ. Sector level METAL
sector
  • EMF principle on CB policy (1993) To avoid
    expected downward pressure in EMU (Europ.
    Monetary union) ?
  • EMF Coordination rule Wage increases off-set
    inflation balanced participation in
    productivity gains (1998 before ETUC!)
  • Other, non-wage issues Working Time Charter
    (1998), 1st Common Demand on training (2005), 2nd
    Common Demand on Precarious Employment
  • Institutions
  • Transnational bargaining coordination networks
    (centring around IG Metall districts)
  • Eucob_at_n information exchange, reporting
    multi-sectoral!

15
4 most active inter-regional EMF networks
(founded 1997)
Regions Countries
Scandinavia Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark
Coastal District Sweden, Denmark u. IG Metal district of Hamburg
Vienna Memorandum Group Austria, IG Metal District Bavaria, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia and Hungary
Central-western Europe Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg and IG Metal District North-Rhine Westphalia
16
Chemicals, textiles and food/agriculture/tourism
  • EMCEF (chemicals), ETUF-TCL (texiles) and EFFAT
    (food, agriculture, food) are forming with EMF
    Eucob_at_n network.
  • Wage coordination rule (inflation, productivity)
    of less relevance due to heterogeneity, limited
    use of overall productivity
  • Various resolutions on qualitative issues such
    as working time, training etc.
  • No inter-regional cross-border networks

17
UNI Europa Graphical Finance
  • European wage guideline in graphical sector
  • Common criteria for the analysis of professional
    skills in graphical sector
  • Collective bargaining network at UNI graphical
    (early 1990s) however, not clustered
    according to regions as in metal sector
  • In finance sector no wage guideline
  • Resolutions on training, gender equality etc.
  • UNI Finance CB coordination network (2002), only
    ex-post information, rather decentral, weaker
    role of ETUF

18
EPSU public sector
  • Epsucob_at_n collective bargaining network
  • European wage bargaining coordination rule
    (inflation, productivity)
  • Resolutions on working time, gender equality,
    training, equal pay, trade union rights etc.
  • CB network in engery sector in central and west
    Europe

19
Unions views on functioning of cross-border
coordination
  • CONFLICT not so much from structural differences
    of the industrial relation systems varying
    normative notions and practices, e.g. the
    considered legitimacy of warning strikes.
  • Bargaining de-centralization undermining of
    collective agreements in Germany by opening
    clauses considered as problematic ? discrepancy
    between officially negotiated wage rates
    reported to the EMF Eucoban System and the real
    wage development on the company level!

20
Unions views on functioning of cross-border
coordination
  • Competitive pressures generally not considered as
    a hindering factor for cross-border coordination
    with respect to wage competition, NMS well
    integrated into EMF CBC approach
  • Topics considered as important for transnational
    coordination training, e.g. comparisons of
    training and apprenticeship systems flexicurity
    social and economic policy issues addressed by
    the Northern member organisations in particular

21
Challenges to cross-border bargaining coordination
  • Declining practice to declare collective
    agreements binding for all employers within one
    sector or groups of sectors
  • Declining employer densities
  • Declining union densities
  • ? shrinking bargaining coverage rates across
    Europe

22
CB coverage rates in the EU (EC 2011)
23
Net union densities (EC 2011)
24
New challanges to cross-border coordination of
CB
  • Economic crisis trend towards re-nationalisation
    of union strategies, e.g. seeking state support
    to tackle effects of the crisis vie public
    short-time working schemes etc.
  • Tended to weaken cross-border initiatives of
    unions
  • Need for wage bargaining coordination to counter
    wage restraint macro-economic imbalances
    increased BUT
  • Limited resources directed to national levels
  • Limited use of coordination guidelines in
    recession (inflation participation overall
    productivity)

25
New challanges to cross-border coordination of
CB
  • Debt-crisis in Eurozone and beyond limits
    governments room for manoeuvre and spurres their
    austerity drive ? increasing pressure on wages
    in private and public sector.
  • New framework for EU Economic governance
    increases need to coordination wage setting
    across border to ensure stable, balanced and
    socially equitable growth.

26
Nominal compensation (per employee, annual
-change), AMECO
27
Real compensation (per employee, annual
-change), AMECO
28
Index nominal ULC 2000-2011 (AMECO)
29
Positions current accounts, 2008, 2011, GDP
30
Conclusions cross-border coordination of CB
  • Divide Western Europe where sector-level CB is
    predominating and New Member States where CB is
    decentralised
  • General long-term trend towards decentralisation
    of wage-setting national, inter-sectoral level
    wage bargaining state-imposed wage setting
    declining
  • Importance of institutional supportive features
    that ensure high coverage of coll. agreements,
    i.e. extension rules practice, obligatory
    membership employers assoc., high union density
  • Structures for employee participation mostly in
    large (multinational) companies, to a much lesser
    extent in SMEs micro-enterprises (lt 10
    employees)

31
Conclusions European SD lobbying EU
institutions
  • European social dialogue at sectoral level ? more
    important for sectors subject to regulatory
    initiatives of the Commission (e.g. Chemical
    sector, telecommunications)
  • Lobbying ETUC some of the EIFs, such as EFBBW
    in the construction sector
  • Participation in process of law-making ? ETUC
    (e.g. EWC Directive, Inf. Consultat. Dir.
    (2002) Working time Dir. review etc.
  • Transnational trade union action demonstrations,
    strike-actions (often coordinated by the EIFs)
  • ? Interest representation participation in
    policy-making at European level a highly complex
    process (division of labor between ETUC, EIFs,
    different instruments) that presupposes the
    unification articulation of (diverging)
    national interests!

32
Resources
  • Topic-based webpage www.etui.org
  • Various publications for different target
    groups most of them are free to download, e.g.
    Benchmarking Working Europe report, Policy
    Briefs, WP, Reports, Books
  • Journals Transfer European Review of
    Labour and Research (published by Sage), viermal
    im Jahr SEER Journal for Labour and Social
    Affairs in Eastern Europe (viermal im Jahr),
    HesaMag (zweimal im Jahr)
  • Online Information on worker participation
    www.worker-participation.eu and database on
    European Works Councils (EWCs) www.ewcdb.eu
  • Newsletters Collective Bargaining, Just
    Transition, Worker participation, HesaMail,
    SETUP
  • ETUI documentation centre and labourline database
    www.labourline.org
  • Events, e.g. Monthly Forum
  • Networks for provision of expertise, e.g. TURI (
    www.turi-network.eu )
  • Traineeships, guest research stays, visitor
    groups
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