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THE IMPACT OF GLOBALISATION AND ITS IMPACT ON WORKERS

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Title: THE IMPACT OF GLOBALISATION AND ITS IMPACT ON WORKERS


1
THE IMPACT OF GLOBALISATION AND ITS IMPACT ON
WORKERS
  • Main Challenges for the Labour Movement

2
QUOTENo.1
  • Globalization reduces poverty because integrated
    economies tend to grow faster and this growth is
    usually widely diffused
  • By World Bank
  • WB Report in 2001

3
QUOTENo.2
  • To allow the market mechanism to be sole
    director of the fate of human beings and their
    natural environmentwould result in the
    demolition of society
  • By Karl Polanyi
  • in 1944

4
AGENDA FOR DISCUSSION
  • How do you change globalization to better serve
    for workers and ordinary people in the world?

5
Activity 1
  • Take a piece of paper, and write a list of FIVE
    THINGS (reforms) you will implement as President
    or Prime Minister of your country to improve
    globalization

6
Activity 2
  • For each of the five things you identified in
    Activity 1, list THREE THINGS you should do to
    achieve the best success

7
GLOBALISATION HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Continuous and radical changes in
  • Means of Transportation
  • Information Technology
  • Political (Regulatory) Framework.

8
GLOBALISATION OF
  • Trade
  • Production
  • Finance (investment, capital)
  • Company (MNEs)
  • Cultures
  • Politics

9
GLOBALISATION IS
  • Process of economic, social, political and
    cultural integration of nation-states into a
    global market/community/standard, with much
    increased inter-dependence

10
CHANGE OF WHEELS and ENGINES for GLOBALIZATION
1980
TRADE
FDI
Exchange of goods and services between nation
state
Creation of productive assets and purchase of
assets by foreigners
GOLD STD/FIXED RATE
US/FLOATING RATE
MANAGED MARKET ECONOMY
FREE MARKET ECONOMY
LARGE GOVERNMENTfor WELFARE STATE
SMALL GOVERNMENTfor PRIVATE INITIATIVE
COLD WARPOWER POLITICS
NEW-LIBERALECONOMIC POLITICS
11
NEO-LIBERALISM
  • If you free up the flow of private capital,
    goods and services across national borders then
    this will lead to raised levels of productivity,
    GDP growth, employment and real income.

12
GLOBALISATION OFTRADE
  • Increase in trade volume (1950-2001)
  • International trade grew twice as fast as GDP, or
    world production
  • However, the growth rate was much higher during
    1950s and 1960s than in 1990s
  • Until 1980s, production was still based in few
    industrialised countries
  • Fordism (mass production system)
  • Standardisation of products.

13
GLOBAL ASSEMBLY LINE
  • Garments designed in the USA -
  • Manufactured under contract in China
  • By a company owned in Hong Kong
  • With raw materials from all around the world
  • Transported to the UK in container ships carrying
    a flag of convenience and crewed by Filipino
    seafarers
  • Payroll and other data tasks carried out in Asia
  • And, the profits accounted in a tax haven (to
    avoid tax)

14
GLOBALISATION OF FINANCE
  • Political decisions to liberalise capitals
    circulation
  • Creation of a global financial network
  • Daily transactions more than 2 trillion US
    (1/4 of total world trade value).

Source WTO (Annual DG Report 2001)
15
GLOBALISATION OFCOMPANY
  • Trans-national Corporations developed
  • Regional markets
  • World market
  • More than 60,000 trans-national corporations
    (TNCs) with over 800,000 affiliates abroad.

Source UNCTAD
16
GLOBALISATION OF CULTURES
  • Development of the media via satellites
  • Global media concentration
  • Advertising
  • English has become a de facto global language for
    business although there exist 6,000 languages in
    the world (95 of world population speak around
    100 languages) One person in five speaks English.

17
GLOBALISATION OF POLITICS
  • End of cold war proliferation of the democratic
    values and market rules of the winner (U.S.)
  • Development of democracy (but with a huge gap
    between the idea and reality)
  • Threat to, and huge limit on, sovereignty of
    nation-states (e.g. social and economic
    policies)
  • Increasing impact of international institutions
    on social and economic policies of countries.

18
GLOBALISATION or POLARISATION? TRADE
  • Percentage in World Trade
  • Share of Africa 1
  • While world trade has increased ten times since
    1970 and more food is produced per person than
    ever before, the number of people going hungry in
    Africa has doubled

19
GLOBALISATION orPOLARLIZATION? FDI
  • The worlds top 30 host countries account for 95
    of total world FDI inflows and 90 of stocks
  • The worlds top 30 home countries account for
    around 99 of outward FDI flows and stocks
  • 49 LDC receive 0.7 of FDI
  • Below 1 African share in FDI inflows.

Source UNCTAD
20
GLOBALISATION orPOLARLIZATION? TNCs
  • Fifty-one of the world's top 100 economies are
    corporations (in 2000)
  • TNCs control 2/3 of all world trade and 80 of
    foreign investment
  • TNCs employ only 3 of the total world labour
    force (2.5 billion) and less than half of them
    are in the South
  • The 200 largest TNCs employ 1 of the total
    labour force and have a turnover equal to 28.3
    of the world GNP
  • About 90 of the worlds largest 100 non-financial
    TNCs are headquartered in the Triad (US, EU and
    Japan).

Source Institute for Policy Studies
Source W. Anfreff, Le multinazionali globali,
Trieste 2000
Source Oneworld.net
Source Globalpolicy.org
Source UNCTAD
21
GLOBALISATION or POLARISATION? INCOME
  • 20 of the worlds population consumes 86 of
    goods produced
  • The richest 20 of the worlds population had at
    their disposal 86 of the world GDP while the
    poorest 20 had access to a mere 1.
  • Income gap between the top 10 and the bottom 10
    771 in 1980 and 1221 in 1999
  • Maximum daily consumption of the worlds poorest
    400 million 0.75 in 1998

Various sources
22
GLOBALISATION or POLARISATION? SOCIAL
  • More than 250 million children at work
  • 120 million working children have no access to
    school
  • Number of official unemployment is 160 million
    and 500 million new jobs needed over the next
    decade
  • 500 million workers are unable to keep their
    families above the 1 poverty line (of the 1.3
    billion people living in poverty worldwide, more
    than 70 of them are women and girls) .

Source ILO World Employment Report 2001
(www.ilo.org) - ICFTUConference of women trade
union leaders, Rio di Janeiro, 18-21 May 1999
23
CONCEPTUAL BACKBONE OF GLOBALISATION
  • Neo-liberal Economic Policy
  • Thatcherism since 79 / Reaganomics since 81
  • Role of IMF/WB WTO (Washington Consensus)
  • Competition, competition and competition!
  • Liberalization of markets
  • Privatisation of public enterprises and services
  • New Zealands Experiment in Asia and the Pacific
  • Integrationist Strategy for development

24
OTHER FACTORS OF GLOBALISATION
  • Fiscal crises in nation states
  • Reduction of tariffs trade barriers (GATT and
    WTO)? Integration of national markets into a
    global market and the emergence of global
    competition
  • Concentration of capital (mergers
    acquisitions)
  • Development of new products (New Economy)
    services and information.

25
IMPACT of GLOBALIZATION on TRADE UNIONS (1)
  • Decrease of trade union density
  • From national agreements/negotiations to
    enterprise/individual agreements (NZ shock)
  • Abolition of, or pressure on, check-off systems
  • Increase of the informal employment (most of the
    workers employed are women and children) where no
    social protection is ensured and organizing is
    extremely difficult.

26
IMPACT or GLOBALISATION on TRADE UNIONS (2)
  • Increase of atypical forms of labour (contract
    labour). These form are more common among women
    than among men (90 of home workers in EU are
    women)
  • Increase of EPZs (from 850 in 1999)
  • Global attack against workers rights
  • Weaker tripartite machinery.

Source ICFTU Annual Survey
27
IMPACT of GLOBALISATION on WORKERS RIGHTS (1)
  • Over 300 strikes repressed by employers or the
    police, in nearly 90 countries
  • About 8,500 arrested or detained
  • 209 trade unionists killed or disappeared
  • Over 100,000 harassed
  • 20,000 dismissed because of their trade union
    activities.

Source ICFTU Survey of Violations of Trade Union
Rights 2001 (http//www.icftu.org/survey).
28
IMPACT of GLOBALISATION on WORKERS RIGHTS (2)
  • 20 million bounded labourers worldwide
  • 700.000 women and children victims of
    cross-border human trafficking each year
  • Worldwide women are paid anything between 10-50
    less than men for doing similar job or different
    job of equal value.

SourcePSI Women - N.14- January 2002
(www.world-psi.org) ICFTUwww.icftu.org/survey
29
THE CHALLENGEGOVERN OR FIGHT? (1)
  • Organising / Global unions
  • Framework Agreements
  • Alliance on MNEs
  • Extension of the European Works Councils into
    Global Works Council.

30
THE CHALLENGEGOVERN OR FIGHT? (2)
  • Trade union networking and global solidarity
  • Globalisation of workers rights ILO Declaration
    on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work
  • Social Clause.

31
THE CHALLENGEGOVERN OR FIGHT? (3)
  • Co-ordination of economic, trade, and social
    policies
  • Social dimension of globalisation and the role of
    the ILO in the world agenda (G8 and relationships
    with IMF/WB/WTO.

32
FUNDAMENTAL GOALS of TRADE UNIONS are
  • To give globalization human face that benefits
    us all, eradicate poverty, eliminates social
    exclusion and reduce inequality
  • To take workers rights out of competition by
    establishing fundamental common standards.

33
HOW TO ACHIEVE THE GOALS?
  • Promote pluralism in international
    decision-makings
  • Reform IMF/WB/WTO
  • Establish international rules negotiated with the
    social partners
  • Control capital flow (short term, speculative) to
    redirect investment into real economies
  • Internationalize trade union programmes,
    activities, campaigns and solidarity.

34
What is Role of ILO?
35
THE ILO AGENDATO ACHIEVE DECENT WORK FOR ALL
  • Decent Work composed of
  • Workers rights
  • Productive employment
  • Social protection
  • Social dialogue

36
WORKERSRIGHTS
  • Ratification and implementation of core labour
    standards (eight core conventions)
  • Ratification and implementation of international
    labour standards
  • Participation to the ILS supervisory system and
    to the follow-up of the Declaration.

37
PRODUCTIVE EMPLOYMENT
  • Productive employment with dignity
  • Employment policies should be core part of
    national economic/social policy, with equal
    opportunities and treatments guaranteed
  • Development of small and medium-size enterprises.

38
SOCIAL PROTECTION
  • Development of social security systems that cover
    the entire population
  • Pension schemes to guarantee a decent life after
    retirement
  • Other welfare benefits
  • Special attention to vulnerable groups (women,
    youth, migrants, the informal sector, minorities,
    etc.)
  • O.S.H. and the Environment.

39
SOCIAL DIALOGUE
  • Promotion and institutionalization of tripartism
  • Strengthening workers and employers
    organisations
  • Strengthening negotiations between social
    partners at all levels (enterprise, industry,
    national, regional and international).

40
Decent WorkFor Better Tomorrow
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