Trade Unions Bring Tough Message To Forum
INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION CONFEDERATION (ITUC)
ITUC OnLine 014/270109
Davos: Trade Unions Bring Tough Message and Practical Solutions to Business at World Economic Forum
Brussels, 27 January 2009 (ITUC OnLine): A team of global and national trade union leaders will deliver a tough message to business at this year's Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, pointing to the potential social time bomb caused by rising unemployment, home repossessions and lost savings and pensions. This follows the disastrous effects of years of deregulation and corporate greed on the global economy. More coordinated action is now needed to get economies onto a pathway to recovery. Failure to act will only further stoke social tensions, and force more and more people to take to the streets as is already happening in many countries.
"We warned business and politicians at Davos last year of dangerous instability in the global economy, but most were more than happy to continue to reap the short-term benefits of the failing model of deregulation and speculation. Business and governments created this crisis on their own, but they won't be able to solve it unless they work with unions to stop the global jobs haemorrhage, kick-start the world economy and put a proper regulatory framework in place," said ITUC General Secretary Guy Ryder.
The ITUC,
with its national affiliates and Global Unions partners, is
pushing a comprehensive recovery and reform package, with
top priority on sustainable employment, in discussions with
the global institutions and national governments. In their
> statement
* Further coordination of interest rate policy
(with more cuts required in European countries)
* Coordinated fiscal stimulus to maintain and create jobs
* Investment in infrastructure to stimulate demand and
prepare for recovery * A "Green New Deal" for
climate-friendly investment and jobs * Actions to keep
workforces employed and retrained during the crisis
* Strengthening of unemployment benefit and other social
security schemes * Spending on schools, hospitals and care
for the aged and young children * Tax and spending measures
targeted at those on low-incomes * Emergency IMF loans to
developing countries, without austerity conditions * A boost
to development aid to help meet the MDGs * Action on the
global food crisis "We have witnessed three decades of
stagnating or falling real incomes for the vast majority,
while huge and undeserved pay and bonuses are still being
gouged out of companies by those at the very top of the
corporate tree, even when they have utterly failed to
deliver," said Ryder. Beyond the immediate need for action
on these points, the global union movement is putting
forward a detailed framework for new regulations to put an
end to the rampant speculation and financial profiteering
which has caused the global crisis. The framework includes
regulatory actions which need to be taken by national
governments, as well as new global measures to support
regulation and ensure coherence. "Governments need to act
together, both on stimulating demand and on the new
regulatory agenda. Success, both in the immediate future
and in the long term, can only be achieved if governments
put workers' rights to organise and bargain collectively at
the heart of their response to the crisis. Unions need to
have a seat at the table, to make sure that the interests of
working people are at the forefront, instead of the
unbalanced and ultimately destructive past practice of
governments letting finance and business interests set the
agenda," said Ryder. The union statement also calls on
business to negotiate with unions to save jobs, upgrade
skills, cut carbon emissions and re-tool industry to set the
basis for recovery. This needs to be done through national
social dialogue and collective bargaining, and
internationally through agreements between multinationals
and Global Union Federations in the different sectors.
The ITUC represents 168 million workers in 316 affiliated
national organisations from 157 countries.
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