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Why EU ‘trade’ means a war on workers

Explore how EU trade agreements impact workers globally, focusing on the intricate interplay between corporate takeovers, globalized labor commodification, and liberalization of trade. Delve into the implications for workers and the contentious landscape of EU trade deals.

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Why EU ‘trade’ means a war on workers

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  1. Why EU ‘trade’ means a war on workers Linda Kaucher Presentation for Institute for Employment Rights conference ‘Developments in European Employment Law’ Wed March 21st 2012 London

  2. 3 interlinked global trajectories – • Corporate takeover - corporations concentrating, overtaking + commandeering the power of states, via size, international trade agreements • Corporations acquiring rights to access government spending(public procurement) - via complicit governments, international trade agreements • Globalised commodification of labour (only ‘cheap’ counts) - corporate profiteering from cross-border wage differential via intern’l trade agreements n.b. Role: City of London Corporation, ‘thecityUK’

  3. EU’s external trade function • Trade Commission (D.G.Trade) - heavyweight part of Commission (international) - invariably ignored in EU debate • Fixes EU neoliberalism in international trade agreements subject to international trade law • Implications for workers – allows cheap labour from rest of world as ‘trade’

  4. 2 ways to capitalise on wage differential 1) Move work to cheaper labour areas 2) Move cheaper labour into higher paid areas Focus here on 2

  5. The EU trade agreement landscape: • EU Trade Commission negotiates on trade on behalf of MSs • WTO multilateral Doha Round stalled • Since 2005, EU pursuing bilateral and regional trade agreements (much more secretive)

  6. What is ‘trade’? Not just ‘trade-in-goods(agricultural, manufactured) - although this focus is maintained Also trade-in-services - 12 all-encompassing service categories (including ‘Other’) - ‘Business Services’ category includes banking, investment, financial services - Trade-in-services also includes moving workers across borders.

  7. How trade-in-services includes moving workers across borders: 4 ‘modes’ of service delivery cross-cut categories: - Mode 1 - e.g. by internet - Mode 2 - consumer crosses border e.g. tourism, foreign students - Mode 3 - company establishes across border - Mode 4 - workers moved across borders

  8. ‘Liberalisation’ - key concept Liberalising trade-in-goods = reducing at-the-border tariffs (& subsidies) Liberalising trade-in-services = opening investment ops to transnational corporations and granting them rights, including rights to bring in workers Can be - unilateral - international trade commitments UK - unilaterally liberalised, as well as big mover in trade deals - behest of City of London Corp

  9. EU/India Free Trade Agreement • Neg’d since 2007 - trying for completion this year • Mode 4 access – Indian govt’s single demand • Is mostly a UK/India FTA (‘85%’) • UK will take biggest part of Mode 4 commitment – but commitment is not a ‘limit’ or ‘cap’ • Relevant UK PBS category- ‘international agreements’ Tier 5 - no numerical limits • Very big issues for Indian people re liberalisation demands on India - protests

  10. How UK govt is accommodating current Mode 4 commitments(ICTs) • Supposedly ‘senior managers’ & ‘specialists’ – abuse allowed by UK govt • Now substantial part of UK labour migration (but not ‘migration’) • In ratio to population, UK - 2 X US, 10X Germany, dble Australia, dble Canada • A discrete Tier 2 PBS category with no numerical limits (i.e. no ‘cap’!) • Most coming for less than a year - lower wage requirement • Can be paid TMW – made up with tax free ‘allowances’. No NI. • ICTs, but most being supplied into other firms

  11. Current Indian Mode 4 demands Not ICTs (already commitment on these) but Contractual Service Suppliers (CSS) - workers sent/brought into any sector by Indian companies NOT established here Independent Professionals (IP) n.b. wide spectrum of employment circumstance. What does it mean here?

  12. TUC - inaction or betrayal? • September 2011 Congress resolution to publicise and oppose the EU/India Free Trade Agreement. Why hasn’t the TUC acted? • Worse - quiet meetings with the Trade Commission fixing up an unworkable ‘safeguard clause’, involvement of ETUC.

  13. Policy continuum on labour move’t-Internal EU / EU external trade- EU move’t lab & services<->Mode 4 in trade ag’ts Both - allow undercutting of workers in host country by workers brought/sent in - have EU and UK govt support - subject to government propaganda - subject to false projections before the tie-in - ‘can’t change’ once fixed Difference - Mode 4 workers potentially from cheaper labour countries - Mode 4 trade concessions more secretive - Mode 4 is international – harder to reverse

  14. Other EU trade agreements In process • Canada • Singapore • Eastern Europe states • Central America • Andes Earlier stage • Southern Mediterranean (Morocco to Israel/Palestine) • China (investment agreement) • US • EPA with West Africa • EPA with Pacific (PNG, Fiji) All include Mode 4 offers

  15. Global employment situation • Unemployment - a global crisis • Wide open for labour exploitation • Legalised means set up Internal EU rules + ECJ decisions / international trade law Yet debate usually limited to national horizon

  16. EU ‘4 freedoms’ goods, services, finance, labour, • Of concern for workers: • Free movement of labour - workers come individually facilitated by agencies, EU financial supported including ‘research’ funding • Free movement of services– firms bring in own workers for contracts • Not just Eastern Europe accession countries • Also - high unemployment states • Also - de-facto accession of 6 more low-income • countries, disguised as ‘trade agreements’ - no • attention, debate

  17. Across whole skills spectrum • EU labour migration - usually taken as ‘unskilled’ (though free movement of services - bring in own skilledlabour) • EU stipulates ‘skilled’ or ‘highly skilled’ for Mode 4 entry (n.b. UK grad unemployment) • Means whole skills spectrum potentially undermined by cheap migrant labour

  18. Why the UK unions’ call for ‘equal pay and conditions’ is inadequate • NOT what this agenda is about • Temporary migrant workers don’t get organised • Comparative advantage undermined by ‘equal pay’ • Even low UK wages worth a lot overseas: focus on exploitation of migrant workers misplaced • UK resident workers are losing. • TNCs expect high skills cheap –policy-makers ignore • Fails to take account of continuum, bigger picture, trade agenda

  19. Effects on national economy • Decreased tax take, no NI • Wages repatriated - out of economy • No earn/spend cycle - for economic recovery • Increased welfare bill • Skills lost, irretrievably, for future economy

  20. Some conclusions • Continuum shows direction for workers is down • EU including Mode 4 in all trade deals- ‘carrot’ • Recognising, resisting the situation is not ‘racist’. As workers’ rights are lost in the few places they exist, the model lost, less progress for workers elsewhere • Mode 4 in ‘international trade’ requires secrecy – so far effectively maintained • Anti-worker agenda supported by spin • Financial services lobby is fundamental

  21. Action • Recognise: moving workers is major capitalist strategy. • Disseminate information & analysis, expose spin • Counter reluctance to discuss cheap labour: facilitate necessary public debate -> asserting other work values -> law • Expose hidden trade agenda, relationship to domestic agenda, role of financial services • Question EU free movement: UK govt can resist EU rules • Call TUC to account re the EU/India FTA and beyond • Challenge politicians to pursue these issues

  22. 3 interlinked global trajectories • Corporate takeover • Corporations acquiring rights to access government spending(public procurement) • Globalised commodification of labour

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