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Harmony on whose terms? Putting the (working) class back into class compromise. Tim Pringle SOAS, University of London tp21@soas.ac.uk. Outline. To demonstrate that it is strikes and the threat of strikes that remain the key impetus for collective bargaining
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Harmony on whose terms?Putting the (working) class back into class compromise Tim Pringle SOAS, University of London tp21@soas.ac.uk
Outline • To demonstrate that it is strikes and the threat of strikes that remain the key impetus for collective bargaining • To chart the progress of collective bargaining in China generally and Guangdong specifically • To identify the responses of key actors to the emergence of collective bargaining
Main arguments • That ‘actually existing conditions’ in China provide an opportunity for the development of forms collective bargaining • That class struggle is a main driver of change • That collective bargaining is a class compromise used to promote industrial ‘harmony’ • Thus ‘social harmony’ is nota prerequisite for collective bargaining – it is an outcome • That the ACFTU is beginning to recognise this
Methodology • Fieldwork conducted in the summer of 2013 and summer of 2014 – some it ‘supervised’ • Workers • LNGO activists • Academics • Academic research published in Chinese and English journals and books • Traditional and social media • Accumulated participant observation in labour issues for 30 years….
Context • Transition from a command economy to a market economy • 15th Party Congress • SOE restructuring • Private capital and the ‘peasant worker’ • Particularities • Household registration • Absence of freedom of association
Rising ‘forces of labour’ • Labour shortages • Accumulation of knowledge • Factory system • Labour laws • Access to social media • Role of LNGOs (Chan 2012; C.K. Lee and Yuan Shen 2011) • Aspects of global production chain management • Just in time ordering • Connected production • Structural Power to Associational Power (Pringle and MengQuan: forthcoming) • Relaxation of 户口制度 • From rights to interests(Clarke et al 2007)
Changing forms of protest • From protests to strikes • Length of strikes • Emergence of picket lines • From rights to interests • Demands for representation • (Re) Collectivisation of labour relations • Phasing out of the victim narrative • From ‘place’ to ‘class’ loyalties • Emergence of ‘game-changing’ disputes
State response • Develop legal framework for governing labour relations (Gallagher 2011) • Slowing of informalisation (Kuruvilla et al 2011) • The collectivisation of labour relations • Inclusion of collective negotiations 12th Five Year Plan • Renewed emphasis on tripartite institutions • Centralised • Regional and local • From repression to concession • Repression still happens
Employers Response • Class interests of employers challenged by • Labour law • Labour shortages • Skill shortages and job-hopping • Increasing diversity in autonomous local employers associations (Lee, Chang-Hee 2013) • Provision of ‘collective goods’ to meet employers’ class needs • Generalised absence of enthusiasm for collective bargaining but: • Challenge from ACFTU for regional/sectoral bargaining • Response from ACFIC affiliates • Response from ‘bottom up’ FIE employer associations
ACFTU • Huge! • Party led • The main problem? • Politically powerful • Organisationally weak • Lack of experience in capitalist labour relations • (Probably) never led a strike • Under pressure from below and above • Not a monolith
Response of ACFTU to labour unrest • Balancing 维稳with 维权 • Recruitment campaign • The importance of pilots • Isolates risk • Diversity of labour markets • Sector-level bargaining in clustered sectors • Bargaining as dispute resolution • Closure bargaining • Gradual introduction of annual enterprise level bargaining in some sectors • Direct elections – an important change • Policy level • Implementation level • From direction to ‘qualified’ representation
Back to my main arguments • That ‘actually existing conditions’ in China provide an opportunity for the development of forms collective bargaining • That class struggle is a main driver of change • That collective bargaining is a class compromise used to promote industrial ‘harmony’ • Thus ‘social harmony’ is nota prerequisite for collective bargaining – it is an outcome • That the ACFTU is beginning to recognise this
Sanitation workers strikesFormalising informality? • Weak structural position due to extensive outsourcing • Landlords, street committees and private companies • Rotation of contracts • Loss of seniority • Strikes emerge in 2007 • Sector-level union established to little avail (YangchengWanbao)
Analysis of Interview Data • High level of fragmentation • Difficult to develop organisation • Conditions for solidarity weak and transient • Strikes have produced a basic trade union consciousness • That sanitation work should not be subject to market forces • That the state should move to discipline employers in this sector
Borne out….? • Yes! Recent strike in University Town, Guangzhou • Contract-seniority based dispute • Considerable public • Two week sit-in – no arrests • Involvement of labour NGOs and labour lawyers • Agreement in favour of workers
Working class identity - The local government is the beneficiary of our hard work and it is in their interest to stand with us when the employer changes. We love the expression Yu proposed: “Steel-forged workers and ever-changing companies.” This is our community, and we are here to stay. (Wu Naiyang – Sanitation worker and organiser).
Harmony, class and conscious collective bargaining • Harmony is the desired goal of states balancing the class needs of employers and employees • It is not a level playing field • Globally collective bargaining has been hammered by neo-liberalisation • China is different? • Strikes are a working class weapon • Weapon of last resort? • Economic versus political strikes • Collective bargaining is an instrument of compromise and conflict containment • Class identity and shared interest • ‘trade union consciousness’ is privileged over Leninist ‘class consciousness’ • Sector-level collective agreements will be key to promoting labour-friendly agreements