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Trade Unions in Russia, China and Vietnam. Simon Clarke. State socialist trade unions. Integral part of Party-state apparatus Primary functions to maintain labour discipline, encourage the production drive administer state social welfare system Protective functions
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Trade Unions in Russia, China and Vietnam Simon Clarke
State socialist trade unions • Integral part of Party-state apparatus • Primary functions • to maintain labour discipline, • encourage the production drive • administer state social welfare system • Protective functions • Represent individual worker in disputes • Monitor enforcement of labour law
Transition to capitalism • Transformed environment of trade unions • state no longer has control of enterprises • does not determine terms and conditions • employment relation now contractual • Contrasting political role of unions • Russian trade unions declared independence of Party-state in 1987 • Chinese and Vietnamese unions still under the leadership of the Communist Party
Russian unions • Collapse of soviet system threatened survival of traditional unions: • Property • Legal privileges • Membership had no confidence in the unions • State needed the traditional unions • To administer traditional state functions • To channel and contain social unrest
Social Partnership • Partnerly relations with state and employer • Tripartite commission • Lobbying legislature and executive • Branch and regional agreements • Collective agreements • Dispute resolution • Negotiated settlement • Judicial resolution of individual disputes
Trade unions and class struggle • Trade unions channel conflict into symbolic protests and bureaucratic and judicial forms of conflict resolution • Weakness of unions is management dominance of primary organisations • Slow progress in overcoming this barrier, mostly in prosperous branches (oil and gas, chemicals, metallurgy, autos)
China and Vietnam • Unions under the leadership of the Party • No freedom of association • Restricted right to strike • China abolished in 1982 • Vietnam introduced in 1994 labour code, only after mediation and arbitration, called by union, supported by majority of labour force • Over 1000 registered strikes since 1994, not one legal
Changes in employment relations • Large lay-offs from SOEs – privatisation • Transition from permanent to contractual employment • Transition from state welfare to social insurance • Massive growth of private and foreign-owned enterprises • Employing migrant workers on low wages, short or no contracts, long hours, poor health and safety
Trade unions and the Party • Not mere puppets of the Party, unions have a powerful voice in the Party • Party has greater interest in reform of the unions than do the unions themselves • Party requires unions • To extend organisation to POEs and FIEs • To prevent strikes and social unrest • By mediating between worker and employer • And channelling disputes into bureaucratic and judicial channels
Collective agreements • ACFTU very active in promoting collective agreements, VGCL less so • Most collective agreements contain little beyond that provided by law • Terms largely dictated by management • Few sanctions for violation • Some more effective collective agreements, especially in JVs
Trade union organising • Trade unions traditionally confined to state and collective enterprises • Pressure from Party to extend organisation and membership • Legal requirement to have a trade union • Mostly bureaucratic process, always top-down • Some exceptions, e.g. Wall-Mart • Sectoral/local unions for SMEs
Reform of workplace unions • Controlled by management • Recognised as a problem, but • Higher union bodies have little leverage • Fear of loss of control • And provoking conflict • Trade union elections • Professionalisation of union
Legal regulation • Collective bargaining vs legal regulation • Baseline terms and conditions set by labour law • Individualistic bureaucratic/judicial dispute resolution • Legal advice centres: NGOs and ACFTU • State or union function? Trade union versus Ministry of Labour
Strikes and protests • Increasingly migrant workers in POEs and FIEs • Strengthened by labour shortage • Fire-fighting role of state and tu • Confine strike to one enterprise • From repression to concession • Labour bureau persuades employer to concede • Trade union persuades workers to return to work • Usually establish a trade union branch by agreement with management • Severe repression of organising beyond one enterprise
Trade unions and Party-state • Unions under Party leadership • From state body to NGO • Party control • Imposes pressure on unions to reform • Backs up union with weight of Party • Confines union within strict limits • Union reform much more advanced in China than in Vietnam
Post-socialist trade unions • Driving force of reform has been development of capitalist relations of production • Mediated by worker unrest • Need for trade unions to take on new roles, reinforced by anxieties of Party-state • Trade union reform confined within limits of social stabilisation • Main barrier to reform is dependence of workplace union on management • There is progress but it is very slow