(One thing of particular interest in this is the self-definition by the
ICFTU of itself as an NGO...As the relations between NGO's and Unions has
not always been the most mutually supportive...this is potentially of
considerable interest, particularly if out of this could develop common
positions and campaigns in areas of mutual concern...

M

------------------------  
 Social Policy, Good Governance, Core Labour Standards and Development
 
 A Discussion Paper for the Meeting on 20 January 1999 between the ICFTU
and Executive Directors and Staff of the World Bank
 
 The Role of Trade Unions in a Global Economy
1. The ICFTU and its affiliates have campaigned for many years for a
social dimension to structural adjustment and have been particularly
active over the last eighteen months in promoting dialogue between unions
and the Bretton Woods institutions over the policy response to the crisis.
One of the issues most prominent in this dialogue has been the role of
core labour standards in development, social policy and good governance.
This discussion paper therefore focuses on how core labour standards
should fit into overall social policy guidelines within the emerging new
"architecture for the global economy and the changing responsibilities of
the World Bank and the IMF, and how the promotion of the new ILO
Declaration could become part of the programmes of the Bank and the Fund. 
2. Trade unions are the largest independent democratic non-governmental
organisations in most countries of the world. They are structured to
represent their members and working women and men generally at the
workplace, by industry, sector and occupation, on a national scale, and
regionally and internationally. The trade union movement in different
countries has developed historically in many different ways depending on a
variety of factors including the structure of employment, the political
environment and, fundamentally, the priorities decided by their members.
However a common feature of their work is the goal of improving the
conditions of work and life of working people. The means of achieving this
goal include collective bargaining with employers at various levels,
influencing government policies that impact on conditions of work and
life, and providing direct services to members through the representation
of grievances, legal assistance, and social welfare programmes. Perhaps
the simplest way to describe the role of trade unions is that they aim to
get the fears and aspirations of people whose voice in society would
otherwise not be heard, understood and addressed.
3. The range of issues taken up by unions can be very broad. Although they
use many methods of advocacy, their strength derives from the fact that
they are economic as well as social organisations. Organised around the
process of work, the most basic of economic activities, they aim to exert
a bargaining power on the contract of employment and the factors that
affect it, so as to ensure that working people are treated with dignity
and justice. Their goal is to counter-balance the inherently unequal
relationship between individual workers and employers, thus enlarging
citizens' freedom to influence a key determinant of their lives. In doing
so they are expressing interests which can conflict with those of powerful
groups in society but which can be resolved to mutual advantage and in the
public interest where effective processes of industrial relations are
built up. To quote from the 1995 World Development Report, " the
probability of governments passing inefficient labour legislation may be
higher when workers' right to representation is not protected. Empirical
analysis finds that political liberties, which almost always go hand in
hand with the freedom of unions to organise, are associated with less
dualism in labour markets and a larger formal sector." 
4. From its foundation in 1919 and especially since its relaunch in
Philadelphia in 1944, the ILO has sought to develop standards in the
social and employment field which reflect the interest of all nations in
social progress and the development of institutions which enable social
problems and conflicts to be resolved. Its standards take the form of
principles to be applied in national law and practice. They thus provide a
framework which is clear in terms of objectives but provides sufficient
flexibility to be adapted to national circumstances. In recent years, as
the interdependence of the world economy accelerated and respect for
democratic forms of governance spread, the ILO was able to develop a large
degree of consensus over the universal applicability of seven of its most
basic Conventions. The ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and
Rights at Work and its Follow-up, adopted by the International Labour
Conference in June1998, sets out the commitment of the international
community to establish a social minimum at the global level which responds
to the realities of globalisation.  The seven Conventions specified in the
Declaration are core labour standards which, where properly observed,
create the foundations for a sound system of industrial relations in which
trade unions, together with employers and governments, can play a
constructive role in working to ensure that social progress goes hand in
hand with the progressive opening of markets to international trade and
investment.
World Bank/IMF Development Committee October 1998
 " the Committee agreed that, beyond responding to the immediate crisis,
and in parallel with ongoing efforts to improve the international
financial architecture, concerted actions were needed to help countries
bolster their structural and social policies and institutions. These
include strengthening the financial sector; establishing a sound business
environment; improving public and private sector governance, particularly
transparency and accountability; and strengthening social protection.
Ministers noted that the primary role of the World Bank was to help
eliminate poverty and improve social well-being, in line with
international development goals. They therefore encouraged the World Bank
to work with the United Nations, the Fund and other partners to develop
general principles of good practice in structural and social policies
(including labor standards)."
5.  The economic and financial turmoil of the last eighteen months which
started in South-East and East Asia and spread to affect nearly all
countries, has served to highlight the need for a new architecture to
govern world financial markets. Its severe social impact on the most
affected countries has also drawn attention to the difficulty of achieving
financial stability without also ensuring social stability and progress,
and vice versa. The quotations in boxes in this paper illustrate, the
broadening agreement on the need to include alongside a  stronger set of
international disciplines on key elements of the international financial
system, strengthened international mechanisms to address the problems of
poverty, unemployment and equitable social development. In its recent
statement the G7 called on the World Bank to develop social policy
guidelines as mandated by the October meeting of the Development
Committee. 
 Core Labour Standards in the Global Market
6.  Structural adjustment is a constant process which describes the way
that production of goods and services in both the public and private
sectors changes to meet economic pressures, increasingly transmitted
through the global market, and social goals. The structure of employment
and conditions of employment are thus also in constant flux affecting the
lives of working women and men in both positive and negative ways creating
increasing uncertainty about future job and income security. The pace,
direction and content of adjustment is therefore a major concern for
unions. The key demand of unions is that basic rights to representation,
non-discrimination and the free choice of employment are respected so that
they are able to work out solutions, which take account of the concerns of
working women and men, to the problems and opportunities change at work
present.
7.   Social stability cannot be modelled on a computer.  Statistical tools
for measuring social inequity and the efficiency of various policy
instruments are of course very important to the work of trade unions, the
Bank and other development agencies in advancing social equity.  But as
well as suffering from an appalling lack of data, they cannot capture
people's sense of fairness.  Addressing that issue requires the creation
of representative, independent, democratic, "free" institutions amongst
which trade unions are important.  
Conclusions ILO High-Level Tripartite Meeting on Social Responses to
the Financial Crisis in East and South-East Asia Bangkok, April 1998
"... It is only in the context of sustained economic growth that durable
solutions to social problems are to be found. A major element of this
reform process will involve the correction of policy and institutional
deficiencies, These reform processes can provide a foundation for the
development of efficient and equitable economic and social policies. This
is especially true with respect to the development in some countries of
adequate systems of social protection which are essential for coping
better with problems of economic restructuring and possible future crises.
In this context, respect for basic international labour standards provides
fundamental enabling conditions for independent, strong and representative
worker and employer organisations to develop productive social
partnerships."
8.  Unions organise at and around the workplace.  Their primary objective
is to improve the contract of employment.  And that contract is different
from all others because it defines directly the relationship between
citizens and the now global market as well as determining people's main
source of income, sense of identity, and role in society. A well
functioning system of industrial relations thus provides a mechanism for
resolving some of the most fundamental causes of social tension.
9.  What unions are saying is that to get out of the crisis and prevent
future ones, governments,  employers and international institutions need
to focus attention on building the laws and institutions needed to
regulate labour markets and build social partnership, as well as those
governing financial markets.  Furthermore, so that countries can both
compete and co-operate with each other, these institutions need to be
built on common international principles.  
10.  The crisis has exposed the weaknesses of existing state mechanisms of
social protection and the tremendous strain placed on families and in
particular on women who carry the main burden of caring for the most
vulnerable - the young, the old and the sick and disabled.  When the
working generation cannot, for reasons beyond their control, meet their
family responsibilities, because they cannot find work, tremendous damage
is done to people's lives and sense of self-esteem.  The effects of the
current crisis in terms of falling school enrolment, increased child
labour, falling levels of nutrition, increased crime and substance abuse,
will be felt for years.
11.  Capital flight and riots on the street are two sides of the same
coin:-  a failure to develop institutions to reconcile economic and social
pressures and develop some consensus on how to move ahead.  Korea was
further advanced in this process of institutional development when the
crisis hit than Indonesia, and despite all its problems is moving ahead,
while Indonesia is having to rapidly develop its social and financial
institutions in the midst of the fastest, steepest and deepest economic
collapse ever seen.  Some of the most important institutions in a market
economy are free trade unions.  In Korea they were strong enough to play a
part in managing the crisis.  In Indonesia they were not, primarily
because of decades of military/party control and repression.
Report of G7 Finance Ministers to Birmingham Summit May 1998
 "Sound policies need to tackle structural economic issues so that
sufficient provision is made for the poorest sections of society and other
vulnerable groups, development is sustainable and living and working
standards for all are improved. This is also key to securing the support
needed for successful economic reform. In this respect we also encourage
the IMF and MDBs to work with the ILO to promote core labour standards and
with the competent international institutions to promote sound
environmental standards." 
12.  Looking beyond the crisis, the ICFTU strongly believes that
comparative advantage will lie with those countries that have a stronger
social cohesion built on investment in education and training, health-care
and a sound industrial relations system, founded on core labour standards.
The most successful countries, both developed and developing, will be
those with institutions that are able to balance and rebalance constantly
the market pressures of flexibility and dynamism with the social pressures
for security and dignity.  The suppleness of a country's institutions will
be the key. 
13.  The ILO is playing a vital role in promoting its new Declaration
which should be actively supported by the World Bank and the IMF. Starting
from respect for fundamental rights at work, a sound industrial relations
system comprises the strengthening of trade unions and employer
organisations, the promotion of collective bargaining, dispute settlement
procedures, the establishment and development of tripartism, and the
involvement of unions and employers in programmes to build up training,
job placement and social security.
 Tackling Social Inequality with the Participation of Unions
14.  New World Bank guidelines on social policy should be based on the
conclusions of the Copenhagen Summit. The current crisis has accentuated
the need for support to national efforts to maintain and strengthen
policies to ensure universal access to primary health-care, schooling for
all up to the minimum school leaving age and improved social protection
policies to ensure the realisation of basic needs such as food, shelter
and clothing. 
15.  The goals of social development policy agreed at the 1995 Copenhagen
Social Summit are  eradication of poverty, creation of employment and
building social solidarity. Bank programmes should therefore address both
the quality of government programmes and the resources, both national and
international, devoted to these priorities. Emergency assistance should
contribute to the establishment of a medium to long term strategy with
clearly defined goals. One of the key questions is the design of social
safety nets to prevent those unable to find productive employment from
becoming trapped in a cycle of poverty. 
16.  A number of the countries worst affected by the crisis are in a
position to establish broad based social security systems to provide
incomes to the unemployed, the sick and disabled, and the elderly. They
also face the challenge of replacing traditional systems based on extended
family networks living in rural communities which are breaking down as
people have moved off the land to urban jobs. Such broad based social
security systems are usually based on contributions paid by workers and
employers supplemented by state contributions from general tax revenues to
ensure that those with a weak or no contribution record a re guaranteed a
minimum income. They often include a mix of a state and private provision.
Emergency support should therefore take the form of "kick starting"
schemes which can be expected to become self-financing as the worst
affects of the current recession wear off. Furthermore, contributory
schemes create investment resources which can broaden and deepen capital
markets reducing dependency on volatile flows of international finance,
including the holdings of national elites. 
17.  Experience shows that not only do workers expect the right to a say
in how social protection systems are managed, a participative approach to
the design and management of social security also helps to ensure that
resources are efficiently used. The World Bank should draw on the
experience of the ILO in the field of the tripartite management of social
security systems and encourage governments to consult trade unions and
employers on the design of its support programmes.
18.  The provision of primary health-care and basic education are widely
recognised as one of the most effective means of tackling poverty and
reducing gender inequality. Such services are also employment intensive
and often create job opportunities attractive to women who have been
amongst the hardest hit by the crisis. The skills and experience of health
and education workers are an invaluable resource to policy planners both
in government and the Bank but their unions are rarely consulted and
involved in making decisions. As a result they are often so poorly
remunerated that it affects their ability to do a decent job,
understaffing undermines the quality of services and the commitment and
initiative of public service workers to improving the  delivery of
services vital to national development is ignored and wasted. 
19.  Construction workers are frequently the first to lose their jobs in a
time of crisis, yet there are unmet needs for the improvement of the urban
and rural infrastructure through the building of low-cost housing, clean
water and sewage disposal systems, and transport networks.
Employment-intensive public works schemes must be part of the social and
economic development strategies promoted by the Bank.  However, such
schemes should be part of a longer term strategy for the construction
industry. All too often major Bank projects contribute to a boom and bust
cycle in the industry which leads to the creation of a large pool of often
poorly trained migrant labour (both within and between countries)
vulnerable to exploitation by contractors. The Bank should insist that
where it is funding projects, tenders should be based on acceptance by
contractors that they will respect core labour standards and the terms of
ILO Convention 94 on public procurement. Bank funded employment intensive
public works schemes should also be worked out in consultation with
construction unions to ensure a minimum level of job and income security. 
20.  Governments also need to develop active labour market policies to
promote training and retraining, and the mobility of labour within and
between sectors and regions. The costs of unemployment both to individuals
and society can be substantially reduced by public policies to smooth
changes in the structure of employment and deduce resistance to change.
For example the IMF and the Bank in particular are promoting programmes
which are having a major impact on employment in the finance sector but
little attention has been paid to the problems faced by redundant workers
who in many countries receive little or no help in finding new employment.
21.  There is growing evidence of increasing child labour in the countries
worst-affected by the crisis as unemployed parents resort to supplementing
family incomes with the meagre earnings of children they can no longer
afford to send to school. In all too many cases children are left to
wander the streets and fall prey to criminal gangs involved in the sex and
drugs industries. Tackling child labour requires a three-pronged approach
to improve the earning and employment opportunities of parents, access to
school places and the implementation of minimum age for employment laws
based on ILO convention 138. The ILO's International Programme for the
Eradication of Child Labour, which involves governments, employers, unions
and n.g.o.s is making some progress on this immense problem and should be
actively supported by the World Bank.
The Contribution of Core Labour Standards to Economic Development
22.  The elimination of child labour is one of the most important core
labour standards for achieving economic development of any country.  At
the same time, the elimination of child labour has been probably the most
controversial of the core labour standards.  Certain observers argue that
child labour is an endemic problem of poverty for developing countries,
which can only be resolved by economic development.  However, on the
contrary, decisive action to help the 250 million children who have been
driven onto the labour market would actually provide many countries with
the key to achieving economic development.
23.  This is so, firstly, because of the high positive returns from good
education, as evidence from the World Bank, among others, has demonstrated
and which child workers are denied access to. According to the World Bank,
in Korea, annual GDP growth was 1.4% higher between 1960 and 1985 purely
as a result of the spending on education over that period. Evidence from
all over the world shows that getting children out of work and into school
is a prerequisite for sustainable, equitable economic development.  If
instead of being educated, children are at work, in the majority of cases,
they just end up swelling the vast ranks of the young unemployed in the
informal sector of impoverished suburbs and shanty towns surrounding major
cities.  If those young people had been educated and so they were literate
and numerate and had skills, they would not be unemployed but they would
be working and contributing to their countries' development.  Therefore
the toleration of child labour is a major handicap for the countries as
well as the individuals concerned.  
24.  Secondly, child workers often undergo severe physical and mental
hardship and as a result have their life-long earnings abilities severely
impaired. One large-scale ILO survey in the Philippines found that more
than 60 per cent of working children were exposed to chemical and
biological hazards and that 40 per cent experienced serious injuries or
illnesses.  In Pakistan, in the carpet sector, a 1991 ILO report estimated
that approximately half the 50,000 young child workers would never reach
the age of 12; they would die beforehand from malnutrition and disease.
Children at work are also very vulnerable to sexual abuse, particularly
girl workers. In other words, in many cases the work carried out by
children is immensely negative to children's health, even their prospects
of life itself. In both social and economic terms, the impact of this
reduction in health and in life is clearly immensely negative and cannot
be tolerated.
25.  Thirdly, no country is too poor to make a major effort to end child
labour. In this regard, the example of the Indian state of Kerala is very
instructive.  Kerala was just as poor as the other states in India when,
several decades ago, it began spending a consistently high share of its
budget on education, well above the average level in India.  Nowadays
Kerala has achieved spectacular successes in terms of the highest school
retention rate in India; by far the lowest gender disparity; almost double
the national figure for literacy; high economic growth; and a far lower
work participation rate of children, at less than one third the average
level for India. Therefore, while accompanying transitional measures are
always needed to help families and children adjust to the loss of income
and international assistance should be increased to the poorest countries
to build up the anti-poverty and education programmes and the labour
inspection services that are needed, even the least developed countries
can start to implement measures today to tackle child labour which will
bring long-term economic benefits for their countries.
26.  Fourthly, as with all the core labour standards, use of child labour
by any one country puts all other countries under pressure to repress
workers' rights also, with the worst effects for developing countries
which have the least resources to resist such pressure.  For example, the
use of child labour undoubtedly makes a contribution to the price of
India's exports in some sectors, creating difficulties for countries
competing with India.  A recent example is the severe damage done to the
carpet industry in Nepal by competition with carpets from India produced
with a high degree of child labour. Therefore those countries which are
making efforts to tackle child labour would be assisted by international
disciplines to prevent competitor countries undermining them by allowing
the continued exploitation of children.
27.  Core labour standards regarding discrimination and freedom of
association are equally important to achieving development.  The more that
women's employment conditions are equal to that of men, the more women are
provided with the job opportunities, remuneration and prospects to realise
their fullest potential and so make informed choices about their lives -
including, especially in developing countries, about family planning.
This requires active government policies in the labour market. Governments
must implement specific policies to eliminate discrimination in wages and
improve job security.  Positive action programmes should be promoted to
improve access of girls and women to education, literacy courses and
training - one telling example from the World Bank showed that each
additional year at school for girls brings about a 5% reduction in the
birth rate - and to promote equal opportunities in formal employment
including job training and credit schemes, health-care for pregnant women
and day-care facilities.  Setting and enforcing adequate labour standards
for women at work increases both motivation and remuneration of the
individuals concerned and so achieves productivity increases across the
board.  
28.  Respect for freedom of association is central to the attainment of
economic development and sustainable growth. The evidence from many
industrialised countries - France, Germany, Japan, Norway, etc - indicates
the positive link between increasing wages and obtaining better
productivity by improving the motivation of workers.  Higher wages also
act as a spur to productivity improvements by obliging employers to try
harder to make economies on other elements of their costs, so increasing
the efficiency of the production process. Furthermore, setting higher
social standards often forces employers to upgrade and so results in more
efficiency and higher growth in the long run.  Conversely much evidence
from developing countries also shows that lowering wages is associated
with lower productivity, in the worst cases because workers are spending
most of their time engaged in informal sector activities to augment their
formal incomes (e.g. Tanzania, Congo-Kinshasa, etc). 
29.  Trade unions play an essential role in the development process by
achieving a sustainable distribution of income and wealth.  Unions have
played a crucial role in improving the wages and working conditions, so
ensuring that the benefits of productivity growth are not confined to a
small elite but are distributed more widely over the whole population.
Productivity, growth and development all depend upon a generalised
perception that the labour market is equitable.  Where this does not
exist, the consequence has either been stagnation - shown by the
below-average long-term performance of many Latin American economies with
extreme income and wealth inequality - or social and political instability
which has undermined development efforts.  This latter situation is well
shown by Africa, and more recently Indonesia, where dissatisfaction has
tended to burst out in damaging and recurrent confrontations which have
jeopardised previous development gain-s and acted as a serious
disincentive to further investment, whether by individuals, companies or
governments.  If, on the other hand, people are generally satisfied with
labour market outcomes, stability is much greater and productivity is
likely to be increased. 
30.  The existence of independent workers' organisation, operating within
a framework of sound industrial relations legislation, provides one of the
best possible guarantees that outcomes will be more equitable.  This is
generally achieved through raising incomes for workers.  It can also be
achieved in a time of economic hardship by ensuring that workers are not
unduly penalised by change.  There are various examples of unions'
preparedness to negotiate "solidarity pacts" with government and sometimes
employers that involve some degree of income restraint by all groups of
the population. 
31.  When workers do enjoy the right to freedom of association, they will
generally use that right to form or to join trade unions.  Their basic
motivation is that only through the collective strength of the union will
they have some influence on their working lives, whether the issue is
remuneration, workplace procedures, conditions of employment, grievances
or health and safety.  Much evidence demonstrates that consultation of
workers, through collective bargaining with their own freely chosen
representatives in the form of trade unions, results in much higher
motivation, continuous feedback for the enterprise on means of improving
its production processes and, as a result, higher productivity.  
32.  This relationship is set to increase in importance.  In a rapidly
changing world, collective bargaining provides the main means of action by
which employment, systems of work and the skills of the labour force can
be continuously adapted while taking account of the need for equity and
efficiency.  Together with mechanisms for tripartite consultation, it
reinforces the institutions of democracy by creating mechanisms for the
resolution of social and economic problems which might otherwise provoke
political tension.
  Social Policy and the Governance of the Global Economy
33. The Bretton Woods Institutions have been called upon to rethink their
policies and to work with member states and key parts of the international
community including the unions and civil society, to  define a new
architecture for the global governance of the world economy. Trade unions
affiliated to the ICFTU have made a concerted effort world-wide and
particularly in the front-line crisis countries, to engage governments,
employers and the international institutions in a dialogue aimed at
finding a consensus on policies to alleviate the effects of the crisis and
build the foundations for early and swift recovery. (A copy of the latest
ICFTU/TUAC statement on the global economic crisis is attached as an
Appendix to this paper)
Declaration of G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors 30 October
 "We agree that more attention must be given in times of crisis to the
effect of economic adjustment on the most vulnerable groups in society. We
therefore call upon the World Bank to develop as a matter of urgency
general principles of good practice in social policy, in consultation with
other relevant institutions. These should be drawn upon in developing
adjustment programmes in response to crises." 
34.  One of the most important steps forward in that dialogue is a growing
understanding that financial and social stability are closely interlinked.
Stabilisation policies that exacerbate social tensions are self defeating,
as is a resort to the printing presses of central banks as a means of
postponing tough choices about the budget. No markets work well without an
appropriate degree of regulation by democratically accountable
governments, but financial and labour markets are particularly prone to
abusive and destructive behaviour.  And since it is now more than evident
that in a global market a failure to regulate adequately in one country
can have profound effects on trading and investment partners, there is an
urgent need to agree on strong universal standards to measure national
policies.
35.  Financial stability is an important prerequisite for development but
too often has been pursued by the blunt tools of austerity. Social
dialogue between governments, trade unions, employers and other
representative bodies is also necessary to build consensus over national
social and economic development goals and means of action. Strong social
institutions, including free trade unions, are vital to the development of
human resources and the mediation of disputes about the allocation of
resources. 
36.  Looking beyond the crisis, the ICFTU strongly believes that
comparative advantage will lie with those countries that have a stronger
social cohesion built on investment in education and training, health-care
and a sound industrial relations system, founded on core labour standards.
The most successful countries, both developed and developing, will be
those with institutions that are able to balance and rebalance constantly
the market pressures of flexibility and dynamism with the social pressures
for security and dignity.  The suppleness of a country's institutions will
be the key. 
37.  The first link in the chain of contracts which make the global market
function is the employment contract. The workplace is where the pressures
of the market impact on people's aspirations for respect and fair
treatment. If governments are to mould globalisation into a force that
enables people to achieve their aspirations and allay their fears, they
must secure their rights to a say on their terms and conditions of
employment. Adopted at the 86th International Labour Conference in June
1998, the ILO Declaration  on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work
is an important building block in the construction of a more humane and
less volatile global market. 
38.  The ICFTU urges all governments to give the new Declaration their
full and active support not only at the ILO but in other international
bodies which can make an effective contribution to its implementation. It
must be part of the new architecture for governance of the global economy
providing a basis for mechanisms for the involvement of trade unions at
national and international levels. Within the new architecture of global
governance of international trade and investment, a much higher priority
is needed for social development. At the UN's Social Development Summit in
Copenhagen in 1995 more than one hundred heads of state and governments
signed up to a very comprehensive anti-poverty, anti-unemployment, anti
social exclusion strategy and programme of action. Similarly the UN's
Beijing Women's Conference marked a major step forward in establishing a
platform for action on equality. These unprecedented agreements should be
fully integrated into the new architecture. As a first step the IMF and
the World Bank should incorporate the national action plan's for the
follow-up of the Social Summit into their policy and lending instruments,
including the Country Assistance Strategies and  Policy Framework Papers.       

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skp/jh 13/1/99


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