http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Denny5.htm

Europe's Pay Attack

   by Brian Denny
   February 27, 2006 21:35

How the European Union's single internal market is being used to force
down wages. Following the accession of eastern European states to the
European Union in May 2004, Ireland, Britain and Sweden allowed
unrestricted access to their labour markets. As a result, migrant
labour has been rapidly moving west, while east European countries are
experiencing population falls and an inevitable brain drain.

In Latvia alone, over 50,000 migrants have left a country of less than
two million people. This has led to a loss of skilled labour and young
people and an uncertain future of underdevelopment. In the three
western states, meanwhile, wages have been dragged downwards in a
process known as "social dumping," as cheap foreign labour replaces the
indigenous workforce and trade union bargaining power is severely
weakened.

A Swedish case that is currently before the EU European Court of
Justice (ECJ), highlights how EU diktats use cheap foreign labour to
batter down national standards. Latvian company Laval was refurbishing
a school in Vaxholm, outside Stockholm, using its own workers. The
Swedish Building Workers Union (SBWU) demanded a collective agreement
with exactly the same conditions as those that Swedish building firms
normally sign. Laval refused and referred to a Latvian collective
agreement instead. Latvian workers were being paid about a third of the
Swedish wage without adequate insurance. As this was a clear case of
social dumping, the SBWU, with the support of other unions, began
industrial action.

Laval argued that this action was not in compliance with EU law and
brought the case to the Swedish labour court, which decided to ask for
a preliminary ruling by the ardently eurofederalist European Court of
Justice. The court is to decide if industrial action in support of
demands for a collective agreement is in compliance with European law,
notably Article 49 on freedom of movement to provide services as well
as the posting of workers directive.
While visiting Stockholm, EU internal market Commissioner Charlie
McCreevy made clear that the Commission fully backed the Latvian
company and the "social dumping" that it had created. "If member states
continue to shield themselves from foreign company takeovers and
competition, then I fear that the internal market will begin to
dissolve. The question here is whether or not Sweden has implemented
Article 49 in the treaty on free movement," he said.
Understandably, the main Swedish trade union federation (LO), which
backed euro membership in a 2002 referendum when the people rejected
it, has indicated that it would withdraw support for Swedish EU
membership altogether if the court rules against collective bargaining
legislation.

LO vice-president Wanja Lundby-Wedin points out that industrial action
is, by its very nature, an obstacle to the activities of a company and
free movement. "However, the right to collective action is, together
with freedom of association and the right to negotiate and conclude
collective agreements, recognised as a fundamental right in
international conventions," she says.

As a result, if the ECJ finds that the industrial action taken in
Vaxholm is against EU law, it would have serious consequences and not
just for Nordic industrial relations systems. "What, until now, have
been regarded as fundamental rights of workers in all democratic states
would be undermined in the name of free movement," says Lundby-Wedin.

These problems have also arisen in Ireland, most notably in the Irish
Ferries dispute, when the company announced plans to replace nearly 600
Irish seafarers with sweated labour from eastern Europe at considerably
lower rates of pay. This provoked huge protests across Ireland and even
Irish premier Bertie Ahern was left wringing his hands about the
injustice of the situation. Yet the Irish government is supporting the
introduction of the EU services directive which would actually
accelerate "social dumping."
Around a quarter of a million migrants, mainly from Poland and Latvia,
now work in Ireland. Often, this is for cash pay considerably below the
legal minimum wage. Ireland is now facing the problems that arise from
merging an Irish labour force of just two million with an east European
labour force of over 70 million. The Irish Congress of Trade Unions is
demanding measures to protect particularly unskilled workers where
social dumping is threatening jobs. "It is an iron law of economics
that an abundant supply of labour pushes down its cost. It is insulting
people's intelligence to pretend otherwise," it says in a statement.

This theme was a source of satisfaction for Bank of England governor
Mervyn King last year, when he declared that immigration from eastern
Europe had "reduced wage inflation" in Britain. "In an economy that can
call on unlimited supplies of migrant labour, the concept of output gap
is meaningless," he said. This phenomenon will be exacerbated when
Romania and Bulgaria join the EU in 2007 or 2008.

A recent US congressional budget report also triumphantly declared that
increased immigration of low-skilled workers from Mexico and central
America had pushed down wages.
Across Europe, it is clear that we are witnessing large movement of
capital eastwards as labour heads west. This is happening in accordance
to the principles of the single European market, which allow the free
movement of goods, capital, services and people, regardless of the
consequences. The single market is a mechanism to remove the powers of
nation states to control the movement of capital and people in the
pursuit of corporate profit. At the same time, it truncates all forms
of democracy, including rights to fair wages, working conditions,
social protection and collective bargaining by trade unions. These
policies also ultimately feed the poison of racism and fascism, the
last refuge of the corporate beast in crisis.

EU commission president Jose Manuel Barroso also plans openly to "lure
talent" from the South and to "capitalise on the lucrative
international education market" by offering top African students
instant EU citizenship. Leading South African MP Kader Asmal slammed
the plans as "another form of discreet colonialism."

"EU countries assist in developing higher education in the South and
then wish to take the cream of the PhD students by seducing them with
the offer of citizenship. This is not a brain drain, but a destruction
of the intellectual capital of the South," he said.

It is clear that, to reverse this increasingly perverse situation, all
nation states must have democratic control over immigration policy and
to apply national legislation over employment. This includes the right
to introduce laws in defence of migrant and indigenous workers as well
as the removal of legislation restricting trade unions taking
solidarity action.

The need for these measures was very evident in the recent Gate Gourmet
dispute, when British Airways baggage handlers struck in support of
Gate Gourmet workers. In the end, hundreds of Gate Gourmet workers,
mainly British Asian women, were made redundant and replaced by eastern
European workers on much lower wages.
---------
Brian Denny is a spokesman for Trade Unionists Against the EU
Constitution.



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