From: "Macdonald Stainsby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, 7 Jun 2001 14:49:22 -0700
To: "Leninist International" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [L-I] WB calls for elimination of labor rights in Mexico





 WB calls for elimination of labor rights in Mexico
 Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2001 12:51:50 -0400
 
 MEXICO SOLIDARITY NETWORK - WEEKLY NEWS SUMMARY
 MAY 22-31, 2001
 
WORLD BANK URGES END TO COLLECTIVE CONTRACTS,  LABOR BENEFITS IN MEXICO
A new World Bank report on Mexico, entitled "An Integral Agenda of
Development for the New Era," was formally presented in Mexico on May
21. The report includes specific recommendations on labor policy for the
government of President Vicente Fox, most notably proposals for
increasing the "flexibility" of Mexican labor.
 
 Concretely, the report recommends that current regulations mandating
 severance pay, collective bargaining, exclusion contracts, obligatory
 benefits, restrictions on contracts for temporary employment and
 apprenticeships, antiquity-based promotion schemes, company-sponsored
 training programs, and company payments to social security and housing
 plans, should all be eliminated.
 
 The report suggested that North American investors attracted to Mexico
 under NAFTA are put off by domestic labor regulations, and that without
 making salaries more flexible, reducing company obligations toward
 workers and essentially repealing the federal labor law, investors will
 continue to have doubts about Mexico's economic future, while the poor
 will continue to be "impeded" by pro-labor laws from "obtaining the
 greatest benefit from their human capital."
 
 While the World Bank recommendations created a good deal of controversy
 in the press and among labor groups, they were solidly backed by the PAN
 party and the Fox administration.
 
 President Fox said that all the suggestions and recommendations made by
 the World Bank "are very much in line with what we have contemplated,"
 and that indeed they are essential for Mexico to "really enter into a
 process of sustainable development."
 
 Managerial Coordinating Council (CCE) president Claudio X. Gonza'lez,
 however, took a different view.  The leader of Mexico's most influential
 business organization affirmed that the World Bank recommendations went
 "over the top," and that business leaders in Mexico have no intention of
 eliminating elements such as severance pay, collective bargaining
 contracts, or payment of benefits to workers.
 
 "We are in the process of modernizing our [labor] law," said Gonza'lez,
 "but some of these proposals of the World Bank are not made even to the
 most developed nations.  Why are they then being recommended for the
 emerging countries?"
 
 This report is a product of the Mexico Solidarity Network.
 Redistribution is authorized and encouraged provided that the
 source is cited.
 Comments: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 This and previous news updates are archived at:
 http://www.mexicosolidarity.org
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