European Labor: The Ideological Legacy of the Social Pact
by Asbjørn Wahl January 04 Monthly Review January 2004January 2004
Europe’s trade union movement is on the defensive. It is also in a deep
political and ideological crisis. At present, the trade unions are unable to fulfill
their role as the defenders of the immediate economic and social interests of
their members. They have lost ground in all sectors and industries. What was,
in the post–Second World War period, the strongest and most influential
trade union movement in the capitalist world is today openly confused, lacks a
clear vision, and hesitates in its new social and political orientation. Ironically,
the same theories, analyses, and policies which gave it its strength in the postwar
period have now become a heavy burden. The ideological legacy of the “social
pact” is now leading the trade union movement astray.
The Neoliberal Offensive
Behind this development is the ongoing neoliberal transformation of our societies.
As this process is not the theme of this article, let us just mention a few important
points. Over the last twenty years, we have been confronted with an immense offensive
from neoliberal forces. Capitalist interests have gone on the offensive, and we
have seen an enormous shift in the balance of power between labor and capital.
Multinational companies have, of course, been at the forefront of this development.
The postwar “social pact” between labor and capital, the policy of
peaceful coexistence between unions and employers, has broken down. The capital
side has withdrawn from the social pact and is increasingly pursuing a confrontational
policy towards organized labor.
The attempts by multinational companies and their political servants to deepen
and to institutionalize their newly-achieved positions of power are important
parts of this development. This is being done mainly through international institutions
and agreements such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) and regional power structures
like the European Union (EU). Since these bodies are less democratic than local
and state governments, they have proved to be the most useful and effective instruments
for the institutionalization of corporate power.
The following analysis is based on the concept that the EU is today the conduit
through which the neoliberal social and economic model is being institutionalized
in Europe. The EU and other regional and supranational institutions are being
constructed on the basis of the new balance of power and cannot be changed, democratized,
or defeated until workers are able to shift the current balance of power in their
direction. Such a shift would require the trade union movement to make its main
long-term task the mobilization of popular and working-class power.
New Conditions, Old Policy
Unfortunately, mobilizing working-class power is not the project of the trade
union movement in Europe today. The paradox labor faces is that while the economic
and political climate in which the trade unions must operate has changed enormously,
most unions have continued to pursue the policy of the social pact. They consider
so-called globalization to be not the result of conscious strategies and new power
and class relations, but rather the necessary consequences of technological and
organizational changes, a position remarkably similar to that expressed by Margaret
Thatcher when she infamously said, “There is no alternative.” What
is needed, they say, is to transfer the policy of the social pact from the national
to the regional and global level. Their methods are “social dialogue”
with employer organizations and state and suprastate institutions, campaigns for
the formal introduction of labor standards (such as the labor conventions of the
International Labor Organization [ILO], which, among other things, prohibit forced
labor, guarantee the rights of free association and collective bargaining, and
prohibit employment discrimination) in international trade agreements and trade
organizations, as well as the pursuit of corporate social responsibility (CSR)
codes of conduct and framework agreements with multinational companies. These
latter are voluntary, unbinding, and unenforceable codes of conduct developed
by the multinational companies themselves. So far, they have had no identifiable
effect on corporate behavior and seem to have as their main aim counteracting
the negative public image of many multinational companies.
This “social dialogue” strategy is being pursued independently of
a concrete analysis of power relations and without recognition of the necessity
of mobilizing class and popular power to achieve social change. To understand
the current state of affairs, we have to look more closely at the history of the
European labor movement—in particular the policy of the social pact, whose
history and impact can hardly be overestimated if we really want to understand
labor’s political and ideological crisis.
The Historic Compromise between Labor and Capital
During the twentieth century, the trade union movement in Western Europe gradually
developed a kind of peaceful accommodation with capitalist interests. During the
1930s, this accommodation was first institutionalized in some parts of Europe,
mainly in the north, when the trade union movement reached accords with employers’
organizations. After the Second World War, a similar process occurred in most
of the rest of Western Europe.
This social pact between labor and capital formed the basis on which the welfare
state was developed and wages and working conditions were gradually improved.
From a period characterized by confrontations between labor and capital, societies
entered a phase of social peace, bipartite and tripartite (labor, employers, and
the state) negotiations, and consensus policies. Because it led to important achievements
in terms of welfare, wages, and working conditions, this policy gained massive
support from the working class. As a consequence, the more radical and anticapitalist
parts of the labor movement were gradually marginalized. Thus, this development
led to the depoliticization and deradicalization of the labor movement and the
bureaucratization of the trade union movement. It became the historical role of
the social democratic parties to administer this policy of class compromise. Not
surprisingly, the current difficulties plaguing the unions are mirrored in the
problems facing Europe’s social democratic parties.
It is important to realize that this social partnership between labor and capital
was a result of the actual strength of the trade unions and the labor movement.
The employers and their organizations came to see that they were not able to defeat
the trade unions. They had to recognize them as representatives of the workers
and negotiate with them. In other words, the peaceful accommodation between labor
and capital rested on a strong labor movement. Another important factor in the
post–Second World War period was that capitalism experienced more than twenty
years of stable and strong economic growth. This made it possible to share the
dividend among labor, capital, and public welfare.
A decisive part of the social pact was the national regulation of capital and
markets. Capital control was the order of the day in all countries. Settlements
between labor and capital were made in an orderly and peaceful way within national
borders. An important result of this was that the trade union movement became
very nationally oriented. Internationalism in the trade union movement began to
deteriorate into a sort of diplomacy within international bodies (like the ILO)
and even into different forms of trade union tourism, with little or no connection
with the immediate needs and interests of the members, even though some of the
internationalist political rhetoric remained in place.
Socialist rhetoric notwithstanding, for the trade union movement the social pact
meant the acceptance of the capitalist organization of production, the private
ownership of the means of production, and the employers’ right to lead the
labor process. In exchange for gains in welfare and working conditions, the trade
union confederations guaranteed industrial peace and restraint in wage negotiations.
Put simply, the welfare state and gradually improved living conditions were what
the labor movement gained in exchange for giving up its socialist project. Today
we can conclude that it was a short-term achievement in a very specific historical
context, one which helped greatly to depoliticize and deradicalize the working
class.
An important feature of this context was the existence of a competing economic
system in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. As the British historian Eric Hobsbawm
pointed out, this was instrumental in making the capitalists in the West accept
a compromise.1 It was on the basis of this compromise that the most important
welfare reforms and institutions were developed during the three decades after
the Second World War. The radicalized labor movement which came out of the economic
and social crisis of the 1930s and the war was, in other words, met by a conscious
strategy by its capitalist counterparts. They voluntarily entered into social
pacts and gave in to many of labor’s social and economic demands in order
to win time and dampen socialist sentiments in the labor movement. Seen from today’s
vantage point, we can say that this corporate strategy was quite successful.
A sharp division of work within the labor movement was a noticeable side-effect
of the class compromise. The conditions for the buying and selling of labor were
regulated by the trade union movement through negotiations, while social security
for the unemployed was handled by the social democratic parties in parliament.
This laid the foundation for a more narrowly economistic development of the trade
union movement, something which weakens trade unions today, as social democratic
parties have shrunken from even their former reformist politics.
The Ideology of the Social Pact
During the era of the social pact, this corporate strategy seemed to have blinded
the labor movement. Based on the real experience of twenty years of continuous
improvements in living and working conditions, the common understanding was that
a way had been found for society to bring social progress and a relatively fair
distribution of wealth to ordinary people without having to endure class struggle
and social confrontations. It was thought that capitalist society had reached
a higher level of civilization. Through gradual reforms, the labor movement had
increased democratic control of the economy. A crisis-free capitalism had become
a reality. There would be no more economic crises like that of the 1930s, no more
mass unemployment, no more social distress, and no more misery among people. All
social trends pointed upwards. For a great many in the labor movement, this was
the reformist road to socialism—and everyone could see that it worked!
These real social achievements formed the material basis for an ideology of social
partnership which remains deeply rooted in European trade union bureaucracy. Personally,
I heard this ideology openly expressed for the first time when I took part in
basic trade union training at the education center of the Norwegian Confederation
of Trade Unions early in the 1980s. There I learned that the first third of the
twentieth century was characterized by intense conflict between labor and capital—including
general strikes, lockouts, and the use of police and military forces against organized
workers on strike. This was a destructive period, which in the end (the 1930s)
had brought the working class nowhere. It was only when this confrontational policy
was abandoned, when the trade union movement started to take full social responsibility,
that real progress was achieved—in the form of better working conditions,
better wages, and welfare reforms. In other words, confrontations with the employers
are destructive; peaceful social dialogue is the way forward. This was the lesson
that was taught at the trade union educational center as late as the beginning
of the 1980s.
The above analysis was wrong then, and it is wrong today. However, the consequences
of this error have become more dangerous for the trade union movement as the social
pact has broken down. What this analysis obscures is that the great achievements
in terms of welfare and working conditions, during the period of class compromise
after the Second World War, were the fruits of the previous conflict. Progress
was made only because the working class had shifted the balance of power between
labor and capital through confrontations and hard class struggle during the first
part of the twentieth century (including the Russian revolution). In other words,
it was the confrontational struggles of the previous period which made possible
the gains later realized through peaceful negotiations.
The Breakdown of the Social Pact
The class compromise, however, was a fragile construction, since its survival
depended upon a stable capitalist economy with a high rate of growth. The compromise
was gradually eroded with the onset of deep economic crises in western capitalism
in the early 1970s. The crises spurred capitalist forces to take the offensive—among
other things to reduce costs—attacking trade union rights, wages, and public
expenditures they undermined the very bases of the welfare state.
The deradicalized and depoliticized trade union and labor movements were taken
by surprise by this development. The employers suddenly became much more hostile
at the negotiating table. Negotiations, which had previously been mainly about
improvements of wages and working conditions, now began to involve attacks on
previous achievements and existing regulations. As most of the trade union leadership
had been steeped in the environment of class compromise and social peace, it was
not prepared for these attacks. Within the framework of the ideology of the social
pact, the neoliberal offensive was simply incomprehensible. The trade union bureaucracy
remained passive, and the trade union movement was forced on the defensive. In
many countries, many workers left their trade unions altogether, as the unions
proved powerless to protect their interests.
Thus, the 1980s represented an enormous setback for the trade union movement,
something which can be seen in the statistics on the level of unionization (organization
of the workforce) in some important West European countries (see table 1).
The few trade unions that tried to take action against the neoliberal attacks,
as did the British mineworkers, were defeated. In the British case, one reason
for defeat was that the bureaucracy of the trade union confederation (TUC) considered
militant industrial action to be a bigger threat to the consensus policy of the
social pact than the furious attacks from the mining companies and the Thatcherite
regime. Many years later, the TUC admitted that it had been wrong not to support
the miners’ strike, but by then the damage had been done. And remarkably,
the TUC has not altered its support for the social pact.
With the breakdown of the command economies of Eastern Europe around 1990, the
only alternative to western capitalism disappeared. Capitalism had triumphed on
all fronts, and for employers the compromise with labor was no longer necessary.
Now capitalist forces could pursue their narrow economic and political interests
with fewer inhibitions. This is why the class compromise (or the consensus model)
has broken or is breaking down all over Western Europe. The historical and economic
preconditions for such a compromise are no longer there, and the most important
product of this compromise, the welfare state, is under increasing pressure.
This analysis of power relations is not understood by the dominant wing of today’s
trade union leadership. When the neoliberal offensive began some twenty years
ago and the employers gradually broke with the policy of social partnership, the
only answer most of the trade union bureaucracy could formulate was to continue
its consensus policy. Some trade unions have almost been begging hostile employers
for a return to the social pact. This policy has been fuelled by the strong national
orientation of the trade union movement. Rather than reorienting themselves towards
confronting the now more aggressive capital interests, the narrow national orientation
and the social partnership ideology of the unions have led much of the trade union
movement into an alliance with, and consequently a subordination to, “national”
capital’s struggle to be internationally competitive. In Germany, the term
“Standort Wettbewerb” is used to mean not only union alliances with
German companies but support for the German state in Germany’s competition
with other nations.
Great parts of the trade union movement have been drawn deeper into business unionism
and legal formalism rather than shifting towards a strategy based on class analysis
and an assessment of the balance of power. The German trade union movement’s
struggle for “unity for work” during the middle of the 1990s is one
good example of this policy of national alliance with the employers. This was
a proposal for a formal renewal of the social pact. It was made by the German
Confederation of Trade Unions and offered to accept poorer working conditions
in exchange for job security. It was rebuffed by the employers. In the same way,
the relatively narrowly focused struggle for minimum labor standards in the WTO,
which leaders of the international trade union movement have been pursuing over
the last ten years, is an excellent example of the legal formalism which has developed
without an analysis of the balance of power between labor and capital.
The trade union bureaucrats, both at the national and at the international level,
continue to see themselves as mediators between labor and capital. Today, when
capitalist forces are on the offensive and have provoked the development of an
international popular justice and solidarity movement which opposes the current
corporate globalization, the international trade union movement is eager to define
itself as a mediating force between this movement and corporate interests. This
was openly expressed when the third World Social Forum (WSF) was held in Porto
Alegre, Brazil in January 2003—in parallel with the World Economic Forum
(WEF) of the political and economic elites in Davos, Switzerland. The international
trade union movement then issued a statement, “Democratizing Globalization:
Trade Union Statement to 2003 WSF and WEF,” which was signed by all the
important international trade union bodies.2 Among other things it stated that:
The international trade union movement has a common message to Porto Alegre and
to Davos. Vision, political will and the necessary capacities must be brought
together at the global level to attain development and guarantee decent work for
the millions of workers who today live in precariousness and poverty without prospects
of a better future. That will require resource commitments as well as commitments
on paper. It will require governance systems to promote our common good, our rights
and democracy. It requires effective democratic processes, and it requires dialogue
to make it happen. We will press the WEF to address the need to globalise social
justice. At the same time, we will contribute in the WSF to finding constructive
approaches to democratising globalisation in the interests of all working people.3
Most of the international trade union organizations do not, in other words, consider
themselves to belong to the new movement against corporate globalization.4 They
consider this new movement to be too politically radical. The International Confederation
of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) or the Global Unions, therefore, do not join forces
with the rest of the movements when they go to the World Social Forum—they
hold their own conferences and meetings on the fringe of the forums. At the same
time, they send equally high-ranking delegations to the World Economic Forum.
“We have always achieved most through dialogue,” is the constantly
recurring refrain.
Policies Independent of Power Relations
The complete lack of analysis of power relations and the preconditions for trade
union strategies is also apparent in the educational work being done internationally
by the trade unions. A number of West European trade unions and confederations
are running training programs in the form of solidarity projects with sister unions
in Eastern Europe as well as in developing countries. In these educational projects,
western unions are disseminating what they consider to be their own great success—the
social pact. They are trying to convince the trade union movement in the rest
of the world of the advantages of pursuing a social partnership model. Given current
power relations, this kind of education is counterproductive to the trade unions
in Eastern Europe and the developing world, which are under attack from aggressive,
confrontational employers.
It is important to notice that all of the developments described above have affected
trade unions in the manufacturing industries more strongly than those in the public
sector and in parts of the transport industry. This has been because manufacturing
is more strongly and directly exposed to international competition. Thus the setback
of the trade unions and the political and ideological shift to the right have
been more prevalent in manufacturing than in any other part of the movement.
The disastrous continuation of a policy of social partnership, in a situation
in which the economic and social basis for this partnership is fading away, is
today being pursued by most of the European trade union bureaucracy—in particular
the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). Thus, over the last few years,
we have seen growing activities in the form of consultations, negotiations, lobbying,
and so-called social dialogue between the assumed social partners in the labor
market. The result so far has been a strengthened bureaucratic development in
the European trade union movement. The social dialogue, or “negotiations
at the EU level,” as it is wrongly being characterized by some, is an exercise
which does not include the right to take industrial action. It is easy to understand,
then, why the results have been so meager.
At the international level, the ICFTU is the strongest advocate for the policy
of social partnership, very clearly expressed in a statement in which it commented
on the United Nations Global Compact. Among other things, it boasts of having
issued a joint statement with the UN, using some of the same key language as in
a corresponding joint statement between the UN and the International Chamber of
Commerce, namely:
It was agreed that global markets required global rules. The aim should be to
enable the benefits of globalisation increasingly to spread to all people by building
an effective framework of multilateral rules for a world economy that is being
transformed by the globalisation of markets....The meeting agreed that the Global
Compact should contribute to this process by helping to build social partnerships
of business and labor.5
At the company level, European Works Councils have become the bureaucratic answer.
These councils of workers’ representatives in transnational companies afford
the workers no real influence, although they can be useful for gathering information
and making trade union contacts. The councils have less influence than similar
institutions that developed in the Nordic countries and in Germany during the
postwar period, although even these have lost real influence in these countries
as market forces have gained ground.
In Europe, this policy of powerless social dialogue is bringing the trade union
movement into a deadlock. A trade union policy based on the mobilization of their
members to confront and fight the attacks from the employers is almost nonexistent
at the EU level, even though we have seen tendencies in this direction at the
national level (in France in 1995 and in Italy in 2002).
The depressing result of these policies has been the acceptance by the dominant
part of the trade union movement of a step-by-step reduction in welfare and working
conditions. Through negotiations, trade unions have gradually accepted an increasing
“flexibilization” of work. In different European countries we have
seen retrenchments in welfare provisions such as reduced sick pay and pensions,
cuts in unemployment benefits, higher use fees in public education, nursery schools,
and health and social services, and the abolition of nonprofit housing projects.
Working conditions have worsened through the undermining of labor laws and agreements,
including the weakening of working hours regulations, the reduction of overtime
pay, the reintroduction of shift work in many industries, reduced job security,
more temporary short contract jobs, more use of contract and leased workers, and
more decentralized bargaining. One important effect of this development has been
the demoralization of workers and a reduction in trade union membership, as the
trade unions fail to protect their members. The growth of right- wing populist
parties is probably the most dangerous result of this trade union policy of indulgence.
Strategic Considerations
So what can the trade union movement do in order to confront the global corporate
offensive? One thing is clear, radical rhetoric is not sufficient, even if it
is common at international meetings. Experiences from the first European Social
Forum in Florence, Italy in November 2002 can serve as an example. There we heard
at least two types of trade union positions. One came from very militant, small,
nonrepresentative groups. Another type was made by representatives from mainstream
European trade unions. For example, a representative from a German union, IG Metall,
wanted to open the struggle for the thirty-hour week. He did not mention, however,
that the same union negotiated an agreement with Volkswagen only a year before
which undermined existing wages and working conditions to induce the company to
open a new factory in Germany rather than in a low-cost Eastern European country.
None of these trade union representatives addressed the real problems of the trade
union movement in Europe today. It is necessary to do that as a basis for developing
a viable trade union strategy.
The first thing necessary is to realize that the confrontational policies of the
multinational companies and other capital interests have to be met head-on by
the trade unions. There are disagreements and contradictions on this position
in the trade union movement—at the national and local as well as at the
international level. Those in the trade unions who want to revitalize their organizations
will therefore have to build new alliances based on the best parts of the movement.
Even if there are many exceptions, these labor organizations are mainly to be
found in the public sector, in transport, in some of the private service sectors,
and in a number of local branches across the trade union movement.
To confront transnational corporations, it is necessary to build networks and
encourage cooperation between workers in the same industries across both national
and company borders. The development of international, class-based solidarity
will have to break with the tendency of business unionism which favors “our”
company over “theirs.” This is a tendency which has a stronger tradition
in the U.S. trade union movement than in Europe, but it has been strengthened
also in Europe over the last twenty years, as depoliticized and deradicalized
trade unions have joined forces with “their” employers to protect
jobs at the national level—in competition with companies in other countries.
This narrow misguided strategy must be replaced by a joint class-based struggle
in which democratic control of production and distribution is taken to the fore.
Another important struggle around which a new internationalist trade union alliance
will have to be built is the struggle against the ongoing corporate takeover of
public services. This means fighting privatization and defending the achievements
which were won through the welfare state. The corporate takeover of these parts
of society represents a very important element of the shift in the balance of
power between labor and capital in our societies.
Another important part of a progressive trade union strategy is to challenge the
dominant thinking of the trade union bureaucracy—the ideology of social
partnership and the peaceful accommodation between labor and capital. We will
have to have difficult but friendly internal discussions on this particular subject
within our movement. These discussions should be based on the understanding that
the policy of social partnership is not the result of conspiracies or treachery,
but the result of a specific historical development. We need new analyses, which
can explain to people how the historical compromise between labor and capital
was realized and why it has broken down. People’s discontent with current
developments has to be taken seriously; their anxiety and dissatisfaction should
be politicized and channeled into trade union and political class-based struggles
for their working and living conditions. That is the only way to prevent these
people from being mobilized by right-wing, populist parties.
We should focus on welfare and working conditions, on the brutalization of work
which is taking place as a growing part of the economy is exposed to market competition,
and on the reduction of workers’ influence over their working day and their
control of the work process.
It is important to realize that this also has a lot to do with people’s
self-confidence. Workers’ dignity is systematically being attacked—in
the work places, in the media, in the general public debate, and in the social
and cultural climate of a society dominated by bourgeois thinking and values and
neoliberal policies. This can be changed only by reclaiming the notions of productive
labor, class relationship, and class identity. It cannot, however, be imposed
upon the working class from outside. It has to be developed as a part of, and
during, the social struggle.
Finally, we must build alliances with the new global movement against neoliberalism—for
democracy, global justice, and solidarity. This global movement of movements is
currently more politically radical and system-critical than the trade union and
the labor movements, even though its knowledge of class relations is rather poor.
The trade union movement needs the radicalism and the militancy of this popular
movement in order to break with their illusions of class compromise. If this alliance
is developed constructively and correctly, the two movements could reinforce each
other and bring the struggle to a higher level.
The social pact was never a defined aim of the labor movement; it was the result
of a specific historical development. It was made possible only as a result of
an enormous shift in the balance of power between labor and capital. The combination
of the Russian revolution, a strong labor and trade union movement in the west,
strong liberation movements in the third world, and a long period of stable economic
growth in the capitalist economy after the Second World War were the very specific
preconditions that made it possible for a relatively stable period of class compromise.
To aim at a new class compromise, a new social pact, under the current much less
favorable power conditions is illusory.
Our aim, therefore, must be to go beyond the social pact and the welfare state.
Only a transformation of society which is deep enough to remove the material preconditions
for a restoration of neoliberal policies can safeguard the interest of working
people. Nothing less than socialism can provide that.
Notes
1. Eric Hobsbawm, Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century 1914–1991
(London: Penguin, 1994).
2. These included the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, the Global
Union Federations, the Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD, the World Confederation
of Labor, and the European Trade Union Confederation.
3. See www.icftu.org/displaydocument.asp?Index=991216994&Language=EN.
4. There are exceptions. In particular, the Public Services International, the
international umbrella organization of national public sector trade unions, has
played an important role in the World Social Forum movement, in particular through
the WTO/world trade-focused Our World Is Not For Sale network (www.ourworldisnotforsale.org).
An increasing number of national trade unions and local branches are also gradually
involving themselves more strongly with the new global justice and solidarity
movement.
5. “ICFTU Statement on the Global Compact,” www.icftu.org.
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