
Globalisation and public sector trade unions
Globalisation is an issue
for all public sector workers. See the list of publications below that
expand on what we say here.
At its most simplistic
level, globalisation is no more than the expression of a natural
progression of business organisation which started at the household
level, moved historically to the village or town level, spread into a
larger province or region and then became national in organisation and
outlook. That it has spread to a global level and global thinking, as
far as strategy is concerned, is neither surprising nor an indication of
globalisation’s inherent ‘goodness’ or
‘badness’.
The problem with
globalisation is that it is not just a natural progression. As
with the earlier forms of business organisation, it stands to benefit
some and make losers of others; the unequal power relationships within
and between nation states and between other groups in society mean that
the judgement about whether globalisation is good or bad depends on the
nature of those power relationships. A progressive government (and its
people), operating in an international environment where equity was a
valued political objective would see sustainable, free and fair trade as
a positive human creation.
Essentially, globalisation
is the potential for a company, in this case a multinational enterprise
(MNE), to look at the whole world as its market and to search the whole
world for its suppliers and purchasers. For example, it will consider
its competitive advantage with wages, raw materials costs and labour
legislation if it uses country X rather than country Y, especially if it
can beat other MNEs that are not able to get market entry into countries
that offer such advantages. What marks an MNE’s operations as
different from a national company is that, in many countries, an MNE can
‘pick’ the level of wages it is prepared to pay or the taxes
it can convince the host government to levy or the price it is prepared
to pay for raw materials. Globalisation is characterised by the fact
that the most powerful companies – the MNEs - think of the whole
planet as their sphere of operation. They are able to shape national and
global politics and policies to suit that end by making offers to many
countries that governments cannot refuse and by their lobbying. Other
companies, which may not be MNEs, which wish or are forced to compete
nationally with an MNE will have to behave as if they are operating in a
global market, whether they want to or not. See also:
MNEs do not just influence
national governments. They have a very close relationship with many
intergovernmental organisations. Sometimes this is simply a project
relationship – they get the contract for a World Bank dam or power
station and they ‘bargain’ on how they will do the job. In a
more sinister way, however, they are often involved in setting Bank or
IMF policy on attitudes to privatisation, for example. At the World
Trade Organization (WTO) – see below for more WTO comment - some
MNEs influence the bodies that establish WTO rules, criteria and deal
with trade disputes. In many cases this is a result of the fact that
business is represented on some governments’ delegations to a WTO
meeting or is asked what it wants out of WTO negotiations. (See
the International
Financial Institutions page on this site for more information
on our positions on these bodies.)
From the outset, we should
be clear about one thing: the globalising behaviour of MNEs and the
influence they bring to bear are not restricted to the private sector.
There are, more and more each day, MNEs infiltrating what have been seen
as public sector operations and there are virtually no public sector
workers who can say that globalisation will not be something they have
to put on their agenda.
Apart from the MNEs that are
the driving force behind it, the main problem with globalisation
relates to the driving idea behind globalisation, unbridled free
market capitalism. Corporate globalisation embraces an ideology that
says the more you let free markets rule, and open your economy to free
trade and competition, the more efficient and flourishing your economy
will be. For many countries and for many people inside many countries,
this is not true.
Corporate globalisation has
its own set of economic rules - which revolve around opening,
deregulating, and privatising your economy. Thousands of people have
been brutalised or left behind by this new system. That’s why some
have called globalisation the re-incarnation of 19th century bandit
capitalism.
Many people cheered when
‘communism’ collapsed. The problem was that when this
happened, it only left one alternative ideology, capitalism. Some people
felt that because communism had failed, we had to go the whole hog in
the other direction - that a sort of extreme “free market”
system was our only available choice. What is often neglected in this
thinking is that there are several “capitalisms” and the
neo-liberal US brand is not an inevitable endpoint.
Today’s era of
globalisation is built around falling telecommunications and information
technology costs - thanks to microchips, satellites, fibre optics and
the Internet. These new technologies are able to weave the world more
tightly together. Among other things, these technologies have allowed
companies to locate different parts of their operations in different
parts of the world, but to tie them together as if they were in one
place.
As a result of all this, the
impact on local communities no longer figures as much as it did in
corporate decision-making. Capital can be transferred from one place to
another, often at the push of a button. If factories get closed and jobs
are lost as a by-product, well, too bad.
See some of PSI’s
publications on these issues:
The World Trade
Organization (WTO) sets the
rules for the world trading system and settles trade
disputes. Many nations, NGOs and trade unions find its whole
philosophy completely unacceptable. Trade unions have been trying to get
the texts and rules of the WTO treaties changed so that disputes
procedures can be established, with the involvement of the ILO,
requiring countries to respect the core labour standards of the ILO. The
PSI paper Stop
the World? No. Shape It! outlines the other main issues on
which trade unions have campaigned at each of the WTO Ministerial
Conferences held since 1996, including the Ministerial in Cancún,
Mexico in September 2003:
-
Democracy, Transparency,
Consultation and Reform of the WTO
-
GATS and Safeguarding
Services
-
Advancing Development
Priorities
-
Making Progress on
Workers’ Rights at the WTO
-
Investment at the
WTO
-
Trade and Competition
Policy
-
Government
Procurement
-
Trade
Facilitation
-
Sustainable Development at
the WTO
-
Agriculture
The General Agreement on
Trade in Services (GATS) is more fully described in the paper
mentioned above but also in Great
Expectations: The future of trade in services. GATS is important for
public sector unions because of the danger that education, water and
health services could be declared tradable services to an extent not yet
seen, subject to WTO rules.
Government/public
procurement. Changes here could allow MNEs to make inroads into
more public services and reduce the ability of governments to support
the growth of small domestic suppliers. Unions also want core labour
standards built into procurement rules. The paper mentioned above deals
with this somewhat but a more extended treatment is found in Public
Procurement.
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