| EMBARGO:
December 29, 0001 GMT
Brussels,
December 29, 1998 (ICFTU OnLine): "1998 was a bad year for the global
economy, 1999 threatens to be worse unless governments take action," is
the stark message the international trade union movement is sending to
union members around the world.
"Globalisation
is man-made and not a force of nature, even it sometimes appears to be
uncontrollable, but the real question is does the international community
have the will to build international policies and institutions to manage
globalisation to meet the needs and aspirations of people?" said Bill Jordan,
General Secretary of the ICFTU, in a letter to unions all over the world
urging them to step up pressure on governments for co-ordinated action
to stave off the threat of a global slump. " Trade unions all over the
world are going to be joining together in a global campaign to combat the
increasingly severe social impact of the crisis in 1999," added Jordan.
The
unions are issuing a four-page statement highlighting that Asian and Russian
economic and financial meltdowns have pushed a third of the world economy
into recession and that working people and the poor are bearing the brunt
of the crisis. In Asia living standards have collapsed and unemployment
has surged; in Russia one quarter of the labour force has not been paid
for six months. There is a real risk of the crisis spreading to Latin America,
Central and Eastern Europe and Africa, regions already experiencing a fall
in growth and a setback to prospects for employment and poverty reduction.
"Slowing
growth in the European Union and the United States, falling trade and dangerously
volatile stock markets could all too easily push the global economy into
a truly global recession with a devastating impact on employment," says
John Evans, General Secretary of the Trade Union Advisory Committee to
the OECD.
Much
of the burden has fallen on women, who carry most of the burden of keeping
families together and caring for the young and elderly on drastically reduced
household incomes. The unions are stressing that measures should be taken
in the countries worst affected by the crisis targeted on the most vulnerable
people, to :-.
protect
education and health budgets, so that the poorest can keep their children
at school and have access to essential healthcare;
create
and expand social safety nets to ensure that the under-employed and jobless
have a satisfactory income on which to live, and extending ILO-backed child
labour eradication programmes;
boost
employment intensive public works schemes and extending training and job
search programmes;
restrain
prices of essential goods and maintain the purchasing power of minimum
wages;
develop
sound industrial relations systems, through the promotion of tripartite
dialogue between governments, employers and unions, based on respect for
the ILO’s core labour standards.
The ICFTU
and TUAC are also pressing OECD countries’ Central Banks and Finance Ministers
to implement a co-ordinated strategy to support balanced demand and restore
global growth and job creation, through:-
further
co-ordinated reductions in the level of interest rates. With the move to
Economic and Monetary Union, Europe has both a responsibility and an opportunity
to support demand growth;
radical
action in Japan to re-capitalise and reform the banks, if necessary through
the nationalisation of the banking system and the introduction of permanent
tax cuts to stimulate domestic demand;
targeted
expansion of infrastructure investment schemes to support output and tackle
structural problems;
financial
assistance to the developing and transition countries in the front-line
of the crisis, to alleviate poverty, support social programmes and restructure
private and public debt;
payment
of back wages due to Russian workers to halt the vicious circle which has
led to lost tax revenue and a prolonging of the financial crisis.
The international
unions are highly critical of the way the debate over financial market
reform has been held behind closed doors by bankers and financial ministry
officials. Calling for full public participation in the "architecture"
discussions, the ICFTU and TUAC are calling on governments to establish
urgently a broad-based Independent International Commission to report rapidly
on the institutional and policy changes needed to establish an effective
international regulatory framework and new financial order. Amongst the
issues the unions want to see resolved in 1999 are:-
more
stable exchange rates between the emerging reserve currency blocks of the
Dollar, Yen and Euro;
controls
on destabilising short term foreign capital inflows and outflows;
binding
international regulation of financial markets to prevent massive leveraged
speculation;
the
implementation of an international tax on foreign exchange transactions;
extensive
debt relief for the poorest developing countries, including those suffering
from the consequences of Hurricane Mitch;
new
standards on corporate governance to combat bribery and corruption;
reform
of the IMF and World Bank structural adjustment programmes to promote increased
employment and poverty reduction, good governance and respect for human
rights and core labour standards;
inclusion
of core labour standards as a subject for negotiation in any new round
of trade negotiations.
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1)The
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) consists of 211
national centres of independent and democratic trade unions in 145 countries
and territories with a total membership of 125 million working men and
women. ICFTU, Boulevard Emile Jacqmain 155, B-1210 Brussels, Belgium. Telephone
(32 2) 224 0211 - Fax (32 2) 201 5815 - E-mail internetpo@ICFTU.org - Web-site
http://www.ICFTU.org
TUAC's
affiliates consist of 55 national trade union centres in the 29 OECD industrialised
countries, which together represent some 70 million workers. It has consultative
status with the OECD and its various bodies. TUAC-OECD, 26, avenue de la
Grande-Armée, 75017 Paris, France. Telephone (33 1) 47 63 42 63
- Fax (33 1) 47 54 98 28 - E-mail tuac@tuac.org - Web-site http://www.tuac.org
For
contact call Stephen Pursey (ICFTU) 32 2 224 0333 or 32 2 672 1963 or John
Evans (TUAC) 33 1 47634263 or 331 45789923
Contact:
ICFTU-Press at: ++32-2 224.02.12 (Brussels).
International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU)
Boulevard
Emile Jacqmain 155, B - 1210 Brussels, Belgium. For more information please
contact: Luc Demaret on: 00 322 224 0212 - press@icftu.org. |