English translation of the work on trade unionism in China and Vietnam (Sindicalismo en China y Vietnam)
I am enclosing an article on trade unionism (the official and the real, and the transition from the first to the second) in China and Vietnam, prepared jointly with comrade Fernando Rocha of the 1 May Foundation of CCOO. A work whose history is reflected in footnote 1.
I am enclosing an article on trade unionism (the official and the real, and the transition from the first to the second) in China and Vietnam, prepared jointly with comrade Fernando Rocha of the 1 May Foundation of CCOO. A work whose history is reflected in footnote 1.
China and Vietnam:
the transition from the “official” unionism
Isidor Boix
Fernando Rocha
Abstract
The
Chinese and Vietnamese trade unions are facing a transition phase, within a
context of implementation of the market economy in both countries and its
integration into the global world economy. Processes of industrial action are
already taken place, exceeding the “official” political and union structures,
with a great uncertainty about their future developments and outcomes. This
article addresses a critical view of this phenomenon, based on the experience
of union cooperation between Spanish union and the unions of both countries,
and on the findings from a specific research developed in Vietnam.
Introduction
Interest
in the evolution of organized labor in China
and Vietnam
can be explained by the geographic, demographic, economic and political
dimensions of one of them ─China─ and also by the peculiar history of both
countries in their current evolution from a system of centrally planned economy
towards the integration in a global market economy.
This
evolution, in which trade unions could play an important role, is contradictory
inter alia because of the permanence
at least formal of the political structures created from the revolutionary
processes that led their current states, which is causing increasing labour and
social unrest in both countries[2].
A
reference for the present paper is the concept of "real" unionism as
the "social organization" to be given in every moment of the working
class, understanding the organized labor as an "association of
interests" of the employees. The particular relationship of workers with
the means of production and their owners or managers generates common interests
and the need of their joint defence, leading to define the union as
"organization of solidarity" or "organized solidarity".
Against
this background, this paper is aimed at addressing a critical approach of the
process of transition currently faced by the labour movement in China and Vietnam . A process that is taking
place in an increasingly connected world, and whose development seems to be irreversible.
The
analysis carried out relies in two main sources of information. Firstly, the direct
experience of one of the authors through his visits to different factories of the
garment industry in China
and Vietnam ,
reaching a valuable empirical knowledge of the working conditions and the
relation of the workers with their unionism, the "official" and the
"real"[3]. Secondly, the findings of
a research project that has addressed the study of the conditions of life and
work and the industrial relations in some of the more important industrial
parks in Vietnam[4].
This
information is complemented with the data and documents obtained from the
official political and union sources, with the news published in both
countries, and also with some bibliographical references.
The
content of the article is structured as follows: firstly, it is addressed the
role of the "party" as a hegemonic political and social subject at
the official level in both countries. Second, the paper analyzes the role of
the trade union organizations in a context of increasing openness of the
economy to the global investments and markets. Thirdly, the legal regulation
and development of collective bargaining is analyzed. Fourthly, there is an
overview of the evolution of living conditions, followed in the next section
with an approach to the phenomenon of strikes in both countries. The article
concludes with some final thoughts for the debate.
1. The Party as the
only official political and social subject in societies with developing market
economies
The
affirmation that China and Vietnam can be
considered as “market” societies is highly controversial. It can be posed the
argument however that the "market" dimension is increasingly relevant,
at least at economic level, in both countries[5].
Nevertheless,
in spite of the increasing insertion of both countries in the global market
economy there is a particular condition of their national legal frameworks that
affects to the market performance, and more specifically to the relations
between the different social and political groups: the existence and social
function of the “single party” and also, in general terms, of the “single-trade
union”.
In
both countries the Communist Party is, following the pure Stalinist tradition,
the real unifying power of society in all areas of organization, both
administrative and social, guaranteeing their cohesion (political, cultural,
administrative...). It also affects social relations and generates nuances of
the market economy itself, especially in its translation into social
organization, in form and content as well as in the synthesis of existing
social contradictions.
Their
constitutions and union laws establish the primacy of the Party over social
organizations (in China
even on the legal system itself). Particularly on trade unionism in particular,
stressing that the single union also necessarily must follow the guidelines of
the Party. Moreover, union leaders are integrated today in the leading bodies
of the Party, always acting less relevant than in the union structure itself,
which means the theoretical subordination of the Union
to the Party.
Having
said that, it is worth noting that this is a phenomenon with its own life, over
which they have no doubt impact their specific social and political realities,
as well as the changing world in an increasingly global economy. We have
perceived symptoms in this regard throughout our own relationship with both
countries, and particularly with their trade union worlds[6].
So,
a necessary starting point of our analysis is giving a brief overview of the
legal rules that highly affects to the core of the trade unionism activity in
both countries, namely the freedom of union association and the right of
strike.
The
Trade
Union Law of the People's Republic of China[7]
establishes in the General Provisions that the All-China Federation of Trade
Unions (AFCTU) and all the trade union organizations represent the interests of
the workers, and also that they “shall observe and safeguard the Constitution,
take it as the fundamental criterion for their activities, take economic
development as the central task, uphold the socialist road, the people's
democratic dictatorship, leadership by the Communist Party of China, and
Marxist-Leninism, Mao Zedong Thought and Deng Xiaoping Theory” (article 4).
The
law also establishes that “the All-China Federation of Trade Unions shall be
established as the unified national organization” (article 10). And the it is
established a clear hierarchy en the union structure and its limitations,
noting that “the establishment of basic-level trade union organizations, local
trade union federations, and national or local industrial trade union
organizations shall be submitted to the trade union organization at the next
higher level for approval” (article 13).
It
is worth highlighting that the right to strike is recognized neither by the
Constitution nor by the Union law, after it was removed from the Constitution
in 1982 under the argument that the Chinese political system had “eradicated
problems between the proletariat and enterprise owners”.
After
the removal of the right to strike, the article 27 of the Union Law establishes
an alternative figure (shameful really), the “work-stoppage”: “in case of
work-stoppage or slow-down strike in an enterprise or institution, the trade
union shall, on behalf of the workers and staff members, hold consultation with
the enterprise or institution or the parties concerned, present the opinions
and demands of the workers and staff members, and put forth proposals for
solutions. With respect to the reasonable demands made by the workers and staff
members, the enterprise or institution shall try to satisfy them”.
The
Constitution
Of the Socialist Republic Of Vietnam[8]
establishes that “the Communist Party of Vietnam, the vanguard of the
Vietnamese working class, simultaneously the vanguard of the toiling people and
of the Vietnamese nation, the faithful representative of the interests of the
working class, the toiling people, and the whole nation, acting upon the
Marxist-Leninist doctrine and Ho Chi Minh's thought, is the leading force of
the State and society” (article 4).
Without
opposing to this "driving" of society by the Party, the Labour
Code of Vietnam[9]
establishes that workers shall have among others the right to strike (article 5.f ).
This
law also includes a specific and complex regulation of the strikes and strikes
resolution that, if followed, would seriously limit the application of this
right. Thus, it establishes that the strike “shall only be carried out in
regard to interest-based collective labour disputes” (article 209.2), but not
because a dispute on the interpretation of compliment of the law.
It
also establishes a set of cases where the strikes are illegal (article 215): (1)
the strike does not arise from an interest-based collective labour dispute; (2)
the strike is organized for employees who are not working for the same
employer; (3) the strike occurs whilst the collective labour dispute is being
resolved or has not been resolved by the competent agencies, organizations or
individuals in accordance with this Code; (4) The strike occurs in an enterprise in the list
of enterprises provided by the Government in which strike is prohibited; and
(5) the strike occurs when the decision to postpone or cancel the strike has been
issued.
There
are also some relevant provisions concerning to the procedures for going on
strike. For example, strikes must be organized and led by the Executive Committee
of the grassroots level trade union, or by the upper-level trade union upon the
request of the employees in undertakings where the grassroots level trade union
has not been established (Article 210). Also, it is established that “employees
who take part in the strike shall not be paid with wages or other benefits as
stipulated by law, unless agreed otherwise by both parties” (Article 218.2).
Finally,
it can be noted that “strikes are prohibited in undertakings which are
essential for the national economy and in which strikes may threaten the
national security, defence, public health and public order. The list of such
undertakings shall be provided by the Government” (Article 220.1).
Despite
such limitations, it should however be assessed that the legal recognition of
the right to strike in Vietnam and union intervention in its development, mean
that the union is considered as an expression of the interest on one side,
workers.
In
fact these rules in Vietnam are applied in very few cases and the vast majority
of strikes in the country, as happens in China with the "work
stoppages" are "illegal" or, at best, “non-legal".
The
formal conception of unions in both countries also contains ideas such as
"it is a function of unions to educate workers". And above all, the
search for "harmonious solutions to conflicts" or "the common
interests of the company and workers", namely: it is not legally assumed
that unions represent the interests of one of the sides in industrial
relations, but they must play rather a role of "mediation".
In the
interviews carried out in both countries with leaders of these unions, also it
appeared the consideration that an essential function of the union ─even the
only one, according to some union officials─ is to ensure "labour law enforcement"[10].
This
mismatch between the legal framework and real life requires addressing what is
the reality of trade unionism in both countries from the perspective of working
conditions and their evolution, the organization of workers and trade union action,
strikes included, with or without the tutelage of other social, political or
administrative authorities.
The
usual answer, especially in China ,
regarding this kind of considerations on freedom of association and the right
to strike, is that these are proposals aimed at torpedoing the socialist regime.
This official argument is obviously confronted with international standards
such as the 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.
But
also, it can be confronted in historical terms with the statements made by
Lenin in January 1921, in
his controversy about the proposal of Trotsky, when the latter called for the
militarization of trade unions. Lenin noted that the confrontation between
workers with the soviet government (the Party) it is not only possible, but
even necessary in some cases. The reason, according to Lenin, is that “the
unions ... will not lose in many years a base as the 'economic struggle' no of
class, in the sense of struggle against bureaucratic distortions of the Soviet
administration, in the sense of defense of the material and spiritual interests
of the mass from the workers…"[11].
The
trade union landscape in China ,
according to the official data for 2014, is as follows: an economically active
population of around 797 million people; 772 million employed people; and 280
million members of the AFCTU[13].
As for Vietnam ,
the official statistics give us the following figures also for 2014: an
economically active population of 53,7 million people; 52,7 million employed
people; and around 8 million members of the VGCL[14]
Now,
if we move the focus from the macro to the micro level, it is worth noting that
many workers interviewed in Chinese and Vietnamese factories with high rate of
union density stated that they were not affiliated to those unions. Or, even
so, they were unaware of their activity at the workplace.
It
can be said that it is really not possible to compare the above figures with
those of the International Trade Union Confederation, which states a membership
of around 180 million people; or with the World Federation of Trade Unions,
with 90 million people.
This
particular concept of "affiliation" is complemented by the system of
union dues. It is formally a double fee: the one paid by each affiliate, and
the one paid by companies directly to the union (2% of the wage bill, although
with increasing difficulties in private companies). Around half of all paid dues
is for the higher level structures and the rest for the "union"
activity in the company, which are mainly for recreational activities and
welfare type.
The
affiliates are paid by payroll deducted in very few of the companies visited in
both countries and were fixed in 1% of individual salary, but observed were
between 0.75 and 1.75 € per month in Vietnam
and 0.3 € in China .
It
is worth noting that in most of the factories visited, the formal workers'
representatives said they do not negotiate salaries. Nevertheless, in recent
years they began to comment that "sometimes speak of wages", although
it is rather to examine the proper application of labour law. Regarding this
issue, it is possible to remark rising trade union awareness in Vietnam compared with the situation in China .
Another
key element is how the leading bodies of the trade unions are conformed in the
workplaces. In both countries there are very detailed and complex rules, but
they do not apply in any of the factories visited in China
to Vietnam .
There is a widespread practice of an alleged consensus to take up such
functions by some people, almost all technical or administrative, mostly
managers or from the personnel department. Also, in many cases taking many
times the role of President of the Union is
played by the chief of staff or the production manager.
The
members of such trade union bodies told us many times that for this function
were suggested or proposed by the business or middle management direction. In a
Chinese factory where the union president was at once the chief of staff, the
owner of the company told us that "he had been hired for both functions".
It
is important to note anyway some differences of degree between both countries,
being more extended in China
situations such as the common interests or the simultaneity of the roles among
the leading bodies of employers and employees. Theses differences can also been
noted with regard to the evaluation of trade unions. In China , trade unions state that
these situations happen mostly because workers want. Furthermore, the leading
body of the ACFTU explained us without blushing that a “pilot project” was
launched at Guandong province, consisting on the application of a “new rule”
that forbids to the owner or manager of a company, or their relatives, being
“union leaders”.
These
situations also can be registered in Vietnam , but there is an increasing
awareness inside VGCL about the need of changing the representation procedures,
and also regarding the improvement of skills training in order to engage in
effective collective bargaining with foreign buyers and their suppliers[15].
In
this regard, it is worth noting a recent experience held in this country in
2015. Specifically, it consisted of a meeting of union members of textile companies
from the north of Vietnam ,
suppliers of the Spanish company Inditex. The goal of this meeting, coordinated
by the VCGL, IndustryALL, Global Union ante the Vietnam Office of the Friedrich
Ebert Foundation, was to launch a national Trade Union network of the suppliers
of Inditex, which is planned to be created in 2016. The Vietnamese Trade Union
Confederation, committed with this project, has assumed the challenge and the
risk of promoting an effective representation of delegates for the
participation in the national Assembly.
The
labour law in both countries establishes a set of provisions about the concept
and procedures of the collective bargaining at company level and, just only in Vietnam ,
also for the sectoral level.
The
Labour
Law of the People's Republic Of China (1994, articles 33 to 35) regulates
the procedures for the negotiation of company-level company agreements, on matters
relating to labour remuneration, working hours, rest and vacations,
occupational safety and health, insurance and welfare. The law also regulates
the relation between this agreements and the labour contracts, establishing
that “the standards of working conditions and labour remuneration agreed upon
in labour contracts concluded between individual labourers and the enterprise
shall not be lower than those stipulated in the collective contract” (article
35).
The
regulation of this topic in the Labour Code of Vietnam (2012) is significantly wider, including a
specific chapter on "Dialogue at workplace, collective bargaining,
collective bargaining agreements” (chapter V). There is a more detailed set up
of procedural provisions but the most interesting issue, as noted above, is the
regulation of the collective bargaining at sectoral level. In this regard, the
law establishes a hierarchy between both levels of bargaining, with a
prevalence of the sectoral over the company-level agreements[17].
Against
this legal framework, the collective bargaining according the international
standards and ILO conventions is practically non-existent. Collective
bargaining is widely regarded as a formality rather than the outcome of real negotiations
between workers and employers. As example, in Vietnam “according to the VGCL
informant, most workers do not know the contents of the active collective
bargaining agreements (CBAs) in their companies. Some cannot even tell the
difference between the CBA and labour contracts”[18]
However,
statistics provided by the trade unions highlight an important number of
collective agreements. For example, in a meeting held in China in 2015 with the AFCTU, we
were told that in 2013 there were registered 2,4 million collective agreements
covering 300 million workers, with a target of a coverage of 500 million
workers for the end of 2015.
The
findings of the interviews carried out in China
and Vietnam ,
and the analysis of the contents of some company-level company agreements,
shows a similar pattern in both countries. Thus, it is called "collective
agreement" to what has been formally signed by the union leadership in the
company and the direction of it, and its contents usually consist of a brief
reference or transcription of the existing legislation on minimum wages,
working hours, quotes social security or in some cases references to a supplement,
to the price of the litter in China, or to the parking the bike in Vietnam. In
some few cases there have been found provisions related to the bonus, but never
to issues regarding topics such as work organization, bonus system or trade
union rights.
It
is worth noting that these situations of little real collective bargaining can
also be found in virtually all the countries with presence of the production
chains of the global brands of wear and garment. At the same time, it is fair
to recognize the potential advantage of China
and Vietnam
regarding the number of such “collective agreements”, as they can be starting
points for an effective collective bargaining.
In Vietnam there
is sectoral collective agreement, the first of this kind, signed in 2010. It
has a limited coverage, affecting to a number of 100 companies and around 100
thousand workers of the garment industry. In spite of this low coverage and of
the reduced scope of its contents, it is worth highlighting at least for two
reasons: on the one hand, because as noted above is the first sectoral
collective agreement at national level. On the other hand, because it links the
regulation of the strikes to the collective bargaining, so it allows the
possibility of “national” strikes.
The
limitations of this agreement shows those of the own trade union, whose
sectoral organization is still very minority compared to the territorial and
local structure. These limitations are also evident in the ignorance of this
agreement by the union leadership of Ho
Chi Minh City , as well as by executives and unions of
the companies we visited.
The
national sector federation of textile and the Vietnamese Confederation affirmed
their willingness to extend the effectiveness of the sectoral agreement while
developing its contents, both in relation to the salary and of issues related
to working conditions, working time in particular. Also, they noted that the
importance to link the sectoral collective agreement to the Code of Conduct and
the company agreement of Inditex with IndustryALL.
4. Evolution of
working and life conditions[19]
Over
the last 10 years, living conditions in China
and Vietnam
have had a remarkably similar evolution, assuming in both countries major
improvements but with significant quantitative differences between them. Thus,
in China
the minimum wages -different according to regions- have risen from 30-65 euros
per month in 2006 to 250-300 euros in 2015. In Vietnam , they have improved from 36
€ in 2009 to a range between 90 and 130 € in 2015. However, these are minimum
wages for the formal economy with a difficult implementation in the underground
economy.
The
actual remuneration of a employee at the garment industry, as tested in
production chains of the big brands of clothing, were between 100 and 140 euros
in 2006 in
China, and came to be between 270 and 500 €. In Vietnam , actual remunerations
evolved from 46 to 80 € in 2009 to 200 to 300 in 2015. All this for an
effective working hours, including additional hours, which has hardly evolved
over the years and remains between 2,300 and 3,000 hours year.
It
is also noted a certain evolution in living conditions in Chinese factories,
where living quarters with bunk beds for workers in large factories away from
urban areas could host in 2006 from 8 to 10 people in spaces 3 8 meters and 10 to 12
berths (the "surplus" served to deposit the goods of the working
poor); in 2015 they were destined for 5 or 6 people. It was also possible to
observe some increase in television in such spaces, as open windows to the
world through the chains that censors allowed to "invade" his
country.
The
audited figures on wages coincide with the official statistics of both
countries regarding the evolution of living conditions and poverty. It should
be added, however, that this progress has occurred in parallel with the huge
increase in inequalities, so that China
is today one of the most unequal countries in Asia .
This is expressed by indicator such as the Gini index: thus, according to some
sources this indicator has increased from a value around 0,35 in both countries at
the end of the XX century, to a value of 0,38 in Vietnam and 0,46 in China in 2015[20].
In
particular, international institutions have remarked that the current process
of industrialization and the consolidation of a growing industrial labour
force, have favoured that many people from rural areas have escaped from the
situation of monetary poverty. However, the results of empirical studies show
that this process is not without contradictions, due to high insecurity and
harsh working conditions that characterize industrial jobs; a fact that in many
cases is causing the return of workers, especially of women to rural areas of
origin[21].
It
is possible to point out that the above noted evolution of living conditions in
both countries has been influenced among other factors by the global struggle
for "decent" work, the direct assumption of that objective by
political and social organizations of each country, and the influence of the
Codes of Conduct and Framework Agreements signed by the multinationals who buy
in both countries.
Nevertheless,
some relevant differences can be found again between China
and Vietnam ,
regarding the trade unions’ approaches on the concept of decent work.
For
example, in China the ACFTU has so far claimed placed outside Global Framework
Agreements in the country[22]
and has established a Code of self Conduct, almost copied from the first
drafted the BSCI[23] textile sector (although
we found that its existence is ignored by both the entrepreneurs like
structures ACFTU companies or territorial).
In Vietnam , by
contrast, the VGCL has considered that the implementation of the Global
Framework Agreement with Inditex can help improve working conditions in the
sector of clothing and footwear and raised incorporate application sectoral
collective agreement above mentioned. Based on these approaches, we are working
to advance the unionization of its implementation and monitoring through the
creation of the Union Network Inditex suppliers in the country, which is a
global pioneering experience in the trade union organization subcontracting
chains.
5. The strike[24]
The
positive evolution of living conditions in both countries have undoubtedly been
influenced by the policies of the respective governments, whose anti-crisis
policies since 2008 have included among other measures increases of the minimum
wages, aimed to boost its domestic market by increasing purchasing power.
In
parallel, it is possible to ask about the influence of the industrial action
carried out by both of the “official” and real unionism, and particularly of
the strikes. Once more, some differences can be found between the two
countries.
Thus,
in China there is as noted above an “official voluntary ignorance” of the
phenomenon of strikes. The own statistics of the Ministry of Public Security shows,
however, an increasing of the social unrest in the country, from 74.000
conflicts in 2004 to 200.000
in 2012[25].
In Vietnam ,
official figures show an increasing in the number of strikes in the past
decade, from 147 in
2005 to 293 in
2014. This rising trend is also remarked by the findings of the academic
research, which has highlighted that Vietnam has witnessed more strikes
than any other Asian country in the last decade, in spite of its vibrant
economy[26].
They
may be of interest to some references to some of the major strikes carried out
in both countries.
The
strike movement in China
was very active in 2010, especially in the automotive industry. Also, this year
and the following were marked by strikes in the electronic, gas and electric
sectors. The comments and valuations taken in the field during our visits,
particularly with the delegation of the ICEM[27]
in July 2010, suggested a conscious tolerance on the government side about
these strikes.
In
April 2014 it took place one of the most important strikes in the recent
history of China .
In the town of Donguang , Guangdong Province
broke a strike of two weeks with the participation of the vast majority of the
45,000 workers of the factories Yue Yuen Industrial Holdings. This is a
Taiwanese company based in Hong Kong ,
considered the largest producer of footwear sports world and works for Nike,
Adidas, Timberland, Puma, Crocs and others.
The
main reason for this conflict was that the company did not pay the social
contributions according to the real wages (around 350 Euros per month), but
according to the basic wages of the region (around 200 euros). The company
didn’t pay either the “funds for housing”, and also there were problems of
schooling for many workers’ child as a consequence of the regulation of the
migration.
The
strike was developed with major demonstrations and occupation of the workplace.
In the little information transpired on this conflict[28]
there is a brief reference about an attempt to mediate by the official ACFTU
union, which was rejected by the strikers. Some strike leaders were arrested on
charges of "public disorder", "obstruction of road traffic"
and "spreading false news", but they were quickly released. Finally,
the government forced the company to pay the contributions, and it also
accepted a wage increase of about 30 € per month. Some media compared the significance
of this strike with that registered in the automotive sector in 2010.
In
June 2014, China Daily (official English-language newspaper) reported that Fujian arbitral tribunal
had ruled in favour of workers after a strike of two weeks. The newspaper
highlighted that “so far the courts and arbitral authorities did not support
the positions of the workers if they defended their rights to strike”.
As
for the strikes developed in Vietnam ,
it is interesting to address one experience that took place in 2015, as we
could test in our last travel to the country. In early April, a major strike
broke out in a footwear company in the area of Ho Chi Minh City . It was the company Pou
Yuen, Taiwanese-owned, with 90,000 workers who produce shoes for Nike, Adidas
and other brands. The reason was the draft amendment of the regulation in the
country of retirement benefits for which hitherto existed a complex formula
that allowed collectability, as single or installment payment before retirement
age (60 for men and 55 for women) if they were quoted a sufficient number of
years (20 according to some documentation). The strike lasted a week and it
included different actions such as the occupation of the workplace and exits to
the street, with no serious incidents. The workers returned to work when the
government pledged to reconsider the issue.
We
could see the impact of this strike in the factories visited by asking the
interviewed workers and trade unionists, and also employers. There was a first
remarkable check: talking of "strike" was no longer a taboo subject.
Quite a few workers said they knew the strike and its essential content
(retirement benefits); also, that they have heard of the strike both in
"radio and television" as in "meetings in the union".
In
one of the companies visited, workers indicated that they had made a 2-day
strike for the same reason, concurring with that of Pou Yuen. This was
recognized by the governing body of the union. They explained how it happened:
during lunch in the canteen someone said he had seen on the internet about the
strike was proceeding, and they decided to join immediately. Almost no one
returned to his job. Union leaders of the company met with their managers and
claimed that there should not be any sanction, letting the workers went home,
and that they would report on the subject, so that the next day could give
explanations. So it was done.
The
next day the workers went to work but did not start waiting for such
information. A local union leader, along with those of the company, explained
the reasons for the strike and the government's commitment to reconsider the
issue. The workers decided to continue
the strike the second day, and the company accepted the proposal of their
return to their homes. The following day employees resumed work, and the two
days of strike were considered as holidays.
In
this company the union leaders indicated that there were also a strike in other
places, but its development was more complicated by the absence of trade union
or trade union initiative in them. During our stay, "Vietnam News"
included several references to the meeting of the National Assembly that was
taking place and on possible amendments to the law on Social Security 2014
Article 60, which had motivated the strike.
This
is the only recent conflict commented on our visit to the factories. In one, we
were told that "until 2009" there had been some conflicts because
"prices rose more than wages"
A
few days after our last stay in Vietnam, Vietnam press reported about a 6-day strike carried out by 1,100 workers in a
garment factory. Drawn on information
from the union of the town the press noted that, as a result of the strike, the
company accepted a wage increase, the construction of a parking lot for
motorcycles and measures aimed to ensure safe water of the company. The
newspaper added that workers also claimed for other issues such as the rest on
Sundays and end the working day on Saturday at 4 and ½ in the afternoon. The
resolution of these claims was still pending.
To
conclude: it is possible to affirm that strikes are increasingly assumed as a
normal fact related to the development of industrial relations in Vietnam . On the
contrary, talking about this topic is still almost a taboo issue in China .
6. Final remarks:
reform or rupture
The
Chinese and Vietnamese labour movements are definitely in a transition phase, and
even under strain in a context of implementation in both countries of the
market economy and its integration into the global world economy. There are now
processes of union action that go beyond official political and union
structures. Against this background, it would be very audacious to establish
any certainty about the future developments of these phenomena.
Clearly,
it is emerging in both countries a new unionism, but it is still risky to
predict whether it will lead to the marginalization of the existing structures,
or if the result will be an integration of the new union leaders arising from
the current mobilizations and strikes, with some of the union officers of the
current ACFTU and VGCL. It remains to be seen what role they might play
unionists emerged from each of the two sources. It seems greater the capacity
of the Vietnamese official unions to integrate new union leaders arising from
trade union action.
It
seems clear in any case that part of the current "union" structures
will lead to management, outside of the union action, of the great resources
that have accumulated with the "union dues" paid for years by
companies.
One
element influencing the development of this transition will be surely the
understanding that the role of trade unionism is necessarily different in a
planned economy, based on the public ownership of the means of production, of
one that it is taking hold through the already advanced privatization processes
or new private equity investments, national or foreign, in a "market
economy with own traits".
This
is a highly relevant issue in Vietnam given the current involvement of the
country in negotiating free trade agreements, including the Agreement between
the United States and Vietnam and the Trans-Pacific Agreement. Both agreements
pose significant challenges, because if on the one hand they recognize the role
of trade unions, on the other strengthen the unilateral power of transnational
corporations of foreign capital on the legal regulations on living and working
conditions in the country.
The
labour movements of Chinese and Vietnamese, based to a greater or lesser extent
in the current official union structures, will play undoubtedly an important
role in the future unionism, responding to the current global labour crisis,
and consciously taking its integration into the global working class.
The
incorporation of the working class of both countries to the global trade union
movement will be definitely a new opportunity to address the current crisis,
broader than an economic crisis, and that translates into a crisis response
capacity of national institutions and supranational including trade unions This
is leading to a global to debate about the need to "rethink",
"reinvent" or "renew" the trade unions[29].
The
necessary construction of a global trade unionism, integrating of labour
movements that organize the working class in all areas and at all levels, must
also consciously assume the existence of interest not necessarily common in
such areas and levels, and at the same time try find their synthesis in all of
them. The immediate future labour movements in China
and Vietnam
can play an important role in this scenario with one condition: to get organize
and represent in a real way the working class of their country.
Therefore,
the relationship of the global trade unionism with new labour movements under
construction in China and Vietnam
constitutes a matter of obvious interest. There is now, in the most diverse
areas of world trade unionism, a debate on this issue that occasionally emerges
with remarkable intensity. From these pages we wish to emphasize its
importance, contributing with our analysis to this process of the official
transition from the real unionism, and our hope of its success.
Madrid, April 2017
FURTHER READING
- CHENG,
J. Y. S., NGOK, K y ZHUANG, W.: «The Survival and Development Space for China 's Labor NGOs, Informal Politics and Its
Uncertainty»,Asia Survey,Vol. 50, No. 6 (November/December 2010), pp.
1082-1106.
-ZHANG,
X., WANG, X., y ZHU, X.: «THE ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF CURRENT STRIKES IN CHINA »,
World Review of Political Economy, Vol. 2, No. 3 (Fall 2011), pp. 371-384.
-POCHA,
J. S.: «One Sun in the Sky: Labor Unions in the People's Republic of China », Georgetown
Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 8, No. 1 (Winter/Spring 2007), pp. 5-11.
-TYSON,
J. L.: «Labor Unions in South
Vietnam »,Asian Affairs, Vol. 2, No. 2 (Nov.
- Dec., 1974), pp. 70-82.
Authors:
Isidor Boix Lluch
Responsible for CSR-CSR at the International Secretariat of
CCOO-Industry and Coordinator of the International Trade Union Federation
"IndustriALL Global Union" for the Global Framework Agreement with
INDITEX, the world's leading clothing distributor.
Fernando Rocha
Sánchez
Degree in Sociology and Master in Labor Relations. Director of the
Studies area of the 1º de Mayo Foundation
[1] Article requested by the magazine “Workers
of the World, International Journal on Strikes and Social Conflict” in
July 2015. In reply to this proposal, a first draft was sent in 2016 and was
positively evaluated in May 2016. It was recommended for publication, with a
few specific considerations that were accepted by the authors. In June 2016, a
final draft was sent in Spanish and English. However, to date Workers
of the World has neither
published the article nor sent any modifications.
Therefore, in February 2017, the authors
decided to make the situation known. There have been two more trade union
visits to these countries in 2017, which confirm the observations made in these
pages. The respective reports are available at http://www.industria.ccoo.es/cms/g/public/o/8/o164503.pdf?platform=hootsuite and http://iboix.blogspot.com.es/2016/12/vietnam-2016-red-sindical-nacional-de.html. The data provided by both reports
confirms the observations made in the article and underlines the divergent
processes taking place in both countries: in China, refusing to participate in
global trade unionism in the defence of decent work in its supply chains
belonging to multinationals; and in Vietnam, culminating with the creation of a
National Trade Union Network of Inditex suppliers in the county, in
collaboration with global trade union authorities.
[2] As an example: the wave of strikes
taking place in 2010 in
China in different factories of transnational corporations or, more tragically,
the suicides of workers by the harsh working conditions in factories like
Foxconn. See TRAUB-MERZ, R. Wage Strikes and Trade Unions in China – End of the Low-wage Policy? Friedrich Ebert Stiftung. Berlín,
June 2011.14 pp. ZHANG, X.; WANG, X., and ZHU, X.: “The economic analysis of
current strikes in China ”,
World Review of Political Economy,
Vol. 2, No. 3 (Fall 2011), pp. 371-384. SCHWEISSHELM, E. Trade Unions in Transition. Changing industrial relations in Vietnam.
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Vietnam
Office. September 2014. ANNER, M. “Labor Control Regimes and Worker Resistance
in Global Supply Chains”, Labor History,
56(3), 2015 (pp 292-307)-
[3] These factories are
integrated in the value chain of the Spanish companies INDITEX and MANGO.
Isidor Boix visited these factories as member of the international department
of the Spanish trade union “Comisiones Obreras” CCOO. Specifically, he made eight travels to China and four to Vietnam . The last reports of this
this visits can be found (in Spanish) in: http://www.industria.ccoo.es/comunes/recursos/99927/doc245349_China_-_2015_Una_nueva_aproximacion_sindical_-_VII_-.pdf
[4] The project Strengthening Workers’ Rights
and Representation (SWORR) was
funded by the European Commission and it was carried out between 2012 and 2015
by a partnership including different trade unions and Academic
institutions from Vietnam
and Europe . Fernando Rocha, the other author
of this article, was involved in some phases of this project. The basic
information can be found in http://sworr.ies.gov.vn/.
[5] However, there are still some
points of controversy. For example, there is an ongoing dispute about the
recognition for China
of the status of “market economy status” under the World Trade Organisation. See
PUCCIO, Laura. Granting Market Economy to
China. An analysis of WTO law and of selected WTO members' policy. European
Parliamentary Research Service. November 2015.
[6] See
BOIX, op.cit.
[7] This law was firstly adopted
on 1950, then reworked in 1991 and later modified in 2001.
[8] Amended in 2013
[9] Amended in 2012.
[10] These interviews were carried out
by BOIX (see op.cit.).
[11] Lenin,
Wladimir. “Insistiendo sobre los sindicatos”, Obras Escogidas, Tomo III,
pagina 583, Editorial Progreso, Moscú 1961, Instituto de Marxismo-Leninismo del
CC del PCUS (own translation from Spanish to English).
[12] The analysis of this section
combines the information provided by the official statistics and the trade;
unions, with the empirical data reached in the visits of one of the authors as
member of an international trade union delegation to factories in China and Vietnam .
[13] Source: China Statistical Yearbook 2015. Nacional
Bureau of Statistics of China. And AFCTU
for data of union membership.
[14] Sources: Vietnam Statistical Yearbook 2014. General
Office of Statistics of Vietnam. VGCL National
Review Conference, 2015
[15] Khanh, Do Ta.-SWORR Fieldwork Research: Synthesis
Report. Institute for European Studies, Hanoi , Vietnam .
August, 2015. Ngọc Trần, A. “Vietnamese Textile and Garment Industry in the
Global Supply Chain: State Strategies and Workers’ Responses”, Institutions and Economies, Vol. 4, No.
3, October 2012, pp. 123-150.
[16] See footnote 11.
[17] For example, it is established that
“where the contents of an enterprise-level collective bargaining agreement or
other regulations of the employer on the lawful rights, responsibilities and interests
of the enterprise’s employees are less favourable than those stipulated in the
sectoral collective bargaining agreement, the enterprise-level collective bargaining
agreement shall be revised accordingly within 03 months from the date on which
the sectoral collective bargaining agreement comes into effect” (article 881.).
[18] Fair Wear Foundation: FWF Country Study Vietnam . 2015 (p.25).
[19] See
footnote nº 11.
[21] Cerimele, Michela. SWORR
Project. Female Internal Migrant Workers at Thang Long Industrial Park. A
Qualitative Case-Study. Author: Dr. Michela Cerimele, University of Naples
L’Orientale. March 2015
[22]
In the last two trips with official meetings, the ACFTU has stated that
the application of these agreements is "under consideration". They
have not yet accepted our suggestion to consider a protocol for implementing
the Code of Conduct of Inditex, linked to the Global Framework Agreement with
IndustriALL Global Union.
[23] Business Social Compliance
Initiative, commitment to corporate social responsibility promoted by major
multinational European industry and distribution whose first approaches were
criticized by European and international trade union movement for its lack of
transparency.
[24] See footnote 11.
[25] It is worth noting that different
reports warn about the underestimation of the extent of social unrest in China
in the official figures. See for example GÖBEL, Christian and ONG, Lynnete. Social unrest in China. Europe China
Research and Advise Network. London, 2012.
[26] KAXTON, Siu; and CHAN, Anita.
“Strike Wave in Vietnam ,
2006–2011”, Journal of Contemporary Asia , Vol. 45, nº 1, 2015 (pp. 71-91).
[27] International Federation of
Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers' Unions, currently integrated in the
IndustryALL Global Union.
[28] Basically provided by Association
Press.
[29] See for example, for the European
context: BERNACIAK, Magdalena ;
GUMBRELL-MCCORMICK, Rebecca; and HYMAN, Richard. European trade unionism: from crisis to renewal? European Trade
Union Institute, Report nº 133, Brussels ,
2014.
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