Presentation Transcript
Slide1: Under Threat: New Trade Deals and Construction Workers (June 2003)
Slide2: Manufacturing Jobs Lost … 3,000,000 manufacturing jobs lost to free trade since 1994
Over 750,000 jobs lost under NAFTA alone Free Trade Agreements once affected mostly manufacturing jobs.
Slide3: Sweatshops-R-Us Globalization Many jobs sent to poor countries
Work often done under sweatshop conditions
Workers often denied unions and basic human rights
Slide4: Free Trade in Services International trade no longer targets just manufactured goods
Now corporate free traders are going after services – including construction jobs
Slide5: New Trade Deals and Construction Workers Negotiations are underway on GATS (General Agreement on Trade in Services) and FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas)
These agreements could:
undermine prevailing wage laws
undermine union wages and jobs
undermine project labor agreements
Slide6: FTAA (Free Trade Area of the Americas) FTAA extends NAFTA to 34 western hemisphere nations
FTAA greatly expands coverage of NAFTA
Negotiations aim to be done in 2004 -- voted on by Congress in 2005
Slide7: GATS (General Agreement on Trade in Services) Goal is to cover all services, all methods of delivering services, and every government measure at all levels affecting trade
GATS is administered by the World Trade Organization (WTO)
GATS covers 146 nations, including U.S.
Negotiations aim to be done in 2004 -- voted on by Congress in 2005
Slide8: GATS, FTAA and Construction Workers Would restrict rules that are “more burdensome than necessary” for foreign companies
Rules would have to be “least trade restrictive”
Would prohibit government from setting conditions for awarding contracts except those necessary for product quality or supplier capability
Slide9: Prevailing wage threatened Would likely be judged “more burdensome than necessary” for foreign construction firms
Prevailing wage laws could be attacked for going beyond what is necessary to ensure service quality or supplier capability
Slide10: Project labor agreements threatened Agreements that require union labor could be prohibited
Would likely be judged to go beyond what is necessary to ensure quality, or be the alternative that is least restrictive to trade
Slide11: Temporary Foreign Workers New GATS rules will almost certainly make it easier to import temporary foreign construction workers “[GATS negotiations are now] addressing issues that were previously considered to be untouchable due to their political sensitivity (e.g. visa and immigration procedures)”
-- high ranking WTO official
Slide12: India’s Proposal Service workers (including construction workers) could work in other countries under “GATS visas”
Companies would not even have to follow the country’s minimum wage laws
WTO internal memo: India’s proposal is getting “serious attention” from U.S., the European Union, and others
Slide13: GATS workers as indentured servants GATS visa workers would have few rights or protections
Workers who tried to form or join a union could find themselves fired or deported
As proposed:
Slide14: Hypothetical Case – Twins Stadium Assume GATS rules are already in place
This is how prevailing wage could be affected under the new trade agreements …
Slide15: In 2006, the Minnesota Legislature gives $400 million to build a new Twins Stadium
Labor fights hard to win assurances that all work will be done under a project labor agreement Assume GATS passes in 2005 …
Slide16: Bids are put out,
Slide17: Built the French World Cup soccer stadium in the 1990s
Is big, experienced, and politically well-connected Bouygues …
Slide18: Their bid is the lowest because they plan on importing workers from their Chinese, Malaysian, and Philippine subsidiaries.
Bouygues wins the low bid by 20%.
Slide19: Bouygues is the lowest bidder, because Bouygues plans to pay these imported workers less than $10 an hour –
-- far below wages in the U.S. but more than in their own country
Slide20: What about Minnesota’s
prevailing wage law? Minnesota requires prevailing wage on all state funded construction projects and the stadium bill ensured a project labor agreement But wait…
Slide21: Bouygues contacts its political friends, The European Union challenges Minnesota’s prevailing wage law under the WTO
The stadium is put on hold while the case is decided
Slide22: The case is heard by a WTO trade tribunal. They are unelected.
They meet in secret.
Representatives from Minnesota are present only if the federal government invites them
Slide23: The WTO finds against Minnesota’s law. The tribunal rules that Minnesota cannot have a prevailing wage law under GATS
The U.S. has only two choices:
Pay trade sanctions ($400 million in this case)
Use all means at its disposal to force Minnesota to repeal its law
Slide24: This was fiction. But if GATS rules are adopted as currently envisioned, this fiction could become all too real.
Slide25: In the 1990s the corporate free-traders went after industrial workers. Now they are coming after construction and public sector workers.
Slide26: What can be done? Build awareness
educate your membership
write opinion piece or letter to editor
write article for local newsletter
Contact Congress
write Congress about specific issue
encourage organization or local elected officials to contact Congress
Make it an election issue
put question on candidate screening
talk to local elected officials about local impacts
Mobilize people nationally
prepare for November Miami rallies
Slide27: Join the
Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition
more than 60 unions and allied groups fighting
to make respect for working people, family farmers, our environment, and our democracy
an integral part of the global economy
Contact:
Larry Weiss 612-276-0788 x19 lweiss@americas.org