Kamis, 07 Juni 2012

Resensi Buku Just Around The Corner

Part 4
The Prince of Neoliberal Globalization

Adam Smith Comes Roaring Back

In the face of polls showing that voters ranked the economy as the number-one issue in the presidential election campaign, in April 2004 John Kerry issued a report that changed the Bush administration with plunging the federal government into more than $6.5 trillion in debt. The lion’s share of new spending, according to the report, was on “entitlements” such as the Medicare prescription-drug program. According to report, entitlements would cost $4.9 trillion. On April 6, Kerry said that if elected he would make the “hard choices” of cutting social programs, if necessary, to redress the budget imbalance. But he also promised to create ten million jobs by, among other measures, instituting cuts of 90 percent of taxpayers.

But after more than a year of campaigning, none of the leading Democratic candidates had proposed addressing the nearly intractable structural unemployment of at least ten million people in the labor force by direct job creation. The best the Democrats were able to manage was to try to include a modest rise in the minimum wage in the welfare-reauthorization bill, a strategy designed to embarrass the Republicans and to appease their own base.

The point of this story is not to emphasize the evils of outsourcing. Instead I want to call attention to ways in which, in the wake of stagnant computer sales in the first three years of the new century, corporations have managed to sustain their profitability. While the stock markets respond positively to any cost-cutting measures that buttress the price of shares, workers have been left behind. In addition to suffering job destruction and outsourcing, U.S. workers, intellectual as well as manual, are experiencing a long-term assault on their living standards: wage have lagged behind even the modest inflation rate of about 2.5 percent a year. For the first quarter of 2004, which economists judge as a period of buoyant “recovery” (at least for some profits ), total wages rose by 0.6 percent, or an annual rate of 2 percent.

The concept of mass strikes for public goods, a practice that is all but routine in some European countries, especially in Italy and France, is so far from the conversation in union circles that to raise the question is tantamount to speaking a foreign language. In this respect, collective-bargaining agreements are not an unvarnished good for workers. 
          
Since the Cold War era, which began around 1947-1948 when the labor movement purged its ranks of the most militant rank-and-file activists and entered into a very public three-way partnership with capital and the state, U.S. unions have surrendered their political and ideological independence.

Surely, since 1995, organizing has become a legitimate priority for a handful of unions who are willing to devote the necessary resources. Some, like the Hotel Employees and Service Employees union, have made impressive inroads in their respective sectors, recruiting tens of thousands of new members in the past decade. But the argument that unions cannot exercise mass power until they have restored their membership strength flies in the face of experiences elsewhere in the world.

Unions have always been at the cutting edge of labor’s long struggle to achieve a measure of protection against the vicissitudes of an unstable job market and an oppressive workplace.

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