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sandensea

(21,600 posts)
Tue Aug 22, 2017, 03:34 PM Aug 2017

Argentine unions lead march against labor flexibilization and higher retirement age proposals

Argentina's three main labor federations and numerous social advocacy groups marched in Buenos Aires today in opposition to labor law flexibilization and pension reform proposals being pushed by President Mauricio Macri.

Converging in downtown Buenos Aires, marchers and labor leaders called for the defense of jobs, free collective bargaining, rejection of pension and labor reform, and a dignified retirement.

They also demanded that Santiago Maldonado, a missing 28 year-old activist, be found alive. Maldonado was arrested on August 1 while supporting a protest by the indigenous Mapuche people against encroachment on sacred lands in Patagonia, and has not been seen since.

Today's demonstration was announced on Friday after an agreement between the nation's largest labor federation, the CGT, and the more left-leaning Worker's CTA and Autonomous CTA federations.

Playing for keeps

Historically beset by divisiveness, Argentina's labor movement has achieved a nearly-unprecedented unity since Macri took office 20 months ago.

Free trade policies and massive utility rate hikes have earned him political support from business groups and the IMF - as well as a record $116 billion in new foreign loans.

Critics, however, note sharply higher prices, a wave of small business failures, higher unemployment, a doubling in capital flight, and - confounding market analyst predictions - a 64% collapse in foreign direct investment.

"They do this every time," CGT leader Juan Carlos Schmidt reminded the audience. "They demand sacrifices from us while encouraging short-term speculation - and once they've make their killing, leave us all holding the bag."

While numerous union demonstrations have taken place against the right-wing Macri administration (including a general strike on April 6), Macri's recent bid for labor law deregulation and for raising the retirement age to 67 galvanized the nation's labor and social organizations alike.

"They're playing for keeps. The government would like to do away with the entire labor movement - not just this labor leader or that," former House Speaker Leopoldo Moreau explained. "People are trying to protect their living standards and labor rights, and don't want to return to pre-1916 conditions."

From the ATM to McDonald's

Known in Argentina as the "McDonald's bill" after it was revealed that the U.S. based fast-food giant helped craft it, Macri's labor reform proposals seek a return to the lax labor law environment of the 1990s, when similar bills were passed in 1992 and 2000.

The work week rose from 40 to 48 hours, short-term trial employment was encouraged, and layoffs were made simpler and less costly. But rather than create jobs, unemployment jumped from 7% in 1992 to 24% in 2002, and the incidence of unregistered workers doubled to 45%.

The 2000 labor bill became known as the "ATM bill" once it emerged that President Fernando de la Rúa, a vocal supporter of Macri's policies, had State Intelligence bribe a number of senators to obtain its passage.

Amid a record collapse and rioting, de la Rúa resigned the following year.

At: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pagina12.com.ar%2F58116-contra-la-flexibilizacion-y-a-favor-del-empleo



Bank workers' leader Sergio Palazzo addresses demonstrators: "There are more than enough reasons for today's mobilization."

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Argentine unions lead march against labor flexibilization and higher retirement age proposals (Original Post) sandensea Aug 2017 OP
This article is very worthwhile. Our own corporate media never mentioned the "McDonald's bill." Judi Lynn Aug 2017 #1
Glad you liked it, Judi. Their efforts have indeed helped moderate Macris course (believe it or not) sandensea Aug 2017 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,450 posts)
1. This article is very worthwhile. Our own corporate media never mentioned the "McDonald's bill."
Tue Aug 22, 2017, 07:05 PM
Aug 2017

I wonder why! They should be so proud a US corporation got in there and help Macri screw the poor working class even more. Just like Anaconda, ITT, and Pepsi helped out so much in Chile.

Hope there is some chance these good people who are trying to undo the damage done already by this right-wing greedy scumball and prevent even more he has in store are going to succeed. In the end, they will, but it's so important he is kept from getting so entrenched he can pull off the second Dirty War against those who resist this looting.

Such a well-done article, it should be re-read for the historical points made which almost all of us wouldn't know.

It's good they are keeping alive the name of the man who was possibly disappeared already, leaving some hideous possibilities in people's mind about what is is they actually did to him.

Best wishes to Sergio Palazzo. Hope people around him will be extra-protective. He will be needing guardians for quite a while, as we know, based on what history has taught us.

sandensea

(21,600 posts)
2. Glad you liked it, Judi. Their efforts have indeed helped moderate Macris course (believe it or not)
Tue Aug 22, 2017, 07:34 PM
Aug 2017

Macri's spending a lot of money (a record $35 billion deficit this year) to breathe life into the economy - the very thing he swore the IMF and Wall Street business press that he'd never do.

There's no doubt he's been doing so out of political expediency - but it shows if nothing else that these mass demonstrations worry him enough to disregard IMF/neocon advice.

Will he heed their demands, and risk choking the economy (which since March has started to recover) back into a severe recession? We'll see.

Thanks as always for your thoughts and keen interest. ¡Matecitos!



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