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WSWS : News
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America : Mexico
Strike by Mexican Volkswagen workers ends
By Gerardo Nebbia
11 September 2001
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The 18-day strike by autoworkers in Mexico that stopped production
at the giant Volkswagen-Mexico plant in Puebla state ended September
5 after the union agreed to managements wage and benefits
offer. The 12,400 workers will receive a 10.2 percent increase
in wages, 3.5 percent increase in food vouchers and 1 percent
more for school supplies for workers children.
Last August, a five-day strike by VW workers at the plant 65
miles outside of Mexico City resulted in a 21 percent wage increase.
Both raises still leave workers wages well behind the pace
of inflation, which has risen 352 percent since 1994.
The latest increase raises average VW wages to 226 pesos a
dayabout $26 USonly marginally above what a family
of four requires to live above the official poverty line in Mexico.
The average wage of a US autoworker is $24 an hour, about seven
times more than for a VW worker in Mexico. (German auto workers
earn about 10 times as much.)
Originally, the Independent Union of Volkswagen Workers (SITVW)
had asked for a 31 percent raise. On August 29, workers rejected
a 9 percent wage offer brought back by the union leadership.
The combined 14 percent raise was too much for VW management,
however. After announcing the settlement, VW-Mexico Vice President
Francisco Bada announced that VW would stop a planned $1.5 billion
investment in Mexico. Instead the company would increase production
of its Jetta models in China, where VW officials said its workers
are less assertive. No doubt VW is counting on the
Beijing governments brutal repression of Chinese strikes
to keep their workers less assertive.
Volkswagen is waging a cost-cutting war with its workers around
the globe. VW-Germany reached an agreement on August 28 with the
IG Metall union, permitting a longer workweek at less pay and
promoting higher productivity in exchange for promises of new
investments. Last year VW fired 1,300 workers at its Uitenhage
plant near Port Elizabeth in South Africa who were waging a struggle
against the firing of 13 militant shop stewards.
The Mexican walkout took place as VW sales weaken worldwide.
Earlier in August, the plant cut back production and 400 workers
were laid off. By the time the strike began VW had a two-week
stockpile of vehicles to cushion the impact of a strike. However,
the strike quickly caused layoffs throughout the state of Puebla,
whose one million inhabitants are heavily dependent of auto jobs.
The settlement came at the end of intensive negotiations involving
Mexican Labor Secretary Carlos Abascal and labor leaders aimed
at blocking the development of a broader movement against worsening
economic conditions and the government of President Vicente Fox.
The day before, telephone workers, airline pilots and transit
workersmembers of the National Labor Union (UNT), the three-year-old
reform union federation that the VW workers are affiliated
withblocked Mexico Citys highways for a few hours,
calling for a national strike.
The 1.5 million-member UNT includes the much older Federation
of Autonomous Unions (FAT), a trade union group independent of
the Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM), the gangster-ridden
and corporatist unions tied to the long ruling Institutional Revolutionary
Party (PRI). The FAT works closely with the United Electrical
Workers (UE) in the US and the American AFL-CIO bureaucracy, which
has long been concerned that a movement by Mexican workers against
CTM not take a leftward direction, threatening the interests of
US multinationals in Mexico and encouraging any similar movement
by US workers.
The leaders of the Volkswagen workers union and UNT called
on President Fox to intervene to end the strike. In the past the
PRI and its affiliated CTM unions would impose corporatist settlements
to quickly bring an end to strikes. This time, however, Fox, a
former Coca-Cola executive and leader of the free-market and right-wing
PAN (National Action Party), refused to intervene, allowing VW
to hold the line against the workers wage demands. The VW
union officials continually dropped the amount of their wage demands
and until finally ending the strike largely on managements
terms.
In response to VWs threats to suspend investment, Puebla
state officials granted the auto giant more concessions. Puebla
Governor Melquiades Morales confirmed that he had met with executives
from Volkswagen Mexico to pledge his collaboration in improving
business conditions. According to Morales, VW officials assured
him that they would continue investing, although they would not
guarantee all the jobs of current VW workers.
In both its Sao Paulo, Brazil and Puebla plants, VW makes use
of so-called cluster technologywhich groups
a series of parts factories close to an assembly plantin
order to sharply increase output by its workers. The speedup prompted
VW workers at the Sao Paulo plant to begin rolling strikes last
month to press for productivity bonuses. The Puebla plant, the
third largest VW plant in the world, has doubled its output since
the early 1990s, although employment has fallen from 20,000 to
12,400. With the assistance of the union bureaucracy labor costs
per car have dropped from 10 percent of the total cost in 1996
to 3.7 percent last year.
See Also:
Mexican VW workers reject settlement,
continue strike
[1 September 2001]
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