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WSWS : News
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East : Turkey
Turkey: Textile firms demand wage freeze, layoffs
By our correspondent
13 August 2007
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On August 8, the Union of Textile, Knitting and Garment Industry
Workers of Turkey (TEKSIF) announced that it could not reach an
agreement with the Turkish Textile Employers Association
(TUTSIS). The union gave notice of its intent to call a strike
by 11,000 workers at 17 companies.
TEKSIF representatives have been in discussions with TUTSIS
since April.
During the negotiations TUTSIS demanded a wage freeze for the
first half of 2007 and a 3 percent increase for the second half
of the year. According to a recent study by the Turkish Central
Bank, the inflation rate by the end of 2007 will be 7.49 percent.
This means textile and clothing workers would suffer another cut
in their real income. These workers have still not recovered from
the massive losses during the 2001 crisis, thanks to the treachery
of the trade union bureaucracy.
The textile industry accounts for 25 percent of exports and
employs 1.5 million workersonly a small fraction of whom
are unionised. According to TEKSIFs web site, in 1996 eleven
out of 28 state-owned companies were sold to private owners. The
remaining public undertakings were subsequently transferred to
other public institutions or stopped production. As a result
of these steps taken under the name of privatization TEKSIF lost
25,000 members. With its 80,000 today, TEKSIF is still one of
the largest unions in terms of membership in Turkey.
The great majority of workers are unregistered and their pay
and employment conditions are appalling. They do not enjoy job
security or any sort of social security protection. Due to the
domination of informal economy in the industry a significant proportion
of production goes unrecorded.
As a result of globalisation, textile firms face intense international
competition, and over the last few years many businesses have
shut down or moved production offshore. After 2008 the industry
expects to face more challenges from China.
A recent report issued by the State Planning Organization (DPT)
says there will be serious cutbacks until 2020, as the elimination
of export quotas on China and other countries is expected to sharply
reduce Turkish exports. Textile production may decrease by more
than 23 percent and ready wear by 33 percent. DTP experts have
calculated that 600,000 workers could face unemployment.
Regarding the future of the industry, Mehmet Simsek, the newly
elected deputy of the governing AKP (Justice and Development Party)
and former economist for the Wall Street firm Merrill Lynch, said
Turkey should leave textiles to China and promote
more value-added industries and products.
Encouraged by the successive pro-company agreements signed
by the unions, the textile bosses have now decided to intensify
the exploitation of workers. TUTSIS Chairman Halit Narin said,
The textile and ready-to-wear sectors have no more competitive
power. Employers are unable to grasp any chance for compromise.
During the military dictatorship that followed the September
12, 1980 coup, Narin was the president of the Confederation of
Employers Unions (TISK). Hailing the new constitution and
labour legislation that followed, which deprived workers of their
most basic rights, Narin said, Up until today it was the
workers who rejoiced. Now it is our turn.
At the same time, the national trade union federation to which
TEKSIF is affiliated, the Turkish Trade Union Confederation (Turk-Is),
joined the discussion of the constitution and labour legislation
in an effort to provide legitimacy to the brutal military junta.
During the period of the military junta the former president
of TEKSIF, Sevket Yilmaz, was part of the leadership of Turk-Is
and in 1982 publicly voiced support for the military coup, claiming
that some trade unionists were guilty of destabilizing the country
and that the military had restored peace. Soon afterward Yilmaz
was elected president of Turk-Is.
The current TEKSIF leadership is composed of the political
descendants of Yilmaz and his supporters. The major concern of
the labour bureaucracy is defending its privileges and political
connections to the ruling establishment, not the living standards
of textile workers. For this reason the TEKSIF officials are trying
to convince textile workers that they must once again accept new
concessions in order to defend Turkeys national interests.
See Also:
Fifty-five years after founding, Turkish
union confederation a bureaucratic shell
[11 August 2007]
Washington discusses plans for covert
action against Kurdish PKK in Iraq
[6 August 2007]
Washington, EU welcome AKP
victory in Turkish elections
[25 July 2007]
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