LO Sweden is
starting a high-level commission on a “new Swedish model”. Long ago, Sweden was
known for what was called the Rehn-Meidner model. The idea was that union wage
strategies and government policy should be combined to promote full employment
and fair distribution while respecting the autonomy of unions and employers.
The basic element was a “solidaristic” wage policy which would raise the income
level of low-income groups and simultaneously speed up structural change and
thereby create more jobs in the future. Unemployment benefits and active labour
market programmes would give workers security in the process of change; a
“security of the wings”, as Gösta Rehn, LO economist at the time, phrased it.
In this guest post, Ingemar Lindberg
discusses the huge task of this new commission: How to re-establish a strategy
for these goals in our times?
Sweden has a semi-centralised
wage setting system, in which negotiations between the social partners in industry
are expected to “set the mark” for other sectors. Union affiliation is still
around 70 per cent and collective agreement coverage 90 per cent. But full
employment is far away; the rate of unemployment remains around 8 per cent. Moreover,
wages have not increased in line with productivity; actually Sweden beats
Germany (and even China) in export surplus seen over the last ten to fifteen
years. This is not very solidaristic with workers in other countries.
In the 1950s and
1960s – the hey-days of the old model – LO Sweden, the blue-collar
confederation, could still dominate the scene on the union side. Today, two
other confederations – TCO for salaried employees and Saco for professionals
–have together more members than LO and negotiate two thirds of the total wage
sum. Differences between the three confederations are not easy to bridge. Many
TCO and Saco unions have accepted individual wage setting models. And LO’s
insistence on its link with the Social-Democratic party is a hindrance for
closer collaboration with the other two.
Also, in the
hey-days of the old model, the Swedish employers were part of the handshake. The
leaders of LO and the Employers´ Confederation SAF toured the US together, presenting
the case for a compromise of this kind. The employers actually saw this model
as a constructive way of working together with labour and create a good climate
at the workplace. Now, however, major fractions on the employer side seem to
have lost all national or long-term interests, focusing instead on transnational
production networks or short-term financial transactions.
Even more
challenging is the persistent high rate of unemployment. The old model was
based on global capital controls of the Bretton-Woods era and on Keynesian
macro-economic management at national level. There was political agreement
across all parties that if unemployment rose towards 3 per cent, active stimuli
through fiscal and/or monetary policies were called for. And the tools were
available at the national level. The national government ruled over fiscal and
monetary policy.
A central issue
for the new commission is bound to be how far a national government in a small
and open country like Sweden can master its own policies for full employment.
No one would deny that national policy space has shrunk. But some, including
myself, would argue that the real limits are larger than the perceived ones.
Excessively low aggregate demand seems to be the main reason for this
“prolonged crisis of democratic capitalism” (Streek). And Sweden is no exception.
Could not the share of wages to GDP be raised? Could not the inflation target
be elevated and fiscal norms relaxed, now that stagnation is more of a threat
than inflation? Could not a huge-scale public investment programme with green
ambitions be started, now that idle resources need be put to use?
Photo by Arjan Richter |
There are
several other new elements which the commission will most probably have to
consider. One is “globalization”, meaning the organization of production and
distribution in trans-national networks, and the extreme mobility of financial
capital. These two elements of a neo-liberal world order threaten both unions
and democracy. More effective tools for transnational union responses need to
be developed. And simultaneously, a
reasonable degree of national policy space – for full employment, labour market
regulation and welfare programmes – needs to be defended and restored.
At its 2012
Convention, LO Sweden elected a complete set of new leaders. A new generation
took over. Establishing a high level commission with a task like this is
certainly a brave thing to do. The commission is required to report in 2015 and
decisions will be taken at the 2016 LO Convention. It will be interesting to
see how far and in what way the commission will tackle these challenges.
Ingemar
Lindberg is a former researcher and social
policy adviser to the Swedish Confederation of Trade Unions (LO). He has
written a number of books and articles on labour and globalisation.
Do you think the social democratic model will be able to survive in Sweden? It would be sad to see one of the few fairer economies in the West undergo a market transformation.
ReplyDeleteYou mention "the basic role of unions is not politics", yet how do you feel the unions are approaching this area? The majority of current unions in the UK are the product of many mergers throughout decades, creating bigger unions with more power (source: http://www.uniontimeline.com/). This seems to inevitably lead to unions being involved with UK politics, such as GMB's affiliation to the Labour Party. But how does this compare to Sweden? Do you feel that big unions in Sweden are heavily involved in politics? If so do you feel it's having a negative impact on union members?
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