The conjuncture between the thirtieth
anniversaries of the fall of the Berlin Wall and the disintegration of the USSR
is an apt occasion to revisit the trajectories of change in the post-Soviet
space. In their article ‘Baltic Labour in
the Crucible of Capitalist Exploitation: Reassessing “Post-Communist”
Transformation’, recently published in the Economic and Labour Relations Review, Andreas Bieler and Jokubas
Salyga assess ‘post-communist’
transformation in the Baltic countries from the perspective of labour. The
authors argue that the uneven and combined unfolding of 'post-communist'
transformation has subjected Baltic labour to doubly constituted exploitation
processes. First, workers in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have suffered from
the extreme neo-liberal restructuring of economic and employment relations at
home. Second, migrant workers from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) in general,
trying to escape exploitation at home, have faced another set of exploitative
dynamics in host countries in Western Europe such as the UK. Nevertheless,
workers have continued to challenge exploitation in Central and Eastern Europe,
in Western Europe, and have been active in extending networks of transnational
solidarity across the continent.
In
the wake of ‘post-communist’ transformation, liberal triumphalists heralded the
falling apart of the so-called ‘Eastern Bloc’ as a success of representative
democracy and the free market, facilitating CEE countries’ ‘historical return’
to Europe. Dissatisfaction over economic recessions during the early 1990s was
pacified through the promises of economic well-being as a result of European
Union (EU) membership. The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Slovenia,
Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia joined in 2004, followed by Bulgaria and Romania
in 2007 and Croatia in 2013. The hopes of working people were, however, soon
dashed by the harsh realities of capitalist exploitation at home as well as
abroad.
The netherworld of
production during transformation cataclysm
The
drive towards labour market deregulation proceeded in the milieu of dramatic
sectoral restructuring induced by opening up to global market competition. Over
the course of transformation, Baltic labour regimes have become synonymous with
casualised and informal types of employment, simultaneous lengthening and
intensifying of work and deteriorating workplace environments. The rhetoric of
autonomy and flexibility was used to depict ‘self-employment’ as an attractive
‘choice’ both in higher and low value-added sectors. Further, many occupying
relatively stable positions in the private sector experienced informalisation
due to a common employer practice to pay officially only a minimum wage
alongside a supplement in the form of unreported compensation (‘envelope
wage’). These discretionary measures subject workers to near-total managerial
control, enabling arbitrary wage reductions in cases of ‘underperformance’.
The
deregulatory effort translated into pushed-up rates of exploitation, subjecting
Baltic workforces to a punitive juxtaposition of higher work intensity and
lengthened durations of work. Labour force surveys in Estonia and Lithuania
indicate a rise in the annual working hours after 2004. In 2006 Estonia
ranked fifth in the EU (with an average of 1,942 hours per year) recording an
0.5% increase compared to 2000, despite a 25 percentage point increase in
hourly productivity (GDP per hour worked) throughout the same period. A small
(0.5%) increase in Lithuania (1,855 hours per year), the tenth highest score,
has been similarly counteracted by a 30-percentage point rise in GDP per hour
worked (OECD 2019).
Chains of European
migration and capital’s thirst for labour from the East
Eastward
enlargement has led to a split between ‘sender’ and ‘receiver’ countries of the
European labour market. Herein, the new EU members from CEE have occupied
centre stage, registering negative demographic developments and waves of
emigration to Western Europe. According to the CEE Development Institute (Duszczyk and
Matuszczyk 2015: 13),
compared to 2004, by 2013 Latvia registered an estimated 513% (23,000 to
141,000) increase in the number of citizens residing in the EU-15, with similar
numbers observed in Lithuania (436% –
50,000 to 268,000), Romania (325% – 541,000 to 2.3 million) and Poland (210% – 580,000 to 1.8 million). As many
as 11.6% of Romanian, 9% of Lithuanian, 8% of Croatian and 7% of Latvian nationals
were estimated to reside in the EU-15.
The
United Kingdom's (UK) immediate post-accession opening up of the labour market
for Eastern European migrant workers had nothing to do with notions of
philanthropy or hospitality. That migrant labour constitutes an invaluable
resource to increase the degree of exploitation and thereby raise the rate of
surplus value can be inferred from the propensity to recruit Eastern Europeans
in food processing, hospitality and agriculture, the sectors that are
experiencing major problems filling job vacancies and tend to be those most
exposed to competitive pressures. Excessive working hours, inadequate duration
of breaks, bullying, problems with obtaining employer references,
disproportionately high fees imposed by recruitment agencies for job search, as
well as instances of lower-than-agreed (below the National Minimum Wage)
remuneration and withholding of wages have been widely documented.
Given
the young profile of CEE migrant workers (81% were aged between 18 and 34 in
2008), employers can subject this segment of the working class to worst
possible health and safety conditions and stockpile savings related to the
organisation of work (Fitzgerald and
Hardy 2010: 132).
Migrant women, who upon entering the country do not qualify for social support
for protracted durations, suffer disproportionately from the workplace- and
(oftentimes) household-based exploitation that intertwines with sexual
discrimination, including unfair and non-compensated lay-offs over pregnancy or
‘unacceptable’ clothing requirements.
It
would, however, be wrong to assume that workers have simply accepted the
intensification of exploitation. Whether at home, abroad or across borders,
they have been an integral part of significant moments of resistance.
Bringing
‘post-communist’ labour struggles back on the radar
What
emerges, for example, from the various issues of narrowly circulated
independent Lithuanian labour weekly Opozicija
is a rich mosaic of labour and societal unrest that followed immediately after
the launch of 'Shock therapy'. In 1993 alone, the education workers’ trade
union engaged in nation-wide industrial action, managing to secure an
eight-fold wage increase over twenty-four months. Additionally, in the spring
of 1993, pickets against rising food prices, uniting workers, pensioners,
students, unemployed and disabled persons, took place at the parliament square,
which also became the meeting point for mass demonstrations over wages and
unemployment as well as the European-wide ‘right to work’ campaign. While in
May the transportation system in Lithuania’s third-largest city of KlaipÄ—da was
brought to a standstill due to a three-week strike, a month later protestors
organised a tent camp ‘against the destruction of Lithuania’s industry’ in
front of parliament.
More
recently, the Lithuanian labour scene has witnessed the creation of the social
movement ‘Life is too expensive’ (Gyvenimas
per brangus), fighting to defend the rights and conditions of workers,
tenants and students. In 2016, activists boycotted supermarkets over
price-hikes and low wages, organised flash-mobs highlighting precarious
employment conditions in retail trade, held city- and neighbourhood-assemblies
uniting students, pensioners and service sector workers and resisting the Labour
Code liberalisation. They staged occupations in two of the country’s largest
cities that attracted broad public support. The outgrowth of these
organisational efforts has been the newly founded G1PS trade union (Gegužės
1-osios profesinÄ— sÄ…junga), which stands out from its counterparts
due to the emphasis on class struggle as opposed to a class compromise-led
politics of tripartism. Espousing the principles of class solidarity that
extends to other forms of oppression, the union also defines ‘resistance’
open-endedly to include mobilisations against rising prices of food, rent or
living expenses, the fight for widely available and quality healthcare,
education and other public services.
Approaching resistance
against capital abroad
Migrant CEE workers in
Western Europe have been involved in resistance too. Trade unions in the UK and
Ireland have played a pioneering role in reaching out to Eastern European
migrants via developing international linkages and adopting innovative
organisational strategies. The Polish trade union Solidarity’s use of internet
promotions to encourage departing workers to unionise in the UK has been
complemented with the British Trades Union Congress (TUC) members’ attendance
at job fairs in Warsaw and the pressure on local unions to develop
Polish-language website sections and application forms (Campbell
2006).
Innovative organisational
methods have included the forging of partnerships with ethnic associations
(Polish Catholic Association in Birmingham) and founding Polish-language union
sections in Southampton and Glasgow by the General, Municipal, Boilermakers
(GMB) union and Transport and General Workers’ Union. One recent example of successful
recruitment is the Bakers Food and Allied Workers Union’s Midlands branch,
whose 6000 strong membership includes about 1000 Eastern European workers (Chaffin
2017). In 2006, the same union concluded a far-reaching agreement with an
employment agency in the UK, allowing it to audit comprehensively the
recruitment of Polish workers and encourage unionisation (Hardy 2015:
195).
To varying degrees, these creative tactics have inspired union organising activities in the Netherlands, Germany, Finland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden, most notably in the construction sector. In consequence, Eastern Europeans stood on the picket lines shoulder to shoulder with their colleagues, including migrant workers from Latin America and the Caribbean. Industrial action at the Iceland distribution warehouse in Enfield, pay and pension disputes with First Bus in the Midlands, as well as demonstrations alongside Irish workers in protest to management’s recourse to migrant recruitment on worse pay and employment conditions, are cases in point (Hardy 2009: 160-161).
In May
2018, it was the warehouse operatives, drivers and office staff, who went on
strike at Tesco Dagenham distribution centre demanding a 15% pay increase.
Organised by the Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers, most were taking
part in industrial action for the first time. The sizeable proportion of
Eastern European workers has been described as devoted and vocal, at times even
shaming picket crossers in their own languages (Campanile
2018).
Towards transnational
solidarity
Finally,
CEE workers have also been involved in moments of contestation across borders. Recent
efforts at unionising the global retail giant Amazon provide a hopeful glimpse.
Soon after workers had started to organise at German Fulfilment Centres (FCs),
the company started to build three FCs across the border in Poland, from which
it intended to carry out deliveries to German customers in case of strikes at
German FCs. At times, Amazon combined this strategy with an explicit threat to
move jobs from strike-prone Germany to its eastern neighbour (Boewe
and Schulten 2019: 27).
Thanks
to direct contacts between workers at German and Polish FCs, it was possible on
occasions to engage in transnational solidarity. ‘When employees at the Polish
amazon FC in Poznań (POZ1) were told that their shifts would be extended by an
hour at short notice at the end of June 2015, spontaneous protests broke out,
resulting in a go-slow strike’ (Boewe
and Schulten 2019: 31). They had realised that their extended shifts were
supposed to counter the walkout at the FC in Bad Hersfeld, Germany.
In conclusion, the twin
dynamics of exploitation should not be taken to imply that the CEE region as a
whole denotes nothing else but a social wasteland where capital dominates
labour. Nor is there some pre-existing hierarchy of nationalities according to
which some are more prone than others to organising around the demands for
social justice. Postulations about alleged ‘post-communist’ labour’s quiescence
tend to discount the many instances in which those workers actively contested
capitalist exploitation at home, abroad and across national borders.
Andreas Bieler is Professor
of Political Economy in the School of Politics and
International Relations and Fellow of the Centre for the Study of
Social and Global Justice (CSSGJ) at Nottingham
University, UK and currently a Core Fellow at the Helsinki
Collegium for Advanced Studies, Finland.
Jokubas Salyga is a fourth-year PhD
student in the School of
Politics and International Relations and a Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Social and
Global Justice (CSSGJ) at Nottingham University, UK and of the ZEIT-Stiftung Foundation
in Hamburg, Germany.
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