Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norway. Show all posts
Thursday, 21 September 2017
Norwegian elections 2017: Another right-wing victory - and a serious Labour defeat.
Thursday, 16 January 2014
Exploitation in the Global South and North: lessons from the aluminium industry.
The production of aluminium
is based on the destruction of the environment and exploitation of workers in
the Global South and North alike, reported Frank Meyer, the Director of ARBARK, the Archive and Library of the Norwegian labour movement, to the transnational labour project
at the Centre for Advanced Study in Oslo.
In this blog post, I will provide an overview of Frank Meyer’s key points in
relation to his comparative case study of Porto Trombetas in Brazil and Årdal
in Norway and reflect on the possible involvement of trade unions in resisting
exploitation in the aluminium industry.
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
The white terror – Déjà vu about fascism and the reactionary turn of our time.
In the summer of 1980, Italian fascists blew up the central station in
“red” Bologna. 85 people were killed, more than 200 were wounded. The
terrorists had close ties to the Italian military intelligence and NATOs secret
stay-behind groups. In Norway in the summer of 2011, two fascist lone wolf
terrorist attacks were carried out against the government square block and the
Youths Labor party summer camp, claiming the lives of 77 people and wounding
more than 300. August 2nd in Italy and July 22nd in
Norway are both markers of the worst terrorist acts in post-war Western Europe.
In this guest post, Idar Helle, a
member of the Transnational
Labour Project in Oslo, reviews the book by Eystein Kleven 22. juli-terroren: Angrepet på arbeiderbevegelsen [The terror of 22nd of July: The attack on
the labor movement] (Marxist
publishing 2011, 42 pages).
Monday, 7 October 2013
What future for Social Democracy?
On 9 September 2013, a red-green alliance led by the social democratic
Labour Party lost the Norwegian general elections. Only two weeks later, the
German Social Democrats (SPD) only came a poor second with just over 25 per cent
of the votes in their country’s general elections. Even if it ends up as thefor
junior partner in a grand coalition, the clear winner was the centre-right
Christian Democratic Party of Chancellor Angela Merkel, which missed only
narrowly an absolute majority in parliament. In this post, I will assess the
general situation of social democratic parties in industrialised countries and
speculate about their potential future role.
Monday, 9 July 2012
Norwegian exceptionalism?
In 2005, a coalition government
led by the Norwegian Labour Party took office. Four years later, it retained power
in the 2009 elections. Welfare spending continues to be high, an expansive
public sector has been maintained and trade unions continue to enjoy a strong
role in economic and social policy-making. In many respects, Norway has
successfully resisted the general direction of neo-liberal restructuring,
public sector cuts and undermining of the welfare state. In this blog post, I
will discuss how we can explain this apparent Norwegian exceptionalism.
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| Photo by xitus |
It is often argued that oil
wealth would explain Norwegian exceptionalism. And indeed, in contrast to other
developed countries, Norway has not had to incur a budget deficit in order to
stimulate the economy during the current global financial crisis. It could rely
on its oil wealth fund. However, as a leading trade unionist remarked to me in
an interview, the crucial institutions of the Norwegian political economy, the
gains made by trade unions, were all achieved before the oil wealth appeared on the agenda in the 1970s. Hence,
the key explanation needs to be looked for elsewhere.
Two main reasons can be identified for Norwegian
exceptionalism. First, in contrast to other small European countries, the
Norwegian production structure is comparatively little transnationalised.
Capital in Norway is characterized by the predominance of small and
medium-sized companies and, as a result, is comparatively weak (see Bieler
2012: 234-5). In contrast to countries such as Sweden, dominated by large
transnational corporations, capital cannot dictate labour how to organize the
domestic political economy (see also Globalisation
and the erosion of the Nordic model).
Moreover, the Norwegian Union of
Municipal and General Employees (Fagforbundet) realised that the balance of
power between capital and labour, on which the class compromise around the
welfare state had been built, had changed in Norway. In response, it
established the broad-based Norwegian Campaign for the Welfare
State, which consisted of trade unions in the public and private sector
as well as a whole range of other social movements and NGOs, including the
Welfare Alliance, the Norwegian Farmers’ and Smallholders’ Union, several
feminist groups and a students’ organisation. The Campaign for the Welfare State fulfilled two crucial functions.
First, through educational initiatives it mobilised support for the welfare
state and against neo-liberal restructuring, and here especially the idea that
the introduction of competition would deliver efficiency gains in the public
sector. Second, it broadened the social basis of resistance against public
sector restructuring and, thus, established a balance of power with capital.
Overall, both the politically
more independent position of the trade unions vis-à-vis the Labour Party and
the broad-based Campaign for the Welfare
State put strong pressure on the Labour Party. As a result of these campaigns,
the Labour Party, as an exception in Europe, moved to the left prior to the
2005 elections and has actually delivered policies in the interests of workers
and wider society. Nevertheless, employers and centre-right parties continue to
put pressure on the Norwegian government towards budget cuts and public sector
restructuring. The Labour Party itself may be tempted to move again towards
this policy course. Successes as achieved in 2005 constantly need to be
re-affirmed and trade union agency for the welfare state will remain crucial.
This blog post is based on the article
Bieler,
Andreas (2012) ‘Small
Nordic Countries and Globalisation: Analysing Norwegian exceptionalism’, Competition and Change, Vol.16/3: 224-42.
Prof. Andreas Bieler
Professor of
Political Economy
University of
Nottingham/UK
Personal website: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/~ldzab
9 July 2012
Monday, 29 March 2010
The power of Norwegian trade unions
Between 2 and 12 March 2010, I carried out 20 semi-structured interviews with representatives of Norwegian political parties, government ministries, employers’ associations and trade unions in Oslo. My main focus was on the continuity and change in the Norwegian political economy in times of global restructuring. The key result of this field research trip was astonishing: trade unions are in charge!
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