German public sector pay dispute: Workers need a new political …

new postal rates

On Monday, March 31, the new contract for over two million German public sector workers employed by federal and local government was announced. Its main purpose is to prevent the pay struggle in the public and private sectors from developing into a broader movement against the government, which could challenge the policy of redistributing wealth from those at the bottom of society to those at the top.
Set against the loss in real wages that public sector workers have had to accept in recent years, the new contract is little more than a drop in the ocean. The trade union Verdi has promoted it as a great success, but that is a sham.
The contract includes a rise in basic rates of around €50 plus a 3.1 percent increase this year. According to Verdi, this equates to a 5.1 percent average rise. Verdi has dropped the original demand for an increase of €200 in basic rates, which would have improved wages considerably for low-income earners. In the coming year, there will be a one-off payment of €225 and a further 2.8 percent rise. To a large extent, however, this will be balanced out by extending working hours in the West German municipalities from 38.5 to 39 hours a week.
In the course of two years, average incomes will thus rise by just over 5 percent. At best, this would barely keep pace with a rapidly rising inflation rate, but it in no way compensates for the pay freeze of the last three-and-a-half years, let alone the cutbacks of the past one-and-a-half decades, which have eradicated a third of the jobs in the public sector.
The public sector employers have been clear for a long time that they would not make any concessions to their workforce this year as far as wages were concerned. In view of rising growth rates, growing potential tax sources, high company profits and the exorbitant salaries of top managers, the pent-up anger of public sector workers—who have had to accept a pay freeze or pay cuts for many years—was simply too great. Verdi, the union that had negotiated this pay freeze, has been losing members hand over fist.

wsws.org


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This entry was posted on Monday, April 7th, 2008 at 10:49 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

8 Responses to “German public sector pay dispute: Workers need a new political …”

  1. Gwen Says:

    wait now i’m confused. my computer is telling me it’s here:which time: /usr/bin/time

  2. Marty Says:

    I’m really tempted to try this: http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=390255

  3. Amilia Says:

    I hate stamps… can’t they just have serials on envelopes? Then we could pay for the postage on the USPS website and just mail the damn thing out….. ohhh but that would take what? 50 years of planning in and out of government agencies before it could be implemented…

  4. Briony Says:

    Slashdot is no longer relevant. Sorry, it’s true.

  5. Rollo Says:

    Great idea! I sick and tired of having to buy 2 cent stamps every few years.I buy stamps in bulk and this will help with future rate hikes every 2 years.

  6. Pollie Says:

    Sound business move on the postal service’s part. They’ve increased the attractiveness of their stamps in the eyes of the consumer without doing much. If the amount you mail in your lifetime is constant, then they’re just getting your money earlier, which they can invest. Also, people are likely to lose stamps that they were hoarding and have to re-purchase

  7. Aubrie Says:

    Waah! I don’t understand what the folks on Slashdot are talking about, but somehow I still managed to get a job writing about the internet at one of the most widely circulated magazines! Waah! It’s probably because I work for a dying medium! Waaah!