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China's economic downturn leads to increased worker protests and strikes across the country

Hamartia Antidote

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https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-02-16/workers-protests-on-the-rise-as-chinas-economy-slows/10793204

On Christmas eve, a group of construction workers stood on the edge of the roof of their former employer's building in Times Square in southern Dongguan City in a dramatic demand for nearly $20,000 in unpaid wages.

Key points:
  • 1,700 worker protests were recorded in 2018, up from 1,250 the previous year
  • Around 80 per cent of last year's protests were over unpaid wages
  • Factory relocation has reduced the number of jobs in Dongguan by 4-5 million
The construction company owner had disappeared, and the workers were desperate to receive their "hard-earned money".

One of the workers posted an appeal on Chinese social media platform Weibo saying they had exhausted all means of finding him and receiving their wages.

As China's economy slows, labour workers are increasingly under threat of unemployment and lost wages.

And as low-income families struggle to survive, worker protests and strikes have increased across the country.

Chinese leaders see labour unrest as a potential political threat and are particularly sensitive to demonstrations this year, as it is the 30th anniversary of the military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters at Tiananmen Square.

Last month, Chinese President Xi Jinping also warned his senior members of the Communist Party to be on high alert for "black swans" and "grey rhinos" — phrases pertaining to extreme unforeseen events — in the face of a slowing economy.

'Ordinary workers are struggling to make a living'

10800248-3x2-700x467.jpg


n 2017, the China Labour Bulletin (CLB) recorded about 1,250 worker strikes and protests countrywide. Last year, the number topped 1,700.

Geoffrey Crothall, CLB director of communications, said while the increase may partly reflect an increased ability of the Hong Kong-based CLB to locate the protests, the figures still showed a "discernible increase".

"The reasons for that are quite varied … but a lot probably has to do with the economic slowdown in China and the fact that ordinary workers are now struggling to make a living," he said.

While most of the protests recorded were small-scale and short-lived, they were frequent and widespread, covering every province and region of China except Tibet.

About 80 per cent of last year's protests were over unpaid wages, with 19 per cent related to factory closures, which CLB predict will increase as "the economy slows and the manufacturing sector contracts".

Mr Crothall said strikes and protests were often the only means at the employees' disposal to resolve collective wage disputes.

"There's no institutionalised collective bargaining mechanism," he said.

"The official trade union doesn't do a good job at representing workers' interests.

"The only thing workers can do is go on strike or stage a protest in the hope of forcing concessions from their employer or getting the local government to intervene on their behalf."

Trade war, cheap labour lures manufacturers elsewhere
PHOTO: In the manufacturing sector, workers are also increasingly protesting over unpaid wages and factory closures. (Reuters: Bobby Yip)
The threat of increased tariffs due to the US-China trade war and the lure of lower wages in countries like Vietnam, Cambodia and Bangladesh have seen dozens of manufacturers pack up and leave China for elsewhere.

Average labour costs in Vietnam are almost half that of China and in Cambodia it's even less, according to Professor Anita Chan, visiting scholar at Australian National University's political and social change department.

Factory relocations have also been increasing within China as transport and communication have improved in the central provinces, where wages are lower than in southern and coastal regions that formerly hosted the lion's share of China's manufacturing, Professor Chan said, leaving millions of workers unemployed and often unpaid.

"Relocation is a serious issue," said Professor Chan, citing the closure of multiple factories in Dongguan — once dubbed "the workshop of the world" — as one example.

"The number of workers [in Dongguan] dropped by about four or five million in a few years. That's a lot!"

In October, GoerTek, the Chinese company that assembles Apple's AirPods announced it would be moving its production from China to Vietnam.

"Due to macro-economic factors — such as external market fluctuations and China-US trade disputes — the company's operation and management has become more difficult," said the company's chairman Jiang Bin in Goertek's 2018 biannual report.

Taiwanese officials revealed last October that almost 30 enterprises had abandoned China and relocated to Taiwan, citing impact from the trade war, while computer manufacturer ASUS also said it was considering relocating its Chinese manufacturing plants to South-East Asia.

PHOTO: The Chinese Communist Party fears an economic slowdown could risk social stability, experts say. (Reuters)
"When relocation happens, wherever they go, these factories try not to pay compensation," Professor Chan said.

"According to Chinese law, for every year of work you should be paid a certain amount of money.

"Another big issue in China today is social security — that means [workers] are entitled to get back a sum of money for retirement but often they discover the company has not been contributing their share for social security."

In other cases, factories close up and owners disappear without paying wages.

"Sometimes the factories just close down secretly, and the workers were left with nothing," Professor Chan said.

'Trade war may have pushed manufacturers over the edge'

PHOTO: Experts say factory closures would become an increasing problem as the economy worsened. (Reuters: Stoyan Nenov)
Both Professor Chan and Mr Crothall said factory closures and unpaid wages have been an issue for many years, but Mr Crothall said the situation had likely been exacerbated by the trade war.

"I think the trade war may have pushed some manufacturers over the edge. That's led to factory closures," he said.

Even in factories that remain open, wage payments can be delayed for months or even years.

In December, workers from Lantang Jiada clothing factory in Guangzhou posted photos of a worker strike on Weibo.

"Our salary is paid once every three months, and each time we were paid in instalments," one user posted.

Mr Crothall said factory closures would become an increasing problem as the economy worsened.

"Up to this point the growing service sector in China has absorbed a lot of the jobs from workers who have been laid off in factories," he said.

"The question of how long that can continue is the important one."

'Gap between rich and poor keeps on getting wider'
PHOTO: Chinese President Xi Jinping has told local governments to strike a balance when it comes to economic risks. (AP: Mark Schiefelbein, Pool)
While there have been reports of protesters and activists being arrested, Mr Crothall said there were "far too many protests to crack down on" and in most cases police didn't get involved.

"Only in larger-scale protests you see a police presence," he said.

In November, Beijing announced changes to business and taxation laws to be implemented from January 1 in a bid to protect workers.

Employer contributions were to be collected by China's tax bureau in an effort to increase China's capacity to enforce its social insurance regulations, including cracking down on underpayment.

Since China's economy began to slow, the Government has tried to ease the impact with strategies from keeping the Chinese manufacturing industry afloat to investing in public infrastructure.

In the past year, China's central bank has slashed the reserve requirement ratio five times to alleviate pressure on small and medium enterprises, Reuters reported, while taxes have been cut for smaller private companies.

PHOTO: Experts say the problem of unpaid wages had likely been exacerbated by the trade war. (Reuters: Stringer)
But Mr Crothall said he remained sceptical about promises to protect low-income workers.

"If you listen to official government pronouncements, they say it's something they are concerned about, but if you look at practical action nothing seems to be happening," he said.

"We've seen the same problems year on year and the situation really doesn't seem to be getting any better.

"Meanwhile the gap between rich and poor keeps on getting wider and wider and even people you would consider to be middle class in China are struggling to make ends meet."
 
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Wt 25% tariff, it will be enough to create a serious uprising in CN due to hundred million workers loss their jobs.

CN "help" US to destroy Soviet, but who help CN when US destroy CN ha ha ?? :cool:
 
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u.s govt debt have crossed 22triilion usd and student debt has increased to its highest level and many students are quiting colleges due to expensive studying cost of universities this will become disaster for them in future and their literacy rate will fall
 
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u.s govt debt have crossed 22triilion usd and student debt has increased to its highest level and many students are quiting colleges due to expensive studying cost of universities this will become disaster for them in future and their literacy rate will fall

And what does that have to do with China's economic downturn and it's growing number of workplace protests?
 
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Good to know Chinese citizens can protest. Step toward democracy.
 
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Chinese GDP growth rate @ 6.5% = economic downturn
American GDP growth rate @ 3.0% = economic miracle

Strange logic
It shows how brain washing works in the West. They spin the growth rate at 6.5% up from previous year into "economic down turns", a false perception of negative growth, and the rest just take it.
 
.
.
Meanwhile, in Asia Pacific...
Bangladesh steel workers demand wage rise; Australian coal haulage workers continue strike action; New Zealand bus drivers hold wildcat strikes
Workers Struggles: Asia, Australia and the Pacific
16 February 2019

Asia
India: Childcare workers protest in Pune
Anganwadi (childcare) workers demonstrated in the western Indian state of Maharashtra this week to demand an increase in their honorarium, a threefold increase in the lump sum retirement fund and a monthly pension. The protests, which were organised by the Maharashtra Rajya Anganwadi Kruti Samiti, were held in different parts of the state, including outside the Pune Collectorate on February 11 and in Mumbai on February 12.

Anganwadi workers in Maharashtra are only paid about 7,000 rupees ($99) as a monthly honorarium compared to 12,000 rupees paid to the same workers in Kerala and some other Indian states. While the central Indian government last year increased the amount paid to anganwadi workers by 1,500 rupees, the workers are yet to receive the increase.

The protesting workers allege that the state wants to close down anganwadis that have less than 25 clients. The anganwadi workers provide care for babies, infants and children up to the age of five, as well as assistance to pregnant women and lactating mothers.

Gandhi Hospital contract nurses in Telangana strike over unpaid salaries
About 100 contract nurses from the state-owned Gandhi Hospital have held protests and a two-hour sit-down strike in the past week over the non-payment of salaries for last three months. The demonstration was organised by the Telangana State Medical Contract Employees & Workers Union.

While the nurses said they were reluctant to strike because it would impact on emergency services, management had ignored their appeals. The nurses have threatened indefinite strike action if their salary arrears are not paid.

Tamil Nadu: Madurai corporation workers hold sit-in protest
Madurai corporation workers in Tamil Nadu staged a sit-in protest on the premises of the Sandhapettai pumping station on February 5 over the victimisation of fellow workers.

The protesters, who have also taken sporadic strike action since February 5, were demanding action against an assistant engineer who sacked five drainage cleaning workers without warning on January 30. The cleaners, who were union members, had been employed at the facility for the past 13 years. They were sacked by the assistant engineer on the first day that he took charge of the area.

India: Punjab sewer workers demand permanent jobs
Scores of Sewerage Workers’ Union members demonstrated outside the Bathinda Municipal Corporation office, in the southern part of part of Punjab, on February 11. They were demanding permanent jobs for 48 contract and outsourced workers who have been employed by the Sewerage Board since 2001.

Protesters chanted slogans against the Punjab state government and accused it of not granting workers’ long outstanding demands. They said that although resolutions supporting their demands had been passed by General House meetings of the municipal council, the civic body has not taken the issue seriously.

Pakistan paramedics protest for service structure, benefits
Paramedical staff at government hospitals in Multan demonstrated on February 7 to demand a new service structure, health professional and risk allowances, job permanency for those performing special services and the withdrawal of the government’s privatisation plans.

The demonstration was called by the Allied Health Professional Association and included paramedics from Nishtar Hospital, Childrens Complex, Chaudhry Pervez Elahi Institute of Cardiology, Fatima Hospital and Mian Shahbaz Sharif Hospital, as well as departmental employees. The workers have threatened to strike on February 19 and 20 if their demands are not addressed.

Bangladesh steel workers demand wage rise
Several hundred workers at PHP Steel Mills struck for four hours last Sunday demanding a salary increase. The factory, which employs about 1,600 permanent and casual workers, is located at Sitakunda in Bangladesh’s Chittagong district. The walkout began at 7 a.m.

According to the police of Sitakunda Police Station, owners had assured the workers that they would take steps to meet their demands next month, and later workers called off the strike.

One worker told the media that the monthly wage of newly-appointed or trainee workers ranged from 3,000 taka ($US36) to 4,000 taka and that the average wage of an experienced worker was no more than 7,000 taka. There are no government-mandated wage guidelines on the Bangladesh steel industry.

ATG Ceylon strike continues in Sri Lankan free trade zone
Around 500 ATG Ceylon workers in the Katunayaka free trade zone remain on strike after walking out on January 11 over the sacking and victimisation of five fellow workers. Strikers protested near the Colombo railway station on February 14.

ATG Ceylon employs about 1,200 workers and is one of Sri Lanka’s leading glove manufacturers. The victimised employees were office bearers in a union formed by the workers to fight against the harsh conditions in the factory. Management has filed a bogus case with the police, claiming that the workers “misused” company property.

Taiwan pilots end seven-day strike
China Airlines management and Taoyuan Union of Pilots officials struck a new workplace agreement on Thursday after a fourth round of negotiations. The deal ends a week-long strike involving some 600 pilots and which impacted on more than 200 flights and almost 50,000 passengers. The stoppage resulted in $NT500 million ($US16.2 million) in losses on the carrier.

China Airlines has said it will address pilot fatigue by rostering three pilots on flights of more than eight hours, rather than two, and four pilots on flights over twelve hours, up from three. While the union claims to have extracted these concessions and that this will improve safety the deal includes a three-and-a-half year no strike pledge.

Burmese workers picket luxury hotel
On Monday workers rallied outside Hotel Tharabar Gate in the Mandalay Region of Burma to demand the right to organise and for reinstatement of union leaders and workers sacked last August.

The hotel workers have been the subject of ongoing state and employer harassment since the sackings. When sacked workers and their supporters attempted to march from the hotel to the Mandalay Region Government Office on December 13 they were attacked by police who broke up the rally and arrested thirteen protesters.

Australia and the Pacific
Australia: Aurizon coal haulage workers continue strikes
Train drivers and crew hauling coal on Aurizon’s Pring section of the central Queensland rail network walked off the job for 24 hours on Tuesday.

The Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Employees (AFULE), which covers the workers, also notified Aurizon that its members will impose a seven-day overtime ban across the whole coal rail network on February 20.

The stoppages follow two months of limited strike action and low level work bans involving close to 1,000 members, in a dispute for a new enterprise agreement.

The unions claim that major disputes are over Aurizon’s refusal to back-pay any negotiated wage increase, rostering, and proposed changes to the “voluntary” redundancy scheme and dispute procedures, including the removal of “arbitration.” The AFULE said it would “de-escalate” its industrial campaign if some progress was made on rostering, shift extensions and annual leave deductions.

DP World dock workers to vote on strike action
The Construction Forestry Mining Maritime and Energy Union (CFMMEU), representing 1,800 workers at DP World ports in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Perth, has received permission from Australia’s Fair Work Commission to hold a “protected action” ballot on proposed strikes.

DP World is threatening to cancel the union-owned income protection scheme if workers do not accept the company’s enterprise agreement offer. The proposed deal would roll over the old agreement, capping wage rises at 2.6 percent per annum. The union wants a ban on the use of casual labour, improved leave entitlements and the conversion of unused sick leave to days-in lieu.

The Fair Work Commission accepted DP World’s request that it be given five days’ notice before strike action commences, rather than the legal requirement of three, giving the company additional time to minimise the impact of industrial action.

Port Kembla Coal Terminal lockout extended
Port Kembla Coal Terminal (PKCT) for the third time in four weeks locked out its 51 permanent workforce at the facility near Wollongong on February 8 in a dispute over job security provisions in a new enterprise agreement (EA). The lockouts are in response to minor strike action and bans by the CFMMEU.

The union and PKCT have been in dispute since the old EA expired in 2015, leaving workers without a pay raise for four years. The union claimed that the key sticking point in negotiations is management’s refusal to carry over the previous job security clause, which prevents a sacked permanent employee being replaced by a casual contractor. The company has threatened to shut the facility if workers do not accept “flexible” conditions.

The CFMMEU has isolated the workers, refusing to mobilise any support from its thousands of members throughout the Illawarra region.

National Patient Transport workers to vote on industrial action in Victoria
United Voice and the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation will ballot their members on industrial action in a dispute with National Patient Transport (NPT) for a new enterprise agreement. Action will be limited to bans on paperwork and communications.

According to the Ambulance Employees Association (Victoria), NPT workers are only paid just $24.09 an hour, which is paid 20 percent less than government patient transport workers who perform the same job. Workers have also complained of being called upon more frequently to assist in regular ambulance emergencies. As well as better wages, NPT’s Ambulance Transport Attendants (ATA) want better training, access to sick leave and greater support from management.

New Zealand: Auckland bus drivers hold wildcat strikes
Drivers employed by NZ Bus on Auckland’s public bus routes to and from the suburb of Onehunga held a strike without notice on Friday morning. Services returned to normal by 10 a.m. The strike followed morning walkouts on February 8 and 12 at the Swanson and Glenfield depots respectively. According to Fairfax Media, the strikes were planned by drivers without the knowledge of Auckland Transport or FIRST Union and Tramways Union, which officially represents the drivers.

Drivers are angry about inadequate training and fatigue caused by rostering. A driver’s work day can be as long as 14 hours. A Tramways Union spokesperson told the media on February 12 that it had advised its 1,000 members not to take industrial action but drivers were so frustrated that “they are not listening to (union) advice to wait until negotiations in November.”

The unions say they were due to enter into negotiations with NZ Bus, mediated by the Employment Relations Authority, on January 30, but the company pulled out saying it was too busy.

New Zealand hospital administration workers hold stop work meetings
More than 5,500 administrative and clerical workers at public hospitals held two-hour nationwide stopwork meetings on February 11. The Public Service Association members voted overwhelmingly in favour of planning for strike action if there is no satisfactory result from pay negotiations later this month with New Zealand’s District Health Boards. Most of the workers are paid little more than the minimum wage.

The stopwork meetings occurred in the same week as a nationwide two-day strike by more than 3,000 junior doctors and a series of strikes by more than 1,000 hospital midwives. Last year, more than 30,000 nurses and healthcare assistants held a one-day strike.

The ongoing wave of strikes in the health sector is in response to deepening austerity measures under the Labour Party-led government, which falsely promised to address the crisis of underfunding and understaffing in hospitals.

Solomon Islands nurses vote to strike
Nurses in the Solomon Islands’ public health system have voted to hold a nationwide strike on February 27 if their demands for better pay are not met. The Solomon Islands Nurses Association says the government failed to pay allowances that had been promised to nurses in exchange for SINA cancelling a strike last year. The union says some nurses are leaving the impoverished country in search of better pay and conditions.
 
.
Meanwhile, in Asia Pacific...
Bangladesh steel workers demand wage rise; Australian coal haulage workers continue strike action; New Zealand bus drivers hold wildcat strikes
Workers Struggles: Asia, Australia and the Pacific
16 February 2019

Asia
India: Childcare workers protest in Pune
Anganwadi (childcare) workers demonstrated in the western Indian state of Maharashtra this week to demand an increase in their honorarium, a threefold increase in the lump sum retirement fund and a monthly pension. The protests, which were organised by the Maharashtra Rajya Anganwadi Kruti Samiti, were held in different parts of the state, including outside the Pune Collectorate on February 11 and in Mumbai on February 12.

Anganwadi workers in Maharashtra are only paid about 7,000 rupees ($99) as a monthly honorarium compared to 12,000 rupees paid to the same workers in Kerala and some other Indian states. While the central Indian government last year increased the amount paid to anganwadi workers by 1,500 rupees, the workers are yet to receive the increase.

The protesting workers allege that the state wants to close down anganwadis that have less than 25 clients. The anganwadi workers provide care for babies, infants and children up to the age of five, as well as assistance to pregnant women and lactating mothers.

Gandhi Hospital contract nurses in Telangana strike over unpaid salaries
About 100 contract nurses from the state-owned Gandhi Hospital have held protests and a two-hour sit-down strike in the past week over the non-payment of salaries for last three months. The demonstration was organised by the Telangana State Medical Contract Employees & Workers Union.

While the nurses said they were reluctant to strike because it would impact on emergency services, management had ignored their appeals. The nurses have threatened indefinite strike action if their salary arrears are not paid.

Tamil Nadu: Madurai corporation workers hold sit-in protest
Madurai corporation workers in Tamil Nadu staged a sit-in protest on the premises of the Sandhapettai pumping station on February 5 over the victimisation of fellow workers.

The protesters, who have also taken sporadic strike action since February 5, were demanding action against an assistant engineer who sacked five drainage cleaning workers without warning on January 30. The cleaners, who were union members, had been employed at the facility for the past 13 years. They were sacked by the assistant engineer on the first day that he took charge of the area.

India: Punjab sewer workers demand permanent jobs
Scores of Sewerage Workers’ Union members demonstrated outside the Bathinda Municipal Corporation office, in the southern part of part of Punjab, on February 11. They were demanding permanent jobs for 48 contract and outsourced workers who have been employed by the Sewerage Board since 2001.

Protesters chanted slogans against the Punjab state government and accused it of not granting workers’ long outstanding demands. They said that although resolutions supporting their demands had been passed by General House meetings of the municipal council, the civic body has not taken the issue seriously.

Pakistan paramedics protest for service structure, benefits
Paramedical staff at government hospitals in Multan demonstrated on February 7 to demand a new service structure, health professional and risk allowances, job permanency for those performing special services and the withdrawal of the government’s privatisation plans.

The demonstration was called by the Allied Health Professional Association and included paramedics from Nishtar Hospital, Childrens Complex, Chaudhry Pervez Elahi Institute of Cardiology, Fatima Hospital and Mian Shahbaz Sharif Hospital, as well as departmental employees. The workers have threatened to strike on February 19 and 20 if their demands are not addressed.

Bangladesh steel workers demand wage rise
Several hundred workers at PHP Steel Mills struck for four hours last Sunday demanding a salary increase. The factory, which employs about 1,600 permanent and casual workers, is located at Sitakunda in Bangladesh’s Chittagong district. The walkout began at 7 a.m.

According to the police of Sitakunda Police Station, owners had assured the workers that they would take steps to meet their demands next month, and later workers called off the strike.

One worker told the media that the monthly wage of newly-appointed or trainee workers ranged from 3,000 taka ($US36) to 4,000 taka and that the average wage of an experienced worker was no more than 7,000 taka. There are no government-mandated wage guidelines on the Bangladesh steel industry.

ATG Ceylon strike continues in Sri Lankan free trade zone
Around 500 ATG Ceylon workers in the Katunayaka free trade zone remain on strike after walking out on January 11 over the sacking and victimisation of five fellow workers. Strikers protested near the Colombo railway station on February 14.

ATG Ceylon employs about 1,200 workers and is one of Sri Lanka’s leading glove manufacturers. The victimised employees were office bearers in a union formed by the workers to fight against the harsh conditions in the factory. Management has filed a bogus case with the police, claiming that the workers “misused” company property.

Taiwan pilots end seven-day strike
China Airlines management and Taoyuan Union of Pilots officials struck a new workplace agreement on Thursday after a fourth round of negotiations. The deal ends a week-long strike involving some 600 pilots and which impacted on more than 200 flights and almost 50,000 passengers. The stoppage resulted in $NT500 million ($US16.2 million) in losses on the carrier.

China Airlines has said it will address pilot fatigue by rostering three pilots on flights of more than eight hours, rather than two, and four pilots on flights over twelve hours, up from three. While the union claims to have extracted these concessions and that this will improve safety the deal includes a three-and-a-half year no strike pledge.

Burmese workers picket luxury hotel
On Monday workers rallied outside Hotel Tharabar Gate in the Mandalay Region of Burma to demand the right to organise and for reinstatement of union leaders and workers sacked last August.

The hotel workers have been the subject of ongoing state and employer harassment since the sackings. When sacked workers and their supporters attempted to march from the hotel to the Mandalay Region Government Office on December 13 they were attacked by police who broke up the rally and arrested thirteen protesters.

Australia and the Pacific
Australia: Aurizon coal haulage workers continue strikes
Train drivers and crew hauling coal on Aurizon’s Pring section of the central Queensland rail network walked off the job for 24 hours on Tuesday.

The Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Employees (AFULE), which covers the workers, also notified Aurizon that its members will impose a seven-day overtime ban across the whole coal rail network on February 20.

The stoppages follow two months of limited strike action and low level work bans involving close to 1,000 members, in a dispute for a new enterprise agreement.

The unions claim that major disputes are over Aurizon’s refusal to back-pay any negotiated wage increase, rostering, and proposed changes to the “voluntary” redundancy scheme and dispute procedures, including the removal of “arbitration.” The AFULE said it would “de-escalate” its industrial campaign if some progress was made on rostering, shift extensions and annual leave deductions.

DP World dock workers to vote on strike action
The Construction Forestry Mining Maritime and Energy Union (CFMMEU), representing 1,800 workers at DP World ports in Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Perth, has received permission from Australia’s Fair Work Commission to hold a “protected action” ballot on proposed strikes.

DP World is threatening to cancel the union-owned income protection scheme if workers do not accept the company’s enterprise agreement offer. The proposed deal would roll over the old agreement, capping wage rises at 2.6 percent per annum. The union wants a ban on the use of casual labour, improved leave entitlements and the conversion of unused sick leave to days-in lieu.

The Fair Work Commission accepted DP World’s request that it be given five days’ notice before strike action commences, rather than the legal requirement of three, giving the company additional time to minimise the impact of industrial action.

Port Kembla Coal Terminal lockout extended
Port Kembla Coal Terminal (PKCT) for the third time in four weeks locked out its 51 permanent workforce at the facility near Wollongong on February 8 in a dispute over job security provisions in a new enterprise agreement (EA). The lockouts are in response to minor strike action and bans by the CFMMEU.

The union and PKCT have been in dispute since the old EA expired in 2015, leaving workers without a pay raise for four years. The union claimed that the key sticking point in negotiations is management’s refusal to carry over the previous job security clause, which prevents a sacked permanent employee being replaced by a casual contractor. The company has threatened to shut the facility if workers do not accept “flexible” conditions.

The CFMMEU has isolated the workers, refusing to mobilise any support from its thousands of members throughout the Illawarra region.

National Patient Transport workers to vote on industrial action in Victoria
United Voice and the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation will ballot their members on industrial action in a dispute with National Patient Transport (NPT) for a new enterprise agreement. Action will be limited to bans on paperwork and communications.

According to the Ambulance Employees Association (Victoria), NPT workers are only paid just $24.09 an hour, which is paid 20 percent less than government patient transport workers who perform the same job. Workers have also complained of being called upon more frequently to assist in regular ambulance emergencies. As well as better wages, NPT’s Ambulance Transport Attendants (ATA) want better training, access to sick leave and greater support from management.

New Zealand: Auckland bus drivers hold wildcat strikes
Drivers employed by NZ Bus on Auckland’s public bus routes to and from the suburb of Onehunga held a strike without notice on Friday morning. Services returned to normal by 10 a.m. The strike followed morning walkouts on February 8 and 12 at the Swanson and Glenfield depots respectively. According to Fairfax Media, the strikes were planned by drivers without the knowledge of Auckland Transport or FIRST Union and Tramways Union, which officially represents the drivers.

Drivers are angry about inadequate training and fatigue caused by rostering. A driver’s work day can be as long as 14 hours. A Tramways Union spokesperson told the media on February 12 that it had advised its 1,000 members not to take industrial action but drivers were so frustrated that “they are not listening to (union) advice to wait until negotiations in November.”

The unions say they were due to enter into negotiations with NZ Bus, mediated by the Employment Relations Authority, on January 30, but the company pulled out saying it was too busy.

New Zealand hospital administration workers hold stop work meetings
More than 5,500 administrative and clerical workers at public hospitals held two-hour nationwide stopwork meetings on February 11. The Public Service Association members voted overwhelmingly in favour of planning for strike action if there is no satisfactory result from pay negotiations later this month with New Zealand’s District Health Boards. Most of the workers are paid little more than the minimum wage.

The stopwork meetings occurred in the same week as a nationwide two-day strike by more than 3,000 junior doctors and a series of strikes by more than 1,000 hospital midwives. Last year, more than 30,000 nurses and healthcare assistants held a one-day strike.

The ongoing wave of strikes in the health sector is in response to deepening austerity measures under the Labour Party-led government, which falsely promised to address the crisis of underfunding and understaffing in hospitals.

Solomon Islands nurses vote to strike
Nurses in the Solomon Islands’ public health system have voted to hold a nationwide strike on February 27 if their demands for better pay are not met. The Solomon Islands Nurses Association says the government failed to pay allowances that had been promised to nurses in exchange for SINA cancelling a strike last year. The union says some nurses are leaving the impoverished country in search of better pay and conditions.

There's a big difference between the industrial action in each of these cases and the situation in China. Pay negotiations are the driver of every one of these strikes, there is nothing unusual about any of them. This post is deflection, it doesn't really put the OP into context.

Unpaid wages and factory closures are driving the Chinese worker protests. The size and scale of the protests are another point, there are too many for the government to stop.
 
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There's a big difference between the industrial action in each of these cases and the situation in China. Pay negotiations are the driver of every one of these strikes, there is nothing unusual about any of them. This post is deflection, it doesn't really put the OP into context.

Unpaid wages and factory closures are driving the Chinese worker protests. The size and scale of the protests are another point, there are too many for the government to stop.
So you suggest China, the world's factory, 1.4 BILLION population should have industrial disputes LESS THAN the PATHETIC nation that you sneak into.
Waiting for NZ to go beg China.

http://gisborneherald.co.nz/opinion/3959853-135/big-risks-for-nz-in-china
Big risks for NZ in China chill
The chill in New Zealand’s relations with China is a major concern that requires careful positioning by the Government, not defensive assurances everything is OK
.
 
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