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SPP resources
SPP Summit - New Orleans
April 21-22, 2008
SPP Summit - Montebello
August 19-21, 2007
Teach-in
March 31 to April 1, 2007
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Tri-National Labor Declaration on Social and Economic Prosperity for North America
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has, to a significant
extent, defined the relationship between the three North American
nations over the last fifteen years. NAFTA was sold on the promise that
it would bring more and better jobs and faster growth to the region and
reduce emigration from Mexico to the United States and Canada. While
trade and investment flows did increase, NAFTA did not create more net
trade-related jobs and those that it did were very often less stable,
with lower wages and fewer benefits. Instead, increased trade largely
benefited the corporate elite in all three countries. Income inequality
has also grown in the region. We believe that the trade liberalization
and investors’ rights provisions contained in NAFTA were an important
contributor to these results.
These difficult social and economic conditions have been exacerbated by
the current economic crisis which was precipitated by neo-liberal
policies and the deregulation of international finance. Further, the
global recession is likely to be long and painful. However, the current
crisis does provide an opportunity to reassess prevailing economic
doctrines, arrangements and institutions and work for common prosperity
through the implementation of a continental strategy for economic and
social development. These problems must be addressed through an open and
participatory process which includes workers and unions.
Our governments will need to undertake measures to address the economic
crisis, such as directing fiscal stimulus to meet national priorities,
including rebuilding our infrastructure and making a transition to clean
renewable energy sources, re-regulating the financial sector, passing
labor law reform, strengthening public services, reducing inequality and
solving the protracted housing crisis. We will also need concerted
international economic policy coordination, and the U.S., Canada and
Mexico can play an important role in that regard both regionally and
globally.
We believe in the potential for the people of North America to
strengthen common ties and participate in broadly shared economic
prosperity. Fixing the flaws in NAFTA is only one part of the challenge
we face. We also need to work together to address a number of pressing
issues, which include labor law reform, migration and development and
the promotion of the rule of law.
Labor Law Reform and Enforcement:
With respect to the most fundamental of the ILO core labor rights,
freedom of association and the right to organize and bargain
collectively, the United States, Mexico and Canada are out of compliance
with their international obligations due to substantial restrictions on
the right to organize and bargain collectively, both in law and
practice. All the North American countries must ensure that workers can
exercise their most basic and fundamental rights or face appropriate
sanctions.
We are concerned that the reform legislation proposed by the Calderón
government points in the opposite direction – towards further
reductions of workers’ rights and wages. The Mexican government must
end practices that limit workers’ right to freely choose their
representatives, including employer-controlled “protection
contracts,” government refusal to recognize independent unions and
elected leaders, firings of workers who advocate union democracy, and
declaring strikes to be illegal. In the United States and Canada,
recognition of basic labor rights entails majority sign up and first
contract arbitration. For this reason, passage of the Employee Free
Choice Act is essential, as it would contribute to further demand-driven
recovery in the U.S. through expanded organizational and collective
bargaining rights for U.S. workers. This increase in U.S. demand would
also be a plus for the Mexican and Canadian economies.
If NAFTA is to contribute positively to the regional promotion and
enforcement of labor rights, several substantive changes must be made to
the North American Agreement on Labor Cooperation. First the common
obligation should be -- at minimum -- the adoption of domestic laws and
regulations that are in total compliance with the International Labor
Organization’s (ILO) core labor rights, as well as the effective
enforcement of those laws and regulations. Enacting the legal reforms
mentioned above would be a positive and significant step in that
direction. Second, the dispute resolution procedures must be overhauled
so that a dispute concerning a violation of any of the agreement's labor
obligations are resolved fully, fairly and expeditiously and with
appropriate remedies. Finally, each government must demonstrate the
political will to act upon the findings and recommendations that result
from the dispute settlement process. Failure to act upon those
recommendations should be subject to immediate and dissuasive fines or
sanctions.
Migration and Development: The failure of the North American economies
post-NAFTA to create the decent jobs necessary to absorb displaced
workers and new entrants has forced many into a desperate search to find
employment elsewhere. This problem has been particularly acute in
Mexico. Even before the crisis, Mexico’s economy failed to create
enough formal jobs to absorb new entrants into the labor market, and
many of the jobs created pay low wages. Mexico’s future prosperity
depends on creating decent jobs that expand workers’ purchasing power,
stimulate domestic consumption, and reduce the pressure to migrate.
In the U.S. and Canada on the other hand, employers, with access to a
large and poorly regulated workforce of undocumented and temporary
migrant workers have undermined all workers by failing to afford the
basic labor rights and protections to everyone. In Canada, guest
workers are subjected to dangerous working and living conditions,
without government over-sight or a comprehensive compliance, monitoring
and enforcement system. Meanwhile, the economic crisis has created
thousands of internal migrants. We believe that all workers, regardless
of immigration status, should be protected by labor laws and able to
exercise their fundamental human rights – including the right to
unionize Governments in all three countries should intervene forcefully
to prevent wage theft, end ineffective raids, stop abuses by labor
recruiters, and offer a clear path to citizenship.
Finally, economic development is a key part of the equation for a more
prosperous North America. Together, we need to help stimulate more
robust, equitable, and sustained economic growth in all three of our
countries. Within the European Union, the Structural and Cohesion Funds
provided a substantial transfer of investment funds to generate job
growth in less developed regions of Europe. A similar investment fund
for Mexico should be provided within the context of a renegotiated
NAFTA. However, in exchange, Mexico should agree to changes in laws and
institutions to better protect the rights of Mexican workers and allow
their income to rise as their economy grows.
Rebuilding our industrial base is essential for maintaining our living
standards. As high-wage countries in a globalizing world, we must
restore our competitiveness by developing national industrial strategies
centered on innovation. This means raising the level of public and
private investment, harnessing distinctive technological and
organizational capacities and developing the skills of our workers.
Further, we need to use government purchasing power and attendant social
policy to renew our local economies, creating the conditions necessary
for broad social inclusion. We should also be thinking regionally to
enhance the long-term competitiveness of these industries vis-a-vis the
world market. This will require cooperation, both among governments and
between governments, labor, and management, to improve productivity
while respecting labor rights and improving wages.
At the same time, we would oppose any new initiative that would prevent
local governments or sub-national levels of government from using public
money to support national, regional or local development initiatives, as
well as any reform which would promote further privatization of services
and expand investor rights into those services at the sub-national
level.
Rule of Law: Mexican and international human rights organizations have
carefully documented the human rights violations in Mexico committed by
police and military personnel as well as the high levels of corruption
within the judiciary. These state actors have committed horrendous acts
of murder, torture, and sexual abuse; however, few have been punished.
Murders and imprisonment of union members have gone unresolved. A true
commitment to rule of law requires not only the undertaking by the
United States to reduce the demand for illegal narcotics and stem the
flow of arms to the drug cartels, but also respect for human rights and
an end to impunity for Mexican security forces. In all three countries,
we believe that true security can only be achieved through social and
economic development predicated on human rights.
Without a serious consideration and incorporation of all of these
dimensions – repairing the critical flaws in NAFTA, effective and
authentic compliance with international labor standards, migration and
sustainable development, and human rights and rule of law – the vital
and essential security agenda involving our three nations ultimately
will not succeed.
In conclusion, the time has come to recalibrate our relationship and
focus on a path built upon shared economic growth and sustainable
development. We hope that the Leaders Summit serves as an opportunity
to lay out a new agenda for North America, one which makes our region
competitive, sustainable and just, and our organizations commit to
working together to promote that agenda
Mexico City, Mexico, August 7, 2009
Francisco Hernández Juárez, Presidente Colegiado
Unión Nacional de Trabajadores (UNT)
John J. Sweeney, President
American Federation of Labor & Congress of Industrial Organizations
(AFL-CIO)
Kenneth V. Georgetti, President
Canadian Labour Congress – Congrès du Travail du Canada (CLC)
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