Labor Law Reform - A Key Battle for Mexican Unions Today
by David Bacon

Published by the Americas Program on: May 26, 2011
http://www.cipamericas.org/archives/4654

Editor's Note: This is the second installment of 
a series on border solidarity by journalist and 
immigration activist David Bacon. This article 
and subsequent installments were originally 
published in the Institute for Transnational 
Social Change's report Building a Culture of 
Cross-Border Solidarity. To download a PDF of the 
entire report, visit the Americas Program website.


Changing Mexico's labor law threatens the lives 
of millions of workers.  It would cement the 
power of a group of industrialists who have been 
on the political offensive for decades, and who 
now control Mexico's presidency and national 
government.   "Labor law reform will only benefit 
the country's oligarchs," claims Andres Manuel 
Lopez Obrador, who most Mexicans think won the 
last presidential election in 2006, as candidate 
of the left-wing Party of the Democratic 
Revolution.  Napoleon Gomez Urrutia, head of the 
miner's union who was forced into exile in Canada 
in 2006, says Mexico's old governing party, the 
Party of the Institutionalized Revolution (PRI), 
which lost control of the presidency in 2000, "is 
trying to assure its return by making this gift 
to big business, putting an end to labor rights."

In part, the change is drastic because on paper, 
at least, the rights of Mexican workers are 
extensive, deriving from the Revolution that 
ended in 1920.  At a time when workers in the 
U.S. still had no law that recognized the 
legality of unions, Article 123 of the Mexican 
Constitution spelled out labor rights.  Workers 
have the right to jobs and permanent status once 
they're hired.  If they're laid off, they have 
the right to severance pay.  They have rights to 
housing, health care, and training.  In a legal 
strike, they can string flags across the doors of 
a factory or workplace, and even the owner can't 
enter until the dispute is settled. 
Strikebreaking is prohibited.

A new labor law would change most of that.

Companies would be able to hire workers in a 
six-month probationary status, and then fire them 
at the end without penalty.  Even firing workers 
with 20 or 30 years on the job would suddenly 
become much easier and cheaper, by limiting the 
penalty for unjust termination to one year's 
severance pay.  "That's an open invitation to 
employers," according to Arturo Alcalde, Mexico's 
most respected labor lawyer and past president of 
the National Association of Democratic Lawyers. 
"The bosses themselves say the PRI reform is the 
road to a 'paradise of firings.'  It will make it 
much cheaper for companies to terminate workers."

The justification, of course, is that by reducing 
the number of workers at a worksite, while 
requiring those remaining to work harder, 
productivity increases and profits go up.  For 
workers, though, a permanent job and stable 
income become a dream, while the fear of firing 
grows, hours get longer, and work gets faster, 
harder and more dangerous.

The PRI labor law reform proposal deepens those 
changes.  The 40-hour workweek was written into 
the Federal Labor Law, which codified the rights 
in Article 123.  That limit would end.  Even the 
current 7-peso/hour minimum wage ($5/day) would 
be undermined, as employers would gain the 
unilateral right to set wages.  The independent 
review of safe working conditions would be 
heavily restricted.

Mexican workers aren't passive and organize work 
stoppages and protests much more frequently than 
do workers in the U.S.  Greater activity by angry 
workers, therefore, wouldn't be hard to predict. 
So the labor law reform takes this into account 
as well.

Even in union workplaces with a collective 
agreement setting wages and conditions, an 
employer could force workers to sign individual 
agreements with fewer rights or lower wages. 
Companies could subcontract work with no limit, 
giving employers the ability to find low-cost 
contractors with no union to replace unionized, 
higher-wage employees.  And it would become much 
more difficult to go on strike.

THE proposed labor law reform is the fourth in a 
series of basic changes in Mexico's economic, 
legal and political framework over the last 
decade.  A fiscal reform began the process of 
privatizing the country's pension system, much 
like the Social Security privatization plans 
proposed for the U.S.  Teachers charge that 
Mexican education reform is intended to remove 
their influence over the curriculum, which still 
espouses values that would seem very progressive 
in a U.S. classroom.  In many cases, they say, it 
will remove them from their jobs also.  Current 
Mexican President Felipe Calderon of the National 
Action Party (PAN) proposed an energy reform 
aimed at privatizing the national oil company, 
Pemex.  Fierce opposition, however, was able to 
restrict it to some degree.

All the reforms have been part of a program of 
economic liberalization opening Mexico to 
private, domestic, and especially foreign 
capital.  Lopez Obrador calls the labor law 
reform "part of a series imposed on Mexico from 
outside over the last two decades, including the 
energy reform, fiscal reform and education 
reform."  The World Bank pressured Mexico to 
adopt an earlier labor law reform after the PRI 
lost the presidency in 2000, and Calderon's 
predecessor, Coca-Cola executive Vicente Fox, won 
it.  The two labor law reform proposals are very 
similar.  Both reflect the surging power of 
corporate employers in Mexico, and the way the 
PRI and PAN often trade places, pursuing the same 
political and economic agenda.

"At the same time," Lopez Obrador notes, "the 
fight against inequality and poverty is not on 
the national agenda."  Mexican poverty 
contradicts claims by its leaders, who insist its 
economic growth merits a seat in the "first 
world."  Changing labor law would make poverty 
more permanent, however, as well as rendering 
unions more impotent to challenge it.  Juan 
Manuel Sandoval, a leader of the Mexican Action 
Network Against Free Trade, predicts, "We will 
become part of the first world - the back yard."

In 2010 Mexico had 53 million people living in 
poverty, according to the Monterrey Institute of 
Technology.  The CIA says half the country's 
population lives in poverty, and almost 20% in 
extreme poverty.  The government's unemployment 
figures are low - 5-6% - but a huge number of 
working-age Mexicans are part of the informal 
economy, selling articles on the street or 
working in jobs where the employer doesn't pay 
into the official funds (the basis for counting 
employed workers.)  Some estimate that there are 
more workers in the informal sector than in the 
formal one.

Even formal jobs don't pay a wage capable of 
supporting a family.  According to the Bank of 
Mexico, 95% of the 800,000 jobs created in 2010 
paid only $10 a day.  Yet when a maquiladora 
worker buys a gallon of milk in a Tijuana or 
Juarez supermarket, she pays even more than she 
would on the U.S. side.  Prices are a little 
lower further south, but not much.  The price of 
milk used to be fixed and subsidized, along with 
tortillas, bus fare and other basic necessities. 
Previous waves of economic reforms decontrolled 
prices and ended consumer subsidies, as Mexico 
was pressured to create more favorable conditions 
for private investment.

Investors have done very well.  In one of the 
recent diplomatic cables published by Wikileaks, 
the U.S. government admits "The net wealth of the 
10 richest people in Mexico - a country where 
more than 40 percent of the population lives in 
poverty - represents roughly 10 percent of the 
country's gross domestic product."  Carlos Slim 
became the world's richest man when a previous 
PRI President, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, 
privatized the national telephone company and 
sold it to him.  Ricardo Salinas Pliego, who owns 
TV Azteca, is now worth $8 billion, and Emilio 
Azcárraga Jean, who owns Televisa, is worth $2.3 
billion.  Both helped current Mexican President 
Felipe Calderon get elected in 2006.

German Larrea and his company Grupo Mexico got 
concessions to operate some of the world's 
largest copper mines.  Grupo Mexico was accused 
of industrial homicide by miners' union president 
Gomez Urrutia after 65 people (many of them 
contract workers) died in an explosion at the 
Pasta de Conchos coal mine in February 2006. 
Since June 2007 the Grupo Mexico copper mine in 
Cananea has been on strike.  Last year Larrea and 
the Mexican government cooperated in using armed 
force to open its gates and bring in 
strikebreakers.

MUCH of the PRI's labor law reform is already the 
reality on the ground in Cananea, at other mines, 
and among maquiladora workers near the U.S. 
Mexico border.  For years the rights of workers 
in northern Mexico, even the rule of law itself, 
have been undermined by the growing power of 
corporations.

The corporate transformation of the Mexican 
economy began long ago, moving the country away 
from nationalist ideas about development, which 
were dominant from the end of the Mexican 
Revolution through the 1970s.  Nationalists 
advocated an economic system in which oil fields, 
copper mines, railroads, the telephone system, 
great tracts of land, and other key economic 
resources would be controlled by Mexicans and 
used for their benefit.

Under President Lazaro Cardenas in the late 
1930s, Mexico established a corporatist system in 
which one political party, the PRI, controlled 
the main sectors of Mexican society - workers, 
farmers, the military and the "popular" sector. 
PRI governments administered a network of social 
services, providing healthcare and housing, at 
least for people in those organized sectors. 
Cardenas also nationalized Mexico's most 
important resource - oil - in a popular campaign.

National ownership of oil, and later electrical 
generation, was written into the Constitution. 
Land redistribution and nationalization had a 
political as well as economic purpose - the 
creation of a section of workers and farmers who 
would defend the government and its political 
party, into which their unions and producer 
organizations were incorporated.

After World War Two, Mexico officially adopted a 
policy of industrialization through import 
substitution.  Factories produced products for 
the domestic market, while imports of those 
products were restricted.  The purpose was to 
develop a national industrial base, provide jobs, 
and increase the domestic market.  Large 
state-owned enterprises eventually employed 
hundreds of thousands of Mexican industrial 
workers in mines, mills, transportation and other 
strategic industries.  Unions had their greatest 
strength in the public sector.  Foreign 
investment was limited.

Enrique Davalos, professor and teachers' union 
activist at San Diego City College, calls the 
system "nationalism in rhetoric, selling out the 
country in practice."  Under successive PRI 
administrations a vast gulf widened between the 
political and economic elite, who managed the 
state's assets and controlled government policy 
in their own interest, and workers and farmers, 
especially those not in the formal sector.  To 
protect this elite, the country's political 
system became increasingly repressive.

In the 1970s, to finance growth while the price 
of oil was high, Mexico opened up its financial 
system to foreign capital (mostly from the U.S.), 
and the country's foreign debt soared.  Managers 
of state enterprises, like the oil company, ran 
private businesses on the side, along with 
politically connected union officials.  Rackets 
and corruption proliferated while labor and 
campesino leaders who challenged the system were 
imprisoned or worse.

The debt and the hold it gave to foreign 
financial interests spelled the end of 
nationalist development.  Oil prices fell, the 
U.S. Treasury jacked up interest rates, and in 
1982 the system collapsed when Mexico could no 
longer make debt payments.  The government 
devalued the peso in what is still infamously 
remembered as the great "peso shock."

In the Constitution Mexicans still had the right 
to housing, healthcare, employment and education, 
but millions of people went hungry, had no homes, 
were sick and unemployed, and couldn't read.  The 
anger and cynicism felt by many Mexicans toward 
their political system is in great part a product 
of the contradiction between the constitutional 
promises of the revolution a century ago, plus 
the nationalist rhetoric that followed, and the 
reality of life for most people.

In a desperate attempt to generate jobs and 
revenue for debt payments, the government 
encouraged the growth of maquiladoras, the 
foreign-owned factories on the northern border. 
By 2005 over 3000 border plants employed over 2 
million workers making products for shoppers from 
Los Angeles to New York.  In 1992 they already 
accounted for over half of Mexican exports, and 
in the NAFTA era, became the main sector of the 
economy producing employment growth.

Maquiladora development undermined the legal 
rights of workers in the border area, and any 
laws viewed as discouraging investment.  The 
government had a growing interest in keeping 
wages low as an attraction to foreign 
corporations, instead of high enough that people 
could buy what they were making.  The old 
official unions, including the Confederation of 
Mexican Workers (CTM), controlled restive workers 
rather than organizing them to win better 
conditions.

ONE of the most important methods of control is 
the protection contract.  Cooperative unions sign 
agreements with factory owners, who pay "dues" 
for workers who often have no idea that the union 
and contract even exist.  They find out quickly, 
however, when they try to organize any 
independent effort to raise wages or improve 
conditions.  The company and official union claim 
a contract is already in place.  If workers try 
to protest, they're forced into a process before 
"tripartite" labor boards dominated by business 
owners, politicians dependent on them, and the 
official unions.

Labor history in Mexico for decades has been 
dominated by valiant battles fought by workers to 
organize independent unions and rid themselves of 
protection contracts.  Thousands have been fired, 
and some even killed.  Despite defeats, 
organizations like the Coalition for Justice in 
the Maquiladoras (CJM), the Border Committee of 
Women Workers (CFO), Enlace, and the Workers 
Support Committee (CAT), have helped workers 
challenge this system.  Some of these battles, 
fought together with independent unions like the 
Authentic Labor Front (FAT), have won union 
contracts, slowly building an independent and 
progressive sector of Mexican labor.

The FAT and the National Union of Workers, to 
which it belongs, have made their own proposals 
for labor law reform.  They've suggested making 
all contracts public to let workers know what 
union they belong to, and to shine a light on the 
corruption of the present system.  They see the 
tripartite labor boards as so compromised that 
they'd do away with them, while removing some of 
the government controls used to punish 
independent unions.

The PRI proposal would not make protection 
contracts public or limit them, nor would it 
change the labor boards or enhance union rights. 
Instead, it takes direct aim at those independent 
unions, some of which have been organized in 
fierce fights against shutdowns and 
privatization, like the recent one at the 
government-owned Mexicana Airline.  New private 
businesses don't want to see these unions spread, 
organizing their workers. A new private airline, 
Volaris, for instance, recently started service 
to the U.S.  Now that the government has forced 
Mexicana into bankruptcy and laid off its 
workers, Volaris hopes to take over the old 
airline's routes, and perhaps even its assets. 
What it doesn't want is the Mexicana union.

The PRI labor law reform would restrict unions to 
the one company or enterprise where they began. 
Industrial, or even craft, unions, representing 
workers at many employers, would become 
impossible to organize.  New private businesses, 
like Volaris, would face no challenge by a union 
seeking to set a base wage for a particular 
industry.  Unions would have much greater 
difficulty in organizing solidarity among 
workers, in any effort like the ones that led to 
the large industrial unions in the U.S. and 
Mexico.

Progressive unions in Mexico today are fighting 
for their survival.  The state institutions that 
enforce Mexican labor law are already heavily 
stacked against them.  PRI's reforms would turn 
the struggle for survival into a desperate labor 
war.



David Bacon is a California writer and 
photojournalist. His latest book is Illegal 
People: How Globalization Creates Migration and 
Criminalizes Immigrants.

The Institute for Transnational Social Change 
(ITSC) is a hub for cross-border collaboration 
among key worker-led organizations (independent 
unions, worker centers, NGOs, and academics) in 
Mexico and the United States.  The institute 
seeks to address the needs of a low-wage 
workforce that is often hard-to-reach - migrant 
workers, women in the garment industry, farm 
workers, miners, and other workers in industries 
dominated by highly mobile transnational 
corporations - and to increase opportunities for 
cross-border collaboration.  The present report 
is part of a series of publications sponsored by 
ITSC.  For more information about the ITSC, 
contact Gaspar Rivera-Salgado at UCLA, 
grsalg...@irle.ucla.edu.

To read the previous installment, The Hidden 
History of Mexico/U.S. Labor Solidarity, visit 
the Americas Program website.


For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization 
Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants 
(Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the 
U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 
2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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