Negotiation We meet in the UJ Doornfontein Library. Next week’s session
will be as follows:
- Date: 3 March (Wednesday)
- Time: 17h00 sharp to 18h30 sharp
- Venue: The Library, University of Johannesburg, 37 Nind Street,
Doornfontein, Johannesburg (former Technikon Witwatersrand). Cars enter
from the slip road to the left of the bridge on Siemert Road.
- Topic: Negotiation. See below for introduction. We proceed from an
understanding of the vanguard relationship between the communists and
the mass of the working class who are organised in trade unions for
self-defence, and not for revolutionary purposes.
We included the Rules of Debate that are applied within those and other
mass organisations. We now come to the practical means by which trade
unions do their business: Negotiation.
Negotiation is what two parties must always do in order to arrive at an
agreement to exchange one thing for another, or in other words, to
arrive at a common contract. In the case of trade union negotiations
with employers, the two sides are trying to arrive at a bargain for the
exchange of Labour-Power for money (wages).
Inflation (a rise in the money prices of all commodities) makes it
inevitable that the price of Labour-Power must also be re-negotiated at
frequent, often annual, intervals. Contrary to what is frequently
written about negotiations, there is no presumption of dispute about
this process. On the contrary, the invariable aim on all sides is to
arrive at a bargain.
On the way to the bargain, there may be “failure to agree”, and
sometimes there may be a “withdrawal of labour”, but there is no
attempt to upset the relationship of boss and worker. The boss/worker
relationship is confirmed, and not threatened, by the process of
negotiation.
So long as there is “failure to agree”, people will talk of a “wage
dispute” and sometimes they will use military language to describe what
happens. Yet even in military terms, as Clausewitz wrote in his book
“On War”: “The Result in War is Never Absolute”. In other words the
combatants will inevitably have to live together in peace again, after
the war.
Negotiation is a skill that can be learned. The linked document is a
very good short introduction to wage negotiation. It comes from the MIA
Encyclopedia of Marxism.
Click here to download the text of Negotiations, MIA


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Posted By DomzaNet to Communist University on 2/25/2010 03:28:00 PM

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