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From
Challenge # 98
July - August 2006
The Breaking of Organized Labor in Israel
Assaf Adiv
ISRAEL of the 21st century likes its workers docile,
accessible, mobile, and cheap. This wasn’t always the case. The ruling
establishment, built by Mapai and the Histadrut, for decades maintained a
high level of income equality, accompanied by a ramified system of
collective agreements guaranteeing workers’ rights. In the 1950’s, the two
top deciles earned 3.3 times more than the two lowest. The society stayed
relatively egalitarian until 1985, when the rules of the game changed
utterly. Israel proceeded to become, within three decades, the cruelest,
most unequal state in the Western world: its two top deciles today earn
21.3 times more than the two lowest. The US comes in second with a factor
of 10.6. (1)
Nowadays there is much talk about the poverty afflicting
almost 20% of Israel’s population (1.33 out of 7 million). One hears less
about the connection between this poverty and the destruction of workers’
rights.
That destruction began in 1985 with the Economic
Stabilization Plan, which was aimed at ending triple-digit inflation and
reducing an enormous national debt. The Likud, in power since 1977, had
inherited a huge inefficient state bureaucracy. It compounded the crisis
with unbalanced spending to cover the costs of its settlement program, the
Lebanon War, and major public projects. The Plan of 1985 aimed beyond
these ills, however, setting about to change the deep structure of the
economy. The world was tending toward capitalist globalization, and the
government wanted to be part of this. It gave Israeli firms a green light
to evade labor laws: they were permitted to get their workers from
personnel (“manpower”) companies or subcontractors. Alternatively, they
could hire them as freelancers under personal contracts. In all these
cases, existing collective labor agreements did not apply. The government
chose, in effect, to abandon the workers.
The destruction of organized labor
In the wake of the 1985 Stabilization Plan, the labor
market has changed beyond recognition. The employers today receive a
series of releases from taxes and wage hikes; they get freedom of action
in determining wages and the composition of their labor force. More and
more workers are employed through personnel companies and contractors,
without regard to collective agreements between the Histadrut and the
employers. (2)
As globalization has deepened, the use of personnel
companies has gathered steam. Between the years 1996 and 2002, the number
of employees in Israel’s public service sector dropped by 15,000. Had the
public services become more efficient? No. The places of those who lost
their jobs were filled with others, supplied by contractors. These new
workers perform the same labor at minimal wages without social benefits
and without the job security that the public services once enjoyed.
(3)
Hand in hand with such massive replacement of organized
labor, there was large-scale privatization of companies owned by the
government and the Histadrut. Take, for example, the Histadrut’s company,
Solel Boneh, which had been the main pillar of Zionist construction since
the 1930’s. In the 80’s, Solel Boneh employed 18,000 workers on the basis
of a binding collective labor agreement with the Histadrut. Most were
eventually fired and replaced by migrants from Romania, Turkey and China.
Many of the migrants have recently been deported. And who takes their
places? Local workers hired by subcontractors and personnel companies.
They receive no social benefits.
The government first allowed the importation of migrants in
1993 to replace organized Palestinian labor from the West Bank and Gaza.
(Israel had just imposed closure on the Territories, after a quarter
century of exploiting them as its chief source of manual labor.) This move
marked the second major crux in the breaking of organized labor. The
migrants were imported by personnel companies, which demanded advance
payments for the privilege of working here, amounting in each case to
thousands of dollars. They entered, therefore, in a state of family debt.
Chained to their employers, they amount – as one researcher has put it –
to “indentured servants.” (4)
The extreme exploitation of these weak workers enabled the
owners of personnel companies not just to get rich, but to accumulate
political power. Wherever migrants worked, the foundations of organized
labor collapsed. There was also a broader effect on the economy as a
whole, especially on its unskilled workers. Take construction, for
instance. At first glance, the numbers here in recent years appear to show
improvement. The number of migrants in construction has dropped from
75,000 to 35,000. In June 2006, the Ministry of Construction and Housing
published figures showing that the number of Israeli construction workers
has grown in the last four years from 115,000 to 135,000. What has
happened, in fact, according to a study by WAC, is that the migrants have
been replaced by Israelis, mostly Arab, working under slavish conditions
via personnel companies and subcontractors. The big building firms reject
any proposal that would restore the system of organized employment through
collective agreements. (5)
The government violates the law
The exploitation of unorganized workers by personnel
contractors isn’t limited to the private sector or construction. Every
Israeli government since 1985 has adopted neo-liberal concepts; cutbacks
in social budgets are considered an end in themselves. According to a
report by the Knesset Research and Information Center, called “Employment
of Workers by Personnel Companies” (2002, in Hebrew), “The shrinkage of
budgets in government ministries created a situation of bypassing standard
procedures, whereby the ministries hire the services of personnel
companies in order to get workers. The number of those employed through
personnel companies in the public sector amounts to between 70,000 and
80,000.”(6)
When we include the private sector as well, the total
number working through personnel companies is huge. Estimates range from
120,000 to 500,000 (in a work force of 2.4 million). This wide variation
is due to the fact that personnel contractors are often registered as
security companies, cleaning companies, and the like; these employ people
outside the framework of the law. Even on a conservative estimate,
however, 120,000 Israelis work under a system of two employers: the
personnel company and the actual firm. That is 5% of the labor force,
compared with 2.5% in Europe and the US. (7)
In 1996 the Knesset passed a law on personnel companies,
which was initiated by the New Histadrut. It compelled equalization of
conditions for all workers, according to the collective agreements that
hold for regular employees at each work place. In fact, this provision has
not been implemented. It contravenes the purposes of government policy, as
explained by Attorney Linda Efroni in Globes (April 28, 2003):
“Following the Economic Stabilization Plan of July 1985,
the government ministries, the other employers in the public sector, the
local governments and the institutes of higher education, all agreed to
reduce the roster of tenured workers. They invented the system of
Israbluff. Accordingly, in exchange for a cutback in the tenured labor
force, the activities-budgets of the various ministries would expand
considerably. It was possible to compensate for the cutback by buying
equivalent services from a personnel company. In this way, there was a
mushrooming of personnel companies specializing in cleaning, office
services and security. The firms that supplied this labor for government
services were made to bid in a tender organized by the General Accountant.
A close check of the matter revealed that the conditions of the tender
foreclosed any possibility of paying the full costs of labor as determined
by the protective laws of the State of Israel, such as minimum wage,
overtime, travel expenses, recuperation expenses, annual vacation, sick
leave and even compensation for job loss.”
Netanyahu’s contribution
In 2003 Ariel Sharon appointed Binyamin Netanyahu as
Finance Minister. This marked another turning point in the breaking of
organized labor. Netanyahu enforced budgetary restraint, carrying out a
drastic cut in government expenditure. One result was to deepen the
practice of “Israbluff” described by Efroni above. With extraordinary
diligence, Netanyahu also ended the Histadrut’s control of the large
pension funds. He privatized the ports, El Al, Bank Leumi and more.
The weakening of the Histadrut was no casual byproduct of
these policies. In an interview, Uri Yogev, head of the Budget Department
in the Ministry of Finance under Netanyahu, named his biggest
accomplishment: “We managed to exploit the period of recession so as to
change the rules of the game and advance the most dramatic revolution of
all: the breaking of organized labor in Israel.” (Haaretz May 5,
2004)
Attorney Itai Svirsky, who coordinates the Legal Clinic of
Tel Aviv University, recently told Challenge that the Netanyahu
period worsened the conditions of employment in public service. On May 24,
2006, Svirsky wrote a letter to the Attorney General and the Commissioner
of State Service, demanding enforcement of the article requiring
equalization of conditions; he also demanded a stop to the custom of
turning a blind eye to the exploitation of workers within the halls of
government. Svirsky explained the logic of this law, which is meant “to
improve the conditions of employment of those working for personnel
companies and to prevent – or reduce as much as is feasible – the
possibility of discrimination between people working side by side in the
same job and the creating of class differences between them, in the sense
of Class A workers and Class B.”
A new sort of trade union
In effect the Israeli labor market has been operating for
many years on the principle of Class A and Class B workers. The members of
the second sort, without rights, have been increasing in all economic
branches. Accompanying this process has been the erosion of the
Histadrut’s position as the only workers’ organization.
With the demise of organized labor, the widening of social
gaps has shaken the commitment of the workers to the goals set by Israel’s
establishment. They feel that by backing private capital, the government
has trampled them into the dust. These workers seek new vehicles in which
to organize and demand their rights. One such vehicle is Centurion, an
organization of workers for security companies. Another is the
organization of artists and playwrights. A third is the actors’
organization. There are non-profit associations such as Kav la’Oved
(Workers’ Hotline) and Mechuyavut (Commitment). These are filling the
vacuum left by the Histadrut when it turned its back on the migrants, the
Arabs and the workers of personnel companies.
Within this complicated reality, WAC is taking steps toward
forming a trade union with a broad social character, including Arabs and
Jews. In the new initiatives for organizing workers, including those of
Educational TV, WAC sees a core around which a new union movement can
grow. n
Endnotes
(1) Jonathan Nitzan and
Shimshon Bichler, From War Profits to Peace Dividends, Jerusalem,
Carmel, 2001 (Hebrew), p. 475 Return to text.
(2) See "The Unmaking of the Histadrut,"
http://www.workersadvicecenter.org/Challenge88-Histadrut.htm
Return to text.
(3) See "The Employment of Workers in Personnel
Companies," Knesset Research and Information Center, 2002,
http://www.knesset.gov.il/mmm/doc.asp?doc=m00347&type=pdf
Return to text.
(4) See Shmuel Amir, "Overseas Foreign Workers in Israel:
Policy Aims and Labor Market Outcomes," a paper prepared by Dr. Shmuel
Amir and Israel's Ministry of Labor a for meeting of the European Centre
for Social Welfare Policy and Research, 1999.
Return to text.
(5) See
www.workersadvicecenter.org/subcontractors1.htm
Return to text.
(6)
www.knesset.gov.il/mmm/doc.asp?doc=m00347&type=pdf
Return to text.
(7) Ephraim Jiloni in "Mashabei Enosh" ("Human
Resources"), November 2001. Jiloni heads the Authority for Economy and
Society in the new Histadrut.
Return to text.
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