KOZ-SR MEETING
A Note by John Evans
TUAC General Secretary
(Bratislava, 3-4 July, 2001)
The Role of TUAC in the OECD
The OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) is
an inter-governmental organisation made up of primarily industrialised
market economy countries. It was established in 1962 as a successor to
the institutions involved in the Marshall Plan notably the OEEC. Some 200
Committees and working groups backed up by a secretariat based in Paris
do the main work of the OECD. They bring together government officials
and occasionally Ministers from the member countries. In addition to being
a research and statistics body for its members, its main function is to
act as co-ordinating body for policy formulation between its members. Although
focused on economic issues, the OECD covers most areas of government policy
with the exception of defence. The OECD Committees therefore span most
government ministries. Informally, it helps to create and define an “ideological”
centre of gravity for economic and social policy for the industrialised
world.
There are relatively few formal powers of the OECD but the process of
peer group pressure on members gives a fair amount of leverage. In a few
areas the OECD does go beyond the indirect role of policy co-ordination
and has negotiated formal legally – binding agreements – the majority of
these are in the area of financial markets, capital flows and in the area
of the environment. The OECD recently concluded a legally binding treaty
on outlawing the bribery of foreign officials in business transactions.
The most spectacular area of the failure of negotiations was the inability
of OECD governments to conclude Multilateral Agreement on Investment in
1998.
The membership of the OECD was traditionally made up of countries of
broadly similar economic and social systems - “industrialised market economies”
and until 1989 was a form of economic NATO. However, since the early 1990s
the membership has expanded to thirty – taking in Mexico and Korea and
also the four “Visograd” countries in Central and Eastern Europe (Czech
Republic, Hungary, Poland and now most recently Slovakia). An outreach
programme has also established a range of meetings with non-members and
a number are signatories of different OECD agreements or are observers
on OECD Committees. The OECD also acts as a co-ordinator of ODA development
assistance programmes from the side of the donor countries through the
Development Assistance Committee (DAC).
The trade union advisory committee (TUAC) was established in 1948 as
an advisory body to the Marshall Plan and subsequently continued in a similar
role to the OECD after 1962. With the exception of the tripartite structure
of the ILO and the formal consultative mechanisms within the European institutions
the TUAC–OECD structure is the most formalised and systematic trade union
interface with any of the global economy institutions. It has therefore
often been used as an example or precedent when the international trade
union movement has been seeking greater access to other institutions such
as the Bretton Woods Institutions and the WTO.
The TUAC is financed almost entirely by membership affiliation fees,
although receives some administrative support from the OECD e.g.– meeting
rooms, some limited interpretation and publications. It is itself made
up of trade union confederations from the OECD member countries coming
from both the ICFTU and WCL families, and currently some 95% of membership
are from ICFTU affiliates. We are delighted that our most recent affiliate
is KOZ-SR. It has three and a half policy staff and three administrative
staff approximately 400 trade union representatives take part in OECD on
TUAC meetings in an average year. The TUAC has not played the role of an
international trade union confederation in the sense of the ICFTU, WCL
or ETUC. Its objective has not been to become an exclusive body of trade
unions in the industrialised countries, but rather to help co-ordinate
trade union policies vis-a-vis the global economic institutions and also
serve as a tool for influencing governments at the international level.
In the development of responses to globalisation therefore it has also
provided a point of access to governments for trade unions from non-member
countries. This covered issues as central as trade union rights for example
when Korea joined the OECD.
The prime goal of the TUAC is to increase trade union influence and
ensure that their views are taken account of at the OECD and in the discussions
at the OECD. At the same time TUAC has the opportunity to be part of intergovernmental
discussions and can thus also act as a source of information to unions
on how government policy making may be likely to affect them – in both
a positive and a negative sense. The more intensive access to government
officials also involved in other international institutions has also allowed
this intelligence to be used in other institutions and dialogues. TUAC
has played an active role in the efforts to influence the Bretton Woods
institutions and WTO described above. The TUAC also provides a point of
internal discussion between the three main blocs of industrial country
unions – North America/ Europe/Japan on economic and social policy questions,
although bilateral dialogues have also now been developed through the North
Atlantic dialogues and the ASEM process.
The role and functioning of TUAC has varied as the role of the OEEC/OECD
has changed over the last 50 years. In the 1950s, the TUAC was heavily
involved in the tripartite structures of the OEEC such as the European
Productivity Agency, engaged in the process of European post-war reconstruction.
In the 1960s the OECD was focussed on macro-economic policy co-ordination
and Keynesian in its orientation. At this time the TUAC discussions often
covered issues such as responses to Prices and Incomes Policies. As noted
above at that time the TUAC comprised the European Regional organisation
of the ICFTU and the forerunner of the WCL. In the 1970s the OECD was involved
in the response to the first oil price shock and the International Energy
Agency was created as oil-importing countries’ response to the OPEC cartel.
It was also at this time that the OECD Guidelines on Multinational Enterprises
were first developed. During the 1980s the OECD shifted again to be monetarist
and supply side in its outlook with the impact of the Reagan and Thatcher
Governments. It was the leading exponent of labour market flexibility and
fiscal and monetary conservatism. TUAC’s role therefore shifted to be on
the defensive, using some of the heterogeneity of the OECD’s departmental
and Committee structure to counteract the supply-side orthodoxy, in a way
that was easier than in the institutions dominated by Finance Ministries.
In the late 1990s the OECD was in a process of change again with a shift
now away from deregulation to one of “shaping” globalisation and international
economic governance. This is again affecting TUAC’s role.
TUAC meets in a Plenary Session, twice a year consisting of all affiliates,
and five working groups back up this work. TUAC’s current priorities -
adopted by the Plenary in successive work programmes are:
- Employment and economic issues and in particular work on
the OECD growth project and public sector questions;
- Globalisation and labour standards including following up the OECD
report on Trade and Core Labour Standards and integrating labour issues
into the Development Assistance Committee’s work on Poverty Reduction;
- Corporate regulation and multinationals and in particular the follow-up
and implementation of the Revised OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises,
corporate governance and anti-corruption work;
- OECD relations with non-member countries and recent members, notably
the maintenance of the OECD monitoring process of labour rights in new
members such as Korea.
- Sustainable development including climate change and general preparations
by OECD for the RIO+10 sustainable development review, as well as work
with the UN and responsible health, safety and environmental bodies (this
work is co-financed and carried out jointly with the ICFTU).
The openness of the OECD to trade union views varies between Committees
and Departments and also over time. As with the Bretton Woods institutions,
since the 1980s it has been extremely difficult to make an impact on the
thinking of the Economics Department, which remains focussed on deregulation
and supply side orthodoxy. In 1998 the then President of the TUAC Bob White
summed this up at the 50th Anniversary Seminar of TUAC: “The OECD has always
played an important role in setting the economic policy agenda of member
governments, through research and through discussions which lead to the
development of a consensus. Unfortunately, OECD work in the 1980s and 1990s
has been dominated by neo-classical “free market” philosophy and the organisation
has seen growing unemployment largely as a function of labour market “rigidities”,
rather than as the result of the restrictive macro-economic policies it
has prescribed. The OECD has also tended to uncritically embrace market
liberalisation, as in free trade, deregulation and privatisation, minimising
the need for governments to put a social context around markets if they
are to result in shared progress. TUAC has had some influence on the internal
debate within the OECD, and those who follow the work of the organisation
closely will know that it is far from monolithic. The TUAC role will, hopefully,
become more central now that it has become clear that the radical liberalisation
agenda has failed to build a stable and growing international economy,
and has fuelled growing inequality and exclusion. The OECD could and should
be at the cutting-edge of developing a new, more balanced consensus over
the necessary role of both markets and regulation in a democratic society,
and TUAC will continue to push the organisation in that direction”.
Paradoxically, however, parallel to the continuing difficulty to influence
Economic and Finance Ministries, there is a growing openness from other
parties in the OECD to have a dialogue with trade unions and also to take
account of our views. This has been seen particularly in those departments
- such the Financial Affairs who were affected by the outcome of the MAI
and already stated there has been some success in shifting the direction
of overall policy to the “re-regulation of globalisation”.
In assessing “what works” in getting trade union views across a number
of factors are important:
- The origin of the OECD TUAC relation were in the immediate
post-war reconstruction period of the Marshall Plan when governments needed
the support of unions to get the plan implemented. Despite the political
changes, the OECD currently still has an initial philosophy of dialogue
with both sides of industry and consultation. Although this is less intense
than in the European Institutions. TUAC does have a consultative status
with the OECD, which means that activities are part of a continuing process
and not one off events. Indeed in the last five years there has been an
intensification of TUAC’s input with more in-depth engagement in the OECD
with a number of Committees.
- To be effective, work requires the co-ordination of action at the
OECD level by TUAC with activity at the national level by affiliates and
in particular when it is necessary to develop pressure by unions on their
governments to adopt stances at the OECD which can be mutually reinforcing
of the union position.
- On key issues there is also a need to link campaigns at the OECD to
wider campaigns of the trade union movement (such as debt relief and core
labour rights) and close partnership exists in particular with the ICFTU.
- It has proved useful to form alliances with other groups - on occasion
with NGOs and environmental groups and on occasion with the BIAC and individual
employers.
- Physical proximity to the OECD is important with sufficient staff
to be interacting effectively (TUAC has three full time policy staff and
one position shared with the ICFTU which has proved to be a minimum to
function).
We are looking forward very much to developing a strong and close
relationship with our new affiliate KOZ-SR.