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ITUC flays World Bank, IMF push for global deregulation

By Collins Olayinka, Abuja
22 October 2019   |   3:02 am
Amid a downgrade of global growth projections to their lowest levels since the global financial crisis, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and World Bank are pushing deregulatory structural reform, which might worsen global poverty, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has said.

Amid a downgrade of global growth projections to their lowest levels since the global financial crisis, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and World Bank are pushing deregulatory structural reform, which might worsen global poverty, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) has said.

ITUC noted that working people in Ecuador and around the world, are resisting this dangerous mix of austerity, deregulation, and attacks on labour rights.

On the other hand, global unions propose an alternative path of inclusive and sustainable growth built around collective bargaining, public investment, and a just transition to a low-carbon economy.

In contrast, the IMF is urging deregulation, privatisation, and weakening of worker protections, especially in emerging and developing countries.

The World Bank is moving in the same direction, promoting financial deregulation and a development model that prioritises the interest of private finance.

A recent Bank publication recommended that countries combine weaker labour regulations with individualised, market schemes for social protection.

“Trade unions will stand strong against attempts to impose deregulatory structural reforms, which have a long history of causing economic crisis and instability. With a global slowdown occurring, more austerity and anti-labour reforms would be a risky mistake,” ITUC General Secretary, Sharan Burrow noted.

ITUC pointed at disastrous effects of failed policies witnessed in Ecuador, where the announcement of a package of structural reforms amid an IMF loan programme caused massive protests.

The measures, including the expansion of temporary employment contracts and further cuts to the public sector, led trade unions and indigenous organisations to successfully fight back.

ITUC added that the structural reform agenda marks a return to the recipe of the Washington Consensus, a set of adjustment policies that wreaked havoc on developing countries in the 1990s.

A new study from the Institute for Policy Dialogue, the ITUC, and Public Services International (PSI) shows that elements of the Consensus continue to be used.

“Austerity: The New Normal – A Renewed Washington Consensus, 2010-24,” describes an unrelenting wave of austerity and attacks on labour rights since 2010, when the IMF pressed governments to prematurely end fiscal stimulus measures taken after the global financial crisis.

A new version of the Washington Consensus has emerged – the Wall Street Consensus. Through its maximising finance for development approach, the World Bank is pushing for private finance to dominate infrastructure investments in developing countries.

This approach, ITUC noted, will deepen financialisation, particularly shadow banking, and drive the use of Public-Private Partnerships that limit access to services and create hidden fiscal risks.

In the replenishment of the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), trade unions have urged the Bank and donor governments to instead focus on quality jobs, stronger labour market institutions, alignment with international labour standards, and transition from the informal to the formal economy.

It is also crucial that development finance supports free, quality public education.

Consequently, ITUC and Education International have endorsed a global call for the World Bank and its private lending arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), to stop supporting for-profit commercial education providers.

Burrow added: “The Sustainable Development Goals can be a powerful guide for the international financial institutions on economic policy, education, labour and gender. Now is the time to reform multilateralism to achieve these goals.”

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