Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 20 – Because they
no longer believe that unions of any kind do them much good and thus don’t want
to pay union dues at a time of crisis, Russian workers are increasingly leaving
official unions but not joining independent ones, according to Velimir
Razuvayev of “Nezavisimaya gazeta.”
In part this reflects a hands’ off
policy by the authorities who in effect are saying to businessmen “do what you
want” in the crisis and thus giving them a free hand to move against workers’
rights. That may win the Kremlin some friends in the short term, but it means
that when Russian workers do protest, they are likely to do so in unorganized
and violent ways.
In today’s edition of the Moscow
paper, Razuvayev says that in Russia’s regions ever more workers “do not see
any sense of paying dues to organizations in the Federation of Independent
Trade Unions of Russia, and their bosses simply do not allow any alternatives”
(ng.ru/politics/2015-10-20/1_profsoyuzy.html).
Social psychologist Aleksey Roshchin
has been studying worker attitudes in the regions for some years because
businesses want to know whether they are likely to face worker activism of one
kind or another before investing. Five
years ago, he says, “almost 100 percent” of workers were members of official
trade unions.
But with the onset of the economic crisis,
that has changed, and now in many places, workers have left these unions but
not joined independent ones, largely because workers no longer have much
confidence that unions can help them and thus are worth the cost or because managers
have been able to block the appearance of such unions in the workplace.
He adds that he has the sense that “the
government now in a definite sense has stopped controlling large industrial
holdings and telling bosses ‘do what you want but we will stay on the
sidelines.’ That is, struggle with the economic crisis as you know how. This
carte blanche is a kind of compensation for the fact that the government doesn’t
give anyone money.”
In the short term, that gives bosses
an even freer hand over their workers, Roshchin says; but in the longer term,
it sets up a situation like that in Pikalevo where when workers do protest,
they will do so as a mass of individuals rather than as an organized group, opening
the way for possible violence.
And as “Nezavisimaya gazeta” has
pointed out before (ng.ru/politics/2015-08-11/1_protest.html),
the likelihood of that is on the rise: the deteriorating economic situation in
Russia means that worker protest activity is 45 percent greater this year than
last, almost all of it “spontaneous” rather than organized.
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