Mexico labor bill would loosen hiring, union grip
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE - In this May 1, 2012, file photo, a demonstrator holds up a statue depicting Mexican actress Angelica Rivera, center, wife's of Enrique Pena Nieto, then presidential candidate for the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), during a Labor Day march in Mexico City. Most Mexicans agree the country's dysfunctional labor laws need to be retooled. What they don't agree on is how, with a new proposal to loosen work rules and increase union democracy threatening to create the first big political battle for President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto. At left, another demonstrator holds a statue depicting Pena Nieto. (AP Photo/Dieu Nalio Chery, file)(Credit: AP)MEXICO CITY (AP) — Most Mexicans agree the country’s dysfunctional, 1970s-era labor laws need to be retooled. What they don’t agree on is how, with a proposal to loosen work rules and increase union democracy threatening to create the first big political battle for President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto.
Advocates say the reform, which will allow part-time work, hourly wages and outsourcing, will help Mexico create the million new jobs per year it needs for young people and migrants returning from the United States. It is backed by both President Felipe Calderon, who submitted it to Congress this month, and Pena Nieto, who takes office on Dec. 1.
Opponents say low wages in several industries already make Mexico’s labor force more attractive — compared to increasingly affluent countries like China — and the last thing Mexican workers need is a reform that would pare the meager benefits and job security they currently enjoy.
“Yes, we need a reform that allows labor productivity to increase, but not at the cost of workers’ rights,” said Jesus Zambrano, leader of the leftist Democratic Revolution party, which has vowed to oppose the bill, in the streets if necessary.
The problem is pressing: The country’s 5.4 percent unemployment rate is probably a huge understatement, given the lack of unemployment insurance and the fact that jobless workers quickly slip into Mexico’s vast, unregistered army of street vendors and day laborers. Officials say the lack of jobs is one reason why so many youths are drawn to Mexico’s violent drug cartels.
Under Mexico’s labor laws, workers earn as little as 60 pesos ($5) per day but still pay dues to pro-company “paper” unions they never see. About one-fifth of salaried workers in Mexico are unionized.
Bosses, meanwhile, complain that expensive severance and benefits packages, along with strict work and seniority rules, make it hard to create new jobs.
Added to that is a lengthy and arcane dispute resolution process that can hold up back-pay or severance cases for a decade.
Experts say loosening work and seniority rules to let employees perform different tasks and gain promotions based on ability would increase productivity.
In August, Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Secretary General Angel Gurria said that labor reform, together with tax and other changes, could boost Mexico’s GDP growth by 1 percentage point per year.




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