Jump to main content
IndustriALL logotype
Article placeholder image

ETUC Call Brings 30,000 to Slovenia to Protest Wage Restraint

Read this article in:

7 April, 2008

Some 30,000 trade unionists took to the streets of Ljubljana, Slovenia, Saturday, 5 April, as European Union finance ministers met in the Balkan country. The unionists, marching behind a call by the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC), were protesting record-high inflation and declining purchasing power at a time when EU officials were calling for wage restraint.

The EU ministers were meeting in nearby Brdo in talks to reform social welfare programmes.

ETUC General Secretary John Monks told the assembled in the capital city’s Congress Square that “we cannot accept lectures that workers should be modest” in pay deals. “Getting a fairer deal for workers across Europe is a top ETUC priority.” The trade union federation has produced evidence that wage moderation does not create more jobs, as some claim, but leads instead to stagnating domestic demand and weakened employment rates.

Since 1995, while wages have dropped as a share of Gross Domestic Product across the EU, corporate profits have risen. Top managers earn up to 300 times more than workers, leaving over 30 million people earning poverty-level wages.

EU unionists that converged in Slovenia over the weekend demanded a rise in real salaries and purchasing power; efforts to create more and better jobs; creation of decent minimum wages to combat poverty; equal pay for men and women; stronger collective bargaining systems, and an end to social dumping; decent work and fair wages for public sector, temporary, and mobile workers; better opportunities for lifelong learning; and a limit to the income of top earners.