LOCAL News :: Globalisation
Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Alliance Party Dunedin North candidate and trade spokeperson Victor Billot says the loss of around 145 jobs at Cadbury's in Dunedin was an indicator of the serious problems faced by working people in New Zealand.
"We are seeing a slow motion disaster for working people as secure jobs evaporate in Dunedin and throughout the nation as major players like Fisher and Paykel and Cadbury shut down plant and lay off the workforce."
He says Dunedin can't take continual hits like this, and workers needed support, but were unlikely to get it from the current Government or a National Party whose answer to unemployment was to attack the unemployed.
Mr Billot says an unregulated global economy, and the free market and free trade policies pursued by past Government's, were the underlying causes of DJS (disappearing job syndrome).
"This is not about efficiency, the dedication or skills of our workers, it is about how we respond to a global economic system that is out of control and is bad for workers."
Mr Billot says that it appears that the Government and National opposition and local Government seemed to have a "possum in the headlights" response to the wreckage of the manufacturing industry.
"Workers have been subsidizing their own jobs as these corporations get rates relief and other support from the Government but clear out when it's convenient for them."
He says private corporations had no loyalty to communities and it was time to consider new ways of doing business.
"We have to start asking ourselves whether we need a system where working people and communities control and own these enterprises rather than to be continually cast aside and have their lives disrupted. We need a regulated economy with a strong local manufacturing base, where secure jobs are seen as more important than private profit."
"New Zealand's economic base is on the fast track to becoming a farm with a golf course in the back paddock. That is not the recipe for an advanced 21st century society, that is a recipe for an imbalanced economy and a wealth and social class divide."
Mr Billot says that while high-end technology sector was of great importance, under the current trend, a majority of workers would be condemned to low skill, casualized jobs with low wages and low security unless a more balanced approach to economic development.
He says that the loss of skills and secure employment is a serious threat to New Zealand's future.
"In a few short years, transportation costs and environmental pressures will mean that local and regional production will become necessary again, but we will have lost the skills and infrastructure by then."
Mr Billot says the Alliance rejects the narrow minded free market approach and sees the economy as there to serve all of society, rather than just to maximize profits for a minority.
Comments
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
"New Zealand's economic base is on the fast track to becoming a farm with a golf course in the back paddock. [and a call centre buried under the golf course]
where are the cadbury jobs going does anyone know?
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Again, profit and efficiency come before workers and community. Like it says above, this is the indication of a failing system, but we've known this for a long time now.
We also know that it's the realm of the workplace and the economy where workers are able to display their full social strength, because it's their role as producers which holds together the social and economic structure. Sadly, this seems to be forgotten.
So, people who are sick of this continuing trend of lay-offs and inept union activity, it's our task to raise awarness of the power of collective, direct action. We've got a long way to go, but posts like these indicate that it matters now more than ever.
Solidarity to the Cadbury workers, Kia Kaha.
Jared D
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Dont you think?
And as for the things that kiwi call Unions...pleaseeeeeeeee. That is a joke. And they would be a joke if they were not holding back workers from getting educated and learning some good working class stuff. UNIONS are run by the middle class to help the boss class to have the working class as slaves.
Fight back. Get Organised outside of a union. Get together in your coffee breaks and in your own homes, Form your own workers collectives and then ask for support from the community around you. Build and build and educate till when you are ready to strike at the boss you will have friendships unity and direction and therefore success. Dont join those fucked middle class unions. Organise yourselves. You can do it. Ask around it can be done. They are some good examples of this. Look around overseas.
The working class is strong when it organises itself.
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Remember it's not abstract organisations and institutions that treat people like dirt: it's the people that make up the rules, regulations, polices and procedures that do!
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
However it is noteworthy that Alliance Party's, Dunedin North candidate for parliament is most often seen on this site posting press releases that end with implicit calls for a VOTE to the Alliance.
One would have thought that a union organiser from the maritime union would have at least a few thoughts about what workers and unionists could do in the current (and likley continuing) absence of a "workers government".
Especially since most workers are also heartily wary of all political parties and parliament generally.
Instead we are left with having to listen to the interminable debate about workers organising outside the unions as a supposed antidote to this apparent union inactivity and bureacracy.
Boooooring!
The majority of politically conscious workers ARE in unions and abstract calls for them to "break" from these organisations on the basis of their poor leadership is just a "left wing" version of the right wing slander that ALL unions are just organisations to put workers money in officials pockets.
The outcome (demoralisation, depoliticisation and deunionisation) are just thre same.
(witness the attempts of the transport unions-breakeaway during the auckaland busses disputes)
For those interested in actually building workers capacity to force concessions from the system by their own actions, the question of rebuilding the union organisation is a crucial one.
Victor, what is the Alliance position on organising in unions to rekindle workers participation democracy and militancy? What practical steps is the alliance taking to organise its working members to confront bureacracy and inactivity in workers industrial organisations TODAY, rather than in some post election Alliance/balance of power utopia.
Actions not promises
Cheers,
IWD
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
The Alliance supports unions as the organizations of working people, however our focus is to promote a comprehensive system for organizing a nation. The goal is a transformation of our society along democratic socialist lines which you can read about on our website. That's our focus, and while we certainly support workers struggles and unions,
We aren't a union, we are a political party, and that is where our main focus goes. We are not a huge or well funded organization, and we are doing our best to promote the goals we have set ourselves, which are at this stage focussed and limited.
That doesn't meet everyones expectations: too bad. See the following post!
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
The Alliance and its irrelevance
21 August, 2008 · 2 Comments
Today’s press release on Cadbury’s redundancies highlights why the Alliance will never return to Parliament. The Alliance of today offers nothing more than the two Marxist minnows, RAM and the Workers Party, demanding nothing more than economic central planning and income redistribution.
They claim redundancies at Cadbury area trend to low wage and casualised work force. Unfortunately for them and their openly Marxist compatriots trending upward median wages suggest the revolution’s further away than ever. Likewise, their claim about casualisation doesn’t match the statistics on full-time vs. part-time employment.
{GRAPH on original posting}
Source: Labour Market Statistics: 2007, Statistics NZ.
Even increasing inequality isn’t a revolution inducing trend.
Job losses aren’t a failing
The Alliance party’s Victor Billot says that the loss of jobs at the Cadbury factory in Dunedin is representative of a failure of the system.
Despite trumpeting his lack of economic nous with such a foolhardy statement, what it does do is highlight the idiocy of those who believe that firms laying off workers is a sign that something is wrong with our system.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In our market economy, private firms fortunes wax and wane in tune with the economic conditions they face. What we have in New Zealand though, are many barriers that mean that firms are handicapped from increasing their production when conditions are going good due to heavy regulation and high levels of taxation that make it difficult to hire workers, build factories and increase productivity.
Private firms are further handicapped in downturns where they have to jump through hoops and the bleating of the unions in order to rationalise their workforces and production levels. So what happens is that when the forces of supply and demand attempt to work in New Zealand, the high levels of government intervention that every business, both large and small, is operating at a level that is entirely suboptimal.
The loss of jobs at the Cadbury factory in Dunedin does not indicate a failure of the system, instead it highlights the brilliance of the system when it is allowed to function: the market responds to changes in supply and demand and the market solution will always be the most efficient.
When the Alliance, a motley collection of bludgers and bleaters, says things like businesses should serve the needs of all society instead of maximising profits for shareholders, we need only laugh at their idiocy.
For profit when derived from free market operations is the most moral end point, compared with the immoral theft that the Alliance and other parties of their ilk promote through their calls for more jobs to be created to ’secure employment’.
The market will decide whether or not new jobs are needed, there is no need for politicians to create new jobs - businesses will create them when they need to.
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Re: Cadbury's job losses indicate a failing system
Yeah - like business people are entirely pure, moral and selfless, and not money-grubbing selfish individualist scum at all.
Hail to the omniscient free market and its invisible hand!