With 'Systemic Violations' of Worker Rights, US Comes in Dead Last in Labor Rankings of Wealthy Nations

Authored by commondreams.org and submitted by maxwellhill
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The International Trade Union Confederation's world map showing its rankings of the best and worst countries for working people includes a noticeable difference between the U.S. and other wealthy countries.

Dark orange in color on the map, the U.S. was singled out by the ITUC this year as the only country in the Group of Seven to have "systematic violations of rights" in work places.

What are the 10 worst countries for workers in the ?Find out in the 2020 #RightsIndex

https://t.co/lHCS56fgEX pic.twitter.com/VyHO1MXpAt — ITUC (@ituc) June 18, 2020

Along with Haiti, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and other countries with far fewer resources than the U.S., the nation was ranked as a 4 on a scale of 1 to 5, with the top-ranking countries reporting only "sporadic violations of rights."

Every other G7 country ranked at least a 3 on the scale.

The countries with the highest rankings include several European and Nordic countries with strong social welfare systems, high marginal tax rates for the wealthiest citizens and corporations, and robust nationwide paid family and sick leave policies. Denmark, Finland, Norway, Uruguay, and Iceland were among those found to have the fewest violations.

Of countries with the rating of 4, the ITUC wrote, "The government and/or companies are engaged in serious efforts to crush the collective voice of workers, putting fundamental rights under threat."

The organization ranked countries based on a number of indicators, including threats to the right to form or join labor unions, the right to collective bargaining, and the right to strike.

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The report comes amid a sharpened focus on labor rights in the U.S. as powerful companies and government leaders have been reticent in recent months to enable workers to stay home from workplaces in order to avoid the spread of the coronavirus.

Amazon has drawn particular outrage among progressives during the pandemic. In April executives plotted to publicly smear Christian Smalls, a warehouse worker who organized his colleagues to protest against what they viewed as the company's lack of safety precautions. Smalls was allegedly fired for leading his coworkers in a walkout.

The company has also come under fire for ending its paid sick leave policy in May, refusing to extend the benefit to fulfillment center workers.

Federal and state government leaders have also displayed disdain for the rights of workers in the midst of the public health crisis, with several states threatening to end unemployment benefits for any worker who didn't return to their job after the economy began reopening.

"In many countries, the existing repression of unions and the refusal of governments to respect rights and engage in social dialogue has exposed workers to illness and death and left countries unable to fight the pandemic effectively," said the ITUC.

Around the world, the ITUC found that violations of workers' rights are at a seven year high.

"The breakdown of the social contract is exposed in the 2020 ITUC Global Rights Index," the report reads. "The trends by governments and employers to restrict the rights of workers through violations of collective bargaining and the right to strike, and excluding workers from unions, have been made worse in 2020 by an increase in the number of countries which impede the registration of unions—denying workers both representation and rights."

snorlz on June 19th, 2020 at 19:08 UTC »

no surprise when we still dont have things like required vacation time. people act like 2 weeks is a great benefit not knowing that western europe has like 4 weeks minimum

Rooster_Fishbone on June 19th, 2020 at 17:16 UTC »

Story time:

During the height of the recession I worked in a factory. While putting heavy parts on hooks to go through the painting process, I hurt my shoulder. I went to the doctor and before I could have thorough testing done, I received a call from my insurance company saying that it was work related, they wouldn't cover anything, and I needed to file a workers comp claim. The insurance was through work

I went to the safety guy and tried. He threatened that I would be fired if I couldn't prove that it happened at work. I immediately lawyered up an found out that I couldn't do anything about it since the company had an arbitration policy. After a year of fighting it, while working the whole time, they finally sent me to a doctor of their choice, who just moved my arm around a bunch and sent me on my way. He determined that I was fine and I never received any treatment. I could not lift my elbow to the height of my shoulder at this point.

After I quit (for different reasons) and got insurance of my own I went to the doctor and found out I had a torn labrum and underwent surgery. The pain was completely gone and I had full mobility within a month.

This is capitalism. This is America for poor folk.

Edit: Thanks for the silver and the kind words, but please do not spend your very real money on a comment I made on the internet.

kmurph72 on June 19th, 2020 at 17:08 UTC »

We live in a society where a big business is expected to grow 3% every year so the rich can get richer. It's not enough that a company is worth billions of dollars and all the executives are super rich. They need to grow grow grow. In order to grow they need to compete globally. In order to compete globally they cannot pay the workers a living wage. This is our system.