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Co-ordination of Workers’ Education and Consultation about the Labour Market Regulations and Organising with a Special Focus on Nordic Companies in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania

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Co-ordination of Workers’ Education and Consultation about the Labour Market Regulations and Organising with a Special Focus on Nordic Companies in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Main partner organisations: ICFTU – International Confederation of Free TU; LO/TCO Bist å nsn ä mnd (Sweden); - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Project Partners

Co-ordination of Workers’ Education and Consultation about

the Labour Market Regulations and Organising with a Special Focus on

Nordic Companies inEstonia, Latvia and Lithuania

Page 2: Project Partners

Project PartnersMain partner organisations: ICFTU – International Confederation of Free TU; LO/TCO Bistånsnämnd (Sweden); LPSK – Lithuanian TU Confederation; LBAS – Latvian TU Confederation; EAKL – Estonian TU Confederation; TALO – Estonian TU for Professional Employees.

Other possible partner organisations:ETUC, GUF, Norwegian, Finnish, Danish TUs, other labour movement NGOs.

Page 3: Project Partners

Project Co-ordination Office

ICFTU Vilnius Bureau

Jasinskio 9

Vilnius, Lithuania

E-mail: [email protected]

Tel.: +370 699 05263

Fax: +370 52124788

Page 4: Project Partners

Target SectorsCommerce;

Finances;

Services;

Printing;

Media;

Telecommunication;

And other interested areas having Nordic investments.

Page 5: Project Partners

Expected Results• Trade unions have better skills in reaching out to the

unorganised workforce in the targeted sectors;• The workforce in the targeted sectors have a better

knowledge and understanding of their rights in working life;• Informational network for economical migrants / potential

migrants developed;• Better co-ordination in the Nordic-Baltic trade union family;• Trade unions have better skills in assisting in forming EWCs;• EWC information co-ordination network for employees from

the Baltic states.

Page 6: Project Partners

Indicators• Increasing trade union membership;• Better interrelations in organising;• Better EWC participation in target sectors;• Many unions from targeted sectors openly sharing

information (update of the data base);• Further development of www.balticTU.net;• Number of EWCs being established, rising

interest/request from local (company) trade unions for information on EWCs.

Page 7: Project Partners

Project Activities – Work planPhases Dates Venues Events

Preparatory Sept 5 Stockholm, SE Baltic Co-ordination meeting for Swedish TUs

Sept 15-16 Riga, LV Project Working Group meeting

Nov 10-11 Tallinn, EST Introduction conference for Nordic-Baltic partners

Main event Oct 27-29 Vilnius, LT “Workers’ Information” – seminar for trainers

Jan 20 Jurmala (?), LV TU leadership meeting with EWC representatives

April 14 Palanga, LT Seminar for TU activists in TransBaltic companies

Follow-up In June 3 meetings – Vilnius, Riga, Tallinn

Evaluation meetings of national working groups

Aug 24-25 Druskininkai, LT General evaluation conference for Nordic-Baltic partners

Aug 26 “ Project Working Group meeting

Page 8: Project Partners

Background Information (LT)

• Total population of Lithuania - 3.5 million;

• Lithuanian labour force - 1.6 million;

• over two-thirds employed in the private sector;

• Lithuanian employee skills - 42% with higher education, 24% with specialised education

•Lithuania's labour costs are among the lowest in the European Union;

•Since July 1, 2005, the minimum monthly salary is 550 LTL (€ 160);

• the minimum hourly salary is 3,28 LTL (~ € 1);

• the average gross monthly wage in the 4th quarter of 2004 was 1,331 LTL (€ 385).

Page 9: Project Partners

Background Information (LV)

• GDP growth (2003) 7.5%

• Inflation (2003) 2.9%

• Inflation annual average over 5 years 2.46%

• Accumulated FDI (2003) 2.8 billion

2004 2005

• Gross wages (LV) 207.56 241.54

• In the public sector 239.99 279.75

• Private sector 188.75 219.24

• Minimum wages - 80 lats (115 euros)

Page 10: Project Partners

Background Information (EST)

• Total labour force (thous., 2004) 659.1

• Employment rate (%) 56.8

• Unemployment rate (%) 9.7

• Minimum wages EUR 172• Average monthly wage (gross) EUR 462

• The highest gross wage is in financial intermediation and the lowest in agriculture and hunting sector.

Page 11: Project Partners

Countries having investments in the Baltic States (LT)

Top 10 Foreign Investors in Lithuania, 2004

• Telia/Sonera (SE/FI)

• SEB (SE)

• TDC(Tele Danmark A/S) (DK)

• Yukos (RU)

• Statoil ASA (NO)

• Phillip Morris (USA)

• Baltic Beverages Holding (FI//DK/SE)

• Hansapank/Foreningsparbanken (EST/SE)

• Vattenfall (SE)

• DFDS Tor Line (DK)

Lithuania's Top Five Investors (%), 01.07.2004

•Denmark 15,8

•Sweden 14

•Germany 9,3

•Finland 8,6

•Estonia 8,4

Most popular sectors: manufacturing, trade,

communications, finance.

Page 12: Project Partners

Countries having investments in the Baltic States (LV)

Latvia's Top Five Investors(in mln. LVL)

1. Sweden - 243,5

2. Germany – 203,2

3. Denmark – 158,9

4. Finland – 156,3

5. USA – 123,2

Page 13: Project Partners

Countries having investments in the Baltic States (EST)

FDI by country in 2005 (%) • Sweden 54,5 • Finland 19.9• United States 4,2• The Netherlands 2,8• Norway 2,4

Companies• Eesti Telecom (SE/USA);• Eesti Uhispanka/SEB (SE);• Hansapank (SE);• Kinda Nordic Tsement (SE/NL)• Sampo Pank (FI)

Nordic Enterprises in Estonia by sectors

42,1

19,2

14,5

8,1

4,3

11,8FinanceReal etateIndustryTradeTransportOther

Page 14: Project Partners

Sectors & Biggest Companies

SERVICE SECTORSSERVICE SECTORS• Finances:

SEB – Vilniaus Bankas (LT; ~1600), Eesti Uhispank, Latvijas Unibanka;Föreningssparbanken/Swedbank – Hansa Banks in LT (~2500 employees), LV (~1200), EST (~2300).Nordea - LT (100 employees), LV (117), EST (142).

• Commerce:ICA RIMI – one of the leading retailers in the Baltics;Kesko (FI) – in Latvia and Estonia; JYSK – all 3 countries; Narvesen (NO).

• Hotels:Radisson SAS, Scandic, Reval Baltics;

Page 15: Project Partners

Sectors & Biggest CompaniesSERVICE SECTORS (cont.)SERVICE SECTORS (cont.)

• Security:Group4 Falck, Securitas – 50 % of the market in the Baltic states.

• Telecommunications:Tele2, Ericsson, TDS Mobile International (DK) – all 3 countries;Telia/Sonera – Lithuanian/Estonian/Latvian Telecom; Omnitel GSM (LT) - 100 % of GSM companies are owned by Nordic.

MANUFACTURING SECTORSMANUFACTURING SECTORS• Building:

NCC; Constructus.• Textile & Wood:

Many small enterprises producing for Nordic companies (e.g. IKEA).

Page 16: Project Partners

General TU membership in the Baltic countries

• LV - ~15 %

• ES - ~12 %

• LT - ~12%

TU membership in the Nordic companies

• ~ 15.000 members in the Baltic states:

–ES - ~8.000;

–LV - ~4.500;

–LT - ~2.500.

25 % of these members are in the

telecommunications sector.

Page 17: Project Partners

Main sectors and membership in 3 Baltic countriesSector Country No. of

employees Members 05.2004

Members 11.2005

Finance all countries ~12.000 200 230

Security (Falck) all countries ~6.500 50 550

Commerce (RIMI & KESKO)

all countries ~10.000 150 250

Telecom all countries ~7.500 4.000

Brewery LT/LV ~1.200 500

Petrol (Statoil) all countries ~2000 400 500

Page 18: Project Partners

Web Page - www.baltictu.net

Page 19: Project Partners

Project ResultsWeb Page - www.baltictu.net

Information on:• Nordic-Baltic co-operation - links to trade unions,

commont projects (including ), etc.;• Data base on Nordic companies in the Baltic countries

and trade unions; • Migration - information for migrant workers prepared

by Nordic unions and governments;• Events in the framework of the project - calendar and

reports/photos from activities.

Page 20: Project Partners

Project Results -Local Activities

There were different activities organised in:

Estonia• meetings with employees in Falck Security;• meeting with the employer in Falck Security;• meetings with employees in Kesko Food AS;• meetings with employees in Rimi;• Skanska shop steward took part at Skanska EWC as an

observer;• information material prepared and printed.

Page 21: Project Partners

Project Results - Local Activities (2)There were different activities organised in:

Latvia• meetings with employees in Rimi;• meetings with the management of Rimi Latvia and ICA

Baltic; • meetings with employees in Kesko Food AS;• meetings with employers and employees in Nordea Bank• protest campaign against outsourcing in the telecom sector;• information material prepared and printed;• Meetings planned in the building, industry and food sectors.

Page 22: Project Partners

Project Results - Local Activities (3)Lithuania

• meetings at workplaces organised by Lithuanian TU of Textile Workers and TU of Forestry Workers;

• distribution of organising leaflets in Rimi;

• meetings with employees in Falck Security;

• meetings with employers and employees in Nordea Bank;

• representative from Lietuvos Draudimas (Danish Codan) took part in EWC;

• collective agreement signed for subcontracting companies in the building sector (in co-operation with Danish SID).

Trade unions established in:• Falck Security Lithuania (DK)• Texdana; textile enterprise (DK)• Hansa bank Lithuania (SE)• Hair and Beauty sector (in co-operation with Danish DFKF)

Page 23: Project Partners

Challenges (1)• sectoral competition;• not clear which union should organise new sectors;• different regional division to GUFs (Baltic countries

are in different sub-regions);• necessity of structural changes (strengthening of

regional structures, individual membership, flexible membership schemes);

• necessity to have closer co-ordination with Nordic TU secretariats;

• campaigning should be organised both in Nordic and Baltic countries at the same time;

Page 24: Project Partners

Challenges (2)• necessity of sub-regional (Nordic-Baltic)

framework agreement;• 90 % of membership in Nordic companies are

from past times;• little/no membership in new sectors;• outsourcing;• subcontracting;• call centres;• migration.

Page 25: Project Partners

Sources• http://www.investinestonia.com• http://www.lsd.lt• http://www.liaa.gov.lv• http://www.csb.lv/