IMF affiliates on trade, employment and development

CANADA: Developing a strategy for metalworkers on trade, employment and development was the subject of an IMF seminar that was held at the CAW education center in Canada on October 11 to 14, 2006.

IMF affiliates from South and North America, together with metalworkers from Africa, Europe and Asia, took part in the seminar, which examined the current situation of bi-lateral and multi-lateral negotiations on trade liberalisation.

Participants expressed concern about new trade liberalisation that, if implemented in an inflexible and generalised way, could seriously damage less developed countries and undermine their ability to build their own industrial policy.

Concern was also expressed about the proposed tariff reductions, that could result in the loss of many industrial jobs and increase the overall precarisation of employment conditions, moving workers from permanent jobs to a growing “informal” labour market with little or no labour protection.

There was full agreement among participants on the importance of incorporating mechanisms for labour protection in trade agreements. However it was felt that inclusion of core labour standards is not enough, and that the international trade union movement also needs to present a clear alternative project to neo-liberalism, such as expressed in the IMF Strategies for an Alternative Globalisation. ( http://www.imfmetal.org/main/files/IMFalternativeStrategies_english.pdf)

Texts of the conclusions and recommendations from the seminar and summaries of the presentations are published in English, Portuguese and Spanish on the IMF website.

IMF Working Party on Trade

A meeting of the IMF Working Party on Trade took place in conjunction with the seminar. The impact of FTAs on countries with differing socio-economic conditions was analysed and different trade union views and strategies were discussed.

WP members recommended that IMF activities focus on



The seminar in Canada followed a series of activities held by the IMF in 2006 aimed at developing common strategies and building union capacity to engage with governments, employers and other institutions around policies on trade, employment and development. Two similar seminars were held in Asunción for the South Cone region in April, and in Durban for Southern and East Africa in June.