(March 26, 2019) - - Today, the Communications Workers of America (CWA) published the following information:
At a hearing today before the Trade subcommittee of the U.S. House Ways & Means Committee, Shane Larson, Director of Legislation, Politics and International Affairs for the Communications Workers of America (CWA), testified that the current U.S. trade agreement model “undermines American jobs and the negotiating power of American workers” and highlighted key components of what a new pro-worker model of trade would look like (watch a video recap of the hearing here).
Larson’s testimony noted that, “CWA members have increasingly seen their jobs offshored, generally to countries where workers are denied fundamental human rights, routinely exploited and not paid a decent wage,” and explained that provisions of current trade policies, such as Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) policies, facilitate corporate offshoring that have led to direct harms for CWA members and other workers:
… The downward pressure of offshoring is a major factor in ongoing wage stagnation for CWA members. Wages for U.S. customer service representatives have dropped by 2.7 percent over the last decade. Employers have told us at the bargaining table that they cannot increase wages for call center workers because they couldn’t compete with other companies who are offshoring the work.”
CWA works closely with call center workers in the Philippines, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and elsewhere as part of a solidarity effort to prevent companies from pitting us against one another. However, we currently have no legal protections for these efforts, despite the fact that this dynamic has created downward pressure on wages and standards for all workers on a global level. While trade agreements are structured to give corporations power to work across borders, workers have no similar ability to come together across to improve conditions.”
- Link to prepared written testimony by Shane Larson, Director of Legislation, Politics and International Affairs at the Communications Workers of America (CWA)
- Link to video of the full Trade subcommittee hearing, “Trade And Labor: Creating And Enforcing Rules To Benefit American Workers”
The Communications Workers of America represents 700,000 workers in private and public sector employment in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. CWA members work in telecommunications and information technology, the airline industry, news media, broadcast and cable television, education, health care and public service, law enforcement, manufacturing and other fields. |
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