BULLETIN
148
Workers and vocational training
January-April 2000
(Full
text available only in Spanish)
THIS ISSUE
Cinterfor/ILO Boletín N° 148 is devoted to the new links that have
emerged - or are bound to emerge between the trade-union movement,
historical representative of the aspirations of workers, and vocational
training. In recent years the latter has undergone a veritable transformation,
as a result of the need to adapt to the political, economic and technological
changes having taken place at the end of the millennium.
On the other hand, the trade-union movement beleaguered by the
dismantling of traditional industries and unemployment is rather
late in resorting to vocational training elevated to the rank of central
bargaining point, on a par with what were the "historic" interests
of trade-unionism in the region: the struggle for wages, the defence
of work posts and social justice. This comparative delay can perhaps
be attributed to the fact that instead of constituting a "cause"
comparable to other vindications of the workers movement, vocational
training pervades them all, appearing to be both vague and omnipresent.
It is therefore necessary to begin systematising the challenges that
that problem poses for the trade-union movement, as well as trade-union
thinking on the matter in recent times.
This issue of the Cinterfor/ILO Boletín starts with a paper by Marcos
Supervielle that analyses the way in which the shift from a technocentric
view of progress to an anthropocentric one, stressing the role of workers
in productive processes, has led workers and their representative organisations
(trade unions) to ascribe a new value to vocational training.
A document prepared by Fernando Casanova and Gonzalo Graña
describes the current situation regarding participation by trade-union
movements in the institutional arrangements of vocational training in
the region as a result of a present-day paradox: the declining share
of the State in national training organisations has caused other participating
agents (trade unions and employers) quite naturally to move in, so that
the former have regained the ground they had been losing.
Oscar Valverde, starting from a historical review of guilds
and trades in the Lower Middle Ages moves over to present times, wherein
the different training systems have to be brought together. He feels
that such integration has to be co-managed by the trade-union movement,
as the only possible guarantee of greater equity and social justice.
Zeroing in on this objective, Carlos Rodríguez examines the
links between vocational training and basic education. No satisfactory
vocational training can exist unless the imperfect structures of basic
education in the region are mended. In this case again, vocational training
transcends a number of barriers, and its reformulation forces us to
"rethink" the world.
Hugo Barreto Ghione finds in training a new horizon for trade-union
action. He considers that the coming together of training and labour
bargaining has not happened by accident. Rather, it is part of an agenda
to govern change and revitalise the tripartite approach (the State-employers-workers)
as absolutely essential to reach that objective.
The second part of this Boletín is based on reflections issuing from
the trade-union movement itself. It includes analytical documents from
the trade-union organisations of a number of countries of Iberian America.
However different the national realities of each one of them, they share
a common diagnosis: it is absolutely necessary for the trade-union movement
to get trained and to take part in the reformulation of vocational training
policies, in the face of fallacies such as the dictum that privatisation
means efficiency, and in defence of public spaces endangered by neo-liberal
and ultra-liberal economic policies in the region.
The initial article in this chapter presents both the conceptual ideas
and action concerning vocational training of the Trade-union Forum for
the Overall Training of Workers a collegiate body of the General
Workers Federation (CGT) of Argentina. It underlines that participation
by organised workers movements is an essential requirement to
legitimise any political social or economic project. Based on this premise,
the Forum develops its views on the many aspects of labour relations
in general, and vocational training systems in particular.
In Brazil, where a great deal of the training offer is in private hands,
documents by the union organisations CUT and Força Sindical point to
the need that the trade-union movement should regain leadership in that
field, developing new models of decentralised tripartite arrangements,
at state and municipal level, reflecting the local individualities of
the populations concerned.
The workers organisations of Colombia (CGDT, CTC, CUT, SINDESENA)
proclaim their defence of the National Training Service (SENA) and maintain
that it should be reformed rather than abolished. Such is the sense
of papers presented by Wilson Arias Carrillo, Luis Eduado Garzón,
Roberto Gómez Esquerra and Luis Miguel Morantes.
The document drafted by Alberto Jménez of the CTRP of Panama
dwells on the purposes and objectives of education, and is in favour
of an all-inclusive education, for the overall instruction of individuals
and citizens, in co-ordination with the requirements of productive work
and social obligations.
The document submitted by the trade-union delegation of Uruguay, PIT-CNT
to the Uruguayan National Employment Board (JUNAE), lays stress on the
fact that the knowledge held by workers is a productive capital that
has been undermined by the other social actors. It points out that smart
enterprises cannot exist without ascribing their proper value to all
parties concerned. Participation by all actors is the only way to prevent
situations that would otherwise lead to conflict.
The contribution of the Spanish trade-union organisations CC.OO and
UGT is contained in a document with their proposals to the Action Plan
for Employment of the Year 2000. The paper embodies the ideas of Spanish
trade unionism on the components and aims that an employment plan requires
to be effective and efficient in the struggle against unemployment and
to make way in the attainment of social justice.
Perhaps the most important common denominator of all these documents
is the semantic revolution with which workers upturn the concepts issuing
from economic and political theories: adaptability, employability, occupational
competence, flexibility, etc. They transform them into veritable critical
"boomerangs" of those very same theories, and send them back
loaded with the human and civic values and the solidarity they have
invested them with.
This "semantic revolution" is an indication that the trade-union
movement of the region is beginning to experience a new "cosmic
view" vis-à-vis the world of labour of the coming century and intends
to play a role in it that it had been neglecting, perhaps through lack
of focus.
Social dialogue in general, and on vocational training in particular,
is a practice that has repeatedly proved to be effective in obtaining
satisfactory results or at least acceptable to the social actors
involved. A paradigm of social dialogue in training is the Spanish system
of continuous training managed by the FORCEM Foundation, a bipartite
body. The articles included in the third chapter of this Boletín bear
witness to the importance ascribed by Cinterfor/ILO to social dialogue
on training. They also reflect the views on vocational training of actors
on the labour scene other than trade unions.
Javier Ferrer Dufol recounts the results obtained in Spain through
the collaboration of the social actors in the field of vocational training
and underlines the importance of social dialogue in meeting the challenge
of creating employment.
Claudio de Moura Castro analyses the effects of business management
on vocational training in Brazil, through what is known as the "S
System". After describing how the training organisations making
up that system came about, he considers what management implies in terms
of adapting training to the needs of firms and enterprises. The financing
of training is also an important element in Moura Castros article.
This special number closes with two contributions by the International
Labour Organisation ILO. The first one is a transcript of the
resolution
adopted by the 88th ILO International Labour Conference (Geneva,
June 2000) on the Development of Human Resources. It revalues the
concept of man as an essential resource for development, and makes an
appeal so that all men without exception may have access to the basic
and technical-vocational training necessary to get a decent job. It
underlines that education and training by themselves will not solve
the problem of employment, unless they are co-ordinated with economic
policies also promoting mans full development, specially targeting
those sectors of the world population that have been left out by economic
growth.
The second one is the
address by the ILO Director General in Rome, on 1st May 2000,
in the presence of Pope John Paul II, during the celebration of the
Workers Jubilee. On that occasion Sr. Juan Somavía urged the representatives
of workers and employers to come together in a "global coalition"
for decent work, and made a "lay" plea for a review of the
rules governing world economy, to infuse them with the ethical substance
they now lack.
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