Article

Strike trends examined

Below, we examine developments in strikes in Greece since 1975, examining the trends in industrial action and the factors which have been cited as explaining them, largely by trade union-oriented researchers. According to one Greek commentator, in general terms the factors upon which strike action depends are as follows: 'Strikes provide a picture of the particularities of a country’s economic and political conditions. They are seriously influenced by the course of the economic cycle and especially by fluctuations in levels of unemployment, as well as by other non-economic factors. Furthermore, strikes, their fluctuations and their length constitute a determining factor and indicator for labour relations' ('The evolution of strikes in Greece', T Katsanevas, /Labour Relations Review/, No. 3, July 1996). In addition, strikes are trade unions’ most important means of applying pressure to have their economic and institutional demands satisfied, and they represent wage-earners’ ability to harm the employers to which they are addressing their demands, since strikes interrupt the process of production.

Trend in strikes in Greece between 1975 and 2002 showed fluctuations due both to economic factors - such as the economic growth and unemployment - and to non-economic factors - such as the political climate and trade union strength, etc. However, a major fall in strike activity was seen during the 1990s. This feature examines the level of strike activity in Greece since 1975 and the possible reasons for the trends observed.

Below, we examine developments in strikes in Greece since 1975, examining the trends in industrial action and the factors which have been cited as explaining them, largely by trade union-oriented researchers. According to one Greek commentator, in general terms the factors upon which strike action depends are as follows: 'Strikes provide a picture of the particularities of a country’s economic and political conditions. They are seriously influenced by the course of the economic cycle and especially by fluctuations in levels of unemployment, as well as by other non-economic factors. Furthermore, strikes, their fluctuations and their length constitute a determining factor and indicator for labour relations' ('The evolution of strikes in Greece', T Katsanevas, Labour Relations Review, No. 3, July 1996). In addition, strikes are trade unions’ most important means of applying pressure to have their economic and institutional demands satisfied, and they represent wage-earners’ ability to harm the employers to which they are addressing their demands, since strikes interrupt the process of production.

Strikes from 1975 to 2002

Table 1 below sets out the main indicators of strike action in Greece from 1975 to 2002.

Table 1. Numbers of strikers, strikes and lost working hours, 1975-2002
Year No. of strikers No. of strikes Working hours lost
1975 46,374 142 1,743,363
1976 300,759 947 6,145,245
1977 559,858 569 9,643,823
1978 471,305 616 7,406,087
1979 1,262,443 588 12,255,273
1980 1,407,821 726 20,494,944
1981 401,757 466 5,690,988
1982 354,315 968 9,731,263
1983 224,265 585 3,881,889
1984 155,318 280 3,350,324
1985 785,725 456 7,660,879
1986 1,106,420 214 8,839,369
1987 1,609,175 249 16,537,686
1988 449,441 320 6,523,896
1989 795,744 207 9,280,631
1990 1,405,497 200 20,335,313
1991 476,582 161 5,839,663
1992 969,484 166 7,072,008
1993 501,274 83 3,509,044
1994 226,155 56 1,872,899
1995 120,250 43 660,630
1996 233,674 31 1,633,508
1997 216,799 36 1,522,577
1998 214,546 38 1,515,347
1999* 4,411 15 45,618
2002** 103,294 23 816,913

Source: Ministry of Labour. *Figures refer only to the first five months; ** figures refer only to the first six months.

The legalisation and activation of trade unions as soon as democracy was restored in 1974 contributed to a proliferation of strikes. As shown in table 1, from 1975 to 1980 there was a constant rise in the number of strikes and working hours lost as a result. This was due not only to economic but also to political factors, in the sense that after end of the seven-year period of dictatorship up to 1975 workers felt the absence of repression and began to demand more trade union freedoms. In addition, falls in the rate of economic growth and in real wages, in conjunction with extremely low unemployment levels, resulted in an intensification of industrial strife.

The number of working hours lost due to strikes reached its highest point in 1980 (20,494,944 working hours lost and 1,407,821 strikers), in the highly-charged political climate of a pre-general election period. According to H Ioannou ('The unequal development of trade unionism. The 1976-1981 strikes', Labour Relations Review, No. 6, April 1997), '… the spate of strikes in the two years from 1977 to 1980 was for the most part a function of the nationwide and local general strikes and was one aspect of the reversal of the political relations of Greek wage-earners with the New Democracy government in power at that time. The spate of strikes in the two years from 1978 to 1980 constituted industrial action protesting the political power; this explains the reduction in the rate of strikes in individual sectors and the increase in general strikes.'

This peak was followed by a sharp fall in strike activity during 1981 (an election year), a rise in 1982 and another decline in 1983-4. From 1985 to 1987, which was the highest point of a wave of strikes, the number of lost working hours increased steadily. Specifically, in 1986 and 1987 the number of strikers was 1,106,420 and 1,609,175 respectively. This was much higher than the number of strikers in 1985 (785,725) and the highest since the restoration of democracy in 1974 (in terms of the numbers participating in strikes). At the same time, 8,839,369 working hours were lost in 1986 and 16,537,686 in 1987. The figures for 1985 and the first half of 1986 included four nationwide strikes against the restrictive incomes policy being implemented at that time by the Socialist PASOK government.

Strike activity reached another high point in 1990, due to reactions against the economic policy promoted by the conservative New Democracy government elected in April. Thus, 200 strikes, 1,405,597 strikers and 20,335,313 lost working hours were registered in 1990. Of the strikes, 103 were held in the private sector of the economy (both large- and small-scale industry) and 60 in banks and state-run utilities and enterprises. The main causes of these major strikes were the abolition of the second instalment of the cost-of-living wage increase in May 1990, the submission of a first draft bill on the social insurance system to parliament in September of the same year, and the planned privatisation and liquidation of so-called 'ailing' state enterprises (Peiraiki Patraiki, Olympic Catering, Euboea Mining etc).

In 1991, both the number of strikers and the number of lost working hours fell dramatically. The number of strikes increased slightly in 1992, due for the most part to industrial action by workers in public transport, the banks and the Public Power Corporation (DEI), stemming largely from a second draft bill on the social insurance system introduced by the New Democracy government. Since then, there was a steady decrease in the number of strikes throughout the 1990s, when strike action by the trade unions reached a nadir.

The causes put forward by researchers to explain the fall in the number of strikes and the low participation of workers in strikes are: on the one hand, the 'labour peace' ensured by the signing of National General Collective Agreement s and sectoral and enterprise-level agreements; and on the other hand, constant pressure exerted on workers by falling real incomes and growing unemployment, resulting in a constant decline in union membership. Furthermore, the fact that in many cases industrial action has not had the expected results appears to have had a negative impact on workers' desire to take part in strikes.

With regard to the period from 1999 to 2002, a lack of data on annual strike trends, their distribution by sector and their basic causes prevent us from drawing further conclusions. According to the Ministry of Labour, the lack of overall data and the gaps in the most recent data, along with the classification of such data in different categories, are caused, first and foremost, by underperformance of the local Labour Inspectorates and by staff shortages.

Economic cycles and strikes

According to researchers, the fluctuations in strike trends may to a large extent be attributed to fluctuations in the economic cycle and especially in unemployment, as well as to other 'exogenous', non-economic factors.

As can be seen from table 2 below, the course of the economy is significantly linked to the evolution of strikes. Thus, the number of lost working hours moves in inverse proportion to the evolution of real wages and the growth rate of the economy. As a result, when growth rates and real wages fall, there is an upsurge of strikes, presumably aimed at satisfying workers’ demands associated with the loss of pay. Conversely, when growth rates and wages increase, industrial action declines. The same is true of the development of inflation and unemployment. When there is an increase in inflation, industrial action also increases, presumably for the purpose of exerting pressure on those in power so that losses of pay can be offset. Furthermore, when unemployment is low, as it was in the 1970s, or it stabilises for a long period at relatively higher levels without increasing , as it did over 1982-90, then there is an intensification of strike action. Just the opposite occurs (ie a fall in strike action) when unemployment is constantly on the rise, as was the case during the 1990s.

Various studies on strike trends have found that strike activity decreases in times of increased unemployment, due to workers’ unwillingness to organise in trade unions, mainly due to fear of dismissal. Conversely, strike activity intensifies in periods of increased employment, because then the unions demand pay increases from a position of power. In the words of K Vergopoulos, writing about the Greek situation in 2001: 'whereas the economy appears to have now entered a new cycle of growth, social demands have not decreased but rather have proliferated and intensified, even against the left-wing government. Whereas in the recent past the 'urgent social issue' was the preservation of social cohesion, nowadays the concept of 'social stability', making up for lost ground as far as wages are concerned and warding off economic and social threats are put forward much more.'

Furthermore, researchers have maintained that industrial action increases and trade unions gain strength in the growth stage of the economic cycle, while conversely members are lost, with a resultant lower union density, during a downturn in economic activity. From a trade union perspective, according to D Katsoridas ('Economic cycles and waves of strikes', Enimerossi, INE/GSEE-ADEDY, No. 58, April 2000), this is because: the capitalist system cannot grant workers’ demands, due to the economic crisis; and there is a large number of unemployed people willing to serve as a reserve pool of labour, effectively putting pressure on people in employment.

Non-economic factors which appear to affect the evolution of strikes include pre- or post-election periods, incomes policy, the political climate, the prevailing ideological trends, government policy, trade union power and wage increases in individual sectors (see T Katsanevas, 1996, cited above and 'Causes and trends in industrial action in the countries of the European Union and Greece', Labour Relations Review, No. 12, October 1998). In particular, some analysts maintain that during pre-election periods there are usually intense strike mobilisations in Greece. The basic reason for this is that the trade unions consider themselves able to take advantage of the election climate, because at such times those in power are more likely to make concessions, and to press for better pay and an institutional framework for their demands

Table 2. Unemployment, economic growth, real wages, inflation and strikes, 1975-99
. Unemployment rate (%) Economic growth rate (%) Real wages growth (%) Inflation (%) Hours lost due to strikes No. of strikers
1975 2.3 6.4 6.1 13.4 1,743,363 46,374
1976 1.9 6.9 8.7 13.3 6,145,245 300,759
1977 1.7 2.9 8.7 12.2 9,643,823 559,858
1978 1.9 7.2 9.4 12.5 7,406,087 471,305
1979 1.9 3.3 2.6 19.0 12,255,273 1,262,443
1980 2.7 0.7 -7.4 24.9 20,494,944 1,407,821
1981 4.0 -1.6 -2.6 24.5 5,690,988 401,757
1982 5.8 -1.1 5.3 21.1 9,731,263 354,315
1983 7.9 -1.1 1.1 20.2 3,881,889 224,265
1984 8.1 2.0 2.0 18.5 3,350,324 155,318
1985 7.8 2.5 1.4 19.3 7,660,879 785,725
1986 7.4 0.5 -8.9 23.0 8,839,369 1,106,420
1987 7.4 -2.3 -4.4 16.4 16,537,686 1,609,175
1988 7.7 4.3 5.8 13.5 6,523,896 449,441
1989 7.5 3.8 8.3 13.7 9,280,631 795,744
1990 7.0 0.0 -2.0 20.4 20,335,313 1,405,497
1991 7.7 3.1 -3.5 19.5 5,839,663 476,582
1992 8.7 0.7 -3.5 15.9 7,072,008 969,484
1993 9.7 -1.6 -4.0 14.4 3,509,044 501,274
1994 9.6 2.0 0.0 10.9 1,872,899 226,155
1995 10.0 2.1 3.6 8.9 660,630 120,250
1996 10.3 2.4 0.6 8.2 1,633,508 233,674
1997 10.3 3.5 7.6 5.5 1,522,577 216,799
1998 10.8 3.1 1.5 4.8 1,515,347 214,546
1999 11.7 3.4 2.4 2.6 45,618 4,411

Source: Ministry of National Economy and Ministry of Labour.

Strikes by sector

Table 3 below sets out the number of working hours lost through strikes by sector of activity over 1975-99.

Table 3. Working hours lost due to strikes by sector, 1975-99
. Total Mines and quarries Industry Electricity/water supply Construction/public works Trade Transport and communications Banks/insurance Other services
1975 1,743,363 392,282 872,957 5,904 53,360 36,372 368,391 130 13,957
1976 6,145,245 352,051 2,532,714 546,721 81,698 195,313 1,630,292 516,294 146,494
1977 9,643,823 1,306,992 3,784,320 341,710 634,508 101,977 2,282,567 342,563 844,911
1978 7,406,087 158,362 1,670,317 344,545 1,017,767 153,550 2,290,756 474,348 466,231
1979 12,255,273 93,079 2,097,091 1,391,360 1,891,611 144,010 1,377,805 2,016,782 351,027
1980 20,494,944 169,392 1,946,297 876,405 3,771,940 129,291 2,471,331 4,778,737 2,309,361
1981 5,690,988 237,132 2,048,408 61,973 1,539,004 191,006 844,788 436,303 283,127
1982 9,731,263 413,365 4,815,041 16,504 555,162 199,436 317,784 3,635,228 126,463
1983 3,881,889 141,192 2,015,496 46,389 606,655 54,604 124,006 585,711 104,992
1984 3,350,324 211,890 2,219,068 19,318 507,421 49,143 98,349 1,888 153,046
1985 7,660,879 96,256 1,810,658 368,175 590,976 201,980 771,367 996,066 1,477,839
1986 8,839,369 27,320 367,696 330,336 626,848 41,736 1,566,792 735,537 1,469,960
1987 16,537,686 48,632 1,267,351 718,525 424,825 41,910 808,247 2,048,885 796,943
1988 6,523,896 193,440 1,680,103 898,618 303,827 181,289 511,763 224,217 1,603,168
1989 9,280,631 270,576 1,069,966 631,880 144,600 13,936 377,524 1,058,622 1,159,783
1990 20,335,313 828,602 960,821 4,119,374 180,773 9,750 1,354,609 5,012,001 1,480,631
1991 5,839,663 47,292 809,151 109,102 1,217,580 20,972 1,206,305 286,184 307,519
1992 7,072,008 133,862 1,006,516 144,887 1,211,792 85,648 104,158 77,274 65,832
1993 3,509,044 23,832 161,802 56,640 709,252 2,000 138,347 16,187 2,600
1994 1,872,899 28,456 68,966 448 408,028 320 14,688 448 176
1995 660,630 8,952 33,480 . 362,472 . . . 1,600
1996 1,633,508 2,768 124,944 7,960 311,352 7,440 13,184 2,472 2,048
1997 1,522,577 nd nd nd nd nd nd nd nd
1998 1,515,347 nd nd nd nd nd nd nd nd
1999 45,618 nd nd nd nd nd nd nd nd
Total 173,192,267 5,185,725 33,363,163 11,036,774 17,151,451 1,861,683 18,673,053 23,245,877 13,167,708

Source: Ministry of Labour.

As indicated by table 3, the sectors with the most, longest and most intense industrial strife over the period examined were industry and banks/insurance. The banking sector appears to have seen the most activity during the 1979-80 and 1989-90 periods. A political confrontation in August was the high point of strike activity in the banking sector during an intensive period of industrial action in 1979. In the 1989-90 period, too, during which there were three successive general elections and a short-lived right/left coalition government in power as well as an 'ecumenical' government, there was an intensification of strike activity by bank employees.

All the other sectors have shown fluctuations in their strike activity over time, depending on the political and economic situation and the degree to which their sectoral position is affected by employers or the state. For example, in industry the most strike activity occurred in 1977-8 and 1981-2. The first period was marked by protests against Law 330, and in the second period – in effect immediately after the PASOK government came to power (when strong left-wing tendencies still prevailed) – industrial workers, particularly when the issue of the so-called 'ailing' public companies arose, hoped for better pay and job security, through the 'socialisation' of these companies. H Ioannou (1997, cited above) estimates that in the 1976-81 period, strike activity in the large- and small-scale industry sector, as well as in mining, developed almost exclusively on the 'primary' level - ie at the level of individual units of production, with isolated industrial action - in contrast with the other sectors where strikes organised on the 'secondary' level - ie at the level of trade union federations - also took place. The evidence suggests that this was also the case with the subsequent industrial action in the sector. Since then, strike activity in industry has been constantly decreasing, except for a slight increase in 1986-8 caused by the PASOK government’s severely restrictive incomes policy. Subsequently, strike activity again began to fall, with a very slight increase in 1991-2 mostly due to action by workers in 'ailing' enterprises, when the New Democracy government was seeking to privatise the viable ones and close down the rest. From 1993 on, strikes in this sector continued to decrease.

Another sector with major strike activity was electricity/water supply, essentially involving workers at the Public Power Corporation (DEI). Their strike activity was on the rise during the 1977-9 period, culminating in a large strike at DEI in 1979. The most notable intensification of strikes occurred in 1989-90, when strikes by DEI workers reached the highest levels in the company's post-war history, comparable to that of banking workers. Thereafter, during the whole of the 1990s, the trend was downward.

Workers in construction and public works also took notable strike action, for the most part during the 1977-80 period, reaching a high point in 1980. The reasons for this intensification of strikes related to a downturn in construction activity and rising unemployment, as well as to protests aimed at the political authorities and the state (according to H Ioannou, 1997, cited above). Since that time, industrial action in this sector has been on the decline, with a slight recovery in 1991-2. As T Katsanevas (1996, cited above) points out, 'The protracted economic recession appears to be associated to a significant degree with the precipitous drop in construction and building activity which has justifiably been described in the past as the driving force behind the Greek economy. This negative development was further exacerbated by the inflow of illegal foreign workers into the sector.'

In the transport and communications sector, there was an intensification of strike activity in 1976-80, 1985-7 (a period of restrictive incomes policy) and 1990-2.

Finally, as regards the sectors of mining, trade and other services, which are characterised by low union density and activity, they were not of decisive importance to overall strike activity during the whole period between 1975 and 1996. However, the mining sector is a minor exception, particularly during 1975-7, when strike activity was stepped up. According to H Ioannou (1997, cited above) 'decisive for the course of collective activities of employed earners in the sector was the acute industrial strife at Mantoudi in 1976 and at Mandem-Lako in Chalkidiki in 1977, which ended in defeat for the workers’ movement and in violent interventions by the mechanisms of repression.' Strike activity in this sector did not show any further increase until 1990.

On the basis of calculations of lost working hours by sector of economic activity, industry and banks would appear to have experienced the most strike activity during the whole period from 1975 to 1996, on the basis of available data (33,363,163 hours lost in industry and 23,245,877 in banks). It may be concludes that workers in industry and the banks act as leaders in relation to those in other sectors.

Commentary

The decline in industrial action during the 1990s was due to the tactical defeats that workers had suffered in the preceding period. The basic reasons for the fall in strike activity were the restrictive economic measures implemented by all governments after 1990, followed by increased unemployment and 'labour peace', which, as mentioned above, was secured by the signing of National General Collective Agreements. Thus, despite the relative large-scale nature of workers’ mobilisations, particularly in public utilities and banks, there was less strike activity in the private sector of the economy (large- and small-scale industry, trade and construction). Nevertheless, at the end of 2000 there appeared to be a turnaround in the downward trend due to new legislative regulations on labour issues in autumn 2000, aimed at further deregulation of the labour market (GR0012190N), as well as to attempts to reform the social insurance system in the basic areas of increasing retirement ages, reducing benefits and increasing the contributions of insured persons (GR0104106F).

Overall, the relative lack of strike activity in the 1990s was arguably a result of the long-term political practice of those in power who systematically cultivated the ideology of 'social consensus', 'labour peace', 'mild monetarism', the 'national' necessity of economic austerity, 'productivity of labour' and capitalist 'modernisation', in effect placing the authority of employers and the 'hyper-profitability' of capital outside labour’s range of fire (as argued by N Grammatikos and D Katsoridas in 'Globalisation & modern Greek intellectuals: A reality, a fabricated argument or a policy?', a presentation to the 8th Scientific Conference of the Sakis Karagiorgas Foundation, entitled Ideological currents and trends among contemporary intellectuals in present-day Greece”, held on 28-31 March 2001 at Panteios University). As a result, given the negative position of the labour force due to increased unemployment, the disorganisation of company-level unions was only to be expected, along with the break-up of the trade unions in the 'ailing' public companies (inasmuch as many of these firms ceased operations or were privatised), and passivity among public servants. Thus, it is argued, a position of labour inactivity and social inertia, and an attitude regarding the worker as a supplicant before the authority of the state and the employers, became entrenched in the consciousness of workers.

However, as experience to date has shown, most working people will not agree to take part in the country’s general progress without putting forward economic demands and without a direct, rapid improvement of their position. At the same time, workers will take an active part in the trade union movement only on condition that their economic situation is improved. This situation could not be any different, because wage-earners’ living conditions, even in 'normal' periods, are very difficult. (Dimitris A Katsoridas and Giorgos Kollias, INE/GSEE-ADEDY)

Eurofound recommends citing this publication in the following way.

Eurofound (2003), Strike trends examined, article.

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