Workers' Rights: A Race To The Bottom?
French workers have staged sometimes violent protests this year against changes to labour laws - are they and other employees around the world more vulnerable than ever?
Are the rights of the world's workers being eroded too far in the pursuit of economic growth?
France has been plunged into sometimes violent industrial unrest so far this year as the government attempts to push through changes to restrict collective bargaining and make it easier for bosses to fire workers. It says the new rules are needed to stimulate business - a view shared by powerful economic forces like the IMF. But do labour reforms always bring greater prosperity? Or do they leave workers vulnerable to profit-hungry corporations, and increase inequality?
Is there a middle way between workers' rights and good business? Ed Butler is joined by Raymond Torres, director of research at the International Labour Organisation, Zoe Lanara, head of international relations at the Greek General Confederation of Labour, and Dan Mitchell, an economist with the Cato Institute in Washington.
(Photo: French CGT union members protesting in Marseilles. Credit: Boris Horvat, Getty Images)
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"To hire someone is like marrying them"
Duration: 01:08
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Collective bargaining "going down the drain"
Duration: 00:41
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- Sun 24 Jul 2016 02:06GMT大象传媒 World Service except Australasia, News Internet & South Asia
- Sun 24 Jul 2016 04:06GMT大象传媒 World Service Australasia & South Asia only
- Sun 24 Jul 2016 10:06GMT大象传媒 World Service except News Internet
- Sun 24 Jul 2016 13:06GMT大象传媒 World Service Australasia
- Sun 24 Jul 2016 14:06GMT大象传媒 World Service West and Central Africa
- Sun 24 Jul 2016 22:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except News Internet
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