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Global
Trade – People for Sale
Paper for the Workshop on Migration and GATS-Mode
4
Prepared by Ramon Bultron, Managing Director
Asia Pacific Mission for Migrants (APMM)
30 September – 2 October 2005
Stuttgart, Germany
First of all, allow me to thank the organizers of
this event for inviting me to speak and share about
the issues and concerns confronting the migrant workers
from the South vis-à-vis GATS Mode 4. This event,
I believe will help the participants of this conference/workshop
to understand migrant workers’ struggle against
the neo-liberal policies of globalization.
This paper will attempt to present the dynamics of
countries within the region where I come from, where
exportation and importation of human labor are dominant.
Migration, rooted in a nation’s economic, political
and social conditions, is varied within the region
especially among country members of the Association
of South East Asian Nations or ASEAN. On one hand,
receiving countries such as Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei
and to a certain degree, Thailand, have significant
numbers of migrant workers from southeast and south
Asia. On the other hand, sending countries like Indonesia,
Philippines, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam have great
numbers of their people working in other countries
to the extent that the first two have clear national
policies of labor export.
The Systematic Exportation of Human Labor
Philippines and Indonesia lead the countries in the
ASEAN with the most number of workers deployed overseas.
For these two countries, overseas employment is very
much a part of the national economy to the extent that
it has developed the most sophisticated labor export
schemes as compared to other countries of the region.
The Philippines started its systematic export of its
workforce way back in the 70s when the country rapidly
slid down the economic ladder. The deteriorating socio-political
situation at that time has led to the institutionalization
of national mechanisms for swifter and more organized
deployment of Filipinos overseas.
Such mechanism served the country first in terms of
saving the economy through the foreign remittances
that migrant workers send. The dollars that overseas
Filipinos send to their economies steadily became the
major factor that consistently cushioned the decline
of national economy.
Secondly, migration also served to ease the socio-political
tension that resulted from the economic crisis. Poverty
and unemployment resulting from the flawed economic
system of the country became the breeding ground for
the forced migration of millions of Filipinos.
To date, OFW remittances remain as one of the top
sources, second only to agriculture, of the nation’s
income.
Deployment of Filipinos abroad has become such a lucrative
industry in the Philippines that the national government
had to establish its own recruitment agency now known
as the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.
Indonesia, meanwhile, started its systematic export
of its nationals in the 1980s. Though even before the
said decade, Indonesians are already present largely
in the Middle East, Singapore and Malaysia, it was
only in this period that the government fully integrated
overseas deployment in its national development program.
The main destinations of Indonesian migrants are Malaysia,
due to its historic ties with Indonesia, and Saudi
Arabia. Singapore also holds a significant number of
Indonesian workers and also, especially for the past
years, countries of East Asia such as Hong Kong and
Taiwan.
Although the labour export program of Indonesia is
not as developed as that of the Philippines, Indonesians
are fast approaching the number of Filipinos in terms
of overseas workers in major labour importing countries.
Like the Philippines, the Indonesian government is
also keen in maximizing migration to generate its much-needed
national income. In 1994-1999, the Indonesia Ministry
of Labour has targeted to send 1.5 million workers
abroad and it is estimated that they will remit about
US$3B.
Overseas deployment as a national policy of the Philippines
and Indonesia has become even clearer since the past
decade.
The economic slide made even faster by the globalization-driven
policies of liberalization, deregulation, privatization
and de-nationalization has displaced many workers,
farmers and other low-paid service workers. These are
the main groups of people who are forced by their dire
situation to work abroad.
Their vulnerability has been exploited by their own
national governments to cushion the blow of crippling
national economic policies. Former Philippine President
Fidel Ramos even sugarcoated the forced migration of
Filipinos by proposing during the APEC Meeting in Manila
in 1996 the concept of “internationally-shared
human resources”.
Taking from the migration of Filipinos and Indonesians,
it can be seen that the major labour-exporting countries
of the ASEAN are the countries that belong to the bottom
economic ladder.
Migrants are Expendable
Sabah in East Malaysia is also a major destination
of migrant workers from the southern Philippines and
Indonesia. It has a major concentration of unauthorized
migrants that include Indonesians who came from Kalimantan
and Filipino Muslims who escaped from the conflict
in Mindanao.
Singapore, meanwhile, is much similar to Malaysia
in its encouragement of foreign professionals. In fact,
Singapore has high prejudice for professionals over
unskilled workers that it offers incentives to them
such as residency status.
Migrant workers in Singapore can be found in the construction
industries although the biggest number of foreign workers
are domestic workers who come mostly from the Philippines.
The migration policy of Singapore has evolved to such
an extent that it has even made the importation of
foreign workers a source of national income by charging
levies to employers who wish to employ non-Singapore
workers.
Such a policy has been copied even by other countries
like Hong Kong that used the Singapore model to implement
an Employment Retraining Levy that now also includes
domestic helpers. Such a levy that will impact the
income of employers of foreign domestic workers was
offset by the HK$400 wage cut implemented the same
year as the levy (2003).
Brunei, meanwhile, like its counterparts in the Middle
East, relies heavily on migrant workers for its main
economic sector that is the oil industry. In fact in
1988, it was estimated that more than 70% of workers
in the private sector are foreign workers. Most of
the migrant workers are from Indonesia.
In Thailand, migrants started to pour in the 1990’s
during the pre-crisis period. Burmese migrants comprise
almost 84% of the total number of foreign workers in
Thailand working mainly in the construction sector,
agriculture and fisheries. Workers from Cambodia and
Vietnam also constitute Thailand’s foreign work
force.
From this migration patterns, it can be gleaned that
labour importing countries within the ASEAN have been,
in the past, relatively easy in accepting foreign workers.
These periods of “welcoming” migrant workers,
authorized or not, correspond to the stage when these
economies experienced economic growth (substantial
or not, or as a whole or in parts).
Migrant workers in these countries have become the
motor that operated the sectors that local workers
have let go in favor of professional or industrial
jobs. These are the jobs, including the construction,
agriculture, and service sectors, which many have come
to consider as the dirty, dangerous and difficult (3D)
ones.
However, in the post 1997 financial and economic crisis
within the region, migrant workers in host countries
have become targets of economic attacks especially
the undocumented migrants who are vulnerable to economic
exploitation, arrest and deportation.
Never in the history of migration of workers within
the ASEAN region has there been massive operations
of host countries to crackdown on undocumented (or
some say unauthorized) migrants.
The celebrated case of deportation of Filipinos and
Indonesians in Sabah highlighted the zeroing in of
host countries on undocumented migrants who, in many
instances, have been made as scapegoats, together with
their legal counterparts, for the social and economic
crisis that besets the ASEAN economies since the 1997
economic crash.
Previous efforts of Malaysia to curb the rise of unauthorized
migrants in the country did not yield any spectacular
change. The policies themselves of Malaysia on foreign
labour frequently change as well reflecting the changes
of its economy.
In general, during the economic “boom” period,
policies on migrants are lax. This can be attributed
to the need of the host countries for the cheaper labour
that migration can provide. When a crisis starts, policies
become stricter to the extent that human rights of
migrant workers are violated as what happened in Sabah
where Malaysian authorities allegedly treated the arrested
migrants inhumanly.
Labor Agreements and Criminalization of Migrant
Workers
Labor agreements in the region whether bilateral or
multilateral is more of labor market niching rather
than promoting and protecting the rights and wellbeing
of migrants.
One example of multilateral agreement is the Bangkok
Declaration on Irregular Migration in 1999. This agreement
did not yield concrete benefits as to the protection
of unauthorized migrants but focused more on the ways
to reduce the number of unauthorized migrants. The
Bangkok declaration was done during the region’s
economic crisis that saw the crackdown of undocumented
migrants in many labour-importing countries.
Agreements with regards to migrant workers remain
largely bilateral in nature as shown by Malaysia’s
agreements with Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand.
Thailand also has an agreement with Burma.
The Philippines, meanwhile, has an umber of migrant-related
agreements with countries outside the ASEAN region.
These agreements pertain more to the regulation of
deployment of Filipino workers to the host countries.
An example of which was the recent agreement made
by the Philippines with South Korea (similar agreements
were made between South Korea and Indonesia and South
Korea and Vietnam), after the recent massive crackdown
of undocumented migrant workers. The bilateral agreements
also followed from the implementation of the new Employment
Permit System (EPS) that allowed a section of undocumented
migrants to work legally in South Korea for a certain
number of years.
The new agreements saw labour-exporting countries
grabbing call of South Korea for new workers in its
factories to replace those who have been deported.
Philippine Labor Secretary Patricia Sto. Tomas herself
has unveiled a new Korea deployment program of the
Philippine Overseas Employment Administration.
Organizations of migrant workers in Korea, however,
fear that the new program will not be able to solve
the issue of undocumented migrants. They said that
the EPS in Korea and the bilateral agreements recently
forged did not include provision for increase of wages
of migrant workers or their protection from abuses
of employers. The EPS even includes a provision restricting
migrant workers from looking for another employer while
in Korea. This will, in fact, lead to more undocumented
migrants as migrant workers leave ran away from their
employers due to unresolved labour issues or abuses.
Global Facilitation of Migration (GATS Mode-4)
Worsens Forced Migration
Now let us look on the global aspects of multilateral
agreements that are now being debated in the WTO specifically
on GATS Mode 4. Generally, GATS is an investment agreement.
However, it also speaks about the movement of people
which is enshrined in the agreement called Mode 4.
It is a multilateral agreement that will ensure the
facilitation of migration in a global scale.
There is a notion on the part of governments that
if we cannot stop out-migration, we might as well help
to facilitate it. Thus, it is seen that GATS is only
a matter of administrative responsibility on the part
of the government and the corporations according to
one of the OECD-WB paper released in 2003.
Another concern is the fear that persons who move
under Mode 4 on a temporary basis will then try to
establish themselves permanently in the host country.
Thus despite the demand from the LDC to open up the
labor market of developed countries, many of the developed
countries like the US and EU are reluctant to accept
Mode 4.
Despite the mantra of free flow of migration, migrant
workers are still the subject of strict visa and immigration
rules of the labor-receiving countries and even worsen
as a result of the US led war on terror.
With this condition both labor sending countries and
developed countries are finding it difficult to reconcile
especially on mode 4 for fear of migrant workers to
settle permanently in the host countries and can create
a condition for the uncontrollable increase in the
numbers of unauthorized migrant workers. However, developed
countries are still interested in Mode 4 but it is
more on the one-sided liberalization of labor market
of the LDC.
With this condition, GATS Mode 4 will only have a
one sided benefit. This will be more advantageous to
the developed countries and multinational corporations
which give free access to service suppliers (personnel
of MNCs) to enter third world countries. It will also
be the source of brain drain (loss of highly-skilled
workers and professionals from third world to developed
countries) and intensify contractualization of labor
globally
On the other hand, since GATS Mode 4 only speaks about
the free flow of labor and not of the safety and protection
of the rights and wellbeing of migrant workers, it
is expected that this agreement will only expose migrant
workers to a poorer working and living conditions.
And because of the worsening economic and political
condition in most of LDC, more migrant workers will
fall victims to exploitation and abuses.
In terms of migrant workers rights to join and form
unions, since Mode 4 will only allow temporary migration,
it will be even more difficult for migrants to form
or join unions and will surely lose negotiating power
in labor disputes and wage negotiations. Thus, migrant
workers can easily be subjected to rotating deployment
via sub-contracting (short-stay, non-renewal of contracts;
seek employment elsewhere);
And since GATS intend to create a common standard
in labor and trade related activities which is even
worse that the current practice, GATS Mode 4 will force
migrant workers to accept more inhuman treatment and
condition including much lower salaries and without
benefits.
To sum-up, I believe that GATS Mode 4 like the other
agreements mentioned above whether multilateral or
bilateral will only strengthen and intensify the existing
labor export policies in most of the third world countries
and can only lead in setting up a standard that is
unfavorable to migrant workers.
In addition, labor agreements that start from the
wrong notion of facilitating migration will only worsen
the exploitative condition of migrant workers for it
does not address the root causes of forced migration.
And for as long as forced migration exist, migrant
workers need to organize their ranks and link their
issues with the struggle back home. It is only through
the united action and struggle of migrant workers that
the rights and wellbeing of migrant workers can be
guaranteed.
Thank you and good day.##
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