Workers' Cooperatives in Italy between Solidarity and Autocratic Centralism

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International Forum Rethinking Economy: Social/Solidarity economy in China and the World, Beijing, April 27-28, 2013 Workers' Cooperatives in Italy between Solidarity and Autocratic Centralism Devi Sacchetto (University of Padua), Marco Semenzin (University of Padua)

Session Overview Prologue: worker cooperatives strike. What happened to Italian cooperatives? An outline of the Italian cooperative movement (1854-1980) The growth of cooperatives in the last twenty years New management and networking patterns Cooperative working conditions in front of the out-sourcing system

The strike of worker cooperatives in the logistic sector The strike in the logistic sector of 22nd March 2013: migrant worker cooperatives The sub-contract model of big multinationals: DHL, TNT, GLS, IKEA. The need for a new rank and file trade unions Stop the exploitation in the cooperatives! No! To the Bossi-Fini law (i.e. strong link between residence permit and work contract) Porterage Cooperatives=Slavery

The Italian cooperative movement in XIX century The long tradition of the Italian co-operative movement (1854): an instrument of self-defence for the working class, not only against the owners, but also to avoid emigration. The co-operative movement embraced three different political ideologies in the XIX century: 1) co-operatives are a way of developing an association of free producers, in order to overcome the contradictions between capital and labour (Giuseppe Mazzini). 2) Co-operatives are a way to defend and organise the working class (socialists and then communists). 3) Co-operatives are a way to help poor people to survive without changing the Italian class division (Liberals). Liguria Cooperative Alliance

The umbrella organizations Three largest umbrella organizations 1) Legacoop (of socialist origin), founded in 1886 2) Confcooperative (of Catholic inspiration) founded in 1919 3) Liberal peak organization. Liberal co-ops were the first founded around the middle of the XIX century, but their organization as a group has always been loose.

Fascist regime (1922-1943) and the cooperative movement An high point of cooperative movement is in 1922: 8,000 associated cooperatives and two million partners Fascism destroies co-operatives (especially the socialist ones) or place the movement under control in the Fascist National Cooperation Body. Some leaders of cooperatives offered their technical experience to the Fascist regime. Ideological continuity with the elements of cooperation designed to unite the interests of workers and of employers.

A slow renaissance after World War II Legacoop (socialist and communist orientation) and Confcooperative (Catholic) immediately reorganized because of the Cold War. The liberal umbrella organization was formed in 1952 as Agci. Other two smaller peak organizations were added later: Unci in 1975 and Unicoop in 2004. The 1948 new Italian constitution (art. 45) recognized the interest of the nation in the promotion of co-operation as a way of keeping together economic activity and solidaristic motivations. 1950-1960s Italian economic boom based on capital-intensive sectors, while cooperatives remained anchored to the defense of the working class with scarce funds.

The turning points 1) The first turning point is in 1950s when the Italian Communist Party decided to ally itself with the middle class and embrace the «enterprise culture». The priority was to develop a trade union subordinate to Party directives and a cooperative movement that could support them. 2) The second turning point is the strong workers struggles between 1968-1980: limits the forms of co-operatives that were sweatshops, but helps the left wing parties to obtain some bills in favour of cooperatives. 3) The defeat of the working class movement in the late seventies substantially modified the cooperative system: cooperatives open up to meritocracy and they enter in the market. In the economic crisis of 1970 s cooperative movement proposed itself as a "valuable resource" and a "real force" in order to overcome the recession. 3) The fourth turning point occurs with the collapse of Soviet Union and the changes in the Italian political system (traditional political parties crisis and weakening of the trade unions)

Growing inside and outside national borders In the 1990s the role of the cooperatives as a "driving force" in favour of the political parties ended. Some cooperatives became Joint stock companies A new business-style approach ensured a growth and a transformation from small to medium large sized structures and to fund cooperative groups (consortium) Only big cooperatives could survive in the global market. Legacoop and Confcooperative fund Obiettivo Lavoro a Temporary Work Agency (TWA). Obiettivo Lavoro is the third largest TWA in Italy after Manpower and Adecco and it is present in Romania, Poland, Brazil, Peru and Bolivia.

Stagnation of Italian economy and growth of new cooperative The expansion of the cooperative movement is due to several factors including the low cost of labour and the generous tax breaks provided for non-profit companies. In 2011 the three pillars of the cooperative movement, Legacoop, Confcooperative, and the Agci came together in the Alliance of the Italian cooperatives : turnover of 140 billion Euros (7% of the Italian GDP); 43,000 companies with more than 12 million partners: 1.3 million employees in total (7.2% of Italian employees).

The structure of Italian cooperative Cooperatives and employees 1951-2011 Numbers of cooperatives % of Total companies Number of Employees 1951* 10,782 0.7 137,885 2.0 1961* 12,229 0.6 192,088 2.2 1971* 10,744 0.5 207,477 1.9 1981* 19,900 0.7 362,435 2.8 1991* 35,646 1.1 584,322 4.0 2001* 53,393 1.2 935,239 5.8 2011** 79,949 1.5 1,310,388 7,2 % of total employees Source: *Istat, Censuses of Industry and the Service Sector, various years (Menzani, Zamagni 2010) and ** Censis 2012.

Cooperatives and employees by economic sector (2011) No. of coop. % % of total company Coop. Employees % % of total employees Agricolture, forestry and fishing 9.042 11.3 1.09 101,949 7.8 8.6 Industry 6,162 7.7 1.10 103,078 7.9 2.3 Construction sector 16,454 20.6 1.99 66,702 5.1 3.2 Services: total 48,047 60,1 1.57 1,037,501 79.2 9.9 Trade, retail, public service and turism 7,069 8.8 0.40 120.616 9.2 2.4 Transport and logistic 8,867 11.1 5.47 257,538 19.7 24.0 Media, finance and real estate Service to the company and consultancy 5,612 7.0 1.20 99,507 7.6 6.5 12,074 15.1 3.83 250,055 19.1 15.7 Social service 14,425 18.0 4.30 309,785 23.6 23.7 Total* 79,949 100 1.50 1,310,388 100 7.2 Source: Censis 2012. * Total include non classified cooperative and other sectors

New kind of cooperatives Two major segments: 1)larger cooperatives that work in accordance with a relatively convergent model, with respect to capitalist companies, and that increasingly use networks where strong elements of rationalization and efficiency are promoted 2)Small cooperatives that show unrelated working practices: cooperatives with high solidarity values as well as sweatshop cooperatives.

Management models and working conditions in the new cooperative company Ethics and Corporate Social Responsibility: from solidarity to business criteria Ideology of participation but the control remains in the hands of the top managers. A limited social life and participation External workers constitute a substantial part of all employees: 42% of workers in cooperatives are not partners but only employees.

The partner worker An ambiguous employee. Subordinate to managers. Italian and migrant partner workers: protect the workers, not the cooperative Deterioration of internal democracy and of working conditions of members and employees of cooperatives.

The cases of consumer cooperatives : I am not the coop! The large retail sector: Conad and Coop two of the largest cooperative supermarket chain stores in Italy with a market share of approximately 34%. The Chinese partner-workers in the chain of Coop Adriatica sub-contracts. Retail workers are not members of the cooperatives: the consumers are members. Standard employment contracts, mostly part-time with very flexible hours: the just-in-time of the workforce. You are the coop, who can exploit you more than this?

Social cooperatives Sub-contract on behalf of public administration: hospitals, hospices, schools. Flexible hours, physically exhausting, emotionally challenging and low wages. Segmentation of labor market: cooperative workers and civil servants Mostly female: Italian women often employed in skilled jobs and migrants, regardless of educational level, as unskilled. Social cooperatives. Oh, you poor man A dual control : one of the leaders from the cooperatives and one from the company or managers from public administration.

Conclusion Two main changes in the cooperative movement: - overgrowth (cooperative groups) provokes a new kind of management, strong distance between managers and workers, ambiguous relationships between cooperatives that control other cooperatives or big enterprise (Ltd); - out-sourcing process of the welfare state and of private enterprises (i.e in the logistic sector) cause a flourishing of cooperatives where the aim is to decrease the "cost of labor (i.e. the wage).

For the future Small/Big Local/Global Partners/External workers Management patterns Working conditions