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THE OTHER SIDE OF GLOBALIZATION: A WORLD WIDE MINIMUM WAGE
by Herb Rubenstein
CEO, Herb Rubenstein Consulting
Introduction
The current
discussion of globalization focuses on the negatives – the
loss of local cultures, the pollution of emerging countries through
the production of goods shipped to more developed countries and
the maltreatment of workers in “sweatshops.” While the
United States is considered the world’s economic villain by
many, we can look to some of our domestic institutions and economic
policies as a way to redirect the forces of globalization to create
win-win scenarios for emerging countries as well as more developed
countries.
As one of the
first lawyers who worked on issues involving the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act (FCPA), I saw first hand the global reach of U.S.
policy. FCPA made it illegal for any U.S. owned company to pay bribes
or commit other corrupt business practices any where in the world,
even if this activity was not considered illegal in the foreign
country where it took place. FCPA made it illegal for a U.S. owned
company to act in a manner oversees that would violate U.S. domestic
anti-corruption laws.
Wages
and Workers
The basic principle
of this law is sound. We need to extend this principle to the most
essential element of business - - the payment of a minimum level
of wages to workers. In the U.S. we have a floor called the minimum
wage and the law allows no employer to pay less than the minimum
wage (and its related rates for “overtime”) to its non-exempt
employee. I served as the lawyer for several Russians who came to
the United States and were not paid the minimum wage for their work
as a cook and dishwasher in a restaurant. Our case proved that failure
to pay the minimum wage is not dischargeable in many bankruptcy
proceedings. Recently, students at Harvard protested mightily that
the University’s contractors were not paying a “living
wage” to their workers. And the living wage, as defined in
Cambridge, an expensive city is more than twice the national minimum
wage. If it is right for workers in the U.S., Britain, France, Germany
and many other countries to be protected by minimum wage laws and
related overtime protections, it is right for workers in every country
in the world to have these protections.
Creating
the International Framework
How can the
U.S. use the basic principle of the FCPA and apply it to the concept
of creating and enforcing country specific minimum wages throughout
the world. The steps along the path to global minimum wages may
be the subject of some debate. Known processes and established procedures
may not be fully developed to figure out exactly what should be
the minimum wage for each country. But this could easily be accomplished.
For example, a first step could be to create a “World wide
minimum wage commission” under the auspices of the U.N. or
World Bank. This institution would take into account the cost of
living, prevailing wages, living standards and many other measurable
factors including exchange rates to suggest a “minimum wage”
for each country in the world that does not currently have an established
minimum wage. Second, the country could then ratify the minimum
suggested rate or wage and then it could become the law of the country.
Even if the country did not make it a law, through treaties, countries
could agree that their own businesses that hired workers in those
countries would be required to pay the minimum wage. Monitoring
organizations could easily document violations that could be prosecuted
either in an international tribunal or in the country where the
workers were not paid or in the country of origin of the company
not paying the workers the minimum wage.
And if enforcement
were not done by treaty, once a minimum wage is set for each country,
the U.S. could then establish a domestic law that requires every
U.S. owned company or subsidiary operating anywhere in the world
to pay its workers no less than the ratified minimum wage in the
country where these workers were actually employed. Second, as part
of our trade and tariff legislation, the U.S. could extend the principle
behind the “anti-dumping” provisions to require that
every company exporting goods to the U.S. to pay the ratified minimum
wage for that country, including standard overtime provisions.
Conclusion
While globalization
may have created a defecto minimum standard for quality of products
it has failed to set a needed minimum wage rate for the workers
who produce these goods and services. The time has come for the
70 year old concept of a minimum wage to be “globalized.”
This will be the first step toward promoting the concept of a global
livable wage and get the world started on a path toward sharing
the fruits of globalization. Then, and only then, will globalization
be able to create a new face and a new reality that will go far
to ushering in the new “win-win” era necessary to each
country to benefit from the world’s economic development.
In addition a global minimum wage would assist in reducing the immigration
pressure currently affecting many developed nations.
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