THE RESPONSE OF MULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISES TO INTERNATIONAL TRADE UNION PRESSURES

1974 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. C. Roberts ◽  
Jonathan May
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolai Nalbandian ◽  

The focus of this article is an employment of option contracts by economic agents when hedging a price risk in international trade of agriculture and food commodities. Despite a serious downturn in the world economy accompanied with major logistics and global value chains disruptions caused by Coronavirus disease in 2020, international agri-food trade demonstrates a sustainable growth supported by a constantly waxing demand due to continuous increase in population and improvement in living standards as well as a higher supply due to modern technological progress. It therefore implies that a comprehensive price risk management system should be introduced to avoid or minimize market participants’ exposure to potentially adverse future events. The article is devoted to the study of the key advantages of using options as an integrated element within such a system. Comparative analysis of future and option contracts is conducted to better understand their respective application depending on a risk profile of an event. The economic nature of options is presented from the perspective of a concept of price insurance that provides for an existence of a certain risk premium determined by market forces which is paid by economic agents to obtain such a price guarantee. Fundamental characteristics of an option contract as a financial derivative, its types and features, reason of usage according to the goals that economic agents, including e.g., powerful multinational enterprises (MNE), try to achieve depending on their specific market position are described. The article explains situations of economic agents, both producers and processors of agricultural commodities on the one hand (acting as hedgers) and speculators one the other hand (acting as such), being naturally long or naturally short as well as respective tactics based on options they adhere to with the aim of protecting their positions against unfavorable moves in market prices. Thus, the fact it refers to real scenarios of using options as price risk hedging tools which international traders can utilize when moving agricultural and food commodities globally, reinforces opinion that this article is of a significant practical importance.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ricardo Framil Filho ◽  
Leonardo Mello e Silva

This article analyses the origins, development and organisation of cross-union, company-based trade union networks in transnational corporations in the metal and chemical industries in Brazil. Collectively developed by local, national, foreign and international trade union organisations, this kind of union action was introduced in the country in the early 2000s as a way to connect local labour representatives organising workers in different locations within the same company. Networks strengthen local labour power and stimulate transnational connections. Promoting solidarity among workers across multiple factories, they offer the perspective for a global unionism connected to shop-floor organisation. Despite these achievements, networks face important challenges. Power imbalances, the reliance on restrictive social dialogue arrangements and the compromise with traditional structures limit the reach of the strategy.  KEY WORDS: globalisation; trade unions; new labour transnationalism; trade union networks; Brazil


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Gumbrell-McCormick

This article presents the author's reflections on the possibilities of a restructuring of the international trade union movement, on the basis of a collective research project to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) which seeks to open a debate within the movement over the lessons to be learned from its history as a guide for its future action. The most important question facing the trade union movement today is what is generally called 'globalisation', a phenomenon that goes back many years, both in terms of economic developments and labour struggles. From this perspective, the paper examines the basis for the existing divisions of the international labour movement, before going over the work of the ICFTU and of the International Trade Secretariats (ITSs) to achieve the regulation of the multinational corporations and of the international economy, and concluding on the prospects for unity of action in the unions' work around the global economy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holger Weiss

AbstractThe International Trade Union Committee of Negro Workers (ITUCNW) was a radical trans-Atlantic network for the propagation of black proletarian internationalism, established by the Red International of Labour Unions in 1928. Its key mastermind was James W. Ford, an African American communist labour union activist who was in charge of the organization and its operations until the autumn of 1931. This article critically highlights Ford's ambitions as well as the early phase of the organization. Both in terms of its agenda and objective as well as in its outreach among black workers in the Black Atlantic, the ITUCNW and its main propagators stressed the “class-before-race” argument of the Comintern rather than the pan-Africanist “race-before-class” approach. This is not surprising as the ITUCNW was one of the organizations that had been established when the Comintern and the RILU had started to apply the “class-against-class” doctrine, which left no room for cooperation between communists and radical pan-Africanists.


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