In
the world of the nineties and after, where cutthroat competition is the
reigning dictum and the corporate sector has seen major upheavals, workers'
well being increasingly is treated as a rather superfluous concern that
can be sacrificed as per convenience. This is true not only for the less
developed economies, but also for the developed countries where workers'
protection was supposedly operating at much higher levels. The growing
number of job losses itself gives an indication of this emerging phenomenon.
In an additional threat to workers' protection, we have new instances
of corporate bankruptcies which are ever more frequent, and worse, new
instances of systematic malpractices leading to bankruptcies and closures.
Workers seem to have no protection against these, at least in the short
run. Corrupt malpractices, suddenly, do not seem to be the forte of only
the less developed economies as has been claimed by the West for a long
time. Enron is of course a now-classic example of that fact. But there
are others. Take the instance of the following company based in Detroit,
America.
February 7, 2002 saw the termination of services of 400 employees from
the former Detroit Central Tool Inc. (DCT), at 30 minutes' notice, and
with a payment cheque for the last month that promptly bounced. Add to
that the fact that the employees suddenly found themselves with no compensation,
no pension and no healthy cover because the company had just been declared
bankrupt. Add also the fact that the Detroit city pensioners, nearby Warren
City Council and vendors used by the company all lost huge sums of money,
and the murky world of corporate practices in America will slowly begin
to reveal itself.
The US law that ensures a minimum of 60 days notice to workers being laid
off could not be applied here because the company claimed “an unforeseeable
business circumstance”. As a result of this apparently unforeseen
bankruptcy, about $550,000 of DCT's final $850,000 payroll is still tied
up, and so is the workers' access to their 401(k) pension funds, part
of which they contributed themselves. Health care coverage of at least
18 months that is normally ensured to laid-off workers under the Consolidated
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) of 1986 was also lost because
the law does not cover workers in bankruptcy cases. The DCT was absolved
of such responsibilities under the insolvency status. Curiously, the company
had switched to a different health administrator only one month before
the shutdown and they could actually settle a very small part of the workers'
claims. This despite the fact that weekly contributions by the workers
towards their medical fund alone should have brought in at least $500,000
a year. So the workers were systematically cheated, of not only their
employers' contribution towards their pension and health care, but also
of their own hard earned contributions.
The slump in the auto industry in summer 2000, due to which DCT lost contracts
from Ford and Chrysler, was cited as the reason behind the bankruptcy.
In reality, the bankruptcy could surely be foreseen by the owners over
the preceding ten years, and was in fact meticulously contributed to by
management strategy.
In the 1990s, the Detroit General Retirement System (DGRS), the city pension
fund covering 23,000 active and retired city workers, lent $36 million
to DCT. By the time the company folded up, DGRS lost about $33 million
considering interest payments and part of the initial that was due, despite
having taken a 15% ownership stake in the company. It also held back payments
from its vendors, and changed them regularly in order to get out of paying
them. DCT also managed to bypass payment of property taxes by making false
promises to the nearby Warren City Council.
What is amazing is that while all this was going on, the company followed
a different policy for its executives, spending enormous amounts on their
entertainment and club memberships, which summed up to perks much larger
than those given by even Chrysler. It maintained an intricate network
of subsidiaries to pay executive compensation and expenses.
These details provide a valuable insight into the workings of an organisation
that followed corrupt and dangerous methods with impunity, at great cost
to its workforce. These practices resemble the policies followed by Enron,
if at a smaller level, giving rise to fears that such cases are not isolated
instances but part of a pattern. There is a real possibility of further
such revelations given the workings of the new corporate America. The
law is evidently unable to offer much reprieve to the workers, at least
in the short run. Bankruptcy cases, whether due to corrupt practices or
not, have seen a tremendous rise in the recent past. The 2001 record,
led by giants such as Enron, Pacific Gas and Electric Company, and the
Finova Group Inc., have been followed by K-mart in January, 2002. The
impact on workers' well being, even in cases of non-corrupt practices,
is still very damaging. However, in genuine cases, there is usually some
indication beforehand, so that the workers can protect themselves to a
certain extent. While bankruptcy may be inevitable in the corporate atmosphere
of today, malpractices and misleading of investors, creditors, and workers
are not.
More alarming is the fact that bankruptcy cases are not restricted to
the United States alone. Given the recent depression, such cases are on
the rise worldwide. In the developed world, we have seen examples of the
HIH, OneTel, Ansett Airlines in Australia, Marconi and Energis Plc in
Britain. In Japan, figures released by leading private sector economic
research firm Teikoku Databank, show that 19,441 companies went under
in 2001, a 1.9 per cent increase on 19,071 bankruptcies in 2000. In Canada,
the number of business bankruptcies in 2001 was 10,055. There has been
a move towards reform of bankruptcy legislation in the developed world.
For example, both Britain and France have adopted new bankruptcy/ insolvency
laws since 1985 and a new bankruptcy law has also been proposed in Germany.
Bankruptcy laws in the three European countries have traditionally been
creditor friendly and oriented toward liquidation, but the new laws move
in the direction of being more debtor-friendly and allowing reorganization
in some circumstances, which is generally the orientation of the American
laws. The more advanced Asian countries like Singapore, Korea, Hong Kong
and Japan already had relatively more developed procedures in place and
they are under further reform.
Bankruptcy cases are also on the rise in the third world. This is more
so in the Asian countries, which were of course, traditionally plagued
by corrupt corporate and bureaucratic practices. For example in Malaysia,
3764 cases of corporate bankruptcy were recorded way back in 1995. In
India, industrial units, for example in the jute industry, have reported
sick regularly. There is however, recognition of this fact among the third
world countries, specially the Asian countries. Many of the Asian countries
including Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, China, India and Pakistan
are now considering various stages of reform of their corporate governance
laws with specific reference to corporate bankruptcy. Most of these try
to use rescue procedures as the main modus operandi. Cultural factors
in Asian countries play a major role in determining the shape of insolvency
procedures. The stigma factor associated with bankruptcy is high and this
means court composition and liquidation are used less as instruments of
rescue, while negotiations, arbitration and informal workouts are used
relatively more.
Outside of the Asian region, the opening up of Eastern Europe to the market
economy has led to review of insolvency law in many jurisdictions, though
in most cases that happened about five years ago. In Africa, the first
harmonised law for a group of countries, the OHADA project, came into
effect in signatory countries in January 1999, and included both a pre-insolvency
rescue procedure as well as the possibility for a court-ordered rescue
in appropriate cases.
In addition, increased globalisation makes the entire world economy vulnerable
to the fate and behaviour of corporate giants where earlier fewer countries
would have been affected by the working of a single corporate body. International
regulation of cross-border insolvency has been a matter of growing concern,
and UNCITRAL, ADB, the IMF, World Bank have shown the latest initiatives
in this direction.
As far as insolvency legislation all around the world is concerned, there
seems to be more preoccupation with supervision and protecting creditors
rights, or as in the US case, with debtors' rights than with workers'
rights. Still, in some countries, for example in India, suggested legislative
reforms indicate that workers' rights are to be treated on par with that
of the creditors. In Europe, e.g. in France, workers protection is stronger
than in the US, though not always so in the case of bankruptcy. In most
less developed economies, where corporate governance laws in such cases
are not very well defined as yet, unemployment is high, court battles
drag on for decades and workers are poorer in general, the workers' protection
issue is of even greater significance. For example, as the number of corporate
bankruptcies climbed in Korea, the unemployment rate reached 7.0 percent,
on a seasonally adjusted basis, in May 1998, compared with 5.9 percent
in February 1998 and 3.4 percent in March 1997.
The increased vulnerability of the world economy in general and its workforce
in particular, to systematic malpractices that lead to corporate failure,
is not in doubt any more. Laws regarding workers' rights in such cases
need to be overhauled and so that workers are safeguarded against the
worst effects and receive at least their basic dues. The escape route
of bankruptcy may bring legal trouble for these companies followed by
lengthy investigations, but prompt redress of workers' grievances should
remain an important priority.
May 24, 2002. |