
Workers' rights in global free fall: 87pc of countries violate strikes, 80pc cripple collective bargaining
The International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) found a 'profound deterioration' in workers' rights in its annual rights index published on Monday, based on 97 indicators laid out by the United Nations and international treaties.
Workers' rights, which the report measured in 151 countries, particularly declined in Europe and the Americas — with the worst results for the two regions since the index was launched in 2014.
In total, 87 per cent of countries violated the right to strike and 80 per cent violated the right to collective bargaining, the ITUC said.
'The right to collective bargaining was restricted in 80% of countries (121),' the ITUC said. In France, for example, 'nearly four in every 10 collective agreements were imposed unilaterally by employers, without union representation'.
The report also said outlined 'persecution' against union leaders.
'In France, more than 1,000 union leaders and members of the Confederation generale du travail (CGT) were facing criminal charges and disciplinary measures for their roles in mass protests against pension reforms,' it said.
Widespread decline
The ITUC gives each country a maximum score of one and a minimum score of five for their respect for workers' rights, such as the right to strike, demonstrate and participate in negotiations.
Only seven countries — including Germany, Sweden and Norway — were awarded the maximum score, compared to 18 a decade ago. Italy and Argentina saw their scores drop in 2025.
'If this pace of decline continues, in ten years there will be no country left in the world with the highest rating for its respect for workers' rights,' ITUC head Luc Triangle said in a statement.
In 2025, Europe experienced the sharpest decline of any region in the world over the past 10 years.
The ITUC also said trade unionists or workers were killed in five countries in 2025: South Africa, Cameroon, Colombia, Guatemala and Peru.
And Nigeria joined the list of the 10 worst countries for workers' rights for the first time.
Only a handful of countries saw an improvement in workers' rights.
Reforms strengthened trade union rights in Australia, while in Mexico, labour law changes improved access to justice for workers. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
6 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
France hopes EU will reach tariff deal with US ‘this weekend'
France's finance minister Eric Lombard said the EU's import tariffs could double without an agreement. (AFP pic) AIX-EN-PROVENCE: France's finance minister said Saturday he hoped the EU would reach a deal on tariffs with Washington 'this weekend'. EU and US negotiators are holding talks over the weekend as Brussels chases a deal before a July 9 deadline to avoid the return of steep tariffs. 'On tariffs, it could all be decided this weekend,' said French Finance Minister Eric Lombard. 'If not, Europe will undoubtedly have to respond more vigorously to restore the balance,' Lombard said at an economic forum in southern France. If the EU does not clinch an agreement with the US by Wednesday next week, higher levies will snap back in and unleash economic pain on the bloc. Without a deal, the default levy on EU imports is set to double to 20% or even higher – US President Donald Trump having threatened at one point to apply 50% duties. EU chief Ursula von der Leyen said on Thursday that Brussels sought an agreement in principle, which would mean further talks would be necessary on the details. But the commission believes that whatever happens, an imbalance in trade measures between the EU and the US will remain. Lombard said it was 'essential' to protect its industry from the US and China. 'Imagine the world as a playground where everyone is playing… and following the rules,' he said. 'And then three bullies come along and don't follow any rules, they knock over the game tables and push around the children who were playing nicely. That's the world of predators,' he said, referring to the US, Russia and China. On China, Lombard said that existing tariffs on steel and the automotive industry were not sufficient. 'We need to do it across all our industrial sectors. Otherwise, China's policy of maintaining a production capacity exceeding 50% of the global market share in each industrial sector will destroy our industry,' he added.

Malay Mail
a day ago
- Malay Mail
China retaliates to EU ban with import restrictions on medical devices
HONG KONG, July 6 — China's finance ministry said today it was restricting government purchases of medical devices from the European Union that exceed 45 million yuan (RM26.5 million) in value, in retaliation to Brussels' own curbs last month. Tensions between Beijing and Brussels have been rising, with the European Union imposing tariffs on China-built electric vehicles and Beijing slapping duties on imported brandy from the bloc. The European Union said last month it was barring Chinese companies from participating in EU public tenders for medical devices worth €60 billion or more per year after concluding that EU firms were not given fair access in China. The measure announced by the European Commission was the first under the EU's International Procurement Instrument, which entered into force in 2022 and is designed to ensure reciprocal market access. China's countermeasures were expected after its commerce ministry flagged 'necessary steps' against the EU move late last month. 'Regrettably, despite China's goodwill and sincerity, the EU has insisted on going its own way, taking restrictive measures and building new protectionist barriers,' the commerce ministry said in a separate statement today. 'Therefore, China has no choice but to adopt reciprocal restrictive measures.' The EU delegation office in Beijing did not immediately respond to a request for comment. China will also restrict imports of medical devices from other countries that contain EU-made components worth more than 50 per cent of the contract value, the finance ministry said. The measures come into force today. The commerce ministry said products from European companies in China were not affected. The world's second- and third-largest economies are due to hold a leaders' summit in China later in July. On Friday, China also announced duties of up to 34.9 per cent for five years on brandy originating in the European Union, most of it cognac from France, after concluding an investigation largely believed to be a response to Europe's EV tariffs. Major cognac producers Pernod Ricard, LVMH and Remy Cointreau were spared from the levies, however, provided they sell at a minimum price, which China has not disclosed. — Reuters

Malay Mail
a day ago
- Malay Mail
Malaysia yields RM4.7b in potential exports, investments from French trade mission, says Miti
KUALA LUMPUR, July 6 — Malaysia has successfully yielded RM4 billion in potential investments and RM675 million in potential exports in the trade and investment mission led by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim to France on July 4, 2025. In a statement today, the Investment, Trade and Industry Ministry (Miti) said Anwar met 40 representatives from France's industrial sector, with several companies expressing intention to invest in high-tech manufacturing, aerospace, renewable energy, tourism and hospitality, digital economy and sustainable infrastructure. 'As for potential exports, RM675 million was generated for high-impact sectors such as aerospace, automotive, renewable energy, pharmaceuticals, digital economy, lifestyle and halal industries. 'These are sectors targeted under the New Industrial Master Plan 2030 (NIMP 2030) and the Green Investment Strategy,' it said. MITI said companies also shared their intention to continue investing in Malaysia, driven by key factors such as a conducive, stable and dynamic investment ecosystem; encouraging global demand for Malaysian-made products; efficient domestic supply chains; a highly skilled workforce; and investor-friendly government policies. The mission delegation also included MITI Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz and representatives from Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) and Malaysia External Trade Development Corporation (Matrade). Tengku Zafrul said the mission's overall success reflected foreign companies' continued confidence in Malaysia's investor-friendly policies, supply chain ecosystem, competitiveness and economic growth potential. 'The investment and trade potential to be realised will also provide business opportunities for local companies, including small and medium enterprises, and more high-paying jobs for Malaysians. 'All these are key in driving our Madani economic transformation agenda,' he said. Anwar is on an official working visit to Italy, France and Brazil from July 1-8, 2025. Besides Tengku Zafrul, Anwar is also accompanied by Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Hasan, Transport Minister Anthony Loke, Defence Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin, Agriculture and Food Security Minister Datuk Seri Mohamad Sabu, Minister in the PM's Department (Law and Institutional Reform) Datuk Seri Azalina Othman and Deputy Energy Transition and Water Transformation Minister Akmal Nasrullah Mohd Nasir. — Bernama