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Forum Post: Steelworkers Form Collaboration with MONDRAGON

Posted 12 years ago on Nov. 27, 2011, 12:50 a.m. EST by LeoYo (5909)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

Can OWS mobilize to form a nationwide co-operative alternative to Wal-Mart? Here's an article on what the United Steelworkers are doing with Mondragon. How can OWS be proactive in supporting a democratic workers' alternative to the profit driven corporate model?

http://www.usw.org/media_center/releases_advisories?id=0234

Steelworkers Form Collaboration with MONDRAGON, the World’s Largest Worker-Owned Cooperative

Article Brief The United Steelworkers (USW) and MONDRAGON Internacional, S.A. today announced a framework agreement for collaboration in establishing MONDRAGON cooperatives in the manufacturing sector within the United States and Canada. .

For More Information: Rob Witherell, 412-562-4333, rwitherell@usw.org

PITTSBURGH - The United Steelworkers (USW) and MONDRAGON Internacional, S.A. today announced a framework agreement for collaboration in establishing MONDRAGON cooperatives in the manufacturing sector within the United States and Canada. The USW and MONDRAGON will work to establish manufacturing cooperatives that adapt collective bargaining principles to the MONDRAGON worker ownership model of “one worker, one vote.”

“We see today’s agreement as a historic first step towards making union co-ops a viable business model that can create good jobs, empower workers, and support communities in the United States and Canada,” said USW International President Leo W. Gerard. “Too often we have seen Wall Street hollow out companies by draining their cash and assets and hollowing out communities by shedding jobs and shuttering plants. We need a new business model that invests in workers and invests in communities.”

Josu Ugarte, President of MONDGRAGON Internacional added: “What we are announcing today represents a historic first – combining the world’s largest industrial worker cooperative with one of the world’s most progressive and forward-thinking manufacturing unions to work together so that our combined know-how and complimentary visions can transform manufacturing practices in North America.”

Highlighting the differences between Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) and union co-ops, Gerard said, “We have lots of experience with ESOPs, but have found that it doesn’t take long for the Wall Street types to push workers aside and take back control. We see Mondragon’s cooperative model with ‘one worker, one vote’ ownership as a means to re-empower workers and make business accountable to Main Street instead of Wall Street.”

Both the USW and MONDRAGON emphasized the shared values that will drive this collaboration. Mr. Ugarte commented, “We feel inspired to take this step based on our common set of values with the Steelworkers who have proved time and again that the future belongs to those who connect vision and values to people and put all three first. We are excited about working with Mondragon because of our shared values, that work should empower workers and sustain families and communities,” Gerard added.

In the coming months, the USW and MONDRAGON will seek opportunities to implement this union co-op hybrid approach by sharing the common values put forward by the USW and MONDGRAGON and by operating in similar manufacturing segments in which both the USW and MONDRAGON already participate.

Click here for the full text of the Agreement.

About MONDRAGON:

The MONDRAGON Corporation mission is to produce and sell goods and provide services and distribution using democratic methods in its organizational structure and distributing the assets generated for the benefit of its members and the community, as a measure of solidarity. MONDRAGON began its activities in 1956 in the Basque town of Mondragon by a rural village priest with a transformative vision who believed in the values of worker collaboration and working hard to reach for and realize the common good.

Today, with approximately 100,000 cooperative members in over 260 cooperative enterprises present in more than forty countries; MONDRAGON Corporation is committed to the creation of greater social wealth through customer satisfaction, job creation, technological and business development, continuous improvement, the promotion of education, and respect for the environment. In 2008, MONDRAGON Corporation reached annual sales of more than sixteen billion euros with its own cooperative university, cooperative bank, and cooperative social security mutual and is ranked as the top Basque business group, the seventh largest in Spain, and the world’s largest industrial workers cooperative.

About the USW:

The USW is North America’s largest industrial union representing 1.2 million active and retired members in a diverse range of industries.

WEBSITES: www.usw.org www.mondragon-corporation.com

6 Comments

6 Comments


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[-] 2 points by aeturnus (231) from Robbinsville, NC 12 years ago

We already have some worker cooperatives in the United States, and they are growing in number. It may be small, but they have grown rather considerably in the last decade.

This could be a much larger example to get the idea out in the open. I have read a lot on this over the past three to four years. I can't seem to find much on what is going on with it as we speak, so I am hoping it is not fizzing out. I think we need to educate people on this matter.

http://www.geo.coop/

[-] 2 points by carldavidson (2) from Baden, PA 12 years ago

Here's a link to a slideshow I did a few years back on how to fight Walmart using cooperativist strategy and tactics.

https://docs.google.com/present/edit?id=dwbvjkw_5d2pknsn5&pli=1

Here's also a link to a longer piece done more recenty

http://carldavidson.blogspot.com/2011/03/mondragon-as-bridge-to-new-socialism.html

[-] 1 points by gmxusa (274) 12 years ago

Good slideshow. But Walmart and others lobby the government to keep import tariffs way down or non existent. Brazil, for example, has very high tariffs on finished imported electronic products, but the tariffs almost disappear if the product is assembled in the country, so every major US electronic manufacturer has a manufacturing plant there. Australia has 800 products with import tariffs, the US has around 200. Both Brazilian and Australian economies are doing well. I don't see how a co-op would be able to offer attractive prices while competing against the low cost of indigent miserable workers in Asia and US Congressmen.

[-] 1 points by Number9 (1) 12 years ago

I've read links where Unions are studying how to invest their pension funds into cooperatives like this.

[-] 1 points by sovaye (259) 12 years ago

Looks good so far. How are they funded? Where the true funding comes from is the telltale sign of who is the ultimate controller.

[-] 1 points by Bayraba (24) 12 years ago

Exciting! Mondragon is the prime example in the world of the people owner the means of production and working together.