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Shapingthe new worldof work
ETUI-ETUC Conference27-29 June 2016 Hotel Thon Europe1040 Brussels, Belgium
The impacts of digitalisation and robotisation
https://storify.com/ETUI_org/shaping-the-new-world-of-work
@etui_org #etuwow16
https://www.youtube.com/c/etuibrussels
After the conference, reports and videos will be available on the ETUI website: www.etui.org > Events > Shaping the new world of work
Contents
Wednesday 29 June 25 Panel 15 26Panel 16 27Panel 17 28Panel 18 29Panel 19 30
Panel 20 31Panel 21 32Panel 22 33Panel 23 34Panel 24 35
Plenary F 36
Plenary G 37
Tuesday 28 June 11 Plenary C 12Plenary D 13
Panel 6 14Panel 7 15Panel 8 16Panel 9 17Panel 10 18
Panel 11 19Panel 12 20Panel 13 21Panel 14 22Open session 22
Plenary E 23Keynote speech 24
Tea break
Coffee break
Monday 27 June 03
Plenary A 04
Panel 1 05Panel 2 06Panel 3 07Panel 4 08Panel 5 09
Plenary B 10
Lunch break
3
Monday 27 June10:00 —11:00 Registration participants
11:00 —13:00 Plenary A — Inaugural keynote speeches Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
13:00 —14:00 Lunch break
14:00 —15:30 Panel 1 — Collaborative economy and platform capitalism Room: Germany Panel 2 — The future of industry in Europe Room: Netherlands I-II Panel 3 — Digitalisation – more democracy in public services and public service workplaces? Room: France EN/FR/ DE Panel 4 — Private services industry: at risk or new opportunities? Room: Netherlands III EN/FR/ DE Panel 5 — Future of jobs in the digital network economy Room: Belgium
15:30 —16:00 Tea break
16:00 —18:00 Plenary B — The big picture (setting the scene) Room: Belgium EN/FR/ IT
18:15 —19:30 Drinks reception
4
Monday 27 June
10:00 — 11:00Registration participants
11:00 —13:00 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Plenary A— Inaugural keynote speeches
Welcome speech:Luca Visentini, ETUC General Secretary
• Marianne Thyssen, European Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion
• JeffreyFranks, IMF Europe Office Director
• MarkKeese, Head of the Employment, Analysis and Policy Division, OECD
• Guy Ryder, ILO Director-General
• Thomas Händel, Chair of the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, European Parliament
Chair:Philippe Pochet, ETUI General Director
Theconferencewillexplorehowdigitalisationisshapingworkandhowregulationsandinstitutions are reacting and responding to these new as well as old challenges. Questions that willbeconsideredinclude:Whatarethemainchallengestoworkaswellastotradeunions?And what are the strategies, regulations and institutions that have been put in place, or could beputinplace,inordertoshapethenewworldofwork?Theopeningpanelwillsetthesceneforthethreedayconference.Thekeynotespeakerswillsharetheiranalysesofhowworkisbeing transformed and, in particular, how their institutions are engaging with the issues at stakeandwhatactionsarebeingtakentoaddressthem.
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
5
Monday 27 June
14:00 —15:30 Room: Germany
Panel 1Collaborative economyand platform capitalism
• Arthur de Grave, OuiShare
• Alain Petitjean, Groupe Alpha
• Harald Wiedenhofer, EFFAT
• Ronald Janssen, TUAC
Discussant:GabrieleBischoff, EESC Moderator:Odile Chagny, IRES
The panel will address the question of ‘new forms of collective’ that may emerge from the development of digital cooperative platforms and the new labour practices associated with them. Different perspectives will be proposed and discussed: labour organization forms, definitions and representations of ‘collective interest’, social protection, governance, etc. Specific attention will be given to the capacity of traditional and new actors to address these new collectives.
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
6
Monday 27 June
14:00 —15:30 Room: Netherlands I-II
Panel 2The future of industry in Europe
• Reinhilde Veugelers, KULeuven and Bruegel
• Ansgar Baums, HP Inc.
• Andrea Szalavetz, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
• FrankSiebern-Thomas, European Commission, DG GROW
Discussant:Luc Triangle, industriAll European Trade UnionModerator:JanDrahokoupil, ETUI
ThispanelconsiderschangingproductionmodelsandthegeographyofproductionnetworksinEurope.HasEuropefailedtotakeadvantageofnewtechnologiestostimulateproductivitygains,employmentandeconomicgrowth?Whatwilldigitalisationmeanformanufacturingandassembly?WhattypeofinnovationsystemscanthriveinEurope?WhatpoliciesdoweneedtosupportindustryandinnovationinEurope?HowcanEuropeanregionscompeteintheglobaleconomy?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
7
14:00 —15:30 Room: France EN/FR/DE
Panel 3Digitalisation – more democracyin public services and publicservice workplaces?
• Jane Lethbridge, Public Services International Research Unit
• Peter Raben, HK Stat, Denmark
• Serge Novaretti, European Commission, DG Connect
• Peter Wieser, City of Vienna
Discussant:Jan Willem Goudriaan, EPSUModerator:ChristineJakob, EPSU
The promise of digitalisation is that it can lead to more openness in service delivery, greater citizeninvolvementandmoreefficientservices.Butcanthisbeachievedinpractice?Ifdigitalisation is transforming how our public services are controlled and provided, what abouttheworkerswhodelivertheseservices?Willtheyalsobenefitfromgreaterworkplacedemocracy,withaclearroleforsocialdialogueindigitalisation?Theworkshopwillbringtogetheranumberofdifferentperspectivesonthepotentialimpactofdigitalisation on public services, from the local to the European level.
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Monday 27 June
8
14:00 —15:30 Room: Netherlands III EN/FR/ DE
Panel 4Private services industry: at risk or new opportunities?
• Christian Verschueren, EuroCommerce
• Evelyn Regner, S&D Group
• Oliver Roethig, UNI Europa
• Miia Järvi, PAM
Discussant:Ursula Holtgrewe, Centre for Social Innovation Moderator:FrancaSalis-Madinier, CFDT
ThisworkshopwilllookatthechallengesfacingtheEuropeanservicesindustryandexplorepossiblesolutions.Keytrendsareanincreaseinatypicalemploymentandthediffusionofnewformsofwork,coupledwithanadvanceinEuropeanintegration,companiesoperatingacrossborders and the digital revolution. The European Commission recognised this development inits‘Agendafornewskillsandjobs’(COM(2012)682)andurgedMemberStatesinits‘EmploymentPackage’(2012)topreventtheexcessiveuseofnon-standardemploymentand to establish decent and sustainable wages. Are the traditional concepts of ‘permanent employment’,‘employer’and‘workplace’disappearing?Howcanweensureaserviceindustrywithsustainableandjob-richgrowththatprovidesinclusivequalityemploymenttoallgroupofworkers,andinnovativequalityservicestocustomersandsocietyatlarge?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Monday 27 June
9
14:00 —15:30 Room: Belgium
Panel 5Future of jobs in the digitalnetwork economy
• Dalia Marin, Ludwig Maximilian University
• Craig Holmes, Pembroke College Oxford
• TobiasKämpf, IFS
• Ann Branch, European Commission, DG EMPL
Discussant:Maria Helena André, ACTRAVModerator:Béla Galgóczi, ETUI
Inthelongruntechnologyislikelytodramaticallyreshapelabourmarketsandtogenerateareallocationofthetypesofskillsthatwillbeneededbytheworkersoftomorrow.Thenatureofwork,theformofemployment,theplaceofwork,theorganisationofworkingtime:alltheseaspects and many more will be subject to radical change. Who will win and who will lose as aresultoftheimpactofnewtechnologies?Whatwillbethenatureofthechangesaffectingemployment,workandjobsasweknowthem?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Monday 27 June
10
16:00 —18:00 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ IT
Plenary B— The big picture (setting the scene)
• JeremyRifkin, author of The Zero Marginal Cost Society andPresidentoftheFoundationonEconomicTrends
• Q&A session
Panel with national trade union leaders:• Laurent Berger,
General Secretary CFDT• Susanna Camusso,
General Secretary CGIL• Luc Triangle, General Secretary industriAll European Trade Union
Chair:Luca Visentini,ETUC General Secretary
ThisplenarysessionwillfeatureakeynotetalkbyJeremyRifkin,followedbyaQ&Asessionwith the audience. The session will then be followed up by a conversation between three EuropeantradeunionleadersandMr.Rifkin.
18:15 —19:30y Drinksos reception Xa
Monday 27 June
11
Tuesday 28 June9:00 —11:00 Plenary C — Technology Room: France EN/FR/ DE Plenary D — Employment Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
11:00 —11:30 Coffee break
11:30 —13:00 Panel 6 — Organizing and representing workers in the digital economy Room: Belgium EN/FR/PL Panel 7 — Inequalities and labour market polarization Room: Germany Panel 8 — Psychosocial risks of future forms of work Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE Panel 9 — The Circular Economy as a driver for jobs and industrial development Room: France EN/FR/DE Panel 10 — Working time Room: Netherlands I
13:00 —14:00 Lunch break
14:00 —15:30 Panel 11 — Work intensification Room: Germany Panel 12 — Workplace innovation in the second machine age Room: Belgium Panel 13 — Data protection for employees Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE Panel 14 — Amazon Room: France EN/FR/DE
Open session — Digitalisation and work: evolution or revolution? Room: Netherlands I
15:30 —16:00 Tea break
16:00 —17:45 Plenary E — Working conditions Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
17:45 —18:15 Keynote speech Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
19:00 —21:30 Dinner
12
Tuesday 28 June
9:00 —11:00 Room: France EN/FR/ DE
Plenary C— Technology
• Maria João Rodrigues, MEP, S&D Group, Vice-Presidentin charge of Economic and Social Policies
• Bettina-JohannaKrings, Head of Research area ‘Knowledge societyand knowledge policy’, ITAS-KIT, Karlsruhe
• Ursula Holtgrewe, Head of department ‘Work and Equal Opportunities’, Zentrum für Soziale Innovation (ZSI)
• MarkGraham, Associate Professor Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford
Chair:Daniela Vincenti, Editor-in-chief of EurActiv.com
This plenary session will focus on the impact of new technological developments on the nature ofworkandthework-lifebalance.Questionstobeaddressedare:Willnewtechnologiessuchas the Cloud, online platforms, the use of robotics, artificial intelligence, augmented reality, 3D-printingortheself-drivingcarsleadtoarevolutionaryorevolutionarychangeinthenatureofworkandthework-liferelationship?Dothesedevelopmentsopenupnewsocialandethicalchallengesforfutureworkingenvironments?HowdoestheriseofthesenewtechnologiesaffectEUandmemberstates’innovationpolicies?Whichfuturetechnologies–nowindevelopment-couldhavefurtherimpactsonthenatureofwork?
11:00 —11:30F CoffeeDBbreakPL
13
Tuesday 28 June
9:00 —11:00 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Plenary D— Employment
• Raymond Torres, Director of the ILO Research Department
• Dominique Méda, Director of IRISSO - UMR 7170, Université de Paris-Dauphine
• PrakashLoungani, Advisor in the IMF's Research Department
• Veronica Nilsson, Deputy General Secretary ETUC
Chair:Guillaume Duval, Editor-in-chief of Alternatives Economiques
Thisplenarywilldebatehowemploymentcanbeunderstoodinadigitalisedeconomy.Isthefutureonebasedontheplatformeconomywhereworkersoffertheirservicesorbidfortasks?Or will this remain a marginal phenomenon. What are the opportunities and challenges thatthecurrentemploymentrelationisfacedwith?Arethereregionaldifferencesinhowdigitalisationwillaffectpaidemployment?Aretheredifferencesacrossdifferentgroupsinsocietyaccordingtoskilllevels,genderandage?
11:00 —11:30F CoffeeDBbreakPL
14
11:30 —13:00 Room: Belgium EN/FR/PL
Panel 6Organizing and representing workersin the digital economy
• IreneMandl, Eurofound
• Peter van den Bunder, FNV-KIEM
• GrzegorzCisoń, NSZZ Solidarność Amazon Fulfillment Poland
• Eric Lee, LabourStart
Discussant:Thiébaut Weber, ETUCModerator:MagdalenaBernaciak, ETUI
The digital economy has triggered changes in employment relations and given rise to new types ofworkers.Intheareaofe-commerce,onlineretailerslikeAmazonmakeuseofahypermobileworkforceformeetingorders;theseworkersaresubjecttoveryclosedigitalmonitoringoftheirworkingtimeandalso,frequently,toprecariousworkingconditions.Atthesametime,digitaltechnologyhasled,withintheworkforce,toanincreaseinthenumbersoffreelancers,independentcontractorsandself-employedpersons,manyofwhomoperateina‘grey’zoneintermsoflabourandemploymentrights.Whileworkplacesolidaritiesarebeingreshaped,newwindowsofopportunityforlabouradvocacyhavebeenopeningup.Thispaneltakesstockofstrategiesandinitiativesdevisedbytradeunionsandother(new)actorsandaimedatupholding and strengthening labour and social standards in the digital era.
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
Tuesday 28 June
15
11:30 —13:00 Room: Germany
Panel 7Inequality and labour marketpolarisation
• PiotrLewandowski, Institute for Structural Research (IBS)
• John Hurley, Eurofound
• Steven Dhondt, KU Leuven and TNO
Discussant:JosefStředula, ČMKOS Moderator:Martin Myant, ETUI
Inequalityhasbeenbroadlyrecognisedasharmfultonotonlythesocialfabricbutalsoeconomic growth. While trade unions represent a major force for the promotion of equality, labourmarketpolarisationhasdrivenincomeinequalitythroughoutEurope.WhatarethefactorsbehindlabourmarketpolarisationandwhatexplainsdifferencesinthisregardamongcountriesinEurope?Doesdigitalisationrepresentaqualitativechange?WhatarethetrendsinthedemandforskillsinEurope?Towhatextentdochangesinincomeinequalityleadtoinequalityofopportunities?Whatisthebestwayofrespondingtolabourmarketinequality?
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
Tuesday 28 June
16
11:30 —13:00 Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE
Panel 8Psychosocial risksof future forms of work
• Jean-ChristopheBerthod, SECAFI
• Evangelia Demerouti, Technical University Eindhoven
• Martin Sonnberger, Porr
Discussant:Harald Wiedenhofer, EFFATModerator: Jonas Rauch
Oneofthebiggesthealthandsafetychallengesworkersarefacinginallsectorsispsychosocialrisks.DigitalizationandIndustry4.0industrialcyclesareintheprocessofdeeplytransformingformsofworkorganizationandtheirflexibility.Thisentailsmajorchangesin:tasksfulfilledbyemployeesandhowtheyfulfilthem(i.e.multi-taskingandinformation);workautonomy;deadlinesandperformancepressure;customerdemands;thesupportofcolleaguesandsuperiors,andappreciationofworkdone;andtheboundariesbetweenworkingandprivatelife.
Theworkshopwilldealwiththefollowingquestions:Aretechnologicaladvancesaffectingemployees’stresslevelsandtheirperceptionsofpsychosocialrisksindifferentways?Why?Whatcanwelearnfromtheresearchandcasestudiesinawiderangeofeconomicsectors?Dowehaveexamplesofgoodpractices?
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
Tuesday 28 June
17
11:30 —13:00 Room: France EN/FR/DE
Panel 9The Circular Economy as a driverfor jobs and industrial development
• Hugo Schally, European Commission, DG ENVI
• Adrian Deboutière, Institut de l'Economie Circulaire
• SirpaPietikäinen, EPP Group
• PatrikBjörnström, Sveriges Ingenjörer
Discussant: Luc Triangle, industriAll European Trade UnionModerator: Laurent Zibell, industriAll Europe
TheCircularEconomyentailsariskforjobs,becausethenumberofshort-livedindustrialitems being produced will diminish. On the other hand, it also entails a large potential for economic development in Europe, in industrialised processes for maintenance, repair, upgrade, disassembly and recycling. Additionally, reusing materials instead of producing industrial itemsfromprimaryrawmaterialsmassivelylowerstheenergyconsumptionofindustry.Ifmanaged right, the Circular Economy can reconcile the objectives of employment in industry, of climate protection and of mineral resources preservation. This panel will explore how these objectives can be reached.
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
Tuesday 28 June
18
11:30 —13:00 Room: Netherlands I
Panel 10Working time
• IlsedeVooght, Femma
• Tracey Warren, University of Nottingham
• PhilippeAskenazy, CNRS
Discussant: BarbaraSurdykowska, SolidarnośćModerator: AgnieszkaPiasna, ETUI
Thecurrentpolicyconsensusisthatnewlabourmarketchallengesrequiregreaterflexibilityintermsofworkorganisation,wagesandworkingtime.Ontheonehand,flexibleandshorterhoursofworkmaycontributetoworkredistribution,promotingbetteruseofhumanresources,greater gender equality, and increased productivity. On the other hand, such developments maycarrysocialcostsandriskssuchasincreasedprecariousness,workintensification,underemployment,andrisinginequality.Inthispanelwediscussdevelopmentsinworkingtimeorganisation,aswellasrelatedchallengesandopportunities.Againstthebackgroundofrecentfindingspresentedbythespeakers,weaskwhatdirectionsmightbetakenandwhatsolutions found for future achievement of both social and economic policy goals.
13:00 —14:00N Lunch Twbreakr
Tuesday 28 June
19
14:00 —15:30 Room: Germany
Panel 11Work intensification
• AgnèsParent-Thirion, Eurofound
• Amélie Mauroux, Dares
• Rebecca Selberg, Lund University
Discussant: Ricardo Gutiérrez, European Federation of JournalistsModerator: Gérard Valenduc, UCLouvain and Université de Namur
Workintensificationisamajortrendidentifiedinallworkingconditionssurveys.Itisacauseofsickleave,labourmarketexclusionandgenderdiscrimination.Newformsofcontrolandnew management practices are contributing to this intensification which is one of the major obstaclestoasustainableworkinglife.
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Tuesday 28 June
20
14:00 —15:30 Room: Belgium
Panel 12Workplace innovationin the second machine age
• KoenRepriels, ACV/CSC
• Tony Murphy, SIPTU IDEAS Institute
• Egoitz Pomares, Sinnergiak Social Innovation (UPV/EHU)
Discussant: PiaMulvadReksten, LO DenmarkModerator: FrankPot, Radboud University
Technological innovation should be complemented by social innovation, meaning innovation inworkorganisation,HRMandlabourrelations.TheEuropeanCommissionandindustriAllcallthis‘workplaceinnovation’;Nordictradeunionsuse‘EmployeeDrivenInnovation’.Theideaistoimproveorganisationalperformance(innovationcapability,productivity)andqualityofworkinglife(competencedevelopment,wellbeingatwork)simultaneously.Whatdoesthismeaninthecontextofrobotisationanddigitalisation?Thepanelwilldiscusshowworkplaceinnovation contributes to healthy and productive jobs in ‘the second machine age’.
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Tuesday 28 June
21
14:00 —15:30 Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE
Panel 13Data protection for employees
• Jan Philipp Albrecht, Group of the Greens / European Free Alliance
• ClaraFritsch, GPA-djp
• EvaSouhrada-Kirchmayer, Council of Europe
Moderator: KathleenWalker-Shaw, GMB
The use of data within the EU has, in general, been regulated lately. After more than five years of consultation, negotiation and amendment discussions, the European Parliament voted on the‘GeneralDataProtectionRegulation’in2016.Manybigplayersintheinternetindustrywere lobbying against this regulation because it would hamper their business in Europe. Unions and NGOs were against the regulation because it would restrict employees’ rights and participation.
Thispanelwilllookatthechallengesofdataprotectionforemployees.Howwillthisregulationshapeemployees'dataprotectionintheworkplace?Willtherebeaneffectivedataprotectionofficeratworksites?Areworkers’personaldatasafernow?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Tuesday 28 June
22
14:00 —15:30 Room: France EN/FR/DE
Panel 14Amazon
• KristyMilland, TurkerNation.com
• LucHendrickx, UEAPME
• Thomas Voß, ver.di
Discussant: FredrikSöderqvist, Unionen SwedenModerator: Christina J. Colclough, UNI Europa
14:00 —15:30 Room: Netherlands I
Open session – Digitalisation and work:evolution or revolution?Moderators:• GabrielaPortelaandIlariaCostantini,
Education team, ETUI
This session will invite you, the participants of the conference, to engage and brainstorm togetherwithusaboutthemainchallengesofthedigitalisationofwork.With the help of interactive techniques such as mind mapping, we will try to gather your questionsandcommentsaboutthefutureofworkinthedigitalage.Willthisdigitalisationbearevolutionoristhisanevolution?WhatshouldtheEUandwhatshouldtradeunionsdotomakesurethistransformationprocesswillhaveastrongsocialdimension?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Tuesday 28 June
Amazon has been a frontrunner in exploiting the openings digitalisation and globalisation bring to multinational com-panies. This panel will discuss a range of interrelated factors that together will shed light on the employment consequenc-es of what we call "digital monopolies". The topics are: 1.AmazonMechanicalTurk:asymbolforthefutureofapolarisedlabourmarketcharacterisedbyprecariousemployment and high staff turnovers.
2.Amazon’ssupplychaindomination:e-monopoliesdisruptingthesinglemarketforservicesandfaircompetition.
3. The challenges posed to taxation, funding of public services and social security by digital platforms such as thoseofferedbyAmazonMechanicalTurk.
23
16:00 —17:45 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Plenary E— Working conditions
• Ursula Huws, Professor of Labour and Globalisation, University of Hertfordshire Business School
• Simon Head, Senior Fellow at the Institute for Public Knowledge at New York University, and of St Antony's College, Oxford
• Jill Rubery, Professor of Comparative Employment Systems, Manchester Business School
• Patricia Vendramin, Codirector of the Research Centre of FTU and invited professor at UCLouvain
• Agnes Jongerius, MEP, Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the European Parliament
Chair: Marie-HélèneSka, General secretary CSC-ACV
Thissessionaimsatsettingoutthemainissueswithregardtohowdigitalisationis(orwillbeinthefuture)improvingor/andworseningworkingconditionsinEuropeandhenceinfluencingthequalityofwork(workingconditions,life-workbalance,autonomyversusprecariousjobs,impactsonsocialdialogue,healthandsafetyattheworkplaceetc.)andwhatarethechallengesofthesetrendsfortradeunionsandworkers.Questionstobeaddressedare:Whatdoweknowabouttheimpactoftechnologyonworkingconditionsfrompreviouswavesoftechnologicalchanges?Howcouldthedigitalisationaffectpowerrelationsattheworkplace?Whatarethegenderedaspectsalreadyinplacethatcouldbeamplified?Whatistherolefortradeunionsinensuringthatworkingconditionsareimproved?Aretheredifferencesacrossdifferentgroupsinsocietyaccordingtoskilllevels,genderandage?
Tuesday 28 June
24
17:45 —18:15 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Keynote speech
• Günter H. Oettinger, European Commissioner for Digital Economy & Society
Comments: Peter Scherrer, Deputy General Secretary ETUCChair: Rudy De Leeuw, ETUC President
19:00 —21:30os Dinner wn
Tuesday 28 June
25
Wednesday 29 June9:00 —10:30 Panel 15 — Skills and training in the fourth industrial revolution: what do companies need? What can workers hope? Room: Belgium I-II EN/FR/DE Panel 16 — Basic income Room: Netherlands I Panel 17 — Working conditions in the sharing economy – crowdwork Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE Panel 18 — New forms of work and labour market policies Room: Belgium III Panel 19 — Negotiating the new world of work – what role for collective bargaining? Room: Germany
10:30 —11:00 Coffee break
11:00 —12:30 Panel 20 — How governments tackle the digitalisation challenge Room: Belgium I-II EN/FR/DE Panel 21 — Back to the future: is the sharing economy an opportunity for trade unions? Room: Belgium III Panel 22 — Dealing with change: new roles and capabilities for trade unions Room: Germany Panel 23 — Health and safety issues of digitalisation and robotics Room: Netherlands I Panel 24 — Workers'participation and the introduction of new technology Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE
12:30 —13:30 Lunch break
13:30 —15:30 Plenary F — How to re-think labour law? Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
15:30 —16:00 Tea break
16:00 —17:45 Plenary G — The way forward Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
26
Wednesday 29 June
9:00 —10:30 Room: Belgium I-II EN/FR/DE
Panel 15Skills and training in the fourthindustrial revolution:what do companies need?What can workers hope?
• Denis Crowley, European Commission, DG EAC
• Vincenzo Spiezia, OECD
• Martin Romer, ETUCE
• Wolfgang Greif, ÖGB/GPA-djp and EESC
Discussant: Marco Ricceri, EURISPESModerator: Thiébaut Weber, ETUC
Oneoftheissuespresentedascentraltothe4th industrial revolution is the question of training andskills.Newtechnologieswillrequirenewdigitalskillsinofficesbutalsoinfactories.AlackofinvestmentintrainingcarriestheriskofaseriousshortageofskilledlabourinEuropein the near future. This is the economic aspect of training: to exploit technological advances tothefull.Butwhatisitssocialaspect?Whatcanreallybeexpectedfromtraininginalessjob-intensiveeconomyandanincreasinglyprecariouslabourmarket?Cannewapproachestotraining provide satisfactory answers to the questions of the increasingly polarised and more unequalsocietyannouncedbythedigitalrevolution?
10:30 —11:00F CoffeeDBbreakPL
27
Wednesday 29 June
9:00 —10:30 Room: Netherlands I
Panel 16Basic income
• Henning Meyer, LSE
• Guy Standing, University of London
• Danièle Meulders, ULB
• Philippe Van Parijs, UCLouvain
Discussants: Plamen Dimitrov, CITUBConny Reuter, Solidar Moderator: Montserrat Mir, ETUC
Theaimhereistodiscussbasicincomeasananswertothechallengesfacinglabourmarketsand welfare states in the light of digitalisation of the economy. The concept of basic income has come once again to the fore as a potentially important mode of response by welfare states toradicalchangesinlabourmarketsandemploymentpatterns.Thepanelhasbeensetuptodiscuss this concept and enable participants to share their thoughts on the pros and the cons attaching to this solution.
10:30 —11:00F CoffeeDBbreakPL
28
Wednesday 29 June
9:00 —10:30 Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE
Panel 17Working conditions in the sharingeconomy – crowdwork
• Michael Silberman, IG Metall
• Joachim Schuster, S&D Group
• IlariaMaselli, The Conference Board
Discussant: KurtVandaele, ETUIModerators: SylviaKubaandFridolinHerkommer, AK Wien
Thegoalofthispanelistobetterunderstandthephenomenonofcrowdworkingbygaininganimprovedsenseofcrowdworkers’needs,backgroundsandapproximatenumbers.Ourgeneralaim is to discuss online platforms and their effect on the competition landscape and as well as onworkingconditions.
10:30 —11:00F CoffeeDBbreakPL
29
Wednesday 29 June
9:00 —10:30 Room: Belgium III
Panel 18New forms of workand labour market policies
• Bruno Palier, CNRS
• MaartenKeune, UvA-AIAS
• Janine Berg, ILO Working Conditions and Equality department
• FritzvonNordheim, European Commission, DG EMPL
Discussant: Ben Egan, ETUC Moderator: Sotiria Theodoropoulou, ETUI
Thepanelwillexaminewhether,andifsohow,digitalisationandtheso-callednewformsofwork,especially‘gigwork’,createnewchallengesforwelfarestatesand,inparticular,labourmarketandemploymentprotectionpolicies.Therationalebehindthisquestionisthatoneapparentconsequenceofthespreadofsuchformsofworkisthatthenumberofpeoplewhoaretechnicallyself-employedincreases.Thismeansthat,fortheseworkers,insofarastheircareertrajectoryinatypical,theriskofunemploymenttakesonadifferentform.Moreover,suchworkpatternsarelikelytoputfinancialpressuresonlabourmarketandunemploymentprotectionpolicies,wherevertheserelymostheavilyoncontribution-basedfinancing.Isitappropriatetospeakhereabouta‘newsocialrisk’and,ifso,arelabourmarketandemploymentpolicieswellequippedtocoverit?Shouldactivationpoliciesadapttothenewrealitiesand,ifso,how?Ifnot,whatkindofchangesshouldweenvisageandshouldtheybethesameacrosscountries?Howcantradeunionsmediatethesechanges?
10:30 —11:00F CoffeeDBbreakPL
30
9:00 —10:30 Room: Germany
Panel 19Negotiating the new world of work– what role for collective bargaining?
• Thorsten Schulten, WSI
• AnnaIlsøe, FAOS
• Benoit Gerits, industriAll Europe
• Denis Pennel, Eurociett
Moderator: Torsten Müller, ETUI
Themoreflexiblenewworldofworkrepresents–withrespecttoworkingtimearrangements,delocalisationofworkandtheemergenceofentirelynewformsofworkorganisation–manifold challenges for collective bargaining as a tool for regulation of the employment relationship. The aim of this panel is to explore the exact nature of the challenges and what these processes mean for the future of collective bargaining as a tool for regulating the new worldofwork.Thepanelwillthusbringtogetherrepresentativesfromdifferentinstitutionsdealingwithcollectivebargainingatdifferentlevels.Thekeyissuestobeaddressedinthediscussionarethefollowing:Whatistheroleofcollectivebargaininginthenewworldofwork?Whichnewissuesshouldbeaddressedinnegotiationsandhow?Doesthenewworldofworkleadtonewconstellationsofactorsandinstitutionalarrangementsincollectivebargaining?Whatdoesallthismeanforthetransnationaldimensionofcollectivebargaining?
10:30 —11:00F CoffeeDBbreakPL
Wednesday 29 June
31
11:00 —12:30 Room: Belgium I-II EN/FR/DE
Panel 20How governments tacklethe digitalisation challenge
• ErikKlär, Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, Germany
• Robert Went, WRR
• Mathilde Bras, Etalab
Discussant: Philippe Pochet,ETUIModerator: Liina Carr, ETUC
ThispanelwilllookatthepositionsofEUmemberstatestowardthenewdigitaleconomyactivitiesandtheimpactontheworldofwork.Domemberstatesseethedigitalisationasanopportunityorachallenge?Aretheyputtinginplaceregulationordotheyleavedevelopmentsintheseareasuptomarketforces?Aretheywillingtoadoptnationallabourlawtoensurenewflexiblegig-jobswillnotleadtomoreprecariouscontracts?IstherecentEUagendaforthe"collaborativeeconomy"agoodstart?
12:30 —13:30N Lunch Twbreakr
Wednesday 29 June
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Wednesday 29 June
11:00 —12:30 Room: Belgium III
Panel 21Back to the future: is the sharing economy anopportunity for trade unions?
• Michel Bauwens, P2P Foundation
• FredrikSöderqvist, Unionen
• FlorentinIancu, Sindicatul IT Timisoara (SITT)
Discussant: KoenFrenken, Utrecht UniversityModerator: ViktóriaNagy, ETUC Youth Committee
Muchofthesharingeconomy,drivenbytechnologicaldeterminism,isprofit-basedandnon-egalitarian;aboveall,itundermines,toaverymajorextent,individualandcollectivelabourstandardswhilealsoendangeringthefinancingofthewelfarestate.Whatkindofstrategiescanorshouldtradeunionsdeveloptocopewiththethreatsofthisso-called‘postcapitalism’?
At the same time, within the context of a retreating welfare state, it appears that there may wellberoomalsoforamoregrass-rootsandnon-profittypeofsharingeconomy,particularlyatthelocallevel.ShouldtradeunionsinEuropeonceagainengagemoreincoalition-buildingwithcommunity-basedandsocialreformorganisationsatthelocallevel?Shouldtradeunionsreturntotheirrootsinseekingtoorganiseunder-representedgroupsofworkerslikethe‘precariat’?Finally,isthisparticularformofthesharingeconomyenablingtradeunionstobroadentheiragenda,forinstance,byincludingecologicalissues?
12:30 —13:30N Lunch Twbreakr
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Wednesday 29 June
11:00 —12:30 Room: Germany
Panel 22Dealing with change: new rolesand capabilities for trade unions
• Gregor Murray, Université de Montréal & CRIMT
• Vincent Pasquier, École de Management, Grenoble
• Valeria Pulignano, KUL
• Christian Lévesque, HEC Montréal
Discussant: LionelFulton, LRDModerator: Marc-AntoninHennebert, HEC Montréal
Theroleoftradeunionsischanging,demandingnewapproaches.Thisworkshopexploresthat challenge in terms of the implications of these new roles for union resources, capabilities andpower.Itdrawsonexamplesoftransnationalmulti-levelbargainingcampaigns,ofthedevelopmentofworkplacesocialdelegatestodealwithpsychosocialrisksandjobquality,ofarticulating between EWCs and local levels on the issue of inequality, and of the impact of the integration of digital media on trade unions’ capabilities and power resources.
12:30 —13:30N Lunch Twbreakr
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Wednesday 29 June
11:00 —12:30 Room: Netherlands I
Panel 23Health and safety issuesof digitalisation and robotics
• Emmanuelle Brun, EU OSHA
• Jan Popma, University of Amsterdam
• RebekahSmith, BusinessEurope
• Maria Bjerre, LO Denmark
Moderator: Aída Ponce del Castillo, ETUI
Animportantaspectofthefutureofworkishowtoorganiseandmanagehealthandsafetyissues.Inthedigitalandautomatedworld,itisimportanttoconsiderhowhumanscaninteractwith emerging technologies, in which industrial sectors this is more prevalent, how robots can replaceorcomplementhumanwork,howtobenefitfromthisandtowhatextentthiscouldaffectworkers’healthandsafety.Thispanelwilldiscussthesequestionsfromthepointofviewofdifferentstakeholders.
12:30 —13:30N Lunch Twbreakr
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Wednesday 29 June
11:00 —12:30 Room: Netherlands II-III EN/FR/DE
Panel 24Workers' participation andthe introduction of new technology
• ManuelaMaschke, Hans-Böckler-Foundation
• Dieter Hügle, Amcor EWC
• Christine Asmussen, Finansforbundet, Nordea Bank
Moderator: AlineHoffmann, ETUI
Thepanelwilltakeasitsstartingpointthefactthat,inmostMemberStates,employeerepresentatives have the right to be informed and consulted on the introduction of new technology.Underthefall-backprovisionsoftheEWCandSEDirectives,theEWCistobeinformedandconsultedabouttheintroductionofnewworkingmethodsorprocesses;accordingly, many EWC agreements have also secured this right. Since new technology is seldom introduced in an isolated way at one site alone, its introduction can have important cross-siteimplications.Thepanel,exploringtheextenttowhichtheintroductionofdigitaltechnologyhasbeenaddressedatthenationalandEuropeancompanylevelbyworkerparticipation, will also assess the potential for coordinating these strategies and approaches across national borders.
12:30 —13:30N Lunch Twbreakr
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13:30 —15:30 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Plenary F— How to re-think labour law?
• Michel Bauwens, Director of the P2P Foundation
• IsabelleDaugareilh, CNRS research fellow, Université de Bordeaux
• SimonDeakin, Professor of Law at the University of Cambridge
• MichałBoni, MEP, EPP Group in the European Parliament
Chair: Esther Lynch, Confederal Secretary ETUC
Thisplenarysessionsaimsatdebatingtowhatextentlabourlawneedstobere-thoughtandwhatnewprinciplesneedtolaiddowninordertoregulateworkandprotectemployees.Questionsthatcanbeaddressedare:Ifthedigitalisationisfosteringarevolutionoftheeconomy can the existing legal instruments be recalibrated to continue to protect employees ordoweneedtoengageincreatinganewparadigmforlabourlaw?Whatshouldbetheroleoftradeunionsinthisrespect?Whatshouldbetheroleofpoliticsinre-shapinglabourlawfrombothanationalandinternationalperspective?
15:30 —16:00F Tea DBbreakPL
Wednesday 29 June
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16:00 —17:45 Room: Belgium EN/FR/ DE
Plenary G— The way forward
• Thorben Albrecht, State Secretary at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, Germany
Chair: Maria Jepsen, Director of the Research Department, ETUI
Round table on social dialogue:• Maxime Cerutti,
Director of the Social Affairs department, BusinessEurope• Nils Trampe,
Permanent Delegate of DA, Danish Employers Association• Sam Hägglund,
General Secretary EFBWW• Catelene Passchier,
Vice President FNV
Chair: Peter Scherrer, Deputy General Secretary ETUC
To conclude the debates of the past three days, this round table will, in an interactive manner set out the challenges and solutions that the social partners can bring to provide a smooth transitioninthelabourmarket,thecreationofqualityemploymentandthedevelopmentof a sustainable economy.
The conversation should set out concrete examples of how social partners have managed technological transformations in the past and how these experiences can be used to deal with thecurrentandfuturechallenges.Whatarethemainchallengesforthesocialpartners?Andhowcansocialpartnersengagewiththesechallengesandprovidesolutions?Howwillsocialpartnersshapethenewworldofwork?
Wednesday 29 June
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The European Trade UnionInstitute (ETUI)
TheETUIconductsresearchinareasofrelevance to the trade unions, including the labourmarketandindustrialrelations,andproduces European comparative studies in theseandrelatedareas.Italsoprovidestradeunion educational and training activities and technicalsupportinthefieldofoccupationalhealth and safety.
TheETUIplacesitsexpertise–acquiredinparticularinthecontextofitslinkswithuniversities,academicandexpertnetworks– intheserviceofworkers’interestsatEuropeanlevel and of the strengthening of the social dimensionoftheEuropeanUnion.Itsaimisto support, reinforce and stimulate the trade union movement.
TheETUIiscomposedoftwodepartments:— A Research Department with three units: Europeanisationofindustrialrelations;Economic,employmentandsocialpolicies;Workingconditions,healthandsafety;
— An Education Department.
TheETUI’sworkisorganisedinaccordancewiththefollowingfivepriorities:— The crisis and the reinforced economic governancesystem;
—Workerparticipationandindustrialrelations;
— Sustainable development and industrial policy;
—Workingconditionsandjobquality;— Trade union renewal.
The European Trade UnionConfederation (ETUC)
TheETUCisthevoiceofworkersandrepresents45millionmembersfrom89tradeunionorganisationsin39Europeancountries,plus10EuropeanTradeUnionFederations.
The ETUC is a democratic, independent, pluralistic,unifiedorganisation,recognizedbythe European Union, the Council of Europe and theEuropeanFreeTradeAssociationasthesolerepresentative,multi-sectortradeunionorganisation at European level.
The ETUC is the only social partner representingworkersatEuropeanlevelintheframeworkoftheEuropeansocialdialogue.TheETUCworksforaEuropeanUnionwitha strong social dimension, which prioritises theinterestsandwellbeingofworkingmenandwomen,promotessocialjusticeandfightsexclusion and discrimination.
Media partners
The ETUI is financially supported by the European Union. The European Union is not responsible for any use made of the information contained in this publication.
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EuropeanTrade Union Institute
Bd du Roi Albert II, 51210 BrusselsBelgium+32 (0)2 224 04 [email protected]
EuropeanTrade UnionConfederation
Bd du Roi Albert II, 51210 BrusselsBelgium+32 (0)2 224 04 [email protected]