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Weekly Worker 623 Thursday May 4 2006 Subscribe to the Weekly Worker

Minimal wage

May 4 2006
Fighting Fund

Record hits

Last week saw a record number of online readers - no fewer than 25,805 all told. Incredibly this beats the previous week’s total - itself a record - by over 6,600 hits.

This most encouraging, although perhaps not totally unexpected, upsurge was not quite matched by an increase in those willing to contribute to our fighting fund, but I can report that we did receive three donations via our website, the most notable of which being a £50 gift from comrade LN. Excellent! Thanks also to RF and SM, who both chipped in with a fiver.

Together with four cheques received in my mailbag - from AB and SF (£20 each), KC (£10) and TG (£5), they helped ensure we surpassed our £600 monthly target. Our total for April was £633 - thank you all.

Another plus was the number of sales of our paper at various May Day events - we all but sold out at the London rally. Now we need to transform some of these one-off sales into subscriptions - and the most convenient (not to mention inexpensive) way of ensuring your Weekly Worker arrives on your doormat every week is by taking out a standing order.

Let’s make May a month to remember for increased subs!

Robbie Rix

Click here to download a standing order form - regular income is particular important in order to plan ahead. Even £5/month can help!
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The WASG and the L.PDS have launched a campaign for a legal minimum wage in Germany - but €8 an hour is not enough

First, the good news. The WASG and the L.PDS have finally managed to get their first real campaign off the ground. Germany is one of the few countries in Europe without a legal minimum wage and, with German wages decreasing in real terms (by 0.9% over the last decade), this is potentially a useful initiative.

Now the bad news. The comrades think that this minimum wage should be a measly €8 per hour (£5.51). By comparison, from October 1 the minimum wage in Britain, introduced by the anti-working class Blairites, will be £5.35. It looks as though the WASG has given ground to the L.PDS and its Realpolitik: previously the WASG had called for a monthly minimum of at least €1,500. €8 an hour works out at just over €1,200 (£830) per month - before tax.

But the comrades in the WASG and L.PDS go further. They want to cut a deal with capital which would allow “those companies that cannot afford its immediate introduction” to “gradually introduce the minimum wage”, as Oskar Lafontaine put it in his speech to conference.

Communists have a radically different approach. We do not start with what capital says it can afford. Nor do we simply adopt the latest demand of the trade union bureaucracy (with perhaps a bit extra for good measure). Our starting point is what the working class and oppressed sections of the population actually need. As it is based on profit, real capitalism constantly negates human need. Therefore the logic of the struggle for our immediate demands poses the task of overthrowing the system as a whole. The fight for a minimum wage is an excellent example of what we mean.

Rather than adopting a left version of the demands of the official movement (based on what is ‘sensible’ within the parameters of existing society), our starting point is what working people need for subsistence, to physically and culturally reproduce themselves under capitalism. The category of ‘need’ therefore is an ever-expanding one. As technology expands, things that yesterday were items of ‘luxury’ - society’s access to them being necessarily limited - become necessities for all. This is the process we can see when we look at something like the internet, DVD players, etc.

In fact, communists across Europe should fight for a unified European minimum wage. This would also help combat capital’s threats to switch production from one country to another as a way of lowering wages and eroding working conditions. The fight for such a minimum wage would also help to bring the advanced sections of the European working class together on the basis of a higher level of unity.

See related articles

Berlin haunts proceedings
Tina Becker and Ben Lewis report from the April 29-30 conference of the Wahlalternative Arbeit und Soziale Gerechtigkeit (WASG) in Ludwigshafen. Intended to smooth the way for unity with the Linkspartei.PDS, it was marked by discontent, threats and the profound disorientation of the left opposition

German CWI blocks with right
It became clear over the weekend that Sozialistische Alternative (SAV), the German section of the Socialist Party’s Committee for a Workers’ International, has manoeuvred itself into an untenable position over Berlin.

Tactics and principle
Tina Becker spoke to Sascha Stanicic, spokesperson of the Socialist Party’s sister organisation in Germany, Sozialistische Alternative (SAV), about the thorny question of Berlin and the opposition in the WASG

Minimal wage
The WASG and the L.PDS have launched a campaign for a legal minimum wage in Germany - but €8 an hour is not enough

Ben Lewis
CPGB comrade Ben Lewis stood as a candidate in the elections for the six vacant posts on the WASG national executive.

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