Mustafa Sönmez reports in
an article published in Hürriyet Daily News on June 22nd, 2013 (http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/more-urban-women-join-the-workforce-in-turkey.aspx?pageID=238&nID=49240&NewsCatID=347)
that the number of women employed in urban areas in Turkey has seen a 50 %
increase and risen to 4.8 million in the past six years. He argues that this is
due to the acceleration of the neoliberal capital accumulation process under
the AKP government, which has led to a new wave of rural to urban immigration,
with more people flowing into the urban labor market. According to him, women who
were previously employed as non-paid family workers in the agricultural sector
now search for jobs, and in an attempt to combat unemployment, the AKP
government has offered employers an incentive by accepting to pay their share
of female workers’ social security premiums. In addition, the author rightly
suggests that women’s increased participation in the labor force has
strengthened the hand of business, who has used this card to fight against
demands from male workers for wage raises, and it has given the newly employed
women a chance to meet the harsh reality of the market not only as unskilled
workers but at the same time as individuals whose dignity is hurt due to their
differences in religion, ethnicity etc. I think that it would be interesting to
investigate the current differences in payment between male and female
unskilled workers in Turkey who perform similar jobs; there must still be an
important gap since, traditionally, men are regarded as the breadwinners of
their families while women are considered to do their bit if they “contribute”
to the family budget at all. I argue that rather than male workers resenting
female workers for a decrease in the power for wage bargaining, both groups of
workers can and should work hand in hand to improve their situation vis-à-vis
employers. Now that increasingly more women are present in the workplace and
welfare states are shrinking due to the global neoliberal turn, it occurs to me
that there is an ample opportunity to incorporate issue-based struggles such as
that of feminism in the organized labor struggle. This would enable the global
public to combine different political struggles to re-enlarge the space for
political debate, which has been confined mainly to identity issues in the
neoliberal era. It would work not only to defend the rights of workers but also
to offer societies a new perspective to create a more just, more inclusionary
order.
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