Bama Athreya and Sandy Levin talk free trade and human rights. February, 2020
Transcript:
I'm John Ciorciari.
I'm the director of the Weiser
Diplomacy Center here at the
Ford School.
I'm happy to welcome you to
this Harry A. and Margaret D.
Towsley Foundation lecture.
We want to thank the Towsley
Foundation which was established
In 2002 with a policy maker in
Residence program that allows
The Ford School to bring
Individuals who have a wealth of
Policy making experience to
Campus including our own
Professor Sandy Levin.
And so please join me first in
Thanking the towsley foundation
For this wonderful program.
[applause]
Today we're going to be speaking
With the nexus between labor
Rights and trade which, of
Course, is a crucial topic as
U.S. And global trade agreements
Are being renegotiated.
And it is a conversation between
Two experts who have worked for
Long periods of time to advance
Workers' rights in the context
Of global trade.
Dr. Bama Athreya is a visiting
Policy expert here at the weiser
Diplomacy center who arrived
Today and who is going to
Leading a number of sessions
During the course of the week
Including a three-part course
For students on related to the
Future of work and also a
Session of in my class next week
Of values and ethics.
Dr. Athreya has worked more than
Trade and labor rights.
Her former organization, the
International labor rights
Forum, pioneered the inclusion
Of a labor clause in trade
Programs as an material active
To protectionism with the goal
Of using it as a race to the top
Instead of the bottom.
She is an economic and quality
Fellow at the open society
Foundations where she is doing
Research on worker conditions in
The digital economy.
She is also an advisor to the
Laudes foundation and most
Importantly got her phd in
Anthropology from um.
Welcome back to dr. Athreya who
Is also on the external advisory
Board.
Of course, most of you already
Have the pleasure and privilege
Of knowing professor levin.
Professor of practice here at
The Ford school with support
From the towsley foundation for
Over 35 years.
Professor levin represented
Residents of southeast michigan
In congress.
He's been actively involved in
Essentially any major debate you
Can think of confronting our
Nation over the recent past
Including welfare reform, the
Auto industry rescue, china's
Entry into the world trade o,
The iran nuclear deal and a host
Of key economic policy issues.
He was chair of the house ways
And means committee during the
Passage of the afFordable care
Act.
He successfully fought against
The privatization of social
Security.
And very relevant to today's
Topic, he pioneered language to
Add enforceable labor and
Environmental standards in trade
Agreements for the first time.
We'll talk more about that in
Our conversation.
Born in detroit he earned a ba
From the university of chicago,
Ma in international relations
From columbia and a jd from
Harvard.
Between the two of them they
Have decades of expertise in the
Area we'll talk about today.
They'll begin by discussing
Historical challenges to
Including labor clauses in trade
Agreements and to enforcing
Them.
And they'll also review some of
The current dynamics.
Labor clauses in recent trade
Deals and how they've been
Tormented and forced --
Interpreted and forced and
Thinking about some of the keys
To effective enforcement of
These provisions going forward.
One last note on format.
We'll have a few of our students
Who are going to be walking
Around the room later with cue
Cards if you want to write down
Questions.
And then we will also have a few
Designated questioners who will
Introduce themselves and then
Ask us selected questions in our
Q&a session.
With that, I'd like get started.
The first thing that perhaps I
Could start with you,
Dr. Athreya, is to set the scene
By sharing with us how you got
Involved and importantly how you
First began to intersect with
Professor 11 rn as you were
Working in the civil society
Space and he was working in
Official channels on a similar
Range of issues.
bama Athreya: thank you so
Much.
It is a pleasure to be here.
Thanks for the invitation to
Participate in this event today.
I will say that professor levin
And I are a little bit of an odd
Couple up here in front of you
And maybe it would help to
Explain that.
I really started out working on
These issues of trade justice in
The streets and was in the
Streets of seattle in 1999 and
That was in november of 1999
When tens of thousands of
Activists converged on the city
From around the world to protest
The world trade organization
Negotiations.
And, you know, I start with that
History because, of course, you
Know, professor levin was the
Insider really trying to see
What could be done with the
Rules. We were on the outside
Pointing out all of the flaws
With the rules as constructed.
You know, this brings me to just
A few big picture points I want
To kind of put out there and
Will probably keep coming back
To over and over again just to
Remind us of why we're even in
This discussion.
And the one is, you know, there
Are days when it feels like
We're in a very sort of
Depressing and hopeless time.
And we look around the world and
We see what looks like
Incredible concentration of
Power.
Particularly corporate capture
Of governments.
And so one of the things that I
Would say I reflect on as I
Think back about, you know, sort
Of where I and my trade justice
Colleagues and friends were 20
Years ago and where we are today
Is that what was clear to us
Then and, you know, was one of
The reasons why we pushed for
These changes to the trade rules
Is still clear to me today.
And that is this concentrated
Power that corporations have
With respect to governments and
Rules really cannot be broken
Without the counter weight of
Organized labor movements.
And so we have as much need
Today as we did then for that
Space for labor movements to
Organize and be that voice and
That weight to really, you know,
Sort of think differently about
The roles.
The second big point I want to
Make and I'll keep returning to
Is that trade rules are not
Free.
There's no free trade.
There never was free trade.
I'm sure professor levin will
Have his own comments on this
Subject.
What there is is heavily
Negotiated trade with hundreds
Of thousands of pages of rules.
So what is important to keep in
Mind -- you know I think -- I've
Always been allergic to sort of
This framing of free trade
Versus, you know, some people
Wanted to label us
Anti-globalization and that was
Never what it was.
It was about fair rules.
Rules that actually protected
People and not just profit.
So I want to disafuse this
Entire conversation of the
Notion there is free trade.
What we are talking about is
Whether we like the rules as
They are constructed or whether
We think a different set of
Rules might give us better
Balance in terms of the overall
Benefits they convey.
So, you asked me to talk a bit
About sort of my own trajectory
In this world and so I'll now
Pivot to that from those major
Points.
When we were advocating around
These issues, again beginning
For my organization back in the
End or curtail trade between
Nations.
We were seeking to say, if trade
Is being used, and particularly
With respect to developing
Countries, if it's being used as
A development tool it's being
Used as a tool to rift up
Economies -- lift up economies,
There is no need to make a
Virtue of cheap labor.
So, back to my first point which
Was about creating that space
For workers to have some agency
To negotiate for fair terms and
Conditions of work.
We said can these rules be
Written in such a way as to
Provide that, you know, not to
Do it for them.
And this is a third point that I
Think I'll probably end up, you
Know, coming back to over and
Over.
Not as a magic bullet, not as a
Solution.
The rules are not the end.
The rules are the means.
Can we use the rules so that
Workers as they begin to
Organize have something to use
As leverage to support their
Efforts to make those demands.
So that was the nature of what
We were looking for in terms of
The conditionality.
What we did over the years is we
Were really very practical about
Looking at what we were able to
Gain.
And, if we look at -- you know
I'm sure, again, I'll sort of
Wait for professor levin to do
Some explanation of some of the
Instruments that we're talking
About, but whether it was trade
Preference programs,
Multi-lateral agreements,
Bilateral agreements, we always
Got what I would consider half a
Loaf.
But I am going to be the person
Who is here to tell you that
That is still better than not
Having gotten anything at all,
Right.
And so it was incumbent upon us,
And my organization, you know,
Really took this as one of its
Principal roles and reasons, you
Know, for part of our mission
Was whatever rules there were,
To use them to bring cases on
Behalf of worker organizations
Around the world.
Because we couldn't even, you
Know, really benefit from the
Incremental gains in language in
These agreements without the
Case work behind it bringing up
The cases year after year after
Year.
I think later in the talk we'll
Talk about some of the specific
Cases add what we were able to
Gain.
But I am the half a loaf.
And I think one of the things
Just kind of quickly pivoting to
The current moment that dismays
Me is I think a lot of that work
That was done in the 1980s and
The 1990s and into the 2000s is
Still there.
There's actually a body of work
That took us three decades to
Build up.
But I think current-day human
Rights and labor advocates have
Forgotten those instruments are
There.
And at a time when we could be
Doing more case work than ever
I'm seeing less of it and I'm
Seeing advocates really not
Understand how to use the
Important leverage we have built
Up to work in solidarity with
Those workers organizations
Around the world.
So I think I'll stop on that for
Now.
that's great thank you.
I want to turn to professor
Levin.
A very big and important slice
In that half of a loaf that we
Do have is the language that you
Introduced with colleagues in
Environmental provisions in
Trade agreements.
I wonder if you could take us
Back to 1999 when you were a few
Blocks away from her in the
Battle of seattle and talk about
The progress over those eight
Years.
How did we get from seattle 1999
And the conversations around
Nafta to lodging labor and
Environmental provisions in
Trade agreements as a normal
Matter of practice?
sander levin: okay, I wasn't
Sure how to proceed but maybe
Seattle is a useful turning
Point.
We may end up talking about more
Recent events.
And the dean is here and we're
Honored you are here.
I am honored to be here.
sander levin: and I think it
Is a secret because I have a
Copy of what the dean wrote --
I'm dating you a bit -- almost
Nafta.
And I think everybody should
Read it, including those who put
Together a successor.
Maybe we'll come back to that.
Let me just talk briefly about
Seattle and try to frame it in
Terms of how trade policy has
Evolved.
I'm going to try to be brief.
It's very difficult for me to be
Brief about trade issues.
And I'm always -- I was always
Teased by staff because it's
Such an invigorating and
Important subject.
Before seattle labor in
Environmental rights really had
A second place.
And the reason for that was
Basic trade ideology.
The ideology goes back to
Recardo, even to adam smith.
The notion was more trade is
Better.
And that worked more or less
When trade was between like
Econ
Economies.
It was challenged 100 years ago
When there was an effort in the
'20s, the 1920s to essentially
Involve labor issues not so much
Environment into the trade
Dialogue.
But that was washed away partly
By smoot holly which washed away
All discussion of trade because
It was so incorrect in
Temperate.
And tariffs became a
Historically, not anomaly, but
Monster.
So, there was a notion going
Back to the 19th century, more
Trade is basically better.
And it bumped into japan.
But there it was between two
Economies basically that were
Very much alike, right.
There were labor rights in
Japan.
There was a market economy.
Though it was a rigged one.
And what happened was that japan
Took advantage of our open
Markets while they had a very
Closed market.
I was going to bring with me
What I have in the office, a
Universal joint that I bought
For $11.40 in detroit in royal
Oak, joe's auto park main
Street, of all places, and it
Cost $105 in japan.
The very -- and we could not
Export to japan our products.
So that's when it began to break
Down the kind of monolithic
Notion more trade is better.
But there was a dialogue here to
Attribute to this university.
And I just want to quote.
It was in 1987.
And this is what clayton yoyter
Who was then the ustr said.
Over the past 40 years all
Administrations and leaders of
Both parties in congress have
Shared the conviction that
Expanding trade opportunities
Will bring higher living
Standards for all.
The key two words I think are
"For all."
It wasn't much longer when --
And this is forgotten -- pat
Buchanan challenged president
Bush in the primary in 1992 over
Trade.
But that also was kind of washed
Out and bush survived it.
And then, of course, next came
Nafta.
So I want to say just a word
About seattle and then go on.
It's an interesting history
Because we began in the late 80s
As a result of japan to really
Say to president clinton, you
Need to look at the conditions
Of trade and its impact.
And so after nafta he began to
Shift gears.
And he began to talk about the
Need to level up not level down.
Bill clinton had a way with
Words.
Level up not level down.
Right.
So we pressured the clinton
Administration to go to seattle
And set up a working group on
Labor in the wto.
Revolutionary.
He got carried away.
And while there was all this
Disturbance outside of the
Halls, he proposed not a working
Group but enforceable labor
Provisions in the wto.
And we said to him, that isn't
What we were proposing.
It was steps too far.
And while there was all of the
Turbulence outside the hall,
Inside the hall there was
Immense turbulence reacting to
What the president said.
Well seattle blew up.
And we haven't had
Demonstrations about trade since
Then like that.
So, just a few words what
Happened after that.
Cafta happened afterwards.
Enforce your own laws was the
Standard.
We came within two votes of
Defeating cafta.
Then, of course, what came
Afterwards you refer to as may
And for the first time there was
Placed in trade agreements
Enforceable labor and
Environmental standards.
And to show how bifurcated it
Was, the bush administration,
Which was still in place, we
Were in the majority for the
First time in seven and eight,
They reduced to negotiate an
Agreement with may 10th in it.
So, essentially, two of us in
The congress negotiated a free
Trade agreement.
It's not a good idea.
It's not supposed to be our
Function.
And we did so with peru.
And I will just say a word about
That.
Because in addition to labor
Standards we included
Enforceable environmental
Standards.
And we laid out requirements of
Peru as to the amazon.
And what happened in later
Administrations including the
Obama administration, they
Failed to enforce it.
They failed to enforce it.
So the most recent battle has
Been over u.S.-mca.
I think that's where I'll stop
So that we can have some
Discussion about it.
In the course that I co-taught,
We didn't talk about usmca.
I have some deep feelings about
What happened in a way to pick
Up the threads of that forgotten
Dean's article in the law review
Which I still have, dean.
So, is that enough to start
With?
And let's have a lot of vigorous
Discussion.
Because my own judgment is, is
To usmca, that it is just the
Opening, the opening kind of
Argument about what happens when
You put together a developed
Country with a developing nation
On its borders.
On its borders.
There are more automotive
Workers today in mexico than in
The united states.
A foreign auto company, bmw,
Opened up a plant not so long
Ago, signed a phony agreement,
And the pay there is a
Dollar-and-a-half an hour.
Okay.
moderator: thank you for
That.
And I wanted to come back to
This issue of the enforceable
Language.
Dr. Athreya, as you mentioned
These are tools for people to be
Able to implement in the defense
Of labor rights and don't
Necessarily ensure labor rights
Unless they are in fact
Enforced.
And I'd be grateful for your
Comments on how in fact some of
The provisions that
Representative levin was so
Influential in lodging in trade
Agreements, how have those been
Enforced?
What are your comments on recent
Developments and, in particular,
With the trump administration
But even in the lateral obama
Years in enforcing them in key
Cases like bangladesh or africa.
bama Athreya: I think this is
A great kvgs because
Enforceability, what is
Enforceability I think is really
Sort of a critical question.
I know one that you grappled
With as a congressman for many
Years.
And we did as well again because
We were were bringing cases.
And I don't think there's a
Fixed answer to at what point,
You know, you consider something
Is fully enforceable.
We would have said that even the
Earliest labor clauses, the ones
That I mentioned in the 1980s,
Which were in unilateral
Programs, trade preference
Programs, were enforceable but
Were not enforced.
And so if we look at the
Trajectory from those early --
You know the first labor
Condition at was in a program
Called -- well it was in the
Caribbean based initiative in
That was a single phrase.
The first full clause was in the
Generalized system of
Preferences program which is a
Unilateral trade preference
Program.
It is a benefit we give by
Reducing or eliminating tariffs
On products in a unilateral
Manner with developing countries
And with least developed
Countries.
The idea being this is to give
Them a leg up and ability to
Sort of enter our markets and
Improve their economies.
And I think, you know, professor
Levin raises an excellent point
About what happens when you've
Got that, you know, friction
Between a highly developed
Market and a really, you know,
Sort of poor developing market
Such as bangladesh or cambodia
Countries that I worked in and
Brought cases on.
So, there was that labor
Conditionality that was
Introduced in 1984.
And we tried throughout the
Subsequent decade to bring
Cases.
And there was total discretion
Because there were no rules as
To what ustr needed to do with
Those cases.
So we saw really widely varying
Responses to the cases depending
On what our other equities were
In the diplomatic relationship
With the particular country.
And it came to a point by the
Early 1990s where my
Organization actually sued the
Bush administration, the first
Bush administration, under
Something called the
Administrative procedures act
For complete failure to enforce
The law.
So, fast forward then to the
I think we can jump around a
Bit.
I might even sort of -- I'll do
A quick note on cambodia and
Then go straight to one of the
Free trade agreements, a
Bilateral agreement with more
Binding stand arts after the
May 10th deal that professor
Looked.
In the late 1990s, my
Organization wrote a case on
Cambodia.
Cambodia had just received
Benefits in 1999 under the
Generalized system of
Preferences program.
Remember, they were coming out
Of basically a long period of
Conflict and had the first
Democratically elected
Government that had just been
Stood up in that country and
They really did not have a
Functioning labor law.
We brought a case forward in
Timing is everything.
The bilateral relationship with
Cambodia was such that this rose
To the top of the priority list
In that diplomatic engagement.
There was robust engagement of
The cambodian government around
This case.
As a result of which the
Cambodian government in 2001, I
Believe -- okay so they passed a
New labor code which was not
Perfect but wait an improvement
Over the old french law that was
The only thing on the books.
They stood up and entity called
The arbitration council which
Could arbitrate labor disputes,
And they put in place or allowed
To be put in place a program
Administered by the
International labor
Organization, the ilo, which
Monitored the entire brand-new
Apparel sector.
Which was the major export
Sector in the country just
Getting off the ground in
The ilo program was able to
Regularly monitor and audit
Labor conditions in all of
Cambodia's garment factories.
That was a long time ago and
Time permitting we can come back
To the what's going on lately
Because there was a very
Interesting -- as I am sure you
Saw -- announcement last week
That the eu is likely to suspend
Its benefits to cambodia over
Human rights abuses.
So, be interesting to reflect on
Really gain.
But that was one example of very
Effective use of a case to
Stimulate very, very specific
Things.
That didn't solve -- cambodia is
Not a worker's paradise, very
Poor country, but there was
Specific outcomes from that
Case.
The labor code, the arbitration
Council and the introduction of
A really quite innovative ilo
Program.
I am going to just talk about
One other case then we can do
Work back and forth.
That is after the agreement that
Professor levin has described in
The mid-2000s, one of the
Bilateral free trade agreements
That was passed was with jordan.
The u.S.-jordan free trade
Agreement.
Which had a labor chapter
Commiserate with the may 10th
Agreement.
And subsequent to the
U.S.-jordan agreement being, you
Know, sort of passed, adopted, a
Number of u.S. Apparel
Companies, you know, went to
Jordan and began sourcing
Apparel from jordan.
And the selling point on this
Agreement, one of the selling
Points had been creating jobs
For jordanian women.
In reality, virtually all the
Women in those factories were
Imported migrant workers from
Bangladesh, sri lanka, india,
Even burma.
So, here you had an industry
That had been stood up, you
Know, sort of in the shadow of
This new shiny agreement that
Had labor conditionality but all
The workers wering my rabidity
Workers.
And a labor rights organization
Exposed just a few years after
The agreement had been passed,
Exposed that many of these women
Had been trafficked.
So, they were victims of labor
Trafficking.
And many had been victims of
Gender-based violence as well.
What was interesting was that in
The wake of the expose, again,
Because of the existence of the
Labor chapter and the agreement,
There was rapid diplomatic
Engagement channels of
Communication between the u.S.
Trade representative and the
Jordanian counterparts to say,
This is a problem for us, we
Can't have that.
You just negotiated this
Agreement with us.
Arguably an issue that without
That labor chapter would have
Been way down at the bottom of
The list for any sort of
Diplomatic engagement with
Jordan.
Think about jordan and where it
Sits, its strategic importance,
Its importance as a long
Standing place where we've had
To have military engagement,
Humanitarian engagement because
Of referees, et cetera.
All that is so important and yet
This trade issue about these,
You know, couple dozen,
Literally a few dozen garment
Factories rose to some serious
Diplomatic engagement around the
Issue.
And I will say I didn't say and
It wasn't in my bio but I spent
The past six years working for
Usa-id.
And I mention that because I can
Tell you -- now, you know, sort
Of this is getting just closer
To the time when I joined aid.
Although it is a little bit
Before my time.
That one of the very first
Things that happen and I
Resuscitated this from the files
Was that usa-id was ordered to
Come up with funding to hire a
Consultant and look and see what
Could be done to improve labor
Rights conditions in the
Factories which they did.
And through the course of the
Negotiations a few things
Happened.
One of which was a version of
That same ilo program to monitor
The apparel factories was stood
Up in jordan.
So the jordanian government
Agreed to, you know, several
Changes including changes in the
Law that made it possible for
The first time for jordanian
Unions to actually represent
Migrant workers. So there was a
Legal change.
There was an actual change
Because those workers actually
Then had access to
Representation.
And there was the introduction
Of a monitoring program that
Assisted and facilitated to
Actually improve overall and
Raise up overall conditions in
Jordan's apparel sector.
So, you know I can talk more
About that and, you know, sort
Of where things since then, but
Yeah, I would say those are a
Couple of examples of, you know,
You go in and as advocates we
Were always really very tactical
About the use of the
Instruments. The case itself
Wasn't going to solve the
Problem.
It was important for other
Actors to come in and say here
Are practical things that can be
Done as a result of which you
Know we can accept resolution of
The case.
So I think I'll stop.
I've got lots of other
Interesting cases we can talk
About as we go but I'll stop
With those two for now.
moderator: I do think the
Cambodian case is interesting
For the point thaw made about
The diplomatic context and the
Broader equities what are the
Conditions that the u.S. Or
Other major players can advocate
Effectively for labor rights.
My very brief time swimming in
The same stream as the two of
You was in the mid-2000s in the
Treasury department when we were
Working with cambodian
Government on that and the
Context of other development in
Debt related negotiations.
At that time 58 percent of c
Cambodia's exports went to the
U.S.
So there was a high degree of
U.S. Leverage.
There was a relationship between
The government that was still --
The government was not in full
Control and the royalist forces
Still had a major say in
Government.
So the dynamics were very
Favorable for negotiating on
That issue.
I think you are right that in
The early part of the 2000s,
Cambodia saw the emergence of
Some of the strongest labor
Unions anywhere in southeast
Asia as you also referenced more
Recently it's gone the other way
As the government has seen them
As a source of political
Opposition and has carried out
Targeted assassinations against
Labor leaders and so forth.
But for a phase when the
Conditions were favorable, I
Agree that it had a major impact
On the conditions for workers in
That country.
Particularly in the garment
Sector which is such a major
Employer.
sander levin: let me just
Comment briefly on those cases.
Very briefly.
As to cafta and as to mexico, a
Bilateral agreement can
Basically work if it's done
Right.
We're in the same neighborhood.
And there isn't a way easily for
Producers to shift from mexico
Or central america including
Dominican republic some place
Else.
So the challenge in a bilateral
Agreement is to really make it
Work.
And with cafta it was totally
Unworkable.
Enforce your own laws as bad as
They are.
And I should point out I think
One of the two major sources of
Immigration from central
America, two causes.
One is violence and the other is
Our economic conditions -- are
Economic conditions.
So we paid a very heavy price in
Cafta for failure to have
Enforceable labor conditions.
A high price.
Secondly, in terms of other
Countries, I think you have to
Have a multi-lateral structure
Contrary to the view of this
Administration which wants to do
Everything unilaterally or
Bilaterally.
Because cambodia is a perfect
Example.
It was the only place where the
Labor movement of the united
States became engaged.
And they supported our agreement
With cambodia.
The labor movement.
The date exactly.
It is the only case I can
Remember where the american
Labor movement in those days
Were supportive of a trade
Agreement.
The problem was that once unions
Were allowed and working
Conditions got better the
Companies moved their production
To other places, especially to
Vietnam.
So, while a bilateral system
Will work in some cases,
Contrary to the present notion
Opposed to any multi-lateral
Kind of structure, that was
Critical as to cambodia.
moderator: on similar lines
It was a peeric victory for the
Labor groups in 2019 got a new
Law finally passed on labor
Protections in cambodia and the
Wages went up by something like
Garment factories literally
Folded and moved as you are
Suggesting.
So, there is a pushing the
Balloon dimension to this that
Merits attention.
Let's get some of your thoughts
And questions.
It looks like michael is going
To start.
Maybe introduce yourself and
Share with us the first of the
Audience questions.
sander levin: no holds barred
Right?
I'm serious.
Trade is such a vital and
Volatile issue that unless you
Say no holds barred and people
Are totally frank, we kind of
Talk around each other.
understood.
I'll do my best to pull out the
Questions.
First thank you so much for
Being here.
Michael vice.
A first year student focusing on
International policy.
Our first question is the u.S.
Has expressed its displeasure
With the lack of accountability
For the wto appellate body.
What do you think could be
Possible reforms to correct this
Problem?
sander levin: let's answer
That briefly.
The wto enforceable system, it
Needs a basic reform.
But the president is using the
Lack of it to make a point.
S, approve aappointments so the
Infrastructure today is totally
Vulnerable.
There's only one person I think
And it requires three.
We had lots of fights.
I won't bore you with the fights
Over the wto enforcement.
They went way overboard at
Times.
It needs to be reformed,
Democratized.
But the notion that you should
Do without it and destroy it,
Well we just used as an ask.
Hopefully the day will come when
Labor and environment are
Part -- they are internationally
Enforced standards, right.
Because, otherwise, companies
Move.
I mean look what happened in
Central america.
I went to a place and I figured
Out how much the workers were
Making.
It was three women's panties and
It happened to have the price on
It.
And where it was going.
$5.
They were making a dollar an
Hour.
When we figured out how much
Labor went into that $5, you
Could double the minimum wage
That those mostly women, and
Many single women with children,
Were making and it would have
Increased the cost of the
Panties at that place in the
United states from $5 to $5.25
Cr
Doubling the wage they were
Receiving it would have increase
The cost to the consumer of
$0.25. So we need to have
Workable structures.
audience member: thank you
For being here.
My name is pa tasha.
I am a first year dual degree
Student in master of public
Policy and master of science
Information.
I have questions --
sander levin: say it loudly
To everybody can hear okay.
audience member: I have a
Question for both speakers.
The american labor movement is
Often portrayed as being
Insullyar.
Protecting the benefits of
Particular workers in a specific
Industry.
Is that characterization fair?
What is the best way to create
Solidarity between white male
Blue collar union members in the
U.S. And immigrants in the u.S.
Working around the world.
moderator: so, basically, the
Question is about when are we
Going to see more of what you
Described in cambodia in which
The u.S. Labor unions go to bat
For workers rights, conditions
In other parts of the world and
See them as part of the same
Effectively the same mission.
Does either of you want to start
With that?
bama Athreya: I can just talk
About -- let me talk about a
Couple of examples of, again,
Uses in cases.
I think it's important to, you
Know, recognize -- first of all
To recognize that labor
Movements are large membership
Based movements and accountable
To their members.
And that's fine, right.
That's how democratic
Institutions work.
That being the case, you know,
Again I feel like it's a
Situation where it depends on
What you look at.
If you look at what statements
The labor movement, you know,
And its representative
Organizations the afl-cio may
Have to make in a very high
Profile debate about whether or
Not to ratify a new trade
Agreement.
It's understandable why there's
A certain political cue lus that
The afl or another union might
Have to make in that
Circumstance.
It can be very different when
You look at this very granular
Level at what is happening with
Worker movements in particular
Countries at particular times.
I'm going to talk about two more
Cases.
The one is bangladesh.
And I think if people know
Nothing else about bangladesh,
Most people know that there is a
Very large garment sector in the
Country and that it has been the
Subject of some incredible
Tragedies in recent years.
The most well-known traffic
Incident is the collapse of the
Rana plaza building in 2013
Leading to the death of well
Over a thousand workers.
But labor groups in bangladesh
Had been in touch with labor
Groups in the united states for
Many years.
And there were solidarity
Campaigns targeting some of the
Big buyers of the apparel from
Bangladesh.
In 2013, there was a review of
Bangladesh's benefits under the
Unilateral preference program,
The gsp.
The afl-cio for years prior to
The rana plaza collapse year
After year had been filing
Submissions to ustr, I mean, for
Many years, saying bangladesh's
Labor laws are inadequate,
They're not protecting these
Workers, workers are not allowed
To organize, there must be
Reforms.
And in 2013 that case finally
Was taken up in a serious
Manner.
And I think professor levin had
Something to do with that as
Well.
He may want to comment.
And there was a suspension of
Bangladesh's benefits.
Now that was a situation in
Which the u.S. Labor movement
Was very comfortable and had
Been comfortable for years
Pushing the u.S. Government to
Enforce labor conditionality in
A way that showed solidarity
With groups on the ground in
Bangladesh.
I think, you know, there are
Other recent cases, actually
I'll just talk about one other
Case because people don't know
About it and it's another great
Case.
But again back to my point about
Cambodia, a lot of this is about
Timing is everything and where
We are in the diplomatic
Relationship.
Suazee land had trade
Preferences under a program
Called the africa growth and
Opportunity act, agoa.
Guess what sector got stood up
There.
Yes the apparel sector.
I don't mean to just talk about
The apparel sector but seems to
Be a thing that countries do
When they get trade programs in
Place.
You know, in the early 2010s the
Country is a monarchy, it's very
Autocratic, it's very
Repressive, was getting more and
More so.
And went as far as outlying all
Civil society organizations.
Right to I a shoesh yate,
Freedom of assembly, wiped it
Out.
So that did not only affect
Labor movements in suazee land.
You aren't even allowed to have
A business organization because
It was an association.
All the human rights groups got
Wiped out.
Church groups got wiped out. You
Know, again, afl-cio brought a
Petition to ustr on behalf of
Its allies in the trade union
Movement.
And the simple push was that the
Country had to reform its law
And organizations to allow a
Associations, you know, allow
Organizations to exist freely
Once more.
Very successful case.
In the course of a few years --
I mean, and ustr yanked the
Benefits.
They took away the agoa
Benefits.
That was controversial.
People were being hurt.
The union was telling us we'll
Take the pain.
Something has to change.
Benefits were removed.
Swazee government reformed the
Law.
In the interval because many of
Us that were working with the
Swazee labor movement they were
Able to survive through the
Period of incredible repression
And hold open that space for the
Rest of civil society, the human
Rights that groups that had go
Go underground because they
Could exist because they were in
The spotlight because of this
Case.
So, when the law was amended and
It was possible to openly
Associate once more, unions were
Able to, you know, it had been
In the wedge in the door to open
That door wider for other
Organizations.
Indeed I believe it was in 2018
We restored agoa benefits.
So a couple examples where the
Labor union was there and they
Were the ones bringing the case.
sander levin: just a couple
Of comments about labor.
The labor movement is going to
Play a more substantial role in
The enforcement of usmca.
That's been provided.
But I think the problem is going
To be the way it's structured.
Mexico is the only democracy on
Earth which has the kind of
Structure it now has with tens
Of thousands of so-called
Protection agreements that
Workers have never seen, never
Voted on.
It's going to be very hard to
Make a dent in that.
And my concern is the way the
Law is constructed it will make
It even more difficult because
It relates to individual
Locations.
But let me just say a word about
Bangladesh.
To the credit of the european
Apparel makers, when they set up
After rana plaza where 1,100
People died, the european
Organization included the labor
Movement.
But the one that was set up by
American companies did not.
And so while working
Conditions -- and you know more
About this first-hand than I do;
I haven't been there for a few
Years now.
While the working conditions in
Terms of safety have improved,
The other conditions for workers
I don't think have.
So if you look at your clothing,
My guess is if we did it here
Now probably a few of us would
Have garments on that say
Bangladesh.
And the workers there continue
To be paid close to a dollar, a
Dollar and a quarter an hour.
And how can you live on that?
That's what this country needs
To ask.
How can people live on it?
And the answer is to central
America they can't.
So it's one of the reasons they
Leave.
audience member: that leads
Into our next question which is
Focused for dr. Athreya but
Please jump in.
Dr. Athreya you worked in the
Ngo, private sector and the u.S.
Government.
Where do you feel most effective
In protecting workers and why?
bama Athreya: so, yeah, I
Mean, there's not -- there's not
A choice there.
There's not really a choice.
And it's interesting because
Most recently I've been in
Government.
And in government had the
Opportunity to see the flip-side
Of cases I had brought when I
Was on the outside as an
Advocate.
We had some very -- even over
The past, you know, couple of
Years, right, so we have had
Some very good work by people in
Public service in the various
U.S. Government entities that
Work on these trade cases, you
Know, with integrity bringing
The cases forward.
But people in government can't
Do that without the outside
Groups who find the facts, bring
The cases forward.
You know, so to put the
Information forward.
So this gives me an excuse to
Come back to one of the early
Points I made in the first few
Minutes.
That is I don't think groups on
The outside quite realized the
Potential of what they could be
Doing with these cases.
And the appetite that people and
Particularly people who are just
Charged with enforcing the laws,
Right, not the politicals, not
The people who are making
Policy, the people whose job it
Is just to enforce the laws that
We have.
What they could do with more
Information on more of the
Conditions, you know, of what's
Really happening on labor and
Environment in more of these
Countries.
So, you know, I won't go on.
I will just say, like, that's
Just such a necessary compliment
You really can't choose between
Where you are more effective.
As for the role of business,
That hasn't come up at all so
Maybe an interesting moment to
Take just, you know, a minute to
Think about that and just as a
Discussion, you know, sort of
Open up a discussion.
A lot of what I have observed
And indeed what also when I was
Working with the private sector
Worked on, was standing up
Systems to manage supply chain
Issues.
To mitigate risk in supply
Chains.
Reduce the risk of the exposure
Of labor rights violations.
And those kinds of voluntary
Risk management efforts are, you
Know, fine, but I feel they are
A thing unto themselves and they
Don't really get at the heart of
What is meant to be addressed
With these labor clauses in the
Various trade instruments.
The reason they don't get there
Is, again, going back to another
One of the points I made early
On.
Because really what all of those
Inst
Instruments do is create that
Wedge, right.
Wedge open that space as I
Described with the swazee.
Then it's really up to workers
And worker organizations.
At the end of the day, who is
Really going to improve
Cond
Conditions of those supply
Chains.
Workers themselves if they had
The agency to do so.
I think the business side
Private voluntary programs, I
Think professor levin you quite
Rightly point out there are very
Few of the accord, which is the
Eu agreement that was stood up
After bangladesh, is one of the
Very few that actually puts
Unions into the equation and,
You know, considers them as a
Partner.
For the most part, the rest of
Them are perfectly happy to work
On health and safety.
They're perfectly happy to work
On, you know, ending child
Labor.
But they will not go as far as
Actually creating that space to
Negotiate with workers.
sander levin: to its credit
The university has a committee
That works with the business
Community in terms of its
Purchases.
And I went to a meeting and I
Think it would be well for the
University to talk further about
How it is more effective.
It is a difficult issue.
But, you know, if we don't face
Up to this, we're going to have
Demons
Demonstrations.
Institutions need to step up to
The plate.
If there were another rana
Plaza, my guess is with all the
Vitality among students at this
University, you would see
Activity.
Rightfully so.
Moment.
By the way they did not want to
Go into rana plaza and they were
Told, if you don't go in, you're
Fired.
So that's kind of what's at
Stake.
In part.
What's next?
A lot of back and forth.
What's the most controversial
Issue you can think of?
Most controversial question?
audience member: I don't know
If this is the most
Controversial, but current labor
Laws in the u.S. Struggle to
Adapt to new and different forms
Of employment such as the
Economy.
How did this affect labor right
Promotion both domestically and
Abroad.
sander levin: say that again.
audience member: current
Labor laws in the u.S. Struggle
To adapt to new and different
Forms of employment such as the
Gig economy.
How does this affect labor
Promotion both domestically and
Abroad.
bama Athreya: I can start on
This since I've started doing
Some research this year on
Digital economy issues.
And so there's -- we don't know.
I mean, let me take a step back
To people who are looking at the
Changes in the economy that are
Being brought as a result of our
Moving into what some are
Calling the fourth industrial
Revolution.
Which is technology, artificial
Intelligence and the ways in
Which it is really sort of
Changing the entire global
Economic landscape.
We are -- and one thing that I
Am just going to observe and
Comment on is we are locked into
A conceptualization of labor
Rights that dates back 100
Years.
It dates back to the formation
Of the international labor
Organization in 1919.
Just after world war I.
And at a moment when governments
Were scared to death of what was
Happening in russia, you know,
Sort of communist revolution,
And workers rising up.
So we needed labor standards to
Deal with that world as it
Looked in 1919.
And so we have our current
Modern day systems of industrial
Relations.
And we have our notion of core
Labor rights which are centered
Around the premise that people
Have formal employment.
What are core labor rights?
The right to associate, the
Right to bargain collectively,
The right to a workplace free
From discrimination, the
Abolition of child labor and the
Abolition of forced labor.
Great, they're all still really
Important fundamental rights but
We absolutely need to think
About the ways in which work
Itself is now being mediated
Very differently.
And this is the subject of
Another talk.
[laughter] and not this talk
Today.
And so, I mean, I think it is a
Really interesting question
Because we have to ask ourselves
How do we make those rights real
And meaningful in a world where
Work itself is digitally
Mediated.
sander levin: we had a
Discussion on that yesterday.
That's how contemporary this
Place is.
I think it was just yesterday
Wasn't it?
And the economy is changing so
Fast.
So we need to ask questions.
By the way, universities are in
The center of this rather
Well-known institution on the
East coast is very much involved
In this very issue.
It isn't quite the same issue,
But it's -- these are not
Industrial workers, typically.
And it's going be even more so
With, I mean, what uber's
Facing, right.
So that could be controversial
For another session.
audience member: taking a
Step back and looking at
History, there's the korea-us
Trade agreement that lasted
Nearly ten years.
Despite extensive input,
Vetting, review and
Congressional oversight, what is
Wrong with the process that does
Not take into account the
Principal that both of you
Present.
How can we alter the process to
Get such comprehensive views on
The table?
sander levin: why don't you
Answer that.
[ laughter ]
I mean, the comprehensive
Issues about the broader
Relationship in which this is
Embedded?
It's not easy to answer that
Succinctly.
But I will say that a part of
It -- it's related to the points
That my colleagues have made
About multi-lateralism.
That it's difficult to imagine
Even in a highly favorable
Bilateral context of diplomacy
To be effective in this space if
The multi-lateral machinery is
Broken.
Because as we all have mentioned
In different points in the
Conversation, most of the labor
Operations that we're discussing
Are for industries that are
Quite easily movable.
And, therefore, will move if
There are incentives to do that,
To find cheaper labor with fewer
Restrictions elsewhere.
So I think that this is -- I
Guess where I would say to start
Is to repair and strengthen
Multi-lateral trade
Institutions.
Because without that no sum of
Effective bilateral diplomatic
Engagements is likely to resolve
This problem sustainably.
sander levin: we need to get
Bilateral correct.
But to simply think we can go it
Alone, that's another subject in
A way.
audience member: has the
Trade war between the u.S. And
China affected how labor
Standards are enforced?
Have any particular sectors
Placed pressure in the
Negotiating these deals?
sander levin: I'll just say a
Brief word about that.
Because when susan collins and I
Put together our course trying
To find two subjects which
Showed the huge bridge that
Needed to be built between
Strong academic learning and the
Challenges of implementing them,
We took unemployment insurance
That hasn't been reformed since
Its beginning really, and china
Pntr.
So, actually that could be a
Very controversial issue for
Those of who us worked on china
Pntr and eventually help to
Construct it.
It was more than controversial.
Labor issues were included but
Only in terms of the database on
Human rights, which is now the
Strongest database that exists.
It included labor rights.
But you could ask a
Controversial question: why are
You so upset about labor rights
In mexico when you redid usmca
But not china?
That's a legitimate issue,
Right?
And the answer I think is
Multi-fold.
Number one.
As is true for china, there's a
Direct impact of labor standards
In mexico in terms of jobs in
The united states.
And that's true as to china.
Finally, economists kind of got
Off the couch and some of them
Decided there were two to three
Million jobs in this country
Lost because of china's exports
To the u.S.
They've been less willing to
Cope with mexico though it had a
Clear impact in terms of the
Dual weight structure in the
United states which we're just
Beginning -- which is now being
Modified.
So the honest answer is you take
These step by step and where you
Can really bring about change
You do it.
As to china it was simply very
Difficult to really get at their
Labor practices through pntr.
There was no way to do it.
So, it is a really good question
And it is the kind of
Controversial issue that we
Should all discuss.
So, I'll leave it at that and
Someone may want to pick it up.
audience member: can you
Speak to legislation or laws
Which give individuals in unions
The right not to pay dues?
There's some state laws going
Into that allow people to --
sander levin: about what?
audience member: the right to
Work and the right for
Individuals in the union to have
The right not to pay dues.
They can be part of the new
Union without paying dues.
sander levin: this relates to
Right to work and dues paying.
bama Athreya: and also I
Think the supreme court case as
Well.
sander levin: maybe we should
Leave that to another time.
I mean, it's related but it's --
You can imagine how many of us
Think how important it is.
But I think this is such a juicy
Subject that we don't want to
Throw in another orange.
audience member: all right.
Shifting gears a little bit.
Please comment on the role of
Labor journalists and the
Unionizing of media companies on
The larger question of labor and
Trade.
So what are the roles of labor
Journalists and media companies
On labor and trade?
sander levin: key.
No, I mean, just look what's
Going on as to labor and
Everything else in this country
Today.
And there's a worrisome erosion
Of journalism in this country.
And that's again another subject
For discussion.
Very worrisome.
I mean, it's journalists who
Pick out, for example, the
Issues to usmca.
Interestingly enough the best
Journalism was done by some
American reporters in mexico.
There really wasn't a very good
Job done in my judgment.
But they're indispensable right.
And the closing of local
News
Newspapers. So we can just leave
It at that.
It's critical.
audience member: so climate
Change has played a major factor
In a lot of the developing
Countries.
It's affecting them the most.
Now how does climate change
Policy developing countries
Affect the labor market, labor
Laws and international trade?
bama Athreya: these are all
Such big questions.
So I always like to kind of
Speak by example.
We do think there is a direct
Relationship with -- I'm going
To go to a direct example on
This and that is bangladesh.
Bangladesh is is a country with
An enormous coastline, has been
Identified as highly vulnerable.
Highly vulnerable to climate
Risk and rising sea levels.
And that will displace
Increasing numbers of people.
We know already, right we can
Forecast that that displacement
Will then put additional
Pressure on labor markets,
Particularly urban labor markets
As people migrate from
Vulnerable regions to cities in
Search of some kind of
Livelihood, economic livelihood,
Which in turn will likely
Depress conditions in those
Labor markets even further than
They're already depressed.
And it's not obviously just
Bang
Bangladesh.
It just happens to be a very big
Populous country.
It's like a petrie dish where
You can see what's going to
Happen.
Arguably you will see obviously
Very different but related
Impacts when you look at
Vulnerable communities,
Particularly coastal
Communities, in a number of
Developing countries --
Sri lanka, coastal regions of
India, indonesia, philippines.
We haven't even gotten to other
Regions of the world yet.
And, you know, governments know
This.
And they know they're already
Having to start to adapt to
Shifting their approach -- their
Urban policy and urbanization.
Because they can see that
They're going to have to deal
With increasing waves of what
We'll call climate refugees.
I would argue we're not paying
Enough attention to climate
Refugees as a cross board of
Phenomenon.
We haven't talked except for a
Little bit about migrant
Workers. Most migrants in the
World are economic migrants.
They're looking for jobs.
They have been on the rise and
Really exponentially on the rise
Over the past decade.
People moving across borders,
You know, in search of economic
Opportunity.
With the changes, again, and
Vulnerabilities and risk to
Communities posed by climate
Change you're going to see
Increasing levels of migration.
We're going have to deal with
That as a labor market issue.
So, we're kind of off trade all
Together now.
So, again, you know, lots of
Good topics coming up in these
Questions for future lectures
But I think we need to think
About and we haven't talked
About what we are doing to
Manage migration flows.
And I mean manage.
I don't mean sort of -- we're
Not talking about keeping people
Out.
We're talking about the fact
That people are moving.
Goods move, services move.
We have trade agreements.
Let's have sensible migration
Agreements in place.
audience member: this
Question pertains to technology
And labor enforcement.
With the growing popularity of
Using predictive analytics to
Proactively enforce crimes in
Various u.S. Cities, can this
Technology be applied to
Enforcing labor violations at
Least in high income eocd
Countries?
Do you see any drawbacks to this
Enforcement approach?
bama Athreya: I'm all over
This question because this was
Some of the experimentation that
I got to, you know, had the
Great plashir of being --
Pleasure with being involved
With as my role at usa id.
We were actually interested in
Highly vulnerable and invisible
Populations of workers that we
Knew were at risk of very
Serious violations.
And one of my personal
Obsessions was the young men and
Boys who work on fishing vessels
Around the world and who have
Now been documented to, you
Know, by a number of excellent
Journalists to basically be
Slaves at sea.
They're enslaved on fishing
Vessels around the world.
Many are migrants from very poor
Countries.
Once they're on the vessels
They're not able to get off.
We knew they were off the grid,
No labor inspectors could reach
Them.
And and they were suffering
Egregious labor and human rights
Violations. So we were extremely
Interested in what could be done
With technology given that there
Was no other way to get eyes and
Ears and access to these young
Men and boys.
So we invested and we were not
The only ones but there were
Sort of a number of us that were
Seized with this question of
Whether we could use some
Combination of vessel monitoring
Technology and satellite
Technology to triangulate and
Identify where crew were most at
Risk.
So, that given limited resources
In the world, you could better
Pinpoint and get the resources
That you do have to the people
Who are most likely to be at
Risk.
You know, the jury is still out.
Investments have been made.
I think it will be interesting
To see what comes of them.
I actually, you know, we can
Talk more about this but, you
Know, I think this is an area
Where there's promise and
There's peril.
And the promise again is really
Finding people who are otherwise
Completely invisible and making
Them visible.
The peril has to do with, you
Know, as subject that I think
More of us are becoming
Increasingly aware of and that
Is the nature of surveillance
Technology and the information
It captures that should be
Protected private information.
So this has come up even with
Respect to some of the things
We've done to keep crews safe on
Vessels in southeast asia.
Things like using biometric I.D.
On crew so we know who has
Gotten on the boat, who's gotten
Off the boat.
It's been pointed out there's
Really serious privacy
Considerations.
And potential violations and
Abuses of the data that has been
Collected by governments for the
Purposes of keeping crews safe
But anything, you know, sort of
Can be used and subverted.
So that's I think a short answer
To the question.
Obviously I've got a lot more to
Say on this but it's an
Interesting question.
sander levin: you know, it's
More just briefly than
Technology.
Because in many countries I know
Somewhat first-hand about those
Who leave nepal.
Their passports are taken.
They're just taken.
And so we need -- that's why
There also needs to be a
Multi-lateral structure relating
To these problems.
Can you imagine going to work
And having your passport taken
So you can't leave?
It happens all the time in many
Countries.
In thailand, in other eastern
Economies.
bama Athreya: and just to
Make one more point to link it
Back.
So, completely agree that you
Can't just have, you know, tools
Are just tools you also need
Systems in place that protect
People.
But just to tie this back to
Trade.
That particular -- this
Particular case of thailand
Improving systems to, you know,
There's a long way to go but at
Least track crew that are
Getting on boats in thai ports
Happened at all because the eu,
The european union, brought a
Trade case against thailand.
And so it's just, you know,
Linking it all back together.
Some of these little things that
We might think are good ideas,
You still need to create the
Political space for them to be
Adopted as well.
And trade in that case, you
Know, trade scrutiny did that.
moderator: let's take one
More question then we'll invite
To you continue the conversation
Outside.
audience member: this is
Respect to the beginning of the
Conversation.
How far do we know to impose
Standards that we accept but are
Beyond the economic capabilities
Of the partner country?
Basic standards such as osha may
Force cultural obstacles.
How do we develop a mutually
Acceptable levelling up
Strategy?
sander levin: so how far do
We go?
You know, in terms of labor,
There's so much
Misunderstanding.
It isn't for us to determine the
Specific wage.
It's to make sure there's a free
Labor market.
And there's often a
Misunderstanding of that.
There is no free labor market in
Mexico.
They now have a progressive
Government that needs to face up
To that.
They're increasing the minimum
Wage I think to $0.90 an hour.
That's an improvement.
But we need to be honest with
Ourselves and honest with
Others.
Essentially in that case, if I
Might use it, it is a question
Of our neighbor which is a
Democracy now with a progressive
Government, making sure that
There is a free democratic labor
Market.
So it can then lift up.
It's setting the conditions.
And the same is true of all
Human rights, right.
It isn't a matter of our
Dictating the results.
It's ensuring the opportunities.
And that's a very american idea
Isn't it?
That is a very american idea.
That's kind of what our country
Is all about, right?
It isn't results.
It's opportunity that can affect
The results.
And that's really what this
Issue is all about.
So those who misdescribe it, no
One expects the garment workers
In bangladesh to be making 5, 6,
$7 an hour when they're making
$1 an hour now, it's providing
The tools for people to utilize.
And it's so american -- it's so
Much a part of our creed that we
Need to simply be very, very
Clear cut about what's at stake
Here.
And I don't know if we're ending
But, I mean, we should be proud
Of what's happened in this
Country that helped create the
Middle-class.
It was a free labor market
Wasn't it?
And so that's really -- and now
In cambodia, I mean, there's a
Dictator who is destroying the
Labor movement.
When I was there it was
Abominable.
And in vietnam when we were
Negotiating tpp, all we said to
The obama administration was:
Just insist that vietnam move
Towards a free labor market.
And when I went to australia and
Met with the negotiator, he said
To me, there will never be an
Independent union in vietnam.
So, and they had thrown in jail
Two people we med one there who
Had been in jail for four years
For trying to form an
Independent union.
But we needed to be is very
Clear cut.
There had to be real change as a
Condition in terms of
Opportunity and in terms of
Structure.
So, it is a good question and in
A sense it isn't simple to
Implement it but it's simple to
State it.
And we need to be clear about
That.
And it relates to kind of
Everything.
You are getting me carried away.
I met armstrong sushi when we
Went there.
And what a disappointment right.
So, now you have how many
Millions, hundreds of thousands
Of people who have lost their
Fre
Freedom.
And the freedom to organize in
Simple terms helped make the
Middle-class of this country.
We should be damn proud of it.
And proud to incorporate it into
A realistic way in what we
Propose.
moderator: thank you.
That's a very nice closing
Comment.
And let's thank the towsley
Foundation, the weiser family
And, of course, our speakers,
Dr. Bama Athreya and our own
Professor Sandy Levin.
[applause]
Now please feel free to continue
The conversation outside.