Allegations: the complainant, who represents workers in the informal economy,
contests a ministerial resolution granting trade union registration to organize only workers
in a relationship of dependence. It also alleges that the Ministry is delaying the granting
of trade union status and has therefore rejected the application for the approval of a
collective labour agreement
- 121. The complaint is contained in a communication of the Single Union of
stallholders of outlets centres, street markets and shopping precincts of the Republic
of Argentina (SUPOFEPRA) of 7 December 2018. SUPOFEPRA sent additional information
through communications dated 10 October 2019, 26 March and 29 July 2020, 9 August 2021
and 25 July 2022.
- 122. The Government sent its observations in communications received on 7
August 2019 and 7 February 2023.
- 123. Argentina has ratified the Freedom of Association and Protection of
the Right to Organise Convention, 1948 (No. 87), the Right to Organise and Collective
Bargaining Convention, 1949 (No. 98), and the Collective Bargaining Convention, 1981
(No. 154).
A. The complainant’s allegations
A. The complainant’s allegations- 124. In its communication of 7 December 2018, the complainant indicates
that: (i) on 3 August 2017, having met all the requirements under the Act on trade union
associations (LAS) No. 23.551, SUPOFEPRA applied to the Directorate of Trade Union
Associations of the Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security for registration
as a trade union; (ii) on 8 February 2018, it received notification by the Ministry
requesting it to amend certain administrative errors of form and pointing out that there
had to be a relationship of dependence between the members and the employers that lease
or rent out the stalls to them; and (iii) on 23 February 2018 it responded to this
request, stating that article 14 bis of the National Constitution grants the right to
establish a trade union to all workers and not only to those in a relationship of
dependence, and requested the Ministry to take into account the jurisprudence
established by the State concerning the recognition and registration of other trade
unions that organize workers without a relationship of dependence, such as the Union of
Taxi Drivers of the Federal Capital with trade union status No. 460, the National
Federation of Taxi Drivers with trade union status No. 1382, the Single Union of Haulage
Companies with trade union status No. 1806, the Union of Newspaper and Magazine Vendors
with trade union status No. 27, the Union of Street, Beach and Coastal Vendors of the
Mar del Plata Area with trade union registration No. 1270, the Union of Sports Stadium
and Train Station Vendors with trade union registration No. 2268 and the Street Vendors
Union with trade union status No. 1381.
- 125. In its communications of 10 October 2019, 26 March and 29 July 2020,
9 August 2021 and 25 July 2022, the complainant indicates that by resolution 534/2019
dated 2 July 2019, the State granted trade union registration to the Single Union of
Street Market Workers of the Republic of Argentina (SUTFRA) (formerly known as
SUPOFEPRA), thereby becoming the first trade union organization to organize street
market and stallholder workers’ activity. The complainant indicates that, according to
the text of the resolution in question, only workers in a relationship of dependence in
the street market, marketplace and shopping precinct sector were allowed to organize.
The complainant considers that this is not logical since the issue relates precisely to
activities of the informal economy and it cannot be said that in such informality there
are workers in a relationship of dependence. The complainant organization, which claims
to represent independent workers – workers in fairs, markets, and shopping precincts –
within the informal economy, indicates that according to the master file on the basis of
which it was granted trade union registration, it was demonstrated that the sector is
economically subordinated. The complainant also indicates that on 13 August 2019 it
requested the Ministry, through case No. EX-2019-72262421-APN-DGDMT, to allow non-waged
independent workers to organize and that on 2 January 2020 it requested the Ministry,
through case No. EX-2020-00228330-APN-DGDMT, to issue a resolution in this regard.
- 126. The complainant indicates that on 2 January 2020, it also requested
the Ministry to grant it trade union status (the complainant attached a copy of the
request, which bears a receipt stamp of the Ministry) and alleges that the Ministry has
been delaying without logical or legal grounds, in a clearly arbitrary manner, the
granting of union status, despite the fact that it is urgently needed by the sector. The
complainant indicates that on 16 April 2022 it informed the Ministry of the signing of a
collective labour agreement with an employer in the sector and requested its respective
approval to confer an erga omnes nature on the agreement. The complainant alleges that
the Ministry rejected the application for the approval of the collective labour
agreement submitted, arguing that the union did not have trade union status. The
complainant attached a copy of a technical report of the Technical Legal Advisory Unit
of the Ministry dated 21 June 2022, which indicates that SUTFRA holds only simple trade
union registration, and therefore does not have sufficient capacity to negotiate the
collective agreement. The report indicates that, in accordance with the Act on
collective bargaining No. 14250 and the LAS, it is the organization with trade union
status that has bargaining capacity. The complainant indicates that the Ministry does
not consider that SUTFRA is a pioneer trade union organization that organizes workers in
fairs, markets, and shopping precincts, and that there is no such other organization
holding either a trade union status or simple registration.
B. The Government’s reply
B. The Government’s reply- 127. In its communications received on 7 August 2019 and 7 February 2023,
the Government indicates that the complainant does not identify in the complaint how the
exercise of its freedom of association has been restricted. The Government indicates
that the complainant has sent several communications and that in each of them it has
used different terms ranging from the relationship of dependence, independent work,
informality, micro-entrepreneurship, economic subordination, and interdependent work,
choosing and highlighting what suits it best, and making assertions without any basis
and without providing any documentation to support such assertions, which makes it
impossible to determine the number of members it claims to have. The Government also
understands that this difficulty in understanding who are the workers that it claims to
represent entails the risk of endorsing the concealment of real employment relationships
that accompany processes of non-compliance with labour law.
- 128. The Government states that: (i) in its first communication, the
complainant refers to the written submission it made before the National Directorate of
Trade Union Associations of the Ministry of Labour, Employment and Security, in which it
stated that the trade union was made up of mostly self-employed workers with
“interdependence” or “economically dependent self-employed work”, due to the large
number of informal workers or what is currently called “para-subordinate workers” who,
although there is economic dependence on those who benefit from their services, are not
registered as workers in a relationship of dependence; (ii) in its second communication
the complainant maintains that on 2 July 2019, the former Ministry of Production and
Labour, now the Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social Security, issued resolution
534/2019 which granted trade union registration to the Single Union of Street Market
Workers of the Republic of Argentina (SUTFRA), as a first-degree trade association to
organize workers employed in fairs, shopping precincts and municipal markets, with an
area of action in different cities of the country; (iii) subsequently, the complainant
indicates having demonstrated a marked economic subordination in which its comrades are
immersed and points out that the State must provide them with the solution that will
bring them dignity and recognition as independent workers; (iv) in another
communication, the complainant indicates that in the master file through which they were
granted trade union registration, it was demonstrated that the sector is economically
subordinated; and (v) in the context of its inaccuracies, the complainant states that it
also brings together independent workers.
- 129. The Government indicates that it would appear from the foregoing
that the complainant claims to represent all workers in the country, citing a series of
statistics in which the source of the information is not substantiated and that the lack
of precision from the complainant makes it impossible to establish what its personal
scope of representation is.
- 130. The Government indicates that, although the complainant claims to
have signed a collective bargaining agreement with employers in the sector and that the
Ministry of Labour would have rejected its request for approval on the grounds that it
does not have trade union status, the Government has no information other than this
claim, nor a reference to the records of the workers it claims to represent. The
Government indicates that SUTFRA was granted registration due to the mere registration
of 83 members in a relationship of dependence and that, in order to have the power to
negotiate collective bargaining agreements, it will have to compare with the
organizations in the sector that claim to be the most representative based on objective
criteria. The Government indicates that some trade unions have applied to the Ministry
of Labour to reserve the rights of each trade union for the opportunity provided for in
article 25 of the LAS (application for trade union status), requesting that the
comparative representativeness assessment be carried out with SUTFRA. The LAS
differentiates between trade union organizations that are simply registered and those
that hold trade union status, meaning those recognized by the State as the most
representative in their territorial scope. Pursuant to the provisions of article 31(c)
of the LAS, trade union organizations with the trade union status are those that have
the exclusive right to intervene in collective bargaining. The Government indicates
that, according to the records kept by the Ministry, there is no administrative action
showing that SUTFRA has submitted itself to the objective comparative assessment to
represent workers in collective bargaining. The Government also indicates that,
according to the National Directorate of Trade Union Associations of the Ministry of
Labour, although SUTFRA has a mandate for the period from October 2019 to October 2023,
the trade union is going through a serious institutional conflict within its executive
committee, which is currently in leaderless.
- 131. The Government states that it has been focusing its efforts on
promoting workers’ rights as a key element in achieving inclusive and sustainable
growth, with particular attention to freedom of association and the effective
recognition of the right to collective bargaining as enabling rights, thereby also
promoting the transition from the informal to the formal economy. The Government notes
that informality is a broad concept and that “the informal economy includes wage and
self-employed workers, family workers, and workers who move from one status to the
other; it includes workers who are engaged in new flexible work arrangements and who are
on the periphery of the core business or at the end of the production chain”. The
Government indicates that in May 2020 it created the Commission for Disputes, Mediation
and Proposals of the Basic Subsistence Economy with the aim of preserving social peace
and guaranteeing the right of every person to have the opportunity to earn a living by
means that ensure them decent living conditions, and indicates that, among other powers,
this Commission prepares reports and proposals that tend to the transition from
informality to formality and transparency.
- 132. The Government also refers to Resolution No. 118/21 of the Ministry
of Labour, Employment and Social Security, which establishes that persons working in the
popular and basic subsistence economy may join associations and exercise the rights
granted to them by the resolution, once the relevant registration has been obtained. The
Government indicates that workers in the popular and basic subsistence economy are
considered to be, among others, those who work individually or collectively to generate
personal and family income, whether they are self-employed, casual, or occasional
workers; street vendors; occupants of street stalls, small fairs, and handcraft sales;
vehicle attendants; shoeshiners; or work for cooperatives.
- 133. The Government indicates that the Registry of Associations of
Workers’ Associations of the Popular Economy and Basic Subsistence has been created
within the Ministry of Labour and that the resolution admitting the registration will
grant social status so that the association can exercise different rights such as
representing its members, individually or collectively, and promoting their
participation in all activities that help the transition from informality to formality.
The Government indicates that the Ministry of Labour will oversee the administration of
the Registry and that the Procedural Regulations of the Registry were approved in
2022.
C. The Committee’s conclusions
C. The Committee’s conclusions- 134. The Committee notes that in the complaint submitted in 2018, the
complainant, which claims to represent informal economy workers, specifically
stallholders in outlet centres, street markets and shopping precincts, alleges that the
process initiated a year previously to obtain its trade union registration had not been
completed and that it had been notified that there had to be a relationship of
dependence between the members and the employers that lease or rent out the stalls to
them. The Committee notes that, in subsequent communications, the complainant contests
the ministerial resolution of 2019 which, while it granted trade union registration,
allowed SUTFRA to organize only workers who provide services in a relationship of
dependence, which it considers illogical as it represents workers in the informal
economy. The Committee notes that the complainant indicates that, although it has asked
the Ministry to allow it to organize workers without a relationship of dependence, it
has reportedly not received a reply in this regard. The Committee also takes note that
the complainant additionally alleges that, despite being a pioneer trade union
organization that brings together workers in fairs, markets, and shopping precincts, the
Ministry has been delaying without any grounds the granting of union status (requested
in 2020), and that, given that it does not have union status, its application for the
approval of a collective labour agreement was rejected.
- 135. The Committee notes that, the Government, for its part, points out
that: (i) the complainant does not indicate in what way the exercise of its freedom of
association has been limited and in the various communications sent it uses terms
ranging from relationship of dependence, independent work, informality,
micro-entrepreneurship, economic subordination, interdependent work, making unfounded
assertions and without accompanying any documentation, with which it is impossible to
establish the personal scope of representation of SUTFRA and to determine its number of
members; (ii) on 2 July 2019, pursuant to Resolution 534/2019, SUTFRA was granted
registration due to the mere registration of “83 members with a relationship of
dependence”; (iii) in order to negotiate collective bargaining agreements, SUTFRA must
be comparatively assessed with the most representative organizations in the sector based
on objective criteria and in this case some unions have already presented themselves to
the Ministry and have requested a comparative representativeness assessment with SUTFRA
in order to obtain trade union status and there is no record that SUTFRA has presented
itself for the assessment; and (iv) SUTFRA is going through a serious institutional
conflict within its executive committee, which is currently leaderless. The Committee
also notes the Government’s indications that it has been taking a series of measures to
promote and encourage the transition from informality to formality and to guarantee the
rights of informal workers. The Government refers, among other measures, to the
establishment of the Commission on Conflicts, Mediation and Uprisings in the Basic
Subsistence Economy and the Register of Associations of Workers’ Associations in the
Popular and Basic Subsistence Economy.
- 136. The Committee observes that the complainant and the Government
concur that, by virtue of the ministerial resolution 534/2019, SUTFRA was registered as
a trade union to organize workers in a dependent relationship who provide services in
street markets, shopping precincts and municipal markets. The Committee notes, however,
that the complainant objects to the fact that it was told there must be a relationship
of dependence between the members and the employers renting the stalls and that,
although it requested to be allowed to organize workers without a relationship of
dependence, it did not receive a reply in this respect. While noting that the Government
highlights that the trade union has not provided documentation to establish its personal
scope of representation, the Committee observes that the Government has not pronounced
itself on the elements that would prevent SUTFRA from being granted the right to
affiliate both dependent and independent workers in the sector concerned.
- 137. The Committee recalls that it requested a government to take the
necessary measures to ensure that self-employed workers fully enjoyed freedom of
association rights, in particular the right to join organizations of their own choosing
and that the free exercise of the right to establish and join unions implies the free
determination of the structure and composition of unions, [see Compilation of decisions
of the Committee on Freedom of Association, sixth edition, 2018, paras 388 and 502].
Further recalling that the criterion for determining the persons covered by the right to
organize is not based on the existence of an employment relationship and that workers
who do not have employment contracts should have the right to form the organizations of
their choosing if they so wish [see Compilation, para. 330], the Committee expects the
Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that workers in outlets, fairs and
shopping precincts, without distinction whatsoever, have the right to establish and join
organizations of their own choosing, subject only to the rules of the organizations
concerned. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this
respect.
- 138. As regards the trade union status that SUTFRA allegedly requested in
2020, the Committee observes that, from the documentation submitted by the Government,
it appears that other trade union organizations appeared before the Ministry and
requested that a comparative assessment be made in order to determine which of them is
the most representative in their territorial area. The Committee observes that, while
the complainant alleges that there is an unjustified delay in the processing of the
application for trade union status, according to the Government, SUTFRA did not submit
itself to such an assessment and, consequently, since it does not have trade union
status, the approval of the collective agreement would have been denied. Noting that the
above seems to indicate a lack of communication between SUTFRA and the competent
ministerial authorities, the Committee requests the Government to engage in constructive
dialogue with all the parties concerned to resolve the issues concerning freedom of
association in the informal economy and to resolve the issues concerning
representativeness of SUTFRA as soon as possible. The Committee requests the Government
to keep it informed in this respect.
The Committee’s recommendations
The Committee’s recommendations- 139. In the light of its foregoing conclusions, the Committee invites the
Governing Body to approve the following recommendations:
- (a) The Committee
expects the Government to take the necessary measures to ensure that workers,
without distinction whatsoever, have the right to establish and join organizations
of their own choosing, subject only to the rules of the organizations concerned. The
Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this respect.
- (b)
The Committee requests the Government to engage in constructive dialogue with all
the parties concerned to resolve the issues concerning freedom of association in the
informal sector and to resolve the issues concerning representativeness of SUTFRA as
soon as possible. The Committee requests the Government to keep it informed in this
respect.