German Trade Union Confederation
This article is in prose. is available. (March 2012) |
German Trade Union Confederation | |
Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund | |
TUAC | |
Website | www.dgb.de |
---|
The German Trade Union Confederation (
The DGB coordinates joint demands and activities within the German trade union movement. It represents the member unions in contact with the government authorities, the political parties and the employers' organisations. However, the umbrella organisation is not directly involved in collective bargaining and does not conclude collective labour agreements.
Union delegates elect committees for 9 districts, 66 regions and the federal centre. The organisation holds a federal congress every four years. This assembly sets the framework for trade union policies and elects five Federal Executives. Together with the presidents of the member unions they constitute the DGB's executive committee. The members of the executive committee, together with the DGB regional presidents and 70 delegates from the unions, form a Federal Council which meets once a year to make decisions on national issues. The DGB also has a youth organisation, DGB-Jugend.
The DGB has its headquarters in Berlin. It is a member of the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC) and the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC).
History
Until 1933
As first German confederation of unions at 14 March 1892 the Generalkommission der Gewerkschaften Deutschlands was founded in
1946–1949
After World War II German unions had to reorganize once again. Various regional and issue-specific unions formed under the Western occupations of Germany.[1]
On 9–11 February 1946 the
On 23–25 April 1947 the Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund, DGB was founded in Bielefeld as a confederation of 12 unions in the Allied-occupied Germany.
Foundations in the American occupation zone:
24/25 August 1946: Freier Gewerkschaftsbund Hessen
30 August – 1 September 1946: Gewerkschaftsbund Württemberg-Baden
27–29 March 1947: Bayerischer Gewerkschaftsbund
Foundations in the French occupation zone:
15/16 February 1947: Gewerkschaftsbund Süd-Württemberg und Hohenzollern
1/2 March 1947: Badischer Gewerkschaftsbund
2 May 1947: Allgemeiner Gewerkschaftsbund Rheinland-Pfalz
On 12–14 October, the 7 umbrella organisation in West Germany merged into the West German DGB as a confederation of 16 single trade unions.
Allgemeiner Gewerkschaftsbund Rheinland-Pfalz | 232,117 | |
Badischer Gewerkschaftsbund | 92,257 | |
Bayerischer Gewerkschaftsbund | 815,161 | |
DGB of the British zone
|
2,885,036 | |
Freier Gewerkschaftsbund Hessen | 397,008 | |
Gewerkschaftsbund Süd-Württemberg und Hohenzollern | 75,502 | |
Gewerkschaftsbund Württemberg-Baden | 464,905 | |
Total | 4,961,986 |
Reunification – Present
In 1990, the members of the FDGB of the
In general, the influence of German trade unions has declined since 1990 and had to accept shrinking real incomes and a reform of the welfare system in 2004 ("Hartz IV laws"), which put additional pressure on wages. For some years, the DGB and its member unions have been campaigning for a minimum wage to be introduced in Germany. Well into the 1990s, they had rejected this idea because they got better results from their strong position in the German system of collective bargaining.[3]
Affiliates
Today
Members of DGB unions 2017[4] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Union | Women | Men | In total | ||||
IG Bauen-Agrar-Umwelt (Construction, Agriculture, Environment) | IG BAU | 67,069 | 26.35% | 187,456 | 73.65% | 254,525 | 4.25% |
IG Bergbau, Chemie, Energie (Mining, Chemicals, Energy) | IG BCE | 137,012 | 21.49% | 500,611 | 78.51% | 637,623 | 10.64% |
Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft (Education and Science) |
GEW | 199,529 | 71.71% | 78,714 | 28.29% | 278,243 | 4.64% |
IG Metall (Metalworkers) | IGM | 406,893 | 17.98% | 1,855,768 | 82.02% | 2,262,661 | 37.74% |
Gewerkschaft Nahrung-Genuss-Gaststätten (Food, Beverages and Catering) |
NGG | 83,741 | 41.89% | 116,180 | 58.11% | 199,921 | 3.33% |
Gewerkschaft der Polizei (Police) | GdP | 46,032 | 24.86% | 139,121 | 75.14% | 185,153 | 3.09% |
Eisenbahn- und Verkehrsgewerkschaft (Railway Workers) | EVG | 41,204 | 21.69% | 148,771 | 78.31% | 189,975 | 3.17% |
Vereinte Dienstleistungsgewerkschaft (United Services Union) |
ver.di | 1,038,221 | 52.24% | 949,115 | 47.76% | 1,987,336 | 33.15% |
DGB in total | DGB | 2,019,701 | 33.69% | 3,975,736 | 66.31% | 5,995,437 | 100.00% |
Former affiliates
Union | Acronym | Year merged | Merged into |
---|---|---|---|
German Railwaymen's Federation |
GdED | 2010 | EVG |
Textile and Clothing Union | GTB | 1998 | IGM |
Wood and Plastic Union | GHK | 2000 | IGM |
Building and Construction Union | IG BSE | 1996 | IG BAU |
Horticulture, Agriculture and Forestry Union | GGLF | 1996 | IG BAU |
Union of Mining and Energy | IG BE | 1997 | IG BCE |
Chemical, Paper and Ceramic Union | IG Chemie | 1997 | IG BCE |
Leather Union | GL | 1997 | IG BCE |
German Postal Union | DPG | 2001 | Ver.di |
Trade, Banking and Insurance Union | HBV | 2001 | Ver.di |
Public Services, Transport and Traffic Union | ÖTV | 2001 | Ver.di |
Printing and Paper Union | DruPa | 1989 | IG Medien |
Arts Union | Kunst | 1989 | IG Medien |
Media Union | IG Medien | 2001 | Ver.di |
Other unions
In 1978 the Gewerkschaft der Polizei (GdP, see above) joined the DGB as 17th union.
The Deutsche Angestellten Gewerkschaft – DAG – was a large white collar trade union. Although the DAG in the British zone 1946 was a member of the DGB in the British zone, the West German DAG never joined the West German DGB as a single member union. In 2001 the DAG merged with four existing DGB unions to become the new DGB union Ver.di.
The railway union Verkehrsgewerkschaft GDBA was a member of the other labour federation, the German Civil Service Federation. In 2010 the GDBA merged with existing DGB union TRANSNET to form the new DGB union EVG.
Presidents
- 1949: Hans Böckler
- 1951: Christian Fette
- 1952: Walter Freitag
- 1956: Willi Richter
- 1962: Ludwig Rosenberg
- 1969: Heinz Oskar Vetter
- 1982: Ernst Breit
- 1990: Heinz-Werner Meyer
- 1994: Dieter Schulte
- 2002: Michael Sommer
- 2014: Reiner Hoffmann
- 2022: Yasmin Fahimi
Structure
districts with regions
- Baden-Württemberg: 4 regions
- Bayern: 14 regions
- Berlin/Brandenburg: 4 regions
- Hessen/Thüringen: 6 regions
- Niedersachsen/Bremen/Sachsen-Anhalt: 10 regions
- Nord (Niedersachsen/Bremen/Sachsen-Anhalt): 7 regions
- Nordrhein-Westfalen: 11 regions
- Sachsen: 4 regions
- West (Rheinland-Pfalz/Saarland): 6 regions
See also
- List of labor unions
- Hans Böckler - first president of the confederation
Literature
- ISBN 0-9543811-5-7.
- F.Deppe/G.Fülberth/H.J.Harrer: Geschichte der deutschen Gewerkschaftsbewegung ISBN 3-7609-0290-1
- http://www.dgb.de/uber-uns/dgb-heute/
External links
References
- S2CID 155548360.
- Jahrbuch für Forschungen zur Geschichte der Arbeiterbewegung, No. III/2009.
- ^ See also Hemmer 2009.
- ^ "DGB-Mitgliederzahlen 2010-2018".