Trade unions have historically been unrecognized by
IBM. Since the company's foundation in 1911, it has not recognized any in the United States, despite efforts by workers to establish them from 1970 onward. In Australia, Germany and Italy, several trade unions have limited recognition from IBM. IBM has been able to minimize membership even in traditional union strongholds in Western Europe.
Industrial composition
IBM was founded in 1911 in
Armonk, New York.
Over 260,000 employees work for IBM world wide as of 2023. The New York Times reported in 2017 that about a third of IBM's employees (130,000 people) worked in India, more than any other country. At the time, fewer than 100,000 employees worked from the United States, the company's headquarter country.
IBM's non-union status is due in part to its
corporate culture that includes strong
employee identification with the company and close individual relations between employees and their direct manager. Rather than waiting for issues to arise, anonymous feedback by employees allows management to address grievances early on. If management becomes aware of unionization drives, investigation teams are formed to discourage unionization and explore alternatives.
Transnational
In 1999, employees of IBM in Europe formed a
European Works Council. In 2011, the global union federations
UNI Global Union and
International Metalworker's Federation formed the "Global Union Alliance" to coordinate labor activities across the globe among its affiliate unions.
In a 2014 research study conducted by the
European Trade Union Institute on transnational companies across 23 European Union (EU) states; IBM was the top 5 largest companies (employee size) in 12 EU states in the
ICT
ICT may refer to:
Sciences and technology
* Information and communications technology
* Image Constraint Token, in video processing
* Immunochromatographic test, a rapid immunoassay used to detect diseases such as anthrax
* In-circuit test, in ...
sector.
The study explores the extent of
industrial relations between IBM management and trade unions. On a scale of 0–5 where 0 means no union recognition exists and 5 being the best, IBM subsidiaries ranked an average of 2.77 across 11 different European states, slightly above the ICT industry average of 2.64. This ranked them ahead of competitors
HP,
Accenture
Accenture plc is an Irish-American professional services company based in Dublin, specializing in information technology (IT) services and consulting. A ''Fortune'' Global 500 company, it reported revenues of $61.6 billion in 2022. Accentur ...
,
Microsoft and ranked behind
Atos,
SAP.
Australia
In 2002, after IBM Global Services Australia (GSA) and
Community and Public Sector Union
CPSU, the Community and Public Sector Union (more commonly known as the CPSU) is a national trade union in Australia. The union came into existence on 1 July 1994 with the amalgamation of the Public Sector, Professional, Scientific, Research, T ...
(CPSU) failed to negotiate a common
enterprise agreement
Enterprise bargaining is an Australian term for a form of collective bargaining, in which wages and working conditions are negotiated at the level of the individual organisations, as distinct from sectoral collective bargaining across whole industr ...
for all 3,500 employees working on a
Telstra contract (half of the employees were previously direct employees of Telstra and covered under a stronger agreement). Previously CPSU organized two 48 hour
strike action
Strike action, also called labor strike, labour strike, or simply strike, is a work stoppage caused by the mass refusal of employees to Labor (economics), work. A strike usually takes place in response to grievance (labour), employee grievance ...
s after announced plans to fire 64 IBM GSA employees.
In April 2010 the
Fair Work Australia tribunal ordered IBM Australia to bargain with the
Australian Service Union (ASU) representing employees in
Baulkham Hills
Baulkham Hills is a suburb in the Hills District of Greater Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is 30 kilometres north-west of the Sydney central business district within the local government area of The Hills Shire. Baulkh ...
,
Sydney
Sydney ( ) is the capital city of the state of New South Wales, and the most populous city in both Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Sydney Harbour and extends about towards the Blue Mountain ...
in a mass layoff proceeding. IBM appealed unsuccessfully, claiming that ASU was ineligible to represent these employees. 80 employees accepted collectively negotiated contracts concerning severance packages and sick leave in case of future layoffs.
China
Over 1,000 workers at the IBM Systems Technology Co. (ISTC) factory in
Shenzhen went on a 10 day
wildcat strike
The wildcat is a species complex comprising two small wild cat species: the European wildcat (''Felis silvestris'') and the African wildcat (''F. lybica''). The European wildcat inhabits forests in Europe, Anatolia and the Caucasus, while the ...
(without union support) between 3 and 12 March 2014, after management announced the transfer of the factory to
Lenovo
Lenovo Group Limited, often shortened to Lenovo ( , ), is a Chinese Multinational corporation, multinational technology company specializing in designing, manufacturing, and marketing consumer electronics, Personal computer, personal computers, ...
.
The strike was part of a larger trend of labor militancy in the
Guangdong province. Workers demanded higher
severance package
A severance package is pay and benefits that employees may be entitled to receive when they leave employment at a company unwillfully. In addition to their remaining regular pay, it may include some of the following:
* Any additional payment base ...
s if they left and higher salaries if they transferred to Lenovo.
Most of the participating strikers accepted the initial offer by management. 20 employees were fired, including worker representatives. While the Shenzhen branch of
All-China Federation of Trade Unions did not support the initial strike, it filed legal claims to reinstate the 20 fired workers.
Germany
IBM Germany has a
Group Works Council, which concluded a
central works agreement on the internal usage of
artificial intelligence in the workplace.
The
German Trade Union Confederation (DGB) has the principle of one trade union for each company, but in practice, its trade union affiliates,
ver.di
(''Verdi'' (stylized as ''ver.di''; �vɛʁdiː; German: ''United Services Trade Union'') is a German trade union based in Berlin, Germany. It was established on 19 March 2001 as the result of a merger of five individual unions and is a memb ...
(including its predecessors) and
IG Metall have been competing since the early 1990s. They compete for union members, seats on the Works Councils with their respective union members and
bargaining coverage via collective agreements. In December 2001, ver.di and IG Metall agreed to form a joint collective bargaining committee with IBM Germany to resolve their internal
union competition.
In the absence of regional collective agreements or high
union density The union density or union membership rate conveys the number of trade union members who are employees as a percentage of the total number of employees in a given industry or country. This is normally lower than collective agreement coverage rate, ...
,
Works Councils fill a bargaining gap on certain topics like
working time through
works agreement
A works agreement (; plural: ; BV) is a special type of agreement in German labour law between a works council and the employer, described in §77 of the Works Constitution Act. It is distinct from collective agreements negotiated by trade union ...
s. would serve as a middle ground between trade union
regional collective bargaining and the more formally regulated
Works Council framework.
In 1996, the union density at IBM Germany was less than 10% of its workforce, including membership of both trade unions
IG Metall and
German Salaried Employees' Union (DAG), yet IBM was a member of the Metal Employer Association ("") which ratified regional collective agreements with IG Metall, including the . In 1994, after
corporate restructuring
Restructuring is the corporate management term for the act of reorganizing the legal, ownership, operational, or other structures of a company for the purpose of making it more profitable, or better organized for its present needs. Other reasons ...
, five non-manufacturing subsidiaries of IBM Germany were created, none of which joined Gesamtmetall, effectively voiding their collective agreement coverage. Instead, they ratified company collective agreements with DAG, which deviated to a longer 38-hour work week.
Italy
In 2007, IBM announced they would cancel a performance bonus worth $1000 per employee. Shortly afterwards, on 27 September, the Italian trade union " IBM
Vimercate
Vimercate (; lmo, label=Brianzöö, Vimercaa ) is a city and ''comune'' in the province of Monza and Brianza, Lombardy, northern Italy. It is from Milan and from Monza.
Its name (whose first finding dates back to the year 745) derives from t ...
" which represented 9,000 IBM Italy workers, coordinated a 'virtual strike' inside
Second Life. Second Life is a simulation software that was used both internally by IBM for its employees and for marketing to external customers.
Between 500 and 1500 real-life IBM employees across the globe signed up to disrupt IBM virtual facilities in solidarity with the Italian trade union's collective agreement negotiations.
Simultaneously, in real-life
pickets were organized outside IBM Italy facilities. The virtual strike was supported by
Union Network International.
One month later, on 24 October, the IBM Italy CEO resigned and the performance bonuses were reinstated, though the company claimed it was unrelated to the strikes.
Japan
IBM Japan employees have been represented by
(JMITU; '')'' since 1959.
In 2019, the company rolled out internal
HR software that used IBM's
Watson artificial intelligence to advise on employee compensation. According to JMITU, for a June summer bonus, the software rated union members an average of 63% while other employees were rated 100%. The union lodged a legal complaint, alleging
algorithmic discrimination.
United States
In August 1970, the IBM Black Workers Alliance (BWA) was formed.
It was the first
high-tech movement for
under represented minorities, to protest lack of equal pay and promote opportunities for young, poor communities.
Between 1978 and 1980 its membership grew five-fold to 1,700 people. In 1980, IBM fired four of the top eight BWA officers, including one for distributing
salary pay-bands. BWA existed until the early 1990s and had chapters in Atlanta, Cincinnati, Hudson Valley, New York City, and Washington DC. They were not a union, nor trying to form one,
but one member, Marceline Donaldson started organizing with the all Black
Pullman Porters Union until she left IBM in 1979. In 1980, Donaldson filed a complaint with the
NLRB
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is an independent agency of the federal government of the United States with responsibilities for enforcing U.S. labor law in relation to collective bargaining and unfair labor practices. Under the Natio ...
and the
EEOC
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is a federal agency that was established via the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to administer and enforce civil rights laws against workplace discrimination. The EEOC investigates discrimination ...
alleging unfair labor practices and retaliation against Black employees joining the BWA chapter in Cincinnati.
In the 1970s, Lee Conrad founded the IBM Workers United (IBMWU) in
Endicott, NY as an
independent grassroots union. It had an underground newsletter called "Resistor"
which highlighted IBM's sale of computers to
apartheid South Africa, comparing them to
IBM's sale of computers to the Nazis. In the 1970s, members of IBMWU distributed fliers at an IBM
shareholder meeting titled "Would IBM have Sold Computers to Hitler?" protesting IBM's business with apartheid South Africa.
In 1999, IBMWU affiliated to the
Communications Workers of America (CWA), rebranded itself as Alliance@IBM under CWA
Local 1701, with Conrad as its lead coordinator.
In 2016, Alliance@IBM shut down, citing low membership,
outsourcing
Outsourcing is an agreement in which one company hires another company to be responsible for a planned or existing activity which otherwise is or could be carried out internally, i.e. in-house, and sometimes involves transferring employees and ...
and
union busting
Union busting is a range of activities undertaken to disrupt or prevent the formation of trade unions or their attempts to grow their membership in a workplace.
Union busting tactics can refer to both legal and illegal activities, and can range ...
.
Notes
References
External links
*IBM
European Works Councilbr>
database*IB
ver.di union portal{{IBM
IBM
Tech sector trade unions
IBM
*
Labor relations in the United States
Labor disputes in China
Labor disputes in Italy
Labour relations in Australia
Labor relations in Germany