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From Mass Movement to Patchy Protest: The Changing Face of Trade Unionism

From Mass Movement to Patchy Protest: The Changing Face of Trade Unionism

&NewLine;<p>By Kamal Madishetty<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The 12th February &&num;8220&semi;Bharat Bandh&&num;8221&semi; called by a joint forum of central trade unions was projected as a nationwide shutdown meant to demonstrate the enduring strength of organised labour&period; In reality&comma; the day revealed how far that national influence has receded&period; While union leaders claimed substantial participation&comma; reports from several states described largely normal commercial activity in most cities&comma; functioning public transport in many regions&comma; and only sporadic industrial disruptions&period; Outside a few pockets where unions retain dense political and institutional networks&comma; daily life proceeded much as usual&period; Even in industrial belts where stoppages were reported&comma; many units operated with partial attendance&period; The dissonance between the sweeping rhetoric of a &&num;8220&semi;Bharat Bandh&&num;8221&semi; and the uneven ground impact suggested that the all-India strike fell well short of its intended signal&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The outcome reflects something deeper&colon; India&&num;8217&semi;s labour market has long been shaped by informality&comma; and this pattern persists strongly today&period; A very large share of workers &&num;8211&semi; roughly 85-90&percnt; &&num;8211&semi; remain in informal employment arrangements without the protections and long-term stability associated with formal factory jobs&period; At the same time&comma; recent labour force surveys show that a majority of employed persons are self-employed rather than regular wage earners&comma; underscoring how limited the traditional&comma; unionised workforce has become&period; The fastest-growing segments of work lie in services&comma; small enterprises&comma; contract arrangements&comma; and platform-based gig employment&period; In such a landscape&comma; the traditional union model-built around large worksites and long-term collective bargaining-touches only a limited fraction of the workforce&period; When workers are delivery partners&comma; freelancers&comma; small traders or micro-entrepreneurs&comma; a centrally coordinated strike often bears little connection to their immediate economic compulsions&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The February 12 bandh made this disconnect visible&period; In Kerala&comma; the shutdown approximated a near-total halt&comma; yet the disruption was accompanied by public criticism and allegations of coercive enforcement&period; In parts of western and northern India&comma; the impact was described as uneven&comma; with only select factories observing closures&period;Elsewhere&comma; reportage focused more on preventive detentions and attempts to block roads or rail tracks than on voluntary worker participation&period; A movement that must rely on blockades and symbolic disruption to demonstrate vitality risks appearing detached from the organic consent of the broader workforce&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>For ordinary citizens&comma; such strikes frequently translate into inconvenience and economic loss rather than solidarity&period; Commuters face uncertainty&comma; small businesses forfeit a day&&num;8217&semi;s revenue&comma; and essential services are delayed&period; For daily wage earners and contract workers&comma; participation can mean forfeiting income without any assurance of long-term benefit&period; Hospital visits&comma; examinations&comma; and routine transactions are disrupted&period; The bandh&comma; once regarded as a dramatic instrument of democratic mobilisation&comma; is increasingly perceived as an imposed interruption of everyday life&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Several factors explain this widening gap between unions and the wider public&period; Employment structures have evolved far more rapidly than union strategies&period; Informal and gig workers do not fit easily into conventional organising frameworks&period; Union leadership often remains concentrated in legacy sectors and public enterprises&comma; where institutional leverage is stronger but representative breadth is narrower&period; Strike demands frequently focus on resisting reforms or opposing privatisation without advancing financially viable or administratively credible alternatives&period; This reactive posture can create the impression of resistance to change rather than constructive engagement&period; Fragmentation among unions further dilutes coherence and blurs public messaging&comma; while the precarity of modern employment discourages workers from prolonged agitation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>This reckoning comes at a strategically consequential moment&period; The global trading environment is increasingly fraught&comma; with protectionist impulses resurfacing and supply chains being reconfigured&period; Yet India has managed to conclude a series of free trade agreements and position itself as an increasingly credible manufacturing and services partner&period; At a time when cross-border commerce is becoming more uncertain&comma; India&&num;8217&semi;s ability to secure new trade partnerships represents both opportunity and responsibility&period; The country cannot afford to miss this industrial inflection point &&num;8211&semi; not after watching China seize a similar opportunity three decades ago and emerge as the factory of the world through sustained reforms and global integration&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>None of this diminishes the normative importance of collective worker organisation&period; On the contrary&comma; as India advances initiatives such as Make in India and seeks deeper integration into global value chains&comma; questions of worker welfare&comma; skills&comma; productivity&comma; and social security become even more central&period; But legitimacy in a modern&comma; globally connected economy rests less on the capacity to halt activity and more on the capacity to shape reforms responsibly&period; Trade unions would strengthen their moral authority by engaging economic liberalisation with detailed proposals on skilling&comma; portability of benefits&comma; workplace safety&comma; and dispute resolution-rather than defaulting to maximalist shutdowns&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The fading resonance of all-India strikes signals not merely institutional decline but a crossroads&period; As a rising Bharat seeks to convert global opportunity into durable prosperity-consistent with the constitutional promise of enabling citizens to pursue their livelihoods-trade unions face a strategic choice&period; They can recalibrate&comma; adopt a forward-looking posture&comma; and become partners in national growth while safeguarding worker dignity&period; Or they can persist with symbolic shutdowns that mobilise shrinking constituencies&period; The former path alone aligns worker welfare with India&&num;8217&semi;s economic resurgence&period; And at this juncture in India&&num;8217&semi;s economic journey&comma; that alignment is not optional- it is essential&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Kamal Madishetty is an Assistant Professor at Rishihood University&comma; Haryana&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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