A Decade after the Take: Inside Argentina’s Worker Owned Factories
“The economy is pretty unstrustworthy in Argentina right now – the economy’s 30% inflation will eat away at your paycheck till there is nothing left and it’s not wise [to] invest in with Argentina pesos. It is very difficult to conduct business at all given the frustrating lack of transparency of most monetary transactions. Which is why it’s in
credible that worker-owned businesses have flourished in the rubble. In Argentina, worker ownership requires trust against all odds. As a student of economics and a young activist, I have held the worker-ownership model in Argentina up as a beacon I could orient towards, an alternative and a method of resistance that might be widely applicable.”
“This movement provided immense hope for many around the world who saw factory occupation and recuperation as the beginning of a paradigm shift; a chance to build a new system within the broken shell of globalized capitalism. The flood of energy and idealism was undoubtedly released in the US by a film by Naomi Klein and Avi Lewis called The Take, documenting a successful factory recuperation. I gained a window into the maturation of this dream in Buenos Aires now 11 years after the first factory take over, of a movement that through its institutionalization process has held fast to some fairly radical principles while beginning to access to mainstream markets.”
An Advancing Global Movement
“While the economic conditions of Argentina have been incredibly precarious, the consciousness that evolved as a result of the crisis provided fertile ground for a vibrant movement. Similar conditions are ripening in the US as well. Detroit, Cleveland, St. Louis and Chicago are all looking to new economic models. Chicago is the home of the first worker cooperative takeover of a factory in the US. New Era Windows and Detroit Unions are seriously considering replacing the corporate auto industry that fled with their jobs with worker-owned industries. Despite the movement’s contradictions, Argentina is still a priceless window into a new path and economic paradigm of worker’s dignity, mutual aid and trust that can provide tangible inspiration to struggle workers and communities around the world.”
I appreciate your concern, PJ. But we will see if they can match the innovation and competition with modern, union involved, capitalist owned factories around the world.
That’s never happened in the past, except in China and that country doesn’t allow “worker owned” factories.
I understand, Cat Kin. I don’t see it as a model that will displace the status quo here in the U.S. But it is one alternative to add to the mix. The only way I think robust manufacturing will return to the U,S. if we pay mind to our own history. The great manufacturing boom occurred in this country only because the government built the infrastructure for it during WWII. We need government to do that again. But, I’m not holding my breath.