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New minimum wage in Turkey: A declaration of war on the working class

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The announcement by Labour and Social Security Minister Vedat Isikhan on Tuesday of a 30 percent increase in the minimum wage by 2025 to 22,104 liras net (US$630) is an open declaration of war by the government against the working class.

This step, taken in line with the demands of finance capital, is the price the government wants the working class to pay for the preparations for war in Syria and the Middle East.

Workers at Schneider Electric factory on strike this month despite a ban on their action [Photo: @BirlesikMetal/X]

“We have tried to determine the most balanced level by evaluating the macroeconomic and conjunctural dynamics as well as the suggestions of our workers’ and employers’ representatives,” Işıkhan said when announcing the minimum wage.

Erdoğan, who in previous years had announced the minimum wage himself and turned it into a political show, briefly said “Good luck to our country and nation” on X and added the next day: “We have kept our promise not to crush our working people with inflation.

This has nothing to do with reality. In November, the official annual inflation rate in Turkey was 47 percent, while ENAG, an independent research organisation, calculated annual inflation at 86 percent. Moreover, the failure to raise the minimum wage in July has severely eroded the real wages of millions of minimum wage earners and other workers.

Given that about half of registered workers in Turkey earn the minimum wage and millions of unregistered workers earn much lower wages, the new minimum wage means further impoverishment of workers in real terms.

The announced minimum wage is slightly above the starvation threshold of 20,652 liras and well below the poverty threshold of 66,976 liras for a family of four as calculated by the Confederation of Turkish Trade Unions (Türk-İş) at the end of November.

In a press statement on Wednesday, Ergün Atalay, the head of the Türk-İş Confederation, reacted to the new minimum wage by saying: “We have been in an unfair commission for 50 years. We will not participate in the commission that sets the minimum wage unless there is no fair arrangement.”

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