Social Pact

The Social Pact (French: Pacte social, Dutch: Sociaal Pact) was an unofficial political agreement in Belgium concluded in secret on 24 April 1944 during the latter stages of the German occupation in World War II.

Social Pact

Officially entitled the Draft Accord for Social Unity (Projet d'accord de Solidarité sociale or Ontwerp van overeenkomst tot sociale solidariteit), the Social Pact brought together representatives of Belgian pre-war trades unions and employers and agreed on a number of social reforms to be implemented after the end of the war.[1] Among the most important were the extension of state social welfare provision and collective bargaining in employment disputes. The pact was concluded in secret on 24 April 1944 while Belgium was still under German occupation as labour and company leaders prepared for the period of reconstruction which would follow liberation by the Allies. Most of Belgium was liberated from September 1944.

The agreement was conducted unofficially and independently of the Belgian government in exile and never achieved any official status, but remained an influential document on post-war politics. Many of its previsions would be met by the social reforms launched by Achille Van Acker in December 1944.[2] The Pact has been seen as the start of the consensus politics which characterised Belgian post-war politics, and a move towards more peaceful social relations.[3]

According to historian Martin Conway, "the real significance of the Pact lay not in the vision it presented of a new era of social welfare but rather in the way in which its preparation demonstrated the degree of common ground that had emerged during the Occupation" between different interest groups.[4] Other historians have pointed to the influence of pre-war corporatist ideas.[5]

See also

References

  1. Conway 2012, p. 24.
  2. Pasture 1993, p. 696.
  3. Pasture 1993, pp. 695; 701.
  4. Conway 2012, p. 25.
  5. Pasture 1993, pp. 701-2.

Bibliography

Further reading

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