a coalition of Argentine longshore and oilseed industry
unions reached an agreement to end a three-week-long strike, which had
paralyzed the nation's busy grain ports in the run-up to wheat export season.
The industry body for Argentine agricultural exporters,
Cámara de la Industria Aceitera de la República Argentina, said Tuesday that it
had reached an agreement with the unions in a meeting brokered by Argentina's
Ministry of Labor.
The deal includes a bonus of $1,000 for those who worked
during the country's pandemic shutdown; a 35 percent salary increase for 2020;
a 25 percent salary increase for 2021; and another salary adjustment in August
2021 that will take account of the consumer price index.
The adjustment helps to address the effects of runaway
inflation on port workers' salaries. Inflation has skyrocketed in Argentina
over the past several years, hitting 26 percent in 2017, 34 percent in 2018 and
37 percent in 2019. Today, the Argentine peso is worth less than a fifth of
what it was in 2015 - the last time that Argentina's grain workers went on
strike.
This walkout was different in one important regard: it was
the first time that the three main unions in the sector all downed tools and
negotiated as a bloc, according to the newspaper El Cronista.
The 20-day strike left dozens of vessels delayed alongside
the pier or at anchor, with high demurrage charges for the charterers. The
cargo backlog is expected to take a long time to clear. Argentine port agency
NABSA reports that there are now more than 160 vessels waiting to load at the
country's main agricultural terminals, and they are slated to take on about 3.4
million tons of cargo worth a combined