Now that 2014 is here, the same well regarded shipping pundits that
were forecasting, less than a year ago, a revival in industry fortunes this
year have quietly postponed that event to the future. I know that trying to
talk markets up is not unique to shipping, and, since tomorrow never comes,
this may seem a good strategy; the only negative being the complete erosion of
credibility in these so-called forecasts amongst those who remember.
I suspect that continuing new shipbuilding orders on top of existing
overtonnaging and upcoming regulatory financial burdens will make the recovery,
whenever it comes, quite brittle. Meanwhile, as everybody struggles to make the
bottom line blue instead of red, Drewry Maritime Research has published a
report saying that operators have kept overall operating cost increases down to
something between 1 and 3 per cent last year. Manning cost increases have been
kept below 2% and non-core assets are being sold, the report adds. What it does
not say, of course, is how much skimping is being done in shipboard maintenance,
how much safety is being compromised or how much crews are being squeezed- wage
and work wise- to keep costs down.
John Green of the seafarer
welfare charity Apostleship of the Sea says that cost-cutting is adding to stress
on seafarers, whose working lives have been ‘dramatically affected.’ He says that
many more seamen are now not being paid or are suffering, in silence and in
fear of being blacklisted, from poor employment practices.
The problem for sailing seamen is
that they do not usually have access, in real time, to how bad things are in any
particular recession. In any case, shipping keeps its skeletons well hidden; although
seamen know that ill-treatment of crews is far more common than is ever
acknowledged, they have no reliable means of finding out exactly which
shipmanager or shipowner is doing what to which crew. The ILO does maintain a
list of ships with abandoned seafarers but that seems incomplete. In any case,
abandonment is just one of the employment abuses seamen are exposed to.
So seamen try to keep themselves
informed using anecdotal evidence and rumour, a situation unchanged since the eighties.’
In this internet age, there should be a better way of doing this; perhaps
seamen’s welfare organisations should share information on dodgy shipowners and
shipmanagers and post it on a common website, since the commercial part of the industry
isn’t going to do it.
Another thing the industry isn’t
going to do is raise crew wages in a hurry, even when it can finally-
hopefully- afford to do so. I fear that shipping is looking at a squeezed future
long-term, and that hoping that a cyclical industry will soon see a repeat of
the boom years is folly. I say this because increasing regulatory costs-
especially environmental- are here to stay, because freight rates will remain
under pressure and because shipping will probably look at increased maintenance
and insurance costs because crews of the near future will be less able and less
experienced.
For existing seamen, especially
from Asia, things are going to get tougher. With consumer inflation historically
running at near double digits in both the Philippines and India, for example, a
seaman is likely to see his savings eroded and his retirement lifestyle under
immense pressure if his wages don’t keep pace with the rising cost of living. I
have written about this earlier, so I will only point out again that my
generation of seamen survived because the dollar went up more than seven times versus
the Indian rupee during the period that we were sailing. I would not bet on the
same thing happening again over the next few decades, recent Indian Rupee
weakness notwithstanding.
Particularly badly hit will be
those seamen who do not have the inclination or the calibre to seek alternate
careers ashore. An earlier generation of seamen- mine included- could think of both
quitting sailing and staying away from soul destroying ‘office jobs.’ That is
going to be increasingly difficult in future, if not downright impossible,
especially if people want to come ashore earlier. The few who go out to sea to
escape the rat race today may find that they are forced into it when they are
older.
And those who do seek careers in
shipping ashore will see, in India at least, greater numbers of ex-seamen
competing for a reducing number of shore jobs. Some will quit shipping
altogether, as they do today, and move on to other industries. The ones at the bottom of the food chain will
be the hardest hit as usual.
Barring the few that are looking
for a different working lifestyle in India, the profession is already shunned
by anybody worthwhile. Body shopping outfits- which is what many of our
agencies really are- will continue to prey on the unsuspecting for as long as
they can; India has a huge population and we like to believe our ‘demographic
dividend’ will continue to feed the mill, come what may.
But demographic dividends only
apply if large numbers of people are willing, able and qualified. And they do
not apply if the ability of a profession to financially sustain an individual long-term
becomes a question mark.
.
.
2 comments:
Dear Manu,
Mariners Action Group (a volunteer seafarer's service organization that was originally formed in response to the MV Iceberg 1 piracy) has established an employers online rating form which is simple to use and confidential. It can be found at: http://mariners-action-group.weebly.com/seafarers-rate-your-companies.html
The information a seafarer enters on the form will be screened for obvious spam or misuse, and then published in a table on another page of the Mariners Action Group website (the table can be found under the "Company Ratings" button on the MAG Home page). Personal information about the seafarer is not used.
The rating form has been up for several weeks and has not yet received much traffic. So users may have feedback about such things as improving the form's availability or ease of use, and those comments will be very welcome.
For the time being, please leave feedback on the website's contact form - we will give all comments serious consideration and respond if possible.
So please, Manu - and all of your informed readership - have a look and see what you think. I hope this will become another source of information for the beleaguered mariner to allow them to avoid bad employers.
Thanks,
Reid
Mariners Action Group
Good stuff, Reid.
Am taking the liberty of copying your comment and making a new post out of it so that it gets more visibility
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