Trade unions, employers’ organisations and public institutions play a key role in the governance of the employment relationship, working conditions and industrial relations structures. They are interlocking parts in a multilevel system of governance that includes the European, national, sectoral, regional (provincial or local) and company levels. This section looks into the main actors and institutions and their role in Turkey.
Public authorities involved in regulating working life
The Ministry of Family, Labour and Social Services (MFLSS) is the main public authority regulating the world of work. The major labour market institutions related to the MFLSS are the Social Security Institution (SGK) and the Employment Organisation (İş-Kur). The SGK aims to provide modern standards of social insurance and universal health insurance to all individuals. İş-Kur is the main institution for labour placement. It is also responsible for increasing employment, reducing unemployment, implementing the unemployment insurance scheme and facilitating employment opportunities for disabled people and former prisoners in the private and public sectors (which are obliged to employ a certain number of disadvantaged persons).
The Labour Inspectorate is also the responsibility of the MFLSS. Its main tasks are to supervise, inspect and follow up on working conditions. There are two types of inspectors: social inspectors supervise the implementation of and compliance with the working condition provisions of the Labour Act, and technical inspectors supervise the occupational, health and safety conditions.
The labour courts in Turkey handle labour law cases – that is, disputes arising from the relationship among employers, workers and trade unions. The new Labour Courts Act No. 7036, implemented in 2017, introduced mandatory mediation in disputes related to employer or worker receivables and compensation and reinstatement claims arising from law, labour or collective labour contracts. Compensation claims arising from occupational diseases and work accidents are not subject to compulsory mediation.
Trade unions
About trade union representation
According to Article 17 of the TUCAA , any person aged at least 15 years old and who is considered a worker may join a trade union. According to Article 17 of the TUCAA and Article 14 of the PSUCAA membership in a trade union is optional; no one shall be forced to be a member. Trade unions can only be established on an industrial (economic activity) basis; occupational/craft and establishment-based unions are implicitly prohibited. There are two types of trade unions in Turkey, each of which is divided into rival confederations with significant political and policy differences. The first includes unions organising mainly blue-collar employees under the jurisdiction of the Labour Act and operating on the basis of the TUCAA. They are commonly known as labour unions (işçi sendikaları). The second type involves unions organising public servants who are under the jurisdiction of the Public Servants Act No. 657 and operating on the basis of the PSUCAA. They are called public servant unions (memur sendikaları).
There are more than 100 labour unions, most of which are affiliated to five divergent and rival labour confederations (Türk-İş, DİSK, Hak-İş, Tüm-İş and Birlik-İş). Confederations do not have the competence to conclude collective agreements. The oldest, largest labour confederation is the centrist Confederation of Turkish Trade Unions (Türk-İş). The left-wing (formerly Marxist and militant) Confederation of Progressive Trade Unions of Turkey (DİSK) and the conservative (formerly Islamic and religious) Confederation of Righteous Trade Unions of Turkey (Hak-İş). These three labour confederations are members of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). Tüm-İş and Birlik-İş were founded in 2015 and 2017 respectively, but they represent a minority of workers. There are 1.859.038 unionised workers and the union density rate was 12.18% in 2017, 12.38% in 2018 and 13.86% in January 2019.
There are also more than 100 public servant unions, most of which are affiliated to one of nine rival public servant union confederations:
- the Confederation of Public Servant Trade Unions (Memur-Sen)
- the Confederation of Civil Servants Trade Union of Turkey (Türkiye Kamu-Sen)
- the Confederation of Public Employee Trade Unions (Kamu Emekçileri Sendikaları Konfederasyonu, KESK)
- BASK
- Birleşik Kamu-İş
- Hak-Sen
- Çalışan-Sen
- Tüm Memur-Sen
- Anadolu-Sen
The dominant unions among these are Memur-Sen, Türkiye Kamu-Sen and KESK. Memur-Sen is a conservative confederation, which has close relations with the Justice and Development Party (AKP) government. Türkiye Kamu-Sen emerged as a confederation with a right-wing and nationalistic perspective but shifted to a less pro-government position after the outstanding growth of Memur-Sen (although its ideological principles have remained constant). KESK, a driving force behind the creation of a legal framework for public servant unions, is critical of government policy. Only KESK is a member of the ITUC and the ETUC. There are 1,684,323 unionised public servants and the union density rate was 71.64% in 2016, 69.28% in 2017 and 67.65% in July 2018. Public servant confederations may sit at the collective bargaining table.
Main trade union confederations, 2019
Long name | Abbreviation | Members | Involved in collective bargaining? |
Türkiye İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Türk-İş | 975.300 | No |
Hak İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Hak-İş | 684.144 | No |
Türkiye Devrimci İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | DİSK | 171.428 | No |
Birleşmiş İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Birlik-İş | 372 | No |
Tüm İşçi Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Tüm-İş | 839 | No |
Source: MFLSS
Main public servant union confederations, 2018
Long name | Abbreviation | Members | Involved in collective bargaining? |
Memur Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Memur-Sen | 1.010.298 | Yes |
Türkiye Kamu Çalışanları Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Türkiye Kamu-Sen | 394.423 | Yes |
Kamu Emekçileri Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | KESK | 146.287 | Yes |
Birleşik Kamu İşgörenleri Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Birleşik Kamu-İş | 64,730 | No |
Tüm Memur Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Tüm Memur-Sen | 6,102 | No |
Çalışanlar Birliği Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Çalışan-Sen | 4,601 | No |
Bağımsız Kamu Görevlileri Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | BASK | 4,160 | No |
Kamu Çalışanları Hak Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Hak-Sen | 2.876 | No |
Anadolu Eksen Kamu Çalışanları Sendikaları Konfederasyonu | Anadolu-Sen | 693 | No |
Source: MFLSS
Employer organisations
About employer representation
According to the TUCAA, employer organisations must be constituted on an industrial basis by employers in the same branch of activity (Article 3/I). However, public sector employer organisations do not have to be constituted by public employers in the same branch of activity (Article 3/II). The public sector employer organisations are Kamu-İş, Tühis and Miksen.
There is only one confederation of employer organisations, the Turkish Confederation of Employer Associations (TİSK). By 2019, only 20 employer organisations were members of TİSK. TİSK has representatives in the ILO, BusinessEurope, the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (which represents the OECD business community), the International Organisation of Employers, BusinessMed and the Union of Black Sea and Caspian Confederation of Enterprises. TİSK represents the interests of its members in various national and international social dialogue mechanisms. However, according to the TUCAA, confederations are not authorised to engage in collective bargaining.
Tripartite and bipartite bodies and consultation
The Work Assembly, the Economic and Social Council (ESC) and the Tripartite Consultation Board are the main tripartite social dialogue institutions at national level. However, the meetings of these bodies are neither regular nor frequent.
The Work Assembly, the oldest social dialogue institution in Turkey, was established in 1946. It is an ad hoc advisory body and has 58 members comprising representatives of employees, employers and the government, as well as universities. The assembly submits non-binding opinions and views on socioeconomic issues at the request of the MFLSS. Only 11 meetings have been convened since 1946; the last one took place in December 2015 when the partners discussed employment policies but reached no agreement.
The ESC is a ‘tripartite-plus’ consultative body comprising representatives of government, trade unions, employer associations and chambers of commerce. The government has a dominant position with a minimum of 16 members. It advises the government on major economic issues and mediates in industrial relations. Although the ESC should convene every three months, and despite becoming a constitutional body following amendments to the constitution in 2010, as of May 2019 it has not convened since 2009 and did not convene regularly prior to that.
The Tripartite Consultation Board, comprising government, labour and employer representatives, exists to comply with ILO Convention No. 144 and Recommendation No. 152. Its purpose is to express views on the amendments, preparation and implementation of labour laws and to promote efficient consultation, information and dialogue between the social partners in the harmonisation process of Turkish legislation with the EU’s acquis communautaire. The board should meet every three months but, as of May 2019, the last meeting took place on 15 October 2018.
Main national tripartite bodies
Name | Issues covered |
Economic and Social Council | Major socioeconomic issues and industrial relations |
Work Assembly | Industrial relations |
Tripartite Consultation Board | Amendments, preparation and implementation of labour laws |