Pope proposes universal salary and reduction of the working day

Francis addressed the second phase of the IV World Meeting of Popular Movements and called for concrete changes to "adjust our socio-economic models so that they have a human face" based on the Social Teachings of the Church.

On Saturday, October 16, Pope Francis spoke at the second phase of the IV World Meeting of Popular Movements, which took place in an online format and was broadcast in five languages through the Vatican's main YouTube channels.  

In his speech of about forty minutes, the Holy Father assured that "Personal change is necessary, but it is also indispensable to adjust our socio-economic models so that they have a human face, because many models have lost it.".  Pope Francis assured: "This system, with its relentless logic of profit, is escaping all human control. It is time to slow the locomotive down, an out-of-control locomotive hurtling towards the abyss. There is still time". The Pope made eleven concrete requests:

  1. I ask all the great pharmaceutical laboratories to release the patents. Make a gesture of humanity and allow every country, every people, every human being, to have access to the vaccines. There are countries where only three or four per cent of the inhabitants have been vaccinated.
  2. In the name of God, I ask financial groups and international credit institutions to allow poor countries to assure “the basic needs of their people” and to cancel those debts that so often are contracted against the interests of those same peoples.
  3. In the name of God, I ask the great extractive industries -- mining, oil, forestry, real estate, agribusiness -- to stop destroying forests, wetlands and mountains, to stop polluting rivers and seas, to stop poisoning food and people.
  4. In the name of God, I ask the great food corporations to stop imposing monopolistic systems of production and distribution that inflate prices and end up withholding bread from the hungry.
  5. In the name of God, I ask arms manufacturers and dealers to completely stop their activity, because it foments violence and war, it contributes to those awful geopolitical games which cost millions of lives displaced and millions dead.
  6. In the name of God, I ask the technology giants to stop exploiting human weakness, people’s vulnerability, for the sake of profits without caring about the spread of hate speech, grooming, fake news, conspiracy theories, and political manipulation.
  7. In the name of God, I ask the telecommunications giants to ease access to educational material and connectivity for teachers via the internet so that poor children can be educated even under quarantine.
  8. In the name of God, I ask the media to stop the logic of post-truth, disinformation, defamation, slander and the unhealthy attraction to dirt and scandal, and to contribute to human fraternity and empathy with those who are most deeply damaged.
  9. In the name of God, I call on powerful countries to stop aggression, blockades and unilateral sanctions against any country anywhere on earth. No to neo-colonialism. Conflicts must be resolved in multilateral fora such as the United Nations. We have already seen how unilateral interventions, invasions and occupations end up; even if they are justified by noble motives and fine words.
  10. Together with the poor of the earth, I wish to ask governments in general, politicians of all parties, to represent their people and to work for the common good. I want to ask them for the courage to look at their own people, to look people in the eye, and the courage to know that the good of a people is much more than a consensus between parties (cf. Evangelii gaudium, 218). Let them stop listening exclusively to the economic elites, who so often spout superficial ideologies that ignore humanity's real dilemmas. May they be servants of the people who demand land, work, housing and good living. This aboriginal good living or buen vivir is not the same as “la dolce vita” or “sweet idleness”, no. This is good human living that puts us in harmony with all humanity, with all creation.
  11. I also want to ask all of us religious leaders never to use the name of God to foment wars or coups (cf. Document on Human Fraternity, 2019). Let us stand by the peoples, the workers, the humble, and let us struggle together with them so that integral human development may become a reality. Let us build bridges of love so that the voices of the periphery with their weeping, but also with their singing and joy, provoke not fear but empathy in the rest of society.

The Holy Father asked "let us stand by the peoples, the workers, the humble, and let us struggle together with them so that integral human development may become a reality" and he offered and recalled the principles contained in the fourth chapter, Social Teaching of the Church, as a path to follow on this path and made two concrete proposals: the universal salary and the reduction of the working day, which he wanted to add to those of urban integration, family agriculture and popular economy that had already been worked on in previous meetings with the Popular Movements.

During the meeting, the delegates of the Popular Movements presented Pope Francis with the document Save Humanity and the Planet, a synthesis of their dialogues in this meeting and in which they propose ways of accessing the rights to Land, Housing and Work, and which is still open to people and social and popular organizations to join.

In addition, there has been the world premiere of the documentary entitled "The strength of us" which reflects the commitment of the Popular Movements around the world, in the struggle for Land, Housing and Work, and in the care of the humble and working people, during this global pandemic.

 

Pope proposes universal salary and reduction of the working day

16 October 2021