With French down on strikes, Macron reforms get easier ride

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* Turnout for rallies to protest economic reforms down sharply

* Past nationwide strikes achieved little for French workers

* French cool to union militancy, Macron consults unions

* Best chance in generations to overhaul labour laws

By Ingrid Melander

PARIS, Oct 12 (Reuters) - There was a time when angry French workers could down tools and take to the streets en masse to force ministers to back down. But things have changed, making President Emmanuel Macron's job of pushing through labour reforms that much easier.

Barely 26,000 attended one Paris rally on Tuesday to protest against the reforms, a fraction of the hundreds of thousands who went on strike in the heyday of French industrial action freezing activity in swathes of the economy.

French strikes are not what they used to be, reflecting a cooling in national attitude to union militancy plus a change in approach by Macron who flagged his reforms well in advance to union leaders who have in turn seen their powers decline.

This means the 39-year-old former investment banker has the best opportunity in generations to overhaul France's labour laws in his strategy to invigorate the EU's second-largest economy.

"Fundamentally it is not a very strike-prone country any more," said Bob Hancke, a labour relations expert at the London School of Economics. "In the mid-1990s, the joke was practically everyone had been a trade union member but no one ever stayed."

In 2015, companies in France lost 69 days to strikes per 1,000 workers. That was barely a fifth of what it was in the late 1990s and a far cry from the 1,000 days lost to strikes per 1,000 workers in the late 1980s.

The decline has accelerated since conservative President Nicolas Sarkozy passed a law in 2007 banning wildcat walkouts and forcing public transport unions to guarantee a minimum service during strikes.

While it is possible that protests will gain momentum when Macron unveils more hard-hitting reforms over the next year, including changes to unemployment benefits and pensions, things have so far played in his favour.

SHIFT IN POWER

Unionists and labour experts interviewed for this story said one critical factor is that big, nationwide strikes have achieved little for the average worker in the past two decades.

"Governments eventually realised they could just force things through," said Stephane Sirot, a professor at the Cergy-Pontoise university. An important point came in 2003, when a mass public-sector protest against pension reform failed to convince the government to budge, he said.