[THS] The Ineffective and Unfair Policies of the European Union
The Harder Stuff in news and commentary
ths at psalience.org
Sat May 15 14:16:29 CEST 2010
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article25448.htm
The Ineffective and Unfair Policies of the European Union
By Vicenç Navarro
May 14, 2010 ""Information Clearing House" --- There are many ways of interpreting
the causes of the vast financial and economic crisis we are suffering in the world and,
in particular, the European Union and the southern shores of our continent. One,
derived from liberal sensitivities, assumes that the blame lies with excessive outlays in
public expenditure, which have suffocated economic growth. This interpretation leads
to the conclusion that we need to diminish this expenditure in order to reduce the
deficit and public debt. Today, this view is generalised throughout most of the
financial, political and media forums in the European Union. As proof of their
confidence in this diagnosis, they point out that the European Union countries that
are in worse shape today are those in Southern Europe -Greece, Portugal and
Spain-, and Ireland, who have the largest deficits, due to the supposed lack of
discipline in getting their expenditure policies under control. The supposed
exuberance of this expenditure (the possibility of retiring at 55 in Greece, is the case
most often quoted) is the cause of these countries' headaches. Hence the pressure to
significantly cut their exaggerated public expenditure, in order to initiate a recovery
and save themselves from collapse (and also save the euro, which is experiencing
difficulties brought on by these countries). With regards to the high levels of
unemployment, this is mostly attributed to the supposed rigidities of the labour
market, consequence of excessively powerful and influential unions that are
hampering the economic recovery with their staunch defence of workers who hold
permanent contracts (and excessively high wages), thereby creating high levels of
unemployment.
This interpretation of the causes behind the crisis results in the public policies
promoted by the European Union, which consist of cutting public expenditure and
employment, weakening social and labour rights and deregulating labour markets.
The development of such policies (reaching their apex in the case of Greece) is
considered necessary to come out of the crisis. In reality, this is merely the
development of liberal policies that the corporate financial world has craved for so
long, and who now use this crisis to bring about. Their social and human costs will be
immense, and their impact on the crisis will be greater, accentuating it.
What is striking is that this liberal dogma, repeated by the news and persuasion
media, has very little empirical evidence behind it. It is easy to show that the root
cause of the problems experienced by countries with major difficulties is not their
excessive public expenditure. In fact, in all of them (Greece, Portugal, Spain and
Ireland), public expenditure as a percentage of GDP is below the mean for the
Europe of the Fifteen, the group of most developed EU countries to which they all
belong. The same happens with public social expenditure as a percentage of GDP,
also below the EU-15 mean. You have an identical situation with public sector
employment. The percentage of the population working in the public sector in all
these countries is below the mean for the UE-15 (see Navarro, V. (ed). La situación
social en España, Vol III. Biblioteca Nueva).
And as for the supposedly exuberant salaries, the figures show that, taking the
wages of workers in the manufacturing sector as a point of reference, all these
countries have salary levels below the mean for the EU-15 (even lower, in fact, than
would correspond to their level of wealth) (see V. Navarro, Marta Tur and Miquel
Campa, La situación de la clase trabajadora en España, at www.navarro.org,
Economía Política section). In contrast, business and banking profits are among the
highest, as well as tax fraud. All this data shows that their problems are not due to
excessive public expenditure or exuberant wages.
For which reason there is a much more credible explanation for the origins and
causes of the financial and economic crises that is marginalised and ostracised in the
news and persuasion media and forums in Spain and the EU. The current crises are
the direct consequence of the liberal policies promoted by the European
establishment that have provoked a vast polarization of income and the creation of
major inequalities. The cited countries have the greatest inequalities in the EU, in a
continent where inequalities have grown enormously. Income from work as a
percentage of total income has fallen massively, and with it demand, one of the most
important causes of the crisis. The other cause of the crisis is the lack of credit, also
the result of income polarization with the exuberant rise in capital gains, which were
predominantly invested in speculative activities (such as real estate and the
development of high-risk instruments) that created bubbles, provoking the major
problem of the lack of credit when they burst.
THE PROGRESSIVE ALTERNATIVE
The solutions are plain to see. We need to stimulate demand in these countries, as
well as all the EU, on the basis of income redistribution by increasing the purchasing
power of the popular classes, counteracting low wages (which are the cause of low
productivity) and a vast expansion of public expenditure that aims to create jobs,
precisely the opposite of the policies being brought into play by the EU. No one has
ever come out of any depression or great recession in the 20th century (like the
current one) without a massive expansion of public expenditure and the growth of
debt. The Great Depression was resolved with the New Deal and the large increase in
public expenditure during World War II. In Europe, the reconstruction of economies
destroyed by the Second World War was based on massive public fiscal and social
investment, facilitated by the Marshal Plan. To believe, today, that we can come out
of this huge recession without a similar increase in public expenditure throughout the
EU is to ignore the lessons of history. Cutting public expenditure is writing a suicide
note. In fact, if it were not for its cuts in public expenditure, Spain would already be
out of the recession.
As for the other major problem, the lack of credit, this needs to be resolved through
public intervention, not to help the banks, as is happening now, but to guarantee
access to credit. As was to be expected, the austerity measures demanded of the
popular classes by the EU are accompanied by very generous measures for the
banks, both Greek and German (among others), holders of Greek debt. As Joseph
Stiglitz was good enough to point out, if all the bank bailouts had been invested in
the creation of public credit banks, the lack of credit would already have been
resolved. 700,000 million dollars has been spent, in the US alone, to save the banking
sector, when with this money we could (and should) have set up a public banking
system that could guarantee access to credit by business (especially small and mid-
size) and the citizenry. Much the same thing has happened in the European Union
(see V. Navarro, ¿Por qué no banca pública? www.vnavarro.org, Economía Política
section).
What we are seeing today is the climax what used to be called class warfare, where
the dominant classes led by financial capital are imposing their demands on the
popular classes in order to recoup their yields. As Warren Buffet, one of the
wealthiest people on the planet and connoisseur of the corporate financial world to
which he belongs, has well said, there are classes and class warfare, and my class is
winning this struggle. The famous saying of tightening your belts only applies to the
dominated classes. The dominating classes do not even wear belts. The inexistent
regulation of the banking sector, despite being the cause of the financial crisis,
already two years back, shows to what extent politics is shaped by corporate financial
interests, which are doing massive damage to the real economy. It is no surprise to
find the so-called democracies facing serious problems of credibility that question
their very legitimacy. The social unrest in Greece is the beginning of a process that
will bring to life what till now only seemed passive, expressing itself through voter
abstention. The transformation of this passive abstention into active agitation will,
from now on, be a constant in the coming years. The danger is that this agitation
may be capitalised by the right, as is presently occurring in the US. We will see what
happens in the European Union.
Published in the digital magazine SISTEMA, 7 May 2010
Spanish original on the author's website http://www.vnavarro.org/?p=4242
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