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http://www.socialistproject.ca/bullet/356.php

*Maybe the NPA has ideas on how to confront the capitalist crisis, but 
if so, they are absent from this statement, which amounts to little more 
than moralizing: it's anticapitalist because capitalism is bad. What's 
the solution? No clues here.
David
=============================

Socialist Project . E-Bulletin No. 356
May 18, 2010*
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  The Greek People are
  the Victims of an Extortion Racket


      Olivier Besancenot and Pierre-François Grond

The events in Greece concern us all. The Greek people are paying for a 
crisis and a debt not of their making. Today it is the Greeks, tomorrow 
it will be others, for the same causes will produce the same effects if 
we allow it.

First and foremost, let us express our full and unwavering solidarity 
with those who must endure an unprecedented austerity plan, not to 
mention contempt and arrogance bordering on racism. The ongoing strikes 
and demonstrations are legitimate, and we support them. This is not the 
crisis of the Greek people; it is the crisis of the world capitalist 
system. The plight of the Greek people speaks volumes about the nature 
of capitalism today. The plan dictated by the European Union (EU) and 
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rides roughshod over the most 
elementary rules of democracy.

If this plan is implemented, it will result in the worst collapse of the 
economy and of peoples' incomes in Europe since the 1930s. Equally 
glaring is the collusion of markets, central banks and governments to 
make the people foot the bill for the vagaries of the system. French 
President Nicolas Sarkozy still dares to talk of the need to regulate 
the market, while implementing measures that are more neoliberal than 
ever. The response to the crisis has been framed by a deadening 
consensus of the Right and the Left. The EU-IMF plan has been drafted by 
European governments of the Right and Left -- and by Dominique 
Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the IMF, an institution that has been 
strangling the Third World for decades and is now attacking Europe. The 
plan is being implemented by the Socialist government of Greek Prime 
Minister George Papandreou, while the French side of the deal has been 
adopted in unison by MPs of the governing centre-right UMP and the 
Socialist Party (SP).


      Background to the Crisis

The Greek debt crisis is the third phase of a broader global crisis that 
began in the United States in the summer of 2008. The speculative 
activities of the major western banks led the world to the brink of the 
abyss and plunged the economy into recession. This has led to escalating 
unemployment, alongside flagging incomes and purchasing power. 
Governments have rescued financial capitalism, resuscitated the banks, 
and revived capitalism by handing out hundreds of billions of Euros and 
dollars. This has made debts and deficits skyrocket and put more fragile 
states like Greece in a difficult position.

Now that the markets have digested the crisis, they are attacking 
government debts and speculating on the future of the weakest. What an 
exemplary lesson on the amorality of a system that is able, in the space 
of one year, to survive thanks to the largesse of states and then punish 
these very states by speculating aggressively against them. These 
speculators are now attacking Spain and lie in wait for further victims.

When French Prime Minister François Fillon announced on May 5th that 
painful measures were in store to "avoid a level of indebtedness such as 
Greece's," he also announced an austerity plan, of which scrapping the 
right to retire at age 60 is only one component. In fact, the three-year 
freeze on public spending will entail a freeze on civil servants' wages 
and job cuts in the hospitals, schools and other public services that 
people need in order to deal with the social catastrophe created by the 
crisis. In contrast, the government has announced it will continue to 
honour the Sarkozy tax cap -- which has already generously awarded a 
thousand or so members of the super-rich with an average refund of 
376,000 Euros apiece.


      Two Weights, Two Measures

The Greek measures overwhelmingly approved by EU governments are an 
attack on social rights. According to the rules of globalized capitalism 
applied by these governments, Europe is losing ground in its global 
competition with the United States and emerging countries. Their 
solution is to regain competitiveness by attacking the standard of 
living and social protection won in Europe through decades of 
mobilization by the workers movement. This means a never-ending race to 
the bottom. And to think that they promoted the Maastricht Treaty, the 
EU Constitutional Treaty and the Lisbon Treaty as the building blocks of 
a Europe based on social justice and social welfare! What utter 
nonsense, when we compare this rhetoric to the bleeding imposed on the 
Greeks -- at 5% interest, no less! The European banks can continue to 
grow rich on the Greek austerity plan, although they are the ones most 
responsible for the global economic chaos. There is nothing humanitarian 
about the "assistance plan" that has been adopted by the National 
Assembly. By supporting the government, the SP has lined up on the side 
of finance and not the oppressed.

Though incapable of organizing solidarity of any kind, the European 
Union certainly knows how to profit from a people's misery. Sarkozy and 
German Chancellor Angela Merkel have jointly declared that they will 
rescue the Euro zone by strengthening "budgetary oversight" of states 
that fail to meet the criteria of the EU Stability Pact. Apparently, in 
a neoliberal Europe, governments are only allowed to contravene the 
Stability Pact when they are pumping public money into the banks. 
Humanity will just have to wait.

Yet, never has there been such an urgent need for a social, ecological 
and anti-capitalist Europe based on solidarity. None of the current 
problems can be solved within national borders. We are all Greek workers 
subject to the same logic. Government debt is the product of 25 years of 
neoliberalism and tax cuts for the rich -- on corporate incomes, capital 
and shareholder dividends. For 25 years these taxes have been constantly 
lowered, and yet we are still told that they represent an unbearable 
burden for employers and the well-heeled. No, this crisis is not ours. 
In Greece, as elsewhere in Europe, we shouldn't have to pay for it.


      Our Demands, Our Alternatives

That is why we demand the cancellation of the Greek debt. To reject the 
austerity plans, to divest the banks of the control they exercise over 
the economy and society, to substitute a single European public banking 
service in place of the European Central Bank, with a monopoly over 
credit, and to demand the cancellation of the debts, is to fight for a 
genuine European project. This would be a Europe of the peoples and the 
workers, where their struggles for a social and ecological Europe based 
on solidarity converge. If we do not initiate this break towards 
building a different Europe, the sovereigntist and nationalist logic -- 
and the xenophobia that goes along with it -- will get the upper hand. 
The race is on.

In the 1990s, neoliberal governments of the Right and Left imposed harsh 
economic convergence criteria in order to pave the way for the single 
currency. The time has now come to secure social convergence criteria: a 
European minimum wage; the right of European workers and their 
organizations to veto layoffs; and social and democratic rights levelled 
upwards to match those of the best national legislation within EU member 
countries. Such a project must be taken up by a new political force that 
reaches beyond national borders -- a European anti-capitalist Left that 
is built step by step. The entire radical Left has to carefully study 
the lessons of the Greek crisis.

In each country, the radical Left is torn between independence from 
Social Democracy and participation in government alongside the 
neoliberal Left. We all want to defeat the Right in Europe, as in 
France; and that means building up the basis for an alternative to the 
routine return to government in 2012 imagined by the French SP. The SP 
has christened this election plan "Gauche Solidaire". Is it surprising 
that in the Greek crisis this "Left Solidarity" has gone to speculators 
and no one else? .

Olivier Besancenot and Pierre-François Grond are members of the 
executive committee of the Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste 
<http://www.npa2009.org/> (NPA) in France. The essay appeared in /Le 
Monde/, May 14, 2010.

Translation from French: Richard Fidler and Nathan Rao.

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Resources

    * Statement on European Crisis from Anticapitalist Organisations
      <http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article17160>, 30 April 2010
    * Statement by Syriza
      <http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article17168>, 2 May 2010
    * Initiative for a European-wide "Week of Protest & Solidarity" from
      Left MEPs <http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article17328>,
      13 May 2010
    * In solidarity with the Greek people's resistance against austerity
      <http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article17341>, 13 May 2010

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