http://peoplesworld.org/europe-and-u-s-have-same-problem-capitalism/
Europe and U.S. have same problem: capitalism


assets/Uploads/_resampled/CroppedImage6060-sam.jpg
by: Sam Webb
July 8 2011

tags: economy, budget crisis, deficit, capitalism, labor, Europe
Greece4

The struggle against austerity is sweeping the U.S. and Europe. Not
for decades have we seen such a surge of struggle in this part of the
world. Moreover, the protest actions are massive and likely to
increase in intensity and scope as time passes.

Prompting the surge is the economic crisis in general and the debt
crisis in particular. Ruling circles on both sides of the Atlantic are
attempting to offload government and private indebtedness onto the
working class and its allies.

The most striking example is Greece, where the social democratic
government in cahoots with the International Monetary Fund and the
European Union has not once but twice squeezed huge concessions from
the Greek people, despite massive nationwide protests. Elsewhere in
the Atlantic world the assault isn't quite as draconian, but it is
punishing nonetheless.

The refrain out of the mouths of the ruling elites irrespective of
country is: the country is broke and there is no option but to cut
wages of public sector workers, abrogate collective bargaining rights,
and shed social programs that were won in earlier periods.

Don't buy this bill of goods!

This crisis is not a crisis of state finances. There is plenty of
money if you look in the right places - the banks accounts of the
investor class and, in the U.S. in particular, the budget of the
Pentagon.

This is a crisis of capitalism. With each passing day it reveals its
inability to meet the elementary living requirements of the working
class in this era.

Indeed, the choreographers of the capitalist system on both sides of
the Atlantic are attempting to shift onto the working class the costs
of the reproduction of labor power, by which I mean the costs of
livable income, education, health care, child and elder care,
retirement security and more - all necessary to guarantee a fresh
supply of labor for ongoing capitalist exploitation.

This is not a new feature of capitalism's mode of operation. It dates
back to its beginnings. It is at the core of class and democratic
struggles since capitalism emerged as a social system.

But what is unique about the current moment is that the major sections
of capital in the U.S. and Europe believe that the debt crisis
provides them with a golden opportunity to permanently and completely
shift the costs of the reproduction of labor power to working people
as well as to lacerate their fighting spirit.

But in shifting these costs there is an unintended consequence: it
undermines the conditions for the reproduction of the system as a
whole.

Why? Because a deeply impoverished working class and a hollowed out
social safety net will severely restrain the already insufficient
consumer demand for good and services, and thus block any recovery,
even a weak one.

Whether the moneybags are able to impose their austerity plans is
still to be decided. So far they have the upper hand.

In these circumstances, the role of the left here and elsewhere is to
extend, deepen and, above all, unite the movement against the
draconian plans of the ruling elites.

Such a task is as much practical as it is ideological. It is going to
take tough nuts-and-bolts organizing and concrete initiatives along
with efforts to bring clarity to tens of millions about the causes of
and solutions to the capitalist economic crisis.

A core element of this struggle is the fight against racism and
immigrant-bashing. Both are obstacles to working-class and people's
unity. Both have the potency to ideologically and practically derail
the building of a powerful multiracial labor-led people's movement.
White and native-born people in general, and white and native-born
workers in particular, must step to the forefront of the anti-racist
and immigrant rights struggles, and in doing so create the conditions
to roll back the austerity drive.

Photo: Capitalism's Greek tragedy: White masks are hung outside the
Greek Parliament by protesters in Athens, July 7, to symbolize
lawmakers who approved a new austerity package. AP/Petros Giannakouris
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