PRISON OF NATIONS
BY ERIC WALBERG, An
Internationalist Journalist
The EU “government" is exposed as
worse than useless, a rubber stamp for this Thatcherite
mania, fooling Europeans into thinking there was someone
controlling the private chaos.
Riots swept across Eastern Europe this winter. In Latvia
100 were arrested when they attacked the Finance
Ministry with cobblestones from the quaintly restored
tourist area protesting unemployment, budget and wage
cuts. In Lithuania, riot police fired rubber-bullets and
tear gas on a trade union march. A demonstration in the
Bulgarian capital turned violent leading to the arrest
of 150 protesters. These three states are all members of
the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM2), the euro’s
pre-detention cell. They must join.
The IMF calls for devaluation of the currencies of these
“economies", which are not really economies at all after
their deindustrialisation over the past two decades, but
the euro-agreements prevent this. And even if they could
do the IMF number, their huge mortgage debts contracted
in euros and Swiss francs over the past decade would
still be unrepayable.
Latvia’s government was trying to comply with
IMF-imposed measures to qualify for an emergency loan,
much like Argentina in 2001, when brutal cuts to
education and social programmes sparked a general strike
and radicalised the entire nation (except, or course,
those responsible for the crisis). The riots in Lativa
brought the government down and its credit rating was
just lowered to junk status.
IT’S NO BETTER INSIDE EUROLAND.
Q: What’s the difference between Ireland and Iceland?
A1: The letter “c". A2: Six months.
We haven’t even mentioned Greece, which is already
considered a failed state, virtually in a state of civil
war since last September. And now the very pillars of
the European Union are crumbling. In January, hundreds
of thousands marched in French cities in the biggest
protest in two decades. An ongoing month-long strike in
France’s far-flung Guadeloupe is now full-scale urban
warfare, with the dead including a trade union leader.
The ruling white elite and tourists are at this very
moment fleeing in panic. Martinique and Reunion have
joined in.
DEMOS, DEMOS EVERYWHERE
In Britain demos are breaking out across the country
protesting unemployment and the bank bailouts. The
British National Party shocked the establishment by
winning a council seat in Kent, “penetrating" the south
of England, and are expecting major gains in the EU
elections in June. Spain lost a million jobs in 2008 and
the unemployment rate is expected to reach 25 per cent
this year. Spain’s (and Ireland’s) so-called wage
inflation now requires wage deflation, workers are told.
With Spain’s high debt levels, this is impossible. Even
if it were possible, wage deflation is a recipe for
revolution.
Marches protesting the economic plight of the people are
expected to grow and lead to further violence throughout
Europe, with Greece as the prequel. Suddenly, the
spectre of the end of the EU, certainly the end of the
common currency, is being raised. Coined to convince the
“free worldö of the dangers of Communism, the domino
effect is back with a vengeance.
The string pullers over the past two decades managed to
transform the face of Europe, destroying the Soviet
Union and expanding the EU and NATO rapidly eastward.
But just as Napoleon and Hitler before them, the
over-confident conquerors moved too far too fast, and
now face the prospect of losing everything. The marvel
of the euro zone is now derided as the Völker-Kerker (prison
of nations) recalling the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Italian journalists have begun to talk of Europe’s
“Tequila Crisis", referring to the collapse of Mexico’s
peso in 1993 when the elite took their money to the US.
A similar capital flight from Club Med could set off an
unstoppable process and even bring the euro down.
WHAT IS THE EURO, EXCEPT A FIXED EXCHANGE RATE AGREEMENT
AMONG MEMBERS?
Sceptics have always dismissed it as a dangerous
straight-jacket, since Europe is far from uniform. It
means national governments are highly restricted in
their monetary and fiscal policies to deal with crises.
It also means that ripples in Europe become tidal waves,
as all the countries’ economic successes or failures
happen together.
This is fine if governments are united in pursuing a
common agenda to promote stability and prosperity for
the common Europeans, but neoliberalism allows for no
such political will. The common economic space has
merely allowed large companies and banks to take control
of the whole market, supposedly to be equal competitors
to their big brothers in the US, China and elsewhere.
But riding the wave of privatisation and euro-expansion,
they threw caution to the winds, with no strong national
governments to clip their wings. The EU “government" is
exposed as worse than useless, a rubber stamp for this
Thatcherite mania, fooling Europeans into thinking there
was someone controlling the private chaos.
As the euro begins to slide against the worthless dollar
(that’s right), no one is seriously preparing for the
possibility of its immanent collapse and what to do
about it. Instead, incredibly, a Financial Times
columnist calls on the EU to drop its euro-entry
requirements for the “economies" of eastern Europe and
quickly shepherd them into the “safeö" euro-fold. Just
as mad as this strategy may seem is the one presently
being implemented: to pump endless cash into the banks
that have recklessly moved into this economic wasteland.
IT IS VITAL TO KEEP THE EDIFICE AFLOAT, AFTER ALL.
Virtually all of Eastern Europe is in hock to Western
banks and as they go bankrupt, or for the “lucky" ones,
their exchange rates plummet with respect to the euro,
they represent bargain-basement fire sales for the West.
The Polish zloty plunged 50 per cent in the past six
months, making it impossible to repay the countless
euro-Swiss loans contracted by unwitting Poles, lured by
low interest rates.
The banks have lent Eastern Europe about $1.7 trillion,
since “independenceö and this must be saved from
disappearing at all costs. The currently proposed $31
billion to be pumped into the banks is peanuts -- as
long as national governments (that is, the people) pay
it, of course.
If the steely-nerved bankers can stay the course, the
pay-off is potentially immense. Lured into euro-clutches,
these orphan nations can now be squeezed. Integration
with a vengeance, on a par with their WWII and post-WWII
occupations. At least under post-WWII socialism (which
many Eastern Europeans remember fondly), the common
people were provided for and the ruling party’s
privileges circumscribed. But if today’s unsupervised
elites keep sending their money abroad, the pit becomes
bottomless. Riots turn into revolutions.
France will no doubt lead the way. Students occupied the
Sorbonne recently in a long-running battle against
President Nicolas Sarkozy’s education reforms, supported
by 70 per cent of the population. French radical
politicians Jose Bove and the popular New
Anti-Capitalist Party leader Olivier Besancenot have
already travelled to Guadeloupe in solidarity with the
strikers. “Their fight is our fight — against captialism,
exploitation, the big supermarkets," exhorted a newly
radicalised Bastille district activist.
Sarkozy’s popularity is at its lowest at 36 per cent,
with a similar number of French saying they would
welcome strikes “on a huge scale". The pollster Dabi
said, “There is a sense of incoherence and a sense that
Sarkozy does not really know where he is taking France.
But that’s largely because there is an incoherence and
Sarkozy doesn’t know here he is taking France."
The same can surely be said of all Western leaders these
days. United States President Barack Obama has it easy.
He at least has a clear agenda to tear up -- the
Reagan-Bush one. But the only common policy of Western
leaders so far is one dictated by the banking elite:
“Bail us out, but leave us alone."
If anything, they are demanding coordinated bailing out
and calling for a new international banking institution,
which of course they will control, and which, we are
supposed to believe, will avert any further
unpleasantness. Such an institution may well act to
avert capitalism’s collapse, but there will be lots of “unpleasantness",
evenly distributed among the common people.
The sunny euro-vistas of yesterday are no longer.
Eastern Europe risks being eaten alive by Western banks.
Western Europe risks mere stagnation and endless
political unrest. All indications are that this is a
deadend, that the only way forward is to break the hold
that the economic system has on both East and West. The
upheavals have begun and the real domino effect will
spread throughout Europe this summer. That the European
parliament elections in June will take place in a
hostile atmosphere is an understatement.
Using a crisis to push through unpopular measures
doesn’t work anymore, as Greek and Latvian politicians
have discovered. The streets are already ringing with
the cry: “We won’t pay for your crisis!"
- IDN-In Depth News | GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
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