Generally
speaking this is a niche blog of interest to the handful of us who are
fascinated by what is happening in our workplaces (particularly in the public
sector) and to our trade union and labour movement.
However, our
local action takes place in a global context and – just now – it is impossible
not to be concerned with the plight of the Greek working class and their
Government.
If the
Syriza-led Government can achieve positive results for the workers who elected
it it will embolden all those of us seeking an alternative to austerity. The
finance ministers of the European Union don’t
want to see that.
Yet a little
over sixty years ago a debtor nation at the heart of Europe saw more than half
of its debt written off and – as
some of the more insightful citizens of that nation acknowledge – that was
the foundation of the postwar German “economic miracle.”
The British
negotiators in the 1950s wanted to see maximum repayment of German debt, but
the United States got their way, facilitating the rebuilding of the German
economy both as a market and as a bulwark against the Soviet Union.
From the
point of view of the capitalist economy, writing off the debts of debtor
nations can be a very rational way to support economic development (and with it
opportunities for the profitable investment which capitalists always seek).
The writing
down of German debt in 1953 was a largely forgotten moment in the development
of the post WWII “long boom” which saw unprecedented stability and growth.
Further debt
write offs in the here and now (whether for the Greeks, or other, far poorer
nations) could easily be accommodated within the framework of a global
capitalist system.
Indeed such
an approach might even stimulate trade and growth far more effectively than the
global elite’s preferred route of continuous deregulation (which is clearly very
unpopular in Europe).
However,
capitalists (and their political
hangers on across all political parties) are interested in their own power
and control rather more than the general welfare of society as a whole.
This is
particularly true given that the circumstances of the post WWII long boom were
also circumstances in which the share of wages in the national income grew
alongside the strength of the labour movement.
A route out
of austerity which included writing down Greek debt would make perfect economic
sense, but less political sense for an elite which is wedded to shrinking the
state and growing inequality, since it would empower those of us who will stop
them.
That the
guiding forces of global capitalism reached a different conclusion in relation
to Germany in 1953 than that which they prefer for Greece in 2015 is not due to
the nations involved but to geo-political circumstances.
Sixty years
ago the elite feared a global alternative to capitalism and was willing to
concede a welfare state, and give ground to our movement, in the face of such a
threat. Today it fears no such challenge. We need to find a way to reawaken
their fear.
Therefore,
we, in all the other advanced capitalist countries in particular, have an
obligation to express our solidarity with the Greek workers and their
Government, to expose the fallacy of the arguments of “austerians” and to
remember 1953 and the agreement on German debt.
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