Photo by Wolf Gang |
Europe
exploited: transnational capital’s push for neo-liberal restructuring.
The EU had always been a capitalist
project. In addition to establishing peace between the different nations,
creating closer economic integration in the European Coal and Steel Community
in 1952 and the European Economic Community in 1958 was intended to prepare the
ground for higher capitalist profits. Nonetheless, this intention had been
combined first with a focus on class compromises at the national level, in
which capital’s control over production was balanced with a commitment to full
employment and an expansive welfare state. Second, there was a commitment to
social cohesion across the EU expressed in structural and cohesion funds for
less developed member states.
It was from the mid-1980s onwards that
this compromise has been increasingly eroded. Against the background of global
economic crisis coming out of the 1970s, European integration was revived
around the Internal Market programme in 1985. The underlying purpose of this
revival was clearly neo-liberal restructuring. Deregulation and liberalisation
across the EU removing not only tariff but also non-tariff barriers was
supposed to guarantee maximum efficiency and, as a result, maximum profits,
which ultimately would also trickle down to people at the bottom of society.
This was supported by Economic and Monetary Union, part of the Treaty of
Maastricht in 1991, and its focus on price stability, controlled by an
independent European Central Bank. Hidden behind neo-liberal rhetoric was,
however, a transfer of power from labour to capital. In fact, the focus on
price stability and limited fiscal sovereignty of countries within EMU left
lowering wages and working conditions as the only option for countries to
regain competitiveness in times of recession.
Photo by Donkey Hotey |
Nevertheless, transnational capital was
not satisfied with transforming only the EU. Enlargement towards Central and
Eastern Europe offered the unique opportunity of restructuring post-Soviet
space along neo-liberal, free market lines. Payments distributed within the
existing 15 member states were only partially extended to the new members in
the East (Bohle
2006). Ultimately, this policy shift towards neo-liberal restructuring
ended in the brutal subjugation of democratic Greece to policies of permanent
austerity imposed from the outside. Transnational capital used the Eurozone
crisis to shift the power balance further away from labour towards capital.
Restructuring measures such as labour market deregulation and privatisation of
state assets, impossible in economically good times, were now imposed on Greece
and other countries in the European periphery.
Photo by Teacher Dude |
The consequence of transnational capital’s
neo-liberal restructuring has been dramatic. Unemployment rates of an average between 8 and
10 per cent across the EU have become the new normal (Eurostat 2016). Inequality
between EU member states as well as within countries has dramatically increased
(Bonesmo
2012). It is this betrayal of the original idea of European integration by
transnational capital, which has put the EU on the brink of collapse. Considering
increasing levels of inequality, citizens have lost confidence in the European
project.
A
clear focus, but ultimately fragmented and weak: the role of the European left.
The European left has been aware of this
dangerous direction from early on. Already at the first European Social Forum (ESF)
in Firenze/Italy in November 2002, activists from all over Europe were clear in
their rejection of neo-liberal Europe. Combining this position with demands for
more participatory democracy and opposition against the impending war on Iraq,
the potentially dramatic implications of continuing free market policies were
identified (Bieler and Morton
2004).
In the end, however, the ESF process petered out towards the late 2000s without
resulting in a broad-based, mass opposition movement against neo-liberal
restructuring across the EU. As participants at the Firenze 10+10 meeting in
2012 acknowledged, the European left was fragmented and weak (see Firenze 10+10 – Reflections on the Left in Europe).
Photo by Bryce Edwards |
Two reasons can be identified for this
fragmentation. First, mainstream European trade unions have oscillated between
a fundamental, principled opposition to neo-liberal restructuring from within
the ESF process and a ‘yes, but’ policy of participating in the policy-making
process at the EU and various national levels. At times, they managed to secure
important concessions, but the overall neo-liberal direction remained
unchecked. Second, political parties of the left, traditionally the second arm
of the labour movement, have actually been instrumental in implementing
neo-liberal restructuring in the first place. Whether it was third way policies
by the New Labour governments of Tony Blair in the UK or the Agenda 2010 by the
social democratic-led coalition government under Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in
Germany, social democratic parties had become the willing implementers of
transnational capital’s agenda.
Unsurprisingly, the European left found it
difficult, if not impossible to pursue a clear line of opposition to
neo-liberalism, not to think about developing a viable alternative. This
failure opened up space for the nationalist right.
Nationalism
with a xenophobic base: the attack on integration by the right.
Photo by Bellmon1 |
Nevertheless, it is not only in the UK,
where the xenophobic right has raised its ugly head. The support for Marine Le
Pen in France, Geert Wilders in the Netherlands, the Alternative for Germany party
in Germany or the almost success of the far-right candidate Norbert Hofer in
the presidential elections in Austria in December 2016 indicates that with the
European left having failed to offer an attractive alternative to neo-liberal
Europe, the right moved in and has occupied the space with its divisive
arguments.
What
position for the progressive European left in the years ahead?
Considering the impossibility of
progressive solutions at the national level and the futility of attempting to
transform the existing institutions of the EU, which have been further
restructured along the line of neo-liberal authoritarianism, what strategy
should the European left pursue? Most importantly, in my view, the focus has to
shift from questions of form of European integration over national sovereignty
versus further supranational integration to questions over concrete policies,
the contents of integration. Key in all these issues is a principled,
internationalist perspective. A progressive left position can never be informed
by anything else.
Clearly, from a progressive left
perspective the position has to be against neo-liberalism and austerity. These
policies are the tools of transnational capital to assert its authority over
labour. In concrete policy terms, this includes opposition to these new free
trade deals based on an expanded free trade agenda such as the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) and the Comprehensive Economic and
Trade Agreement (CETA).
In relation to migration and refugee
crisis, an internationalist perspective can mean nothing less than
international solidarity. From a left perspective, this has to include the free
movement of people and open borders. Any compromise with calls for migration
controls risks becoming mixed up with nationalist sentiments. For trade unions,
more precisely, this implies support for foreign workers to ensure that
employers do not abuse them in their attempt to undercut official wage levels
and working conditions. As the Norwegian construction workers’ union has
declared, ‘we are a union for workers in Norway, not a union for Norwegian
workers’!
Photo by scottmontreal |
Moreover, from a progressive left
perspective, the emphasis should be on social justice at the workplace and within
wider society. This has to involve a strengthening of workers’ and trade union
rights at all levels from the company to the industrial sector as well as
national and European political decision-making arenas. Additionally,
large-scale redistribution of wealth within and between countries is required
to combat blatant inequality.
Additionally, a progressive left position
has to be solidly anti-war, including opposition to war mongering, which has
intensified security risks in Europe in view of heightened tensions with
Russia. Increases in military spending, replacing the Trident nuclear weapons
system in the UK or moving troops to the border with Russia cannot be policies
of the progressive left.
Finally, these questions come back to issues of democratic participation in decision-making. Too many key decisions are taken behind closed doors by a selected few without any input of wider society. All areas of decision-making must be opened up to participatory democracy. In a way this agenda goes back to the ESF at Firenze in 2002. A clear anti-neoliberal economic policy course is combined with participatory democracy and a strong anti-war stance. Especially the latter had been a core component of the initial European project.
Photo by Newtown grafitti |
Finally, these questions come back to issues of democratic participation in decision-making. Too many key decisions are taken behind closed doors by a selected few without any input of wider society. All areas of decision-making must be opened up to participatory democracy. In a way this agenda goes back to the ESF at Firenze in 2002. A clear anti-neoliberal economic policy course is combined with participatory democracy and a strong anti-war stance. Especially the latter had been a core component of the initial European project.
Forgetting this lesson may be at our own peril.
Andreas Bieler
Professor of Political Economy
University of Nottingham/UK
Andreas.Bieler@nottingham.ac.uk
Personal website: http://andreasbieler.net
28 February 2017
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