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The axe-men are coming: preparing the
public-sector fight back
General election
campaigning has begun in Britain with the establishment parties
unveiling plans for deep public-sector cuts. The details may vary. But
they all agree that workers and sections of the middle class should pay
for the economic devastation wrought by the bankers and the failures of
the capitalist system. As HANNAH SELL writes, only determined, militant
action will be able to push back this offensive.
ONE ISSUE WILL override all
others during the coming years: Who will pay for the economic crisis?
Top bankers’ bonuses have returned to record levels, with £40 billion
expected to be paid in the City in the first two months of the year.
Meanwhile, youth unemployment has reached 18.4% according to official
figures, with total unemployment at 7.9% and rising. The number of
children living in dire poverty increased by 21,000 in the first eight
months of last year. (SOS Children’s Villages) House repossessions have
increased, and will increase further as the one million people who
currently use their credit cards to pay rents or mortgages reach their
credit limits. (Shelter, 11 January)
Capitalism is determined that
the bill for the recession – triggered by the implosion of the banking
system – is paid by the working class, the public sector in particular.
However, it will not be possible for governments to carry out the brutal
cuts in public spending demanded by the world’s capitalist classes
without facing mass revolts and opposition. In the last year this has
been shown across Europe – by the movements in Iceland, France, Spain,
Greece and elsewhere, but also by militant strike action in Britain.
The huge state debts
accumulated over the last two years, transferred from the private
finance sector, were unavoidable for world capitalism if a great
depression, worse even than the 1930s, was to be avoided. The
representatives of capitalism have learnt something since then. When
economic crisis hit this time, the neo-liberal orthodoxy of the previous
three decades was jettisoned overnight in favour of massive state
bailouts of the finance sector. As Robert Lucas, known as ‘the high
priest’ of neo-liberalism, put it: "In a foxhole, we are all
Keynesians".
The scale of the stimulus
packages and bailouts was unprecedented. The cost of the bailouts and
government guarantees for toxic loans may amount to £10 trillion
worldwide – almost the equivalent of the gross domestic product (GDP) of
the most powerful economy in the world, the US. These massive bailouts
have succeeded, at least for now, in softening the effects of the
crisis, but have not prevented a ‘great recession’, nor have they solved
any of the underlying problems. And it is not certain that an even
deeper crisis – a great depression – has been avoided, particularly if
there are further financial shocks.
In Britain, the amount spent
by the government in bailing out and underwriting the banks and finance
sector is estimated at £1.2 trillion. This is equal to one week of world
output! Combined with a dramatic fall in tax receipts, this has led to
the government deficit spiralling upwards. In 2009, government borrowing
reached £178 billion, taking total net public debt to £798 billion.
Borrowing will exceed 12% of national income in 2009-10,
Britain’s worst ever annual deficit in peacetime.
What’s the difference?
THE CENTRAL THEME of the
general election campaign is the size of the deficit, with the Tories
accusing New Labour of profligacy. However, had a Tory government been
in power in 2008, when the country was within 48 hours of a complete
collapse of the banking system, it would have been forced to take, in
essence, the same measures. Just as George W Bush had no choice but to
empirically adopt Keynesian measures to bail out Wall Street, so Gordon
Brown – who just weeks earlier had criticised other European governments
for not taking financial deregulation far enough – had to do a
180-degree turn and intervene in the finance sector on a massive scale.
Faced with further financial crises it cannot be ruled out that a
Cameron-led government would have to carry out further Keynesian
measures.
Now, however, in a gigantic
con trick, the blame for increased government debt is being laid at the
feet of the working class and public-sector workers. There are no
fundamental disagreements between the different wings of the capitalist
class on this issue – although there are policy differences. This is
true also for the major political parties. Many workers rightly fear the
return of a Tory government, which would launch an all-out assault on
the public sector. Brown, in an attempt to win the election, is
emphasising that New Labour would wield the axe more gently than the
Tories. For example, whereas New Labour is proposing a maximum 1% pay
increase for all public-sector workers for two years or more from 2011,
the Tories are proposing to freeze pay for 80% of public-sector workers.
Both are pay cuts in real terms but the Tories’ are more severe.
However, as a Financial Times editorial pointed out: "Despite heated
rhetoric, the differences between Labour and Conservatives on this issue
are rather slight". (24 November 2009) The Liberal Democrats have also
joined the axe-wielding frenzy, ditching their policy of abolishing
tuition fees along with other promises. In essence, all three parties
put forward the same position: taxes will increase for the working
class, and ‘the axeman cometh’ for public-sector pay and services.
Vicious cuts to university
funding – one third of the total budget – give a glimpse of what a
fourth New Labour government would be like. Chancellor Alistair Darling
has said that Britain faces the worst cuts in 20 years and has
consistently refused to rule out cuts of 17% in ‘non-ring-fenced’ parts
of the public sector. New Labour’s real position was clearly indicated
in Darling’s pre-budget report, of which the Financial Times declared:
"Not in the past 40 years has Britain experienced such a sustained
squeeze on public spending than that planned by this government. The
International Monetary Fund in the 1970s, Margaret Thatcher in the
1980s, and John Major in the 1990s, were mice compared with the lions of
Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling in the desire to curtail the role of
the state in the years ahead". (10 December 2009)
Incredibly, the majority of
the cabinet seem to believe that the best chance of winning the election
is to admit the scale of cuts they would carry out. This shows how far
removed they are from reality. Brown appears to favour a different
presentation, emphasising that New Labour cuts will not be as brutal as
under a Tory government. However, there are no substantive differences
between members of his cabinet, only an argument about how much sugar
with which to coat the bitter pill. To suggest, as Larry Elliott has in
The Guardian, that Brown is following a similar approach to the
Alternative Economic Strategy (AES) of the Labour left of the 1970s is
completely wrong. The AES, while very limited, did call for the
permanent nationalisation of the finance institutions and defence of
public services, whereas Brown has only nationalised banks under duress,
in order to prop them up and sell them back to the private sector at the
earliest opportunity, and is in favour of massive cuts in public
spending.
The debate over state deficits
THIS IS NOT to say that there
are no real disagreements between New Labour and the Tories on these
issues. But they are mainly on how fast the axe should fall. According
to the Financial Times, at the 2009 conference of the Confederation of
British Industry, there was no agreement on when cuts in public spending
should begin: "Forty per cent thought the risk lay in tightening [ie
cutting] too quickly, while 60% thought it lay in doing so too late".
Faced with an intractable crisis, the political representatives of
capitalism are trying to decide whether the rock or the hard place is
better.
There are those, now
wholehearted converts to a Keynesian approach, who believe that the
government deficit should be allowed to grow for a considerable period.
They rightly fear that short-term cuts in public spending would lead to
a catastrophic double-dip recession. David Blanchflower, ex-member of
the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee, was correct when he said:
"The Tories’ economic proposals have the potential to push the British
economy into a death spiral of decline that would be almost impossible
to reverse for a generation". (The Guardian, 10 October 2009) He and
others recognise that it is only the intervention of the state that has
so far prevented British – and world – capitalism falling into that
‘death spiral’. Figures from the Office for National Statistics have
shown how, for example, the government was entirely responsible for the
2.2% increase in investment in the third quarter. Public investment was
up 10.7%, private business investment was down by 0.6%. Bank lending
remains at historically low levels. In other words, the private sector
remains on a life-support machine, only functioning as a result of huge
state sector blood transfusions.
From the point of view of
capitalism, however, allowing state deficits to spiral unchecked is only
viable if there is a prospect of healthy economic growth in the
not-too-distant future. In the Financial Times, Samuel Brittan wrote:
"My own bottom line is that all this is in response to a largely
imaginary budget crisis. If we have a normal economic recovery the red
ink will diminish remarkably quickly". (1 October 2009) Brittan draws a
comparison with the immediate post-war period when Britain’s total
national debt was over 200% of GDP, compared to today when it is just
under 60% and forecast to reach 100%.
In the immediate aftermath of
the war, public spending was cut severely. However, the fundamental
reason that the size of the debt was reduced over the following decades
was the unparalleled economic growth of the post-war upswing. By 1973,
when the upswing ended, output in the advanced capitalist countries was
almost three times that of 1950. More was produced in that quarter
century than in the previous three quarters. In that situation, not only
was the national debt reduced dramatically, but capitalism was prepared
to buy social peace by accepting a steady increase in living standards
for the working class in the advanced capitalist countries and a huge
expansion of the ‘social wage’ – spending on pensions, the health
service, unemployment benefits and so on. Although these policies are
associated with Keynesianism, they are not really classical Keynesian
policies, which are designed to pump-prime the economy at times of
crisis, rather than be applied during an upswing. In addition, the
increased public spending during the boom was overwhelmingly financed by
taxation, not by government borrowing.
Britain’s intractable problems
THIS EXCEPTIONAL ‘golden era’
could not be more different to what we face today. Following the end of
the post-war upswing, capitalism set about restoring its profits, in
large part by driving down the share of wealth taken by the working
class in wages and the social wage. In Britain, the last 16 years of
boom – driven by huge finance sector bubbles – masked the underlying
problems of capitalism. They have now been laid bare. During the recent
boom, inequality reached its highest levels since the 1930s, as
globalisation was used to drive wages down. Inevitably, this exacerbated
the underlying problems of overproduction and overcapacity as, in
essence, workers were less able to buy back the goods produced. This was
partially disguised by the expansion of consumer credit, but has turned
dramatically into its opposite with the onset of recession. The consumer
debt overhang in Britain is a vast £1.5 trillion.
It is likely that, as the
economic stimuli are withdrawn, the world will enter the second dip of
recession. We are faced with a protracted, drawn-out crisis,
interspersed with periods of anaemic growth. Mass unemployment, and the
accompanying, dramatic increases in poverty, homelessness and misery,
will not go away even when economies stutter into growth. In a world of
economics in intensive care, Britain, the last OECD country to crawl out
of recession, is among the weaker patients. Government figures show that
the cumulative output loss since the beginning of 2008 has been over 5%.
This makes the problems of
British capitalism intractable. As Larry Elliot writes: "The hope, of
course, is that the willingness to slash interest rates, create
electronic money and run up hefty record peacetime budget deficits has
bought time for the private sector, so that when state intervention in
the economy starts to diminish, consumers and businesses will be in a
fit enough state to grab the baton. There is no guarantee that this will
happen, particularly since it will prove mightily difficult – nigh-on
impossible, perhaps – for policymakers to judge when and how to remove
the stimulus". (The Guardian, 28 December 2009)
Given this reality, from the
point of view of capitalism, the seemingly insane policies of the Tories
– to follow the ‘Irish road’ and proceed quickly to slash the public
sector to the bone – have a certain brutal logic. This is reflected in
the overwhelming switch of big business funding from New Labour to the
Tories, as the party they believe can most effectively manage capitalism
in the next period. Without doubt, the Tories’ plans would throw
millions more workers onto the dole. In the end, however, the concern of
capitalism is not about more or less misery for working- and
middle-class people, but about restoring profitability. Given the
overweening dominance of the finance sector in Britain, primarily, this
means restoring the profits of the ‘banksters’. For the finance sector
in particular, the real dangers that Britain’s debt will be downgraded
and/or there will be a run on the pound, plus the danger of inflation
further into the future, are threats to future profits.
Following the Armageddon that
the City has wreaked, a section of Britain’s ruling class harbours the
dream of moving Britain back towards a concentration on manufacturing.
This is utopian given the sickly character of Britain’s manufacturing
and the weight of the finance sector. The manufacturing sector of every
advanced capitalist country has been hollowed out, but Britain leads the
way with it making up just 16% of output before the recession.
Productivity in Britain also lags behind – at eleventh place in the OECD
league. In any case, those Keynesian commentators who suggest that a
greater emphasise on manufacturing would mean a more equitable form of
capitalism are mistaken. In reality, the manufacturing and financial
sectors are intertwined.
Even from the point of view
of manufacturing capitalism, it is the restoration of profits that
matters. British capitalism has spent 30 years positioning itself as a
provider of cheap labour. A further dramatic increase in unemployment,
which the Tories’ plans would lead to, would act as what Karl Marx
called ‘a reserve army of labour’, a big stick with which to try and
frighten workers into accepting lower wages. Driving down wages would,
in turn, exacerbate the crisis of overproduction and overcapacity.
However, individual capitalists are not driven by the medium- or
long-term interests of capitalism as a whole, but by how best to
maximise their own profits.
The arbiters of the logic of
the market, such as Moody’s ratings agency, have declared that Britain’s
"affordability is stretched to the limits of what is consistent with a
top rating", and are threatening that Britain, like Greece, will face
its debt being downgraded at some point if cuts are not made fast
enough. As an editorial in The Guardian correctly explained, the ratings
agencies have the attitude of money-lenders and are not interested in
human misery, in "unemployment or long-term growth". Nor are they
accurate: "The
agencies regularly commit huge blunders. At the beginning of
2008, there were about a dozen top-rated countries in the entire world,
according to Moody’s and Co – but there were 64,000 Collateralised Debt
Obligations securities, CLOs and the like that were at the same notch,
much of which turned out to be rubbish. The agencies thought Enron was
fine – until just four days before it went bust. They got southeast Asia
wrong, and before that Latin America". It concluded: "The past couple of
years should have finally given the lie to the notion that the City
experts know best". (4 January)
Blaming public-sector workers
THE MAJORITY OF the
population would agree wholeheartedly, but capitalist governments
continue to dance to the tune of the rating agencies. But ‘the logic of
the market’ will not seem logical to the working class. At a certain
stage, the cuts being threatened by the next government will lead to
massive social upheavals. Even Thatcher, the axe-woman par excellence –
who, it has been revealed to no-one’s surprise, scrawled ‘not nearly
tough enough’ and ‘too small’ on her ministers’ proposals to cut public
spending – did not cut on anywhere near the scale of Darling’s
pre-budget report, never mind those proposed by today’s Tory leader,
David Cameron. Apart from the brief period at the end of the second
world war, only once has Britain’s government implemented an absolute
cut in public spending. The infamous Geddes Report attempted to cut
public spending from £603 million to £428 million in the 1920s, and was
one of the main factors behind the 1926 general strike.
At this stage, the
overwhelming propaganda laying the blame for the size of the deficit on
public-sector workers has some effect. A YouGov poll on 13 September
2009 showed 60% of people in favour of public spending cuts. Many
workers blame the City of London for the crisis, whilst believing that
there is no option but to accept cuts as the banksters will never pay
for the crisis.
However, the mood will change
when cuts become concrete. A more recent poll showed that the majority
of public-sector workers do not believe that they will suffer a pay
freeze. It is one thing to acquiesce to cuts when you do not think that
they will have any direct effect on you or your family, another when it
is your pay that is being frozen, or your job, pension, school and
hospital that it is facing cuts. Despite the attempts of the
representatives of capitalism to divide public- and private-sector
workers, once public-sector workers enter action, there will be enormous
potential to win the support of other workers in a united struggle to
defend public services. An indication of this was the public support for
the postal workers’ strike, which remained at 2:1 despite the media
onslaught against the Communication Workers Union.
Even before the huge attacks
begin, cuts have started and workers are having no choice but to resist.
The Guardian explained: "Britain is ushering in the new year with the
threat of widespread unrest as civil servants, tube drivers and rail
workers are poised to ballot on strike action". (31 December 2009) In
addition, the postal workers’ strike ballot is still live. Also on the
agenda are movements of students against university cuts, alongside the
fight back against youth unemployment led by Youth Fight for Jobs. These
battles, looming in the first part of 2010, are preparation for the
enormous struggles that will be necessary under the next government.
Philip Hammond, shadow
treasury secretary, declared that there is no danger of a ‘winter of
discontent’ after a Tory victory, as trade union leaders were only doing
their job when they "came out and rattled their sabres" at the TUC
conference. Behind the scenes, the shadow cabinet had established
"cordial relations" with them, Hammond said. Unfortunately, it is all
too likely that the majority of union leaders see that the best way of
defending their members against a Tory government is by establishing
‘cordial’ – that is, supine – relations with it. This was the case when
Thatcher came to power. Her government responded to their friendly
overtures by launching an onslaught on the trade union movement and
workers’ rights. Cameron would be no different.
Sharpening struggle
HOWEVER, HAMMOND AND the
Tories are making a big mistake if they confuse the approach of the
union leaders with that of the rank and file. Last year saw important
struggles – from Lindsey oil refinery, the post, to the Leeds bin
workers, etc. Faced with vicious attacks on pay and conditions, workers
are prepared to fight, and can win victories. Flying pickets, unofficial
and all-out strikes for weeks at a time were some of the militant
methods of the 1970s and 1980s which were re-adopted in 2009. The
shrinking size of the pot available – as a result of the crisis – is
already sharpening the struggle between capital and labour enormously.
This process will accelerate
in the coming years. The outrageous decision by the courts to ban the
British Airways cabin crew strike is a declaration that any strike can
be declared illegal and is a foretaste of what is to come. It is likely
that a Tory government would add to the already formidable armoury of
anti-trade union laws. It will take a concerted struggle to push aside
these laws but, as the Lindsey workers demonstrated, it is possible to
do so. Leaders of the general union, UNITE, correctly called the BA
decision "disgraceful" but were not prepared to defy it. Socialists are
not light-minded about the need to protect the trade union funds and
resources built up by members over a long period. Ultimately, however,
the only way to defeat the anti-union laws will be to defy them. In the
case of the cabin crew, UNITE could have called on all its BA members to
strike for at least a day and call a massive demonstration at Heathrow
airport against the court ruling. If the courts had then come for the
union’s funds, the whole of the trade union movement would have needed
to mobilise in defence of democratic rights and the unions.
The anti-union laws are just
one aspect, although a crucial one, of the struggles that are coming.
Socialists have a vital role to play in politically arming the working
class for those struggles. The starting point has to be that the working
class will not pay for the capitalist crisis: it is not our bill and we
will not pick it up. We will not accept a single cut in workers’ pay or
public services. The logic of capitalism means that an assault on public
services is inevitable, but not that its success is inevitable. If the
working class meets the assault with a sufficiently militant and
determined response, the representatives of capitalism can be forced
back.
The next government – whether
New Labour, Tory, coalition or hung – will be fundamentally weak, with
very shallow social support. This would be true even if the Tories win a
large majority, which does not seem the most likely outcome. There is a
possibility of a second general election within quite a short space of
time if the government faces mass opposition to its policies.
The strategy of the ‘dented
shield’ – that it is necessary to accept some cuts to show that the
working class is ‘reasonable’ and prepared to make ‘sacrifices’ for the
common good – would be a disaster. Weakness invites aggression and
sacrifice does not sate the drive for profit. It only gives the
capitalists confidence and allows workers to be divided over which
sectors should accept cuts. In reality, without united struggle against
all cuts, unimaginably vicious attacks will be made. For example, the
IMF has used the economic crisis to renew its demands for ‘ healthcare
reforms’: "These reforms have basically to be confronted. The idea of
[just] introducing these fiscal rules and not doing these reforms is a
joke". This is the real position of world capitalism. The depth of
public support for the National Health Service means that no government
dares to openly agree with the IMF but, despite claims that the NHS is
ring-fenced, cuts are already taking place.
The NHS Confederation estimates that the health service will have to
find £15-20 billion of ‘efficiency savings’ over the next five years.
If the working class does not resist, the complete destruction of a
publicly-owned health service will be on the agenda.
Forcing the capitalists back
IT IS NOT possible to predict
exact timescales, but it is certain that the working class will resist.
Look at Iceland, with a population of 330,000, where the cuts being
demanded to pay back the debts of Iceland’s bankers – costing £10,700
per person – have led to a powerful movement of opposition. Under the
impact of the crisis, Iceland first elected a supposedly left government
which accepted the demands of the European Union (EU) and IMF. But,
under pressure from the movement, it was the right-wing president who
called a referendum. No wonder. The Financial Times compared it to the
collapse of the Soviet Union and the accompanying catastrophic drop in
life expectancy: "By how many years must Icelandic lifespans shorten?"
And, fearing the potentially revolutionary movement that could develop,
its editorial appealed: "Do not put Iceland in a debtors’ prison". (7
January) This is recognition that, given the scale of the threatened
revolt, it makes sense to retreat in this instance – particularly given
the small sums involved on a global scale. This shows that state debt is
not only an economic question but also a political one. Faced with a
powerful enough movement, the capitalists can be forced to retreat to
defend their system.
Capitalist propaganda insists
that major cuts are inevitable. In more private discussions, however,
capitalist commentators admit a different reality. For example,
discussion is taking place in the pages of the Financial Times on the
question of Greece, with some arguing that it should leave the eurozone
sooner rather than later. In essence, their reasoning is that
working-class resistance to the scale of the cuts demanded by the EU
will be too great and it is therefore utopian to try and force them
through. Desmond Lachman drew a comparison with Argentina, which
defaulted on its debt in 2002, after the IMF-proposed ‘adjustment plan’
led to "rioting in the streets" – in reality, a mass movement with
revolutionary features. (Financial Times, 11 January) Today, the
Argentinean ruling class is unable to force through brutal enough cuts
to satisfy global capital and may well default again.
Of course, as long as the
capitalist profit system remains, the ruling class will attempt to
defend its profits by whatever means necessary. Blocked in one direction
it will try another. Faced with massive struggles to defend wages and
public services, it could in the future consciously use inflation to
undermine the size of the debt and workers’ wages. It is only by
fighting back at each stage – in that situation, for wage increases in
line with inflation – that the working class will be able to prevent
capitalism driving it into the dirt. To be fully effective, however,
those struggles will need a perspective for an alternative to
capitalism. They will have to be linked to the socialist transformation
of society.
The majority of national
trade union leaders have been completely bewildered by the economic
crisis. Having largely accepted the ‘logic of the market’ they became
used to decades of ‘concession bargaining’ trade unionism, and act as an
enormous fetter on the ability of the working class to struggle. This
does not mean that they will hold back struggle indefinitely. On the
contrary, as was shown by the GMB and UNITE’s eventual official backing
for the construction workers’ strikes last June, they can be forced into
action by their members. Nonetheless, left-led trade unions, such as the
PCS civil servants union and the Rail, Maritime and Transport workers’
union (RMT), will have an important role to play in putting forward a
united strategy to defend jobs and public services. At the same time,
the development of genuine militant ‘broad left’ organisations within
the trade unions will be a crucial part of fighting to transform them
into democratic, fighting bodies.
The first step should be a
massive national demonstration in the first part of the year under the
slogans: ‘We won’t pay for their crisis’, and ‘No cuts – defend all jobs
and services’. This would send a warning to the next government that the
trade union movement will not accept cuts in workers’ pay, conditions,
pensions or public services. The next step would be a 24-hour
public-sector general strike, as a step towards a complete 24-hour
general strike.
The need for a political strategy
ALONGSIDE AN INDUSTRIAL
strategy, a political strategy will be needed. The majority of national
trade union leaders continue to cling desperately to the coattails of
New Labour. Yet Darling’s pre-budget report attacked the public sector
so brutally that even Dave Prentis, general secretary of UNISON, was
forced to declare: "I am not going to sign up to this. I know how our
members feel: they feel angry and betrayed. It is just not on to make
nurses, social workers, dinner ladies, cleaners and hospital porters pay
the price for the folly of the bankers".
But what is the leadership of
UNISON going to do about it? Unfortunately, it will argue for a vote for
New Labour in the general election, as the ‘lesser of two evils’. So
will the leadership of UNITE, and the majority of the TUC, despite the
court ruling against the BA strike. There may be acquiescence to the
union leaders’ call for a New Labour vote, because of the fear of the
Tories. However, this does not mean that rank-and-file trade unionists
support New Labour. On the contrary, the majority of those who vote for
them will do so through gritted teeth.
Nonetheless, there are some
activists who still cling to the hope that, following an election
defeat, New Labour could move back to the left. To put it mildly, this
does not seem the most likely scenario. In other countries, such as
France and Greece, the ex-social democratic parties have not moved to
the left when out of power. In Britain, the lonely band of remaining
left MPs will shrink even further beyond the election – half of the
Socialist Campaign Group is retiring! Even if every one of the remainder
wins, there will be only eleven left.
The task of socialists is to
prepare the working class for the coming battles. This can be done most
effectively by standing socialist candidates in the general election.
The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition, initiated by socialists and
militant trade unionists – including Bob Crow, general secretary of the
RMT, and Brian Caton, general secretary of the Prison Officers
Association – can play a crucial role in politically preparing the
ground. The huge impending battles will create big opportunities for
steps towards a mass party of the working class.
Even where there are no mass
workers’ parties, or where supposedly left leaders bend the knee and
accept the will of the markets, that will not prevent working-class
resistance, as the example of Iceland shows. But it will enormously
complicate the situation and can leave room for the far-right, such as
the BNP, to falsely claim to be the real fighters for working-class
people.
A timid response
POSSIBLY THE ONLY advantage
that capitalism has had in the last two years is the lack of mass
socialist parties, even of a left-reformist character. This is the
result of the previous 20 years when, falsely equating Stalinism with
genuine socialism, capitalism went on a huge propaganda offensive
against socialist ideas. The legacy of that period lingers on. Despite
the enormous anger against the banksters, this is yet to find a mass
political reflection. There are no major movements demanding that the
banksters are taxed ‘until the pips squeak’ – yet – although there would
be massive support for such a demand. A YouGov poll for Compass, a
soft-left New Labour think-tank, showed that 71% supported the
introduction of a wealth tax. (14 April 2009) Even in countries where
new left formations were already in existence before the crisis began,
such as Germany, Greece and Brazil, their leaderships have tended to
move rightwards under the impact of the crisis.
Nonetheless, as struggles
develop so will demands that the rich should suffer, to pay back
government deficits. Even now, the programme of the right-wing union
leaders will seem unacceptably timid to most trade unionists. New
Labour, like the Tories before it, has consistently cut taxes for the
corporations and the super-rich. Under pressure of the crisis and anger
with the banksters, New Labour has made a tiny move in the opposite
direction, introducing a 50% tax rate for those earning over £150,000.
UNISON’s ‘alternative budget’, limits itself to calling for the
threshold to be lowered to £100,000, which it estimates would raise an
extra £2.3 billion. It makes no demands for any increase in tax rates
for the super-rich or the big corporations. Compass has also limited its
demand for taxation of the rich to 50%. Yet for most of the 1970s, the
top rate of income tax was 83%, and big corporations paid 52% of their
profits in tax. The latter has been reduced step-by-step ever since, to
just 28% today.
UNISON’s leadership would
probably argue that more radical demands are utopian because the big
corporations and super-rich would not accept them. However, as the
banksters’ squeals of outrage at New Labour’s very mild attempts to trim
their fingernails have shown, they will not willingly accept any
increase in taxation, no matter how timid.
New Labour’s levy of a 50%
‘super tax’ on bank bonuses over £25,000 will apply to little more than
half of the new year payouts. Such was the mildness of the measure, and
the anger against the bankers, that even the Tories could not oppose it,
and it has been welcomed by the right-wing governments of France and
Germany. None of this prevented Price Waterhouse Cooper and other City
firms from threatening to move abroad. For a temporary period in the
post-war upswing, on the basis of a high rate of profit, capitalism was
prepared to accept higher rates of taxation. Neo-liberalism set about
reversing that and, now, capitalism is not about to reverse the
situation.
The case for socialism
THE LESSONS OF the past will
need to be relearned by the workers’ movement. In France in 1981, a
left-reformist government came to power under François Mitterrand.
Within 100 days, however, under the pressure of the markets, it
retreated and began to implement neo-liberal attacks on the working
class. Today, if a left government tried to implement a wealth tax that
went beyond what capitalism was prepared to accept, the markets would
threaten a strike of capital.
This does not mean that it is
wrong to raise demands to tax the rich, but it is necessary to go beyond
that. The next decade will demonstrate graphically the brutality of
capitalism. On the basis of experience, key sections of the working
class will draw the conclusion that it cannot be tamed and turned into
something more equitable.
Already a layer understands
that the only real answer to the banksters’ blackmail is the
nationalisation of the banking and finance sector, with compensation
paid only on the basis of proven need. Instead of being run by and for
the profiteers, a nationalised finance sector could be run by and for
the mass of the population, with majority representation at all levels
drawn from the unions in the banking industry, the wider working class
and labour movement, with the government also represented. This would
need to be linked to the introduction of a state monopoly of foreign
trade, to control all imports and exports, including capital. That would
only be a start, however. What is required is taking into democratic
public ownership all of the economic levers of power, to begin to
develop a socialist planned economy.
The importance of the Trade
Unionist and Socialist Coalition standing in the general election is
that it will begin to prepare the ground for the struggle beyond the
election, and can begin to popularise the case for socialism amongst
broader sections of the working class. That is why it is a step forward
that it is standing on a socialist programme, including the call "for a
democratic socialist society run in the interests of people not
millionaires. For bringing into democratic public ownership the major
companies and banks that dominate the economy, so that production and
services can be planned to meet the needs of all and to protect the
environment".
The onset of the economic
crisis in 2008 has already had a profound effect on the outlook of the
working class. At this stage, however, this is not immediately obvious,
as the majority still hope against hope that it will pass and life will
return to normal. In the next two years, the hammer blows of events will
demonstrate to millions that we face a new, far worse, version of
normality. Mass struggles, unlike anything we have seen in the last 20
years, will be on the agenda. The potential to build mass support for
socialist ideas will once again be posed.
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