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The end of consensus politics in the Netherlands
Part I: The legacy of Wim Koks Social Democratic government
By Wolfgang Weber
23 August 2002
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This is the first of a three-part article on the political
background to the decline of social democracy and the rise of
the right-wing populist movement headed by the late Pim Fortuyn
in the Netherlands. Parts two and three will appear over the next
several days.
At the end of July, two months after parliamentary elections,
a new coalition government of Christian Democrats (CDA), the List
Pim Fortuyn (LPF) and right-wing Liberals (VVD) took office in
the Netherlands capital of The Hague.
The strongest parliamentary faction, the CDA, received five
ministerial posts, including two of the most important, foreign
affairs and the judiciary, and nominated the prime minister, Jan
Peter Balkenende. Three of the four ministries that went to the
VVD were also major posts: the home office, finance and defence.
The List Pim Fortuyn, named after the right-wing populist murdered
shortly before election day, became the second strongest faction
with 26 representatives, but was only able to claim the portfolio
for immigration and integrationa ministry recently subordinated
to the judiciaryand three others, including the ministry
of the economy.
In a parliamentary statement on the governments programme
agreed by the coalition partners, Prime Minister Balkenende declared
that the coming years would be extremely difficult for most Netherlanders.
Budgetary savings of 11 billion euros are to be achieved through
severe cuts in the public service sector as well as in health
entitlements and occupational disability insurance. Within three
years, 40 percent of workers deemed by doctors unfit for work
will have to accept some kind of inferior job or lose their right
to a pension. Savings are also to be made at the expense of the
unemployed, whose numbers have been increasing dramatically for
some months.
Shortly after assuming power, the government announced that
additional cost-cutting measures pertaining to the social service
budget would be unavoidable. To justify this, the government claimed
that income from taxation had drastically declined as a result
of the economic slump, that next years official statistics
predicted further growth in unemployment, and that the budgetary
deficitin spite of the proposed cutswould increase
to 3.5 billion euros, i.e., to 8 percent, rather than the previously
estimated 2 percent, of the Dutch gross national product.
The dismantling of social services is to be accompanied by
the establishment of a strong and ubiquitous state apparatus,
with tougher penal legislation and a greater deployment of police
than ever before.
Up to now the Netherlands, compared to other European countries,
has had a reputation for relatively generous policies toward foreigners.
It is now adopting the toughest measures to isolate and expel
immigrants. New asylum-seekers will be admitted only if they are
wealthy enough to afford 6,600 euros for a language and integration
course. The opportunities for dispersed family members to reunite
will be restricted more harshly than anywhere else. All immigrants
illegally resident in the country, in most cases working on flower
and vegetable plantations, will be expelled without exception.
Special military forces are to be established to hunt, catch and
deport immigrants.
In this connection, the government is once again making it
obligatory to carry an identity card. Everyone will be obliged
to carry such a card or passport at all times. Immigrants who
fail to comply with this requirement will be subject to immediate
deportation. The obligation to furnish proof of identity was first
introduced in the Netherlands during the Nazi occupation. It was
used by the authorities to identify Jewish citizens quickly and
easily, before handing them over to the Gestapo.
The new government and its programme constitute a fundamental
break with the politics of consensus, i.e., the customary
methods and mechanisms of rule of the Netherlands ruling class
which stem from a tradition that goes back centuries. The aim
of such consensus politics, often involving lengthy negotiations
and manoeuvrings, was to dampen social conflicts and avert open
class confrontation. With the advent of the governments
new programme, the ruling elite is now orientating itself towards
just such a confrontation.
The legacy of social democratic policies
This transformation is scarcely discernable in the public debate,
which proceeds as if nothing has changed. The opposition partiesparticularly
the social democratic Party of Labour (PvdA) of the previous prime
minister, Wim Kokrefrain from voicing any fundamental opposition
to the new government and its policies. This, in itself, is an
expression of the decay of bourgeois politics, the parliamentary
parties and the media.
It is hardly surprising that the opposition parties are, by
and large, remaining silent, when one considers that they led
the government for the past eight years (twelve years in the case
of the PvdA) and, together with the trade union bureaucracy, brought
about a shift to the political right. This fact is crucial for
an understanding of the current situation in the Netherlands.
At the same time, it is symptomatic of political developments
in almost every European country.
As chairman of the Dutch trade union federation in 1982, Wim
Kok negotiated the Wassenaar Agreement with the CDA-led
government of Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers. This agreement constituted
a fundamental change in social and wage policies. Henceforth,
the object of consensus politics was no longer to
be the improvement of social conditions, but rather budget cuts
directed against workers, the unemployed, the sick and pensionerscuts
carefully negotiated and worked out in detail by the governing
parties, trade unions, churches, businessmen and other lobby groups.
At first, limits were placed on pay increases; later wages
were reduced and part-time and low-pay jobs encouraged. At the
beginning of 1990, the PvdA entered the government led by Lubbers
of the CDA. Wim Kok became minister for finance, and the trade
unions became even more tightly bound to the government.
Four years later, Wim Kok himself took over the office of prime
minister. He remained in power until the recent change of government,
supported by a coalition of the PvdA, the right-wing VVD and the
D66 party. The D66 came into existence as a liberal splinter group
from the VVD in 1966.
Under the slogan of the Netherlands answer
to globalisation, Wim Kok systematically enforced the policies
he had introduced in 1982. The Netherlands Model became
the paradigm for dismantling the welfare statevia a method
of rigorously executed step-by-step measures, always implemented
in collaboration with trade unions and works committees. As such,
it became the model for many European governments.
In the Netherlands it was called the Polder Modela
designation that implies there was no alternative. Just as the
people who lived on the Polder (the term given to land reclaimed
from the sea and secured behind dykes) had to bury all conflicts
and stick together in the battle against the forces of nature,
any resistance to government policy had to be suppressed in the
battle for Netherlands place on the global market.
In line with the Polder Model, social security
and unemployment benefits were reduced and the proportion of contract
and part-time work was sharply increased. By the end of Koks
term in office, more than 38 percent of all employment was based
on part-time contracts. In Germany the comparable figure is less
than 10 percent.
Telework, or home employment, has also been systematically
introduced. Computer experts and other highly qualified workers
are often employed on a part-time basis or in some other fashion
that precludes job security. They do not receive a monthly salary
according to a wage agreement, but instead are paid in relation
to the goods they produce. In this way, costs for the employer
are substantially reduced.
Teleworkers do not normally require an office, because
they use their homes as a work place and maintain contact with
the employer or customer by telephone or over the Internet. Supplementary
earnings for night or weekend work, sick pay, etc., are omitted
from the flat-rate payment for completed work, because such workerswhether
employed on a regular basis or self-employedmust willingly
forgo these entitlements to ensure payment for punctually completed
work. If they are employed as independently contracted labourers,
the employer also avoids social insurance contributions.
Another important feature of the Polder Model involved
forcing dismissed workers and the unemployed to assume the status
of self-employed, so as to improve the unemployment statistics
and decrease the financial burdens on the national budget and
on business concerns. As a result there emerged, particularly
in the service sector, an army of small, self-employed businessmen
and businesswomen, staggering along on the margins of existence.
The so-called Ich AG (Me Ltd) campaign,
currently being propagated by the Hartz Commission in Germany,
is modelled on this development.
The result of such measures has been the creation of a broad
layer of working poor, i.e., working families barely able to keep
their heads above water. At the same time, the official tally
of unemployed and the governments expenditure on social
support and unemployment benefits were reduced to a minimum.
The end of the Netherlands Model
The stock market boom of the 1990s, fuelled by speculation
and the availability of credit, gave Wim Koks government
the appearance of success for a few years. Despite the Dutch economys
shaky foundation, the growth in world trade enabled the social
consequences of the Polder Model to be concealed for
a while. It provided the Netherlands, so vitally dependent on
export, with new jobsthough they were jobs offering very
low levels of pay.
Some political scientists and commentators even expressed the
opinion that, with the government of Wim Kok, the realisation
of an open, liberal, democratic society had come closer to realisation.
To justify such optimism, they pointed to the continuance of consensus
politics in spite of social hardships and to liberal
laws for homosexuals, prostitutes, drug addicts and the terminally
ill who wish to determine for themselves when and how they are
to die.
However welcome the abolition of discriminating civil and criminal
laws for such groups of people, genuine democracy and freedom
are possible only when social inequality has been overcome. But
the Netherlands under Wim Kok and the social democrats was becoming
ever more socially and economically polarised. A layer of wealthy
people at the top of society was growing richerthe number
of millionaires had risen to over 200,000 in 1999while the
working population was becoming ever more impoverished.
Any illusions about this state of affairs were soon to be dispelled.
When the world economy plunged into recession last year, the bitter
consequences of the Polder Model for the working class
rapidly became apparent.
Despite the low wages they were offering, many firms failed
to prove productive enough to meet the demands of global competition.
The low level of wages was even partly responsible for a slow
growth in productivity. As economists have long known, under conditions
of economic growth, low wages tend to impede the systematic development
of new technology, and can thus become a drag on the growth of
productivity.
Now the representatives of banks and business concerns were
demanding an end to the strategically regulated dismantling
of the welfare state and a tougher course of action.
During the final months of Wim Koks government, thousands
of working poor were thrown onto the streets, without the benefit
of a state safety net to prevent them from falling deeper into
poverty. Within a few months, the number of unemployed rose to
a level comparable to that in Germanybut with far less financial
support and aid for the jobless.
Consequently, in this small and densely populated country,
where housing is expensive and hard to come by, the number of
homeless people shot up last winter. According to the Salvation
Army, figures for the homeless rose from less than 10,000 last
year to 70,000 at present.
One development is particularly tragic. Up to six months ago,
not a single woman was among the newly registered homeless people.
Today, according to the relief organization Federatie Opvang,
more than 25 percent of homeless are women, and this proportion
is increasing each month.
From a total population of 16 million, one million households
were already living below the poverty line in 1997. According
to some estimates, this number has risen to well over 2 million
since last winter.
Under these dire social conditions, Pim Fortuyn came onto the
political stage, proclaiming the flood of immigrants
to be the national scourge that was ruining the country.
He declared that the politics of consensus had to
be abandoned so that the country could be roused from its torpor.
To be continued
See Also:
Corporate Netherlands mounts anti-immigrant
witch-hunt
[12 August 2002]
Programme of the new Dutch
government: xenophobia, welfare cuts and a stronger state
[10 July 2002]
Right-wing parties unseat
social democrats in Dutch elections
[18 May 2002]
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