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Germany: Berlin public services face drastic cuts
By Verena Nees
27 January 2003
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Berlin city hall is governed by a coalition of the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) and the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), the successor
to the Stalinist party of state in former East Germany. This so-called
red-red coalition in the Berlin Senate is leading
the national field when it comes to public service cuts.
The aggressiveness and arrogance with which the SPD/PDS are
approaching this task far surpasses the preceding Christian Democratic
Union (CDU)/SPD regime under Eberhard Diepgen. The Berlin Senate
is signalling a national assault on public sector wages and working
conditions with its withdrawal from the public sector employers
association and an initiative in the Bundesrat (second
federal parliamentary chamber) aimed at worsening city workers
pay.
During the recent national public sector wage bargaining round,
the Berlin city government announced its withdrawal from the local
government employers association effective January 31. As
soon as a new contract had been agreed at the national talks,
Berlin brought forward the date of its withdrawal by three weeks,
in order not to have to pay the minimum wage increase that had
been negotiated.
Interior Senator Koerting (SPD), who represents Berlin as an
employer, justified this by stating that there should be a wage
freeze. If this results in a strike, his spokeswoman cynically
noted, that is still better than raising wages. Koerting said
he would not be extorted by the trade unions. But
who is extorting whom is obvious: the Senate is using all its
means of exerting pressure to break the contract that the SPD
had previously praised, and pay below contract wages.
In the first instance, withdrawal from the employers
association only affects blue- and white-collar city workers and
employees. But other public sector undertakings in Berlin, which
are operated partly as non-profit-making foundations or public
enterprises, are also being pressurized to withdraw oras
in the case of the bodies running public transport and garbage
disposalto implement substantial savings.
Last week, the four Berlin universities and three of the four
advanced technical colleges also withdrew from the local government
employers association. A spokesperson for the colleges said
that the Senate had exerted massive pressure and threatened to
remove subsidies paid from city hall. According to reports, the
same threat was made in relation to the non-profit-making foundation
running the citys museums and the Lette-Verein responsible
for apprentice training.
In the negotiations, the trade union Ver.di is calling for
Berlin to adopt the federally agreed contract, while Interior
Senator Koerting is proposing a so-called solidarity pact:
a wage freeze, cuts in Christmas bonus and holiday pay for those
on higher wage scales, as well as shorter hours for less pay.
A Ver.di spokesperson said this hardly gives any grounds
for negotiations.
Negotiations over a solidarity pact failed last November, after
Ver.di rejected a wage freeze and compulsory shorter hours combined
with lower wages. In response, the union proposed additional incentives
to encourage more voluntary part-time working. These concessions
to the Senate failed because of substantial resistance from the
rank and file, which was also reflected in union delegate meetings.
The Senate is justifying its approach by saying the coffers
are empty. It points to an annual structural deficit
of 2.3 billion, and overall debts of 40 billion, which
are rising daily by approximately 10 million. On November
5, Berlin city hall declared a budget emergency in order to draw
down some 50 billion in federal assistance. Like the aid
packets provided by the International Monetary Fund for highly
indebted countries, this comes on condition that Berlin must make
cuts right up to the pain threshold.
An extensive austerity package already exists: 300 million
are to be cut from the personnel budget by the end of 2003, including
30 million in child day-care, where staff shortages already
mean chaotic and dangerous conditions. Tens of thousands of jobs
face the axe; apprentices will no longer find a place in the public
service.
The budget cuts will hit the poor hardest, with additional
welfare payments for rent, clothing, heating, etc., for those
on social security largely disappearing. The Senate has imposed
such massive cuts in central funding to the city boroughswhich
are responsible for disbursing welfare paymentsthat the
Neukoelln district, with over 300,000 inhabitants and approximately
40,000 welfare benefits recipients, had to temporarily close welfare
offices at the beginning of November and halt provision of some
services.
The role of the PDS, which governs some districts in East Berlin,
is worth noting. It is not seeking to dissuade the SPD from carrying
out its cuts in social programs, as promised in its election campaign,
but provides a shining example in implementing austerity measures.
Last October, the PDS-governed district of Marzahn/Hellersdorf
was the first to present a proposal to consolidate the budget,
which it referred to as private facility management.
PDS District Mayor Uwe Klett declared proudly that the goal
was to lower expenses drastically by employing new methods.
The new methods consist of the worn-out prescription
of privatisation, which was extensively employed in the former
East Germany following reunification and led to a drastic decline
in jobs. Klett would like to cut 300 public sector jobs by transferring
all the state-run child day-care facilities to a private owner,
as well as bringing private management into schools. Kletts
plans have even led to discontent inside the PDS.
Another Senate decision has stoked up further indignation in
the general public: The planned increase in pay for city councillors
of around 1.65 percent will go ahead, despite the austerity packet.
Instead a clothing allowance for senators will be cut, saving
merely 200,000.
Berlin faces a critical economic and social crisis. The German
capital is characterized by increasing poverty and unemployment.
In December, unemployment rose from 17.1 to 17.9 percent, and
290,000 people are without workthe highest level since the
fall of Berlin Wall. Only a quarter of an original 400,000 industrial
jobs remain. As central government has cut back on subsidies it
previously paid to firms to locate in West Berlin, enterprises
have moved into the surrounding countryside. New closures have
already been announced, such as Nestle, which will be shutting
what was the worlds largest chocolate factory. East German
factories collapsed when the deutschmark became the official currency
in the East, or they were sold off by the Treuhand.
But this is not the only reason for the financial crisis. In
addition, there has been a collapse in tax receipts, which affects
all the municipalities and can be traced back to years of tax
handouts to big business and the wealthy, as well as the proverbial
Berlin sleaze, by which top SPD and CDU officials enriched themselves
for decades.
See Also:
In run-up to key state elections
German Green Party proposes drastic cuts in Frankfurt
[21 January 2003]
Pay deal in the German public sector
[21 January 2003]
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