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In runup to key state elections
German Green Party proposes drastic cuts in Frankfurt
By Marianne Arens
21 January 2003
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In its proposals for a sustainable urban policy
published in December, the Green Party has outlined hundreds of
drastic social cuts it wants carried through in Frankfurt am Main.
The party wants to reduce municipal subsidies; cut provisions
for pensioners and youth; transfer public libraries and municipal
offices to the private sector, turn city-owned swimming pools
into limited companies and stop AIDS advice being offered by the
public health system.
Frankfurt is presently governed by a grand coalition comprising
the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Social Democratic Party
(SPD), the Greens and the neo-liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP).
CDU party leader Uwe Becker has welcomed the Greens proposals.
Frankfurt faces an acute financial crisis. Since December 9,
2002 the city has had to rely on short-term credits from the banks
in order to meet its financial obligationsin part to repay
interest on long-term loans to the very same banks. Welfare payments,
public sector wages and regular maintenance costs can only be
financed with the help of such credits.
According to Peter Heine, director of the municipal Finance
and Tax office, in the last three weeks in December, the city
owed some 12 banks approximately 90 million euros borrowed
as short term loans. Frankfurts Treasurer Horst Hemzal
(CDU) has said the city will be dependent on bank credits for
the next ten years. An additional cumulative deficit in the municipal
budget of 1.8 billion euros will exist until 2006. Hemzal has
announced that all municipal workers aged between 55 and 65 years
will have to take early retirement.
The citys catastrophic financial problems are due to
a sharp decrease in business tax receipts by approximately 200
million euros. This is despite the fact that there are 329 major
banks in Frankfurt with a business volume of over two trillion
euros.
The Greens blame the decrease on new tax legislation passed
by the federal government. Since entering office in 1998, the
SPD-Green coalition in Berlin has given big corporations, banks
and the rich numerous tax handouts, creating severe financial
problems for local governments. The recent cut in corporation
tax meant a drop in revenues of over 20 billion euros in 2000
alone. The following year, tax offices had to return 426 million
euros to big business.
Now the Greens sitting in Frankfurt City Hall have decided
it is their job to recoup from the most underprivileged and the
poor, all that the Greens sitting in the federal government in
Berlin have handed out to the rich.
Ever since they first took on responsibility for the municipal
coffers between 1993-1997, Frankfurts Greens have ranked
among the most active representatives of the banks. In order to
prepare Frankfurt as the location for the European Central Bank,
Green Party City Treasurer Tom Koenigs recruited Wolfgang Nierhaus
as an advisor. Nierhaus was a commercial banker and CDU city councillor,
coming straight from the senior management of Deutsche Bank. During
his term as city treasurer, Koenigs implemented drastic cuts.
As with the CDU, however, the Frankfurt Greens sustainable
urban policy proposals amount to the privatisation of the
public sector. Frankfurt city council still provides and
administers a large number of services and regards the city administration
as the body that should carry out such tasks, its policy
document complains. In future, it should concentrate on
ensuring that standards are met and less on doing everything itself.
The Greens continue that the municipality has not been harsh
enough in clamping down on social spending, complaining that Often,
the political will was not strong enough to deter people
from making welfare claims.
The partys document contains 17 pages of proposed cuts.
For example, concession fares on public transport for the needy
should be abolished. Provisions for outpatient and inpatient treatment
for the elderly should be reduced by 10 percent; likewise subsidies
for juvenile welfare services. Fees charged by municipal child
day-care facilities are to be increased and several local libraries
shut. The central municipal canteen that supplies child day-care
centres with daily meals is to be privatised.
The Greens also propose that 10 percent of permanent posts
in the Office of Youth Affairs and the Welfare Department be cut.
Such departments are already struggling with growing social problems
and without the sufficient resources. Moreover, the party wants
to impose a freeze on new recruits in all municipal offices, with
the exception of child day-care facilities and hospitals.
They propose that the city stops financing its heroin-substitute
methadone programme and that the Public Health AIDS Advisory Board
be closed; with patients being sent to private medical practices
or hospitals for assistance.
In the cultural field, the Greens want to cut municipal subsidies
for theatres such as the English Theatre, the Komödie, the
Fritz Rémond Theatre and the Volkstheater by 50 percent
by 2006. In the museums, municipal shareholdings are to be sold
off to the private sector and the money used to establish a non-profit
foundation to run them. The Department of Science and Art is to
be dissolved.
Under the euphemistic slogan of more autonomy,
the Greens propose that budgets for personnel and teaching materials
for education, presently administered by the Länder (state
governments), be transferred to each individual school. Given
the chronic oversubscription in many municipal schools this would
inevitably lead to the same situation which already prevails in
many English cities, where head teachers have to chose between
spending on an urgently needed teacher, a computer or on necessary
cleaning.
The policy papers approach to difficulties faced by the
municipalitys Highways Department is particularly cynical.
The department is unable to spend the funds available because
it does not have the personnel to do so, the paper admits.
Rather than proposing to lift the recruitment freeze, the Greens
demand a reduction of the funds for road maintenance of
around three million [euros], [and a] reduction of personnel spending
of around two million.
The citys 14 municipal swimming pools are to be transferred
to a limited company, as was proposed by the CDU. Finally, the
Greens agree that the financing of Frankfurt Zoo should be restructured,
either as a limited company, a non-profit foundation or stock
company, in order to prepare it for privatisation.
Despite stating that this sale of assets ... will not
reduce the structural deficit, the Greens propose further
privatisations, calling on the city to sell of its share
in the airport, the municipal savings banks, the Frankfurt Messe
and many other holdings. For the Greens, what counts is maximising
profits. Libraries, swimming pools, museums, the health services,
even schools and hospitals must be run along these lines or hived
off.
The Greens new programme bears many similarities with those
proposed a few months ago by the CDU. This is no coincidence.
Today the Green Party represents the interests of a wealthy section
of the middle class; many of its former environmental and radical
activists being found in the top echelons of those directing the
citys economy.
Following the last local elections there were even discussions
between the Greens and the CDU about forming a black-green
coalition in City Hall, which only failed because of the resistance
of the Greens rank-and-file and a dissenting CDU councillor
who preferred to support the far-right Republikaner.
The anti-working class policies of the Greens in Frankfurt
City Hall, and those of the SPD in federal government have enabled
CDU right-winger Roland Koch to take the lead in opinion polls
for the Hesse state election on February 2a situation that
underscores the importance of the socialist alternative being
provided in the ballot by the Partei für Soziale Gleichheit
of Germany (PSG, Socialist Equality Party) and its candidates.
See Also:
Hesse state election
manifesto of the Partei für Soziale Gleichheit of Germany
For social equality! No to the Iraq war!
[27 December 2002]
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