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France: Iraq war speeds up governments austerity measures
By Alex Lefebvre
27 March 2003
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Having announced at the National Assembly that the Iraq war
crisis was contributing to a moment of national unity,
the government of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin has specified
that world events are speeding up the calendars [of the
reforms he has announced]. This declaration goes beyond
a simple attempt to use the rise of President Jacques Chirac in
the opinion polls, following his opposition to US war plans at
the UN, to rapidly push through the reforms already
prepared by the government. They represent more broadly an attempt
to adjust the French economy and public opinion to the new world
reality inaugurated by the invasion of Iraq by US forces.
The crisis over Iraq has deepened the awareness within French
ruling circles of their massive military inferiority in comparison
to the US. Henri Martre, former head of the French defense firm
Aérospatiale, announced on March 4 that pan-European
military organization is going up in smoke faced with an
offensive by US defense firms, which are encouraging European
countries to buy US weapons systems. One of this offensives
recent successes was Polands decision to buy US F-16 fighters
instead of the European Eurofighter or Rafale models.
The daily Le Monde commented: The American [military-industrial]
offensive seems to be achieving its goals: to exploit the relative
weakness of European defense budgets by capturing a large percentage
of them, so as to leave no funds for autonomous European programs.
The European armies are technologically far behind their US
counterparts, especially in regard to contemporary war, with its
long-distance fighting: large transport planes, satellite positioning
systems, cruise missiles, etc. Le Monde writes, The
A-400M transport plane and the Galileo satellite position system,
which is meant to rival the American GPS, are currently falling
behind for lack of funds.
Le Monde asked: Does the European military-industrial
complex still have the means to face up to the Americans, like
European diplomacy? It noted that the US military budget
(355 billion euros) is more than twice as large as the defense
spending (150 billions euros) of all European countries put together,
and that US military research funds are eight times larger than
the corresponding European figure. It added that, compared to
their European counterparts, US defense contractors offer far
superior working conditions to researchers and management.
The new world reality created by the Bush administrations
abandonment of international law will encourage ruling circles
in European countries who have opposed the US to deepen their
social austerity policies, to free up the funds needed to minimize
the US military lead. This dovetails with the agenda of the Raffarin
government, which has always been to favor military spending while
enacting reforms in social spendingand which
is now declaring that a moment of national unity is
encouraging it to do so.
The government has intensified its social attacks on public
sector workers. On pension reform the minister for
social affairs, François Fillon, officially announced that
the government is seeking to increase the length of working lives
to 40 years. He added that after the end of the governmental-level
pension reform, the government will form committees
of management and union representatives to make the necessary
adjustments of the reform.
He also let it be known that after the end of the discussions
on pension reform, salaries will also be targeted
for reforms. Public sector workers salaries
have lost roughly 2.6 percent of their buying power in the last
three years. A union official indicated that nothing leads
us to believe that there will a positive evolution on the central
issues concerning salaries in the public sector.
Under the twin blows of very weak economic growth and the Iraq
war, President Chirac is also threatening public sector workers
job security. He invited his ministers to evaluate in detail
the methods of execution of their credits and of their public
spending. The finance minister is counting on between 10,000
and 30,000 job cuts. The government has assured that these reductions
will not affect the increased spending on the police and the armed
forces.
French ruling circles are also pressing the government to extend
the social assaults to private sector workers. Ernest-Antoine
Seillière, chief of the Medef (Movement of French enterprises,
the businessmens association), has launched a campaign to
insist that pension reform must not remain limited
to the public sector.
Alain Madelin, the former head of Démocratie Libérale
(a free-market party with links to extreme-right elements) who
is now a member of the ruling right-wing UMP party, is forming
circles inside the UMP to discuss the planned reduction
of income taxes to 70 percent of their current levels, a UMP campaign
promise. He is voicing opposition in ruling circles to Chiracs
floating the idea of putting off the tax cuts until the French
governments budget situation improves, and to slow down
the process of applying the cuts.
The economic situation in France, even before any possibly
destabilizing effects of the Iraq war, presages attacks on the
working class. The government has officially predicted 1.3 percent
GDP growth rate for 2003; this is so low that it is predicting
a steady rise in unemployment.
Several large firms are in shaky condition, having announced
record losses or suffering from massive indebtedness. France-Télécom,
facing 70 billion euros in debts, is cutting 13,000 jobs, of which
7,500 are in France. Alcatel is announcing record losses of roughly
4 billion euros for 2002 and will announce restructuring plans.
The transportation and energy firm Alstom, which is on the
verge of giving up hope according to one financial analyst,
has announced a record 1.4 billion euro loss for 2002 and several
spin-offs; unions fear that this will lead to massive job losses.
Even these accounts may well be overestimates based on accounting
fraud. The Stock Market Operations Committee (COB) reprimanded
several firmsincluding Vivendi, Suez, Vinci and Wanadoofor
having published accounts based solely or principally on
concepts that are not defined by French accounting texts.
The COB is considering asking the firms in question to publish
new accounts.
French economic difficulties, the expression of a crisis that
is affecting all the world economic centers, are also taking on
a political dimension. French ruling circles opposition
to the war in Iraq may end up prompting the US government to start
a trade war with France. New York Representative Pete King announced,
We have too long been a punching bag for this third-rate
country [France].... We should no longer treat them as allies,
and make them feel it where it hurts, in the wallet. US
Secretary of State Colin Powell has mentioned the possibility
of consequences on bilateral relations, at least in the
short term. French business circles are counting on losing
contracts with the US government, at the very least.
At a time of intense inter-imperialist tensions, the political
and international character of the fight to protect workers
living standards, in France and elsewhere, becomes apparent. The
French ruling elite will not be able to grant real concessions
to workers. They are already committed to austerity politics to
finance a more powerful role in a world where the law of the jungle
is increasingly the only determining principle of international
relations.
See Also:
Antiwar protests in France
[25 March 2003]
Paris, Berlin and the war against Iraq
[15 March 2003]
Pensions under threat in France
[7 March 2003]
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