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WSWS : News
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New Dutch government plans drastic cuts
By Jörg Victor
31 May 2003
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After months of political wrangling, a new Dutch cabinet was
sworn in this week. The new government is a coalition of the Christian
Democratic Appeal (CDA), the Peoples Party for Liberty and
Democracy (VVD) and Democrat 66 (D66).
The May 27 swearing-in of the new coalition will end one of
the longest phases without a legitimate government in the Netherlands.
The centre-right coalition comprising the CDA, VVD and the populist
List Pim Fortuyn (LPF) had resigned in autumn 2002. Weeks of negotiations
between the CDA and the social-democratic Labour Party (PvdA)
followed the January 22 general election, before finally collapsing
at the beginning of April.
CDA Chairman Jan-Peter Balkenende, the outgoing prime minister,
will lead the new government, which plans to implement the sharp
attacks against the population that were a central component in
the negotiations between the CDA and PvdA. Everyone will
have to suffer, according to Balkenende. The time
of welfare guarantees is over.
The coalition parties agreed to 13.1 billion euros worth of
austerity measures in order to produce a balanced budget by 2007.
This economic programme, unique in the history of the country,
is to be achieved by the destruction of 12,000 public service
jobs and sharp cuts in the health and pension provisions of the
general population as well as in social security:
* The pension age is to be raised from 65 to 67 years and early
retirement stopped.
* The jobless will only be eligible to draw unemployment benefits
for between one-and-a-half and two years, instead of up to five
years. The length of time a worker must have been employed before
drawing unemployment benefits is to be raised.
* The catalogue of benefits available through the health insurance
scheme is to be reduced, with patients having to finance treatments
themselves. Health insurance will also no longer cover some medicines.
* Everyone will be obliged to pay a compulsory health insurance
contribution of between 200 and 400 euros in addition to the contributions
already deducted from salaries.
* Additional new reforms will do away with disability
insurance (WAO), which also covered psychological illnesses.
* The past model linking social insurance benefits to the level
of wages will only be maintained if wages rise moderately.
This means that the Dutch population faces the choice between
stagnant wages and sinking benefits.
Balkenende has already announced that further cuts are possible,
if the Dutch economy does not grow as envisaged in the coalition
paper or if additional unplanned expenditure arises. The current
1.5 billion euro deficit in the health insurance scheme will lead
to further cuts. Balkenende also did not exclude raising taxes
in this context.
The Ministry of Defence and the police are expressly excluded
from the planned cuts.
An additional expenditure of 500 million euros is planned to
hire more police officers and fund the military. In addition,
the powers of the police are to be expanded. The police will be
able to conduct arbitrary body searches, even in cases where there
are no grounds for suspicion. A 1998 regulation prohibiting the
police from cooperating with criminals is to be lifted.
There has been practically no opposition to these measures
by the established political parties. The PvdA agrees on expanding
police powers. The abolition of the provision prohibiting cooperation
with the criminal milieu met hardly any opposition in parliament,
although the move legitimises existing unofficial and illegal
cooperation between police and criminals.
This form of consensus politics in security policies
results from the belief of the ruling elite that resistance to
the substantial attacks on the rights and social gains of Dutch
working people can only be controlled by police measures.
Remarkably, there was no discussion between the CDA, VVD and
D66 over the fundamentals of the coalition during the coalition
negotiations. The three parties immediately began to elaborate
the cuts they planned in social spending. The leadership of the
self-proclaimed left liberal D66 no longer seems to
be interested in what it was saying yesterday.
D66 chairman Boris Dittrich had told the press before the January
elections that his party would under no circumstances
take part in a Christian Democratic-Liberal coalition,
because this contradicted the D66 demand for greater deregulation.
Now, several members of the party leadership have declared that
it is not acceptable for D66 to allow questions of principle
to stand in the way of an opportunity to participate in government.
Foreign policy
There were also no discussions on foreign policy. Without further
ado, the new coalition is adopting the position of the outgoing
right-wing government. Holland will despatch between 600 and 1,000
soldiers to British-occupied southern Iraq. Apparently, to finance
this deployment, the incoming government plans to increase the
6 billion euro defence budget by an additional 100 million euros.
Not a small factor in the ease with which these foreign policy
issues were resolved within the coalition is the role of Hollands
largest corporation, the oil giant Shell. The third biggest industrial
enterprise in the world, Shell recently announced that its net
receipts for the first quarter in 2003 totalled 5.3 billion euros
(or 1.2 percent of Hollands gross domestic product).
Royal Dutch Shell (RDS), which has a 60 percent holding in
the company, has its registered office in the Netherlands. The
Shell Transport Group in London controls the remaining 40 percent.
A declared goal of the RDS holding company is to not interfere
in the operational business of its subsidiarieswhich operate
in almost every country in the worldbut to determine the
course of these subsidiary companies though appointments to their
boards of directors. The task of each subsidiary is to realise
the highest dividends possible, which are then paid to the Shell
holding company, the only shareholder in the subsidiary companies.
The Netherlands has two representatives on the Shell holding
company board of directors. The close relationship between Shell
and the Dutch political caste is personified in Wouter Bos, chairman
of the social-democratic PvdA. A former top manager in the corporation,
Bos was the leading political personality to abandon opposition
to the Iraq war directly after the January elections and place
himself ever more clearly behind the right-wing government, which
regarded the war as legitimate and promised the US its support.
It is no coincidence that Dutch troops are to be sent to British-occupied
southern Iraq. It does not require the gift of prophesy to forecast
that Shell will seek to develop its business in Iraq mainly in
the countrys southern oil fields.
See Also:
Netherlands coalition talks
break off
[29 April 2003]
The end of consensus
politics in the NetherlandsPart III: The historical roots
of consensus politics
[26 August 2002]
The end of consensus
politics in the NetherlandsPart II: The role of Pim Fortuyn
and his party
[24 August 2002]
The end of consensus
politics in the NetherlandsPart I: The legacy of Wim Koks
Social Democratic government
[23 August 2002]
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