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WSWS : News
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Countdown to Polands entry into the European Union
By Marius Heuser
4 October 2003
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On March 1, 2004, Poland, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Latvia,
Lithuania, Malta and Slovakia will become members of the European
Union (EU). Of these countries, Poland has by far the largest
population and the biggest economy. With a population of 36 million,
Poland will also be entitled to proportionate representation within
the bodies of the EU.
The EUs eastward expansion aims to secure access to markets
and resources of cheap labour as well as to increase Europes
political and economic weight. Poland is currently the fourth
largest foreign trading partner of the EU.
The Polish population regards EU membership with mixed feelings.
Many Polish workers have relatives in EU countries or travel there
on a regular basis. EU countries appear wealthy in comparison
with Polands eastern neighbours. Younger Poles in particular
have illusions regarding Polish EU membership. In the referendum
on European Union membership on June 7-8, 77 percent voted in
favour of membership, with a 59 percent turnout.
At the same time, however, support for the populist right-wing
peasant party Samoobrona (Self-defence) and the National-Clerical
League of Polish Families (LPR) is growing. Both reject EU membership
and are attempting to utilise widespread resentment against attacks
on social gains and the impoverishment of wide layers of society
for their own nationalist ends. According to recent opinion polls,
the ruling SLD (Alliance of the Democratic Left), the former Stalinist
partywhich has consistently advocated EU membershipis
opposed by 70 percent of the population.
The social situation for ordinary people has worsened dramatically
since 1989. This is mainly a result of the measures carried out
in recent years to meet the requirements dictated to the Polish
government by the EU as a precondition of EU membership. In March
1998, Poland was accepted as an applicant for membership, and
certain priorities were mandated. Among other issues,
privatisation was to be brought to completion, progress was to
be made regarding the structural reform of fishing, and farming
and financial transactions were to be liberalised.
Polands out-of-date industry and agriculture cannot compete
with its EU rivals. Ongoing privatisations and rationalisations
have led to horrendous levels of unemployment and social destitution.
In mining alone, 250,000 jobs have been destroyed since the reintroduction
of capitalism. Official unemployment has long since exceeded the
18 percent mark, while unemployment benefits are low and are only
granted to few. This directly results from the privatisation of
the health and the welfare sector.
The situation facing farmers is especially bleak. While the
contribution of the agricultural sector to gross national product
is only 3.3 percent, about 20 percent of the Polish workforce
is still employed on the land. On average, it takes 26 people
to cultivate one hectare of land, meaning that Polish farmers
cannot compete on the world market. At the same time, cheap subsidised
products from western Europe are increasingly available on the
Polish market.
Although many large and modern agricultural concerns were created
during the recent structural reforms, 55 percent of all Polish
farms still make up less than five hectares of land. Such farms
occupy 21 percent of agricultural land. On the other hand, 19
percent of the large-scale farms cultivate 56 percent of the agricultural
land. Studies have revealed that more than half (56 percent) of
the farms cannot be developed andnow faced with competition
from the EUare doomed to close down. Many farmers are already
only producing for their personal use, and their farms are their
only protection from complete destitution. The latest structural
reforms are certain to ruin millions of people.
In recent years, the cost of consumer goods has nearly risen
to the level of prices within the EU, while wages have remained
low. A recent study by the Economics School and the University
of Warsaw established that 40 percent of Polish households have
an income insufficient to meet basic needs. One quarter of the
Polish population is living below the official poverty line.
The various governments that have ruled Poland since the collapse
of the Eastern Bloc have had considerable difficulties pushing
through their anti-social measures in the face of widespread popular
opposition. The coalition of the right-wing Election Action
Solidarity (AWS) with the liberal Freedom Union
(UW), which came to power in 1997, fell apart in the summer of
2000 because of conflicts within its own ranks. Conservative sections
of the AWS, based on rural layers, refused to support the reforms
demanded by the EU because they feared losing their last vestiges
of influence. These conflicts continued during the subsequent
period of rule by the minority government of the AWS.
Following elections in September 2001, both the AWS and the
UW suffered devastating defeats and failed to be re-elected to
the Polish parliament. The election was won by the SLD, which
together with the considerably smaller Workers Union (UP) won
41 percent of the vote. The SLD and the UP formed a coalition
with the Peasants Party (PSL) led by Leszek Miller. The SLD is
the only major party to have consistently advocated Polish membership
in the EU.
The political circles in Poland upon which the EU relies for
its eastward expansion consist mainly of criminal elements that
have emerged from the former Stalinist bureaucracy. When the political
system in Poland collapsed at the end of the 1980s, the leadership
of the Stalinist state party PZPR made a remarkable transformation.
The old bureaucrats became neoliberal opportunists, who sought
to line their own pockets from the coming changes. They manoeuvred
themselves onto the boards of the newly privatised companies,
banks and the most important media and state institutions. This
is the origin of the so-called red directors, who
today own a considerable number of Polish companies.
When the SDRP (later the SLD) was re-elected in 1993, it continued
its neoliberal course, which was tailored to satisfy the interests
of its clientele. At the same time, it abolished laws that had
been passed by the Solidarity government. These laws were aimed
at revealing the extent of connections between politicians and
the former Stalinist secret police, the KGB. The old elite also
re-established its positions with the state authorities and the
media.
The ruling president, Alexander Kwasnievski, began his political
career in the Stalinist youth organisation before rising to the
highest levels of the party. In 1990, he became the chairman of
the SDRP. The head of the government, Leszek Miller, was secretary
of the Central Committee of the SDRP and was renowned as a Stalinist
hardliner. Today he is calling for voters to support Polands
EU membership.
The character of the ruling government became clear in the
course of last years revelations of widespread corruption.
In June of last year, Miller was suspected of having urged actor
Lew Rywin to undertake bribery amounting to $17.5 million. Although
this could not be proven, during the investigation into the allegations
it became apparent that the SLD largely consists of people intent
on using the party as a starting point for their own careers in
big business. The fact that Miller rebuilt his cabinet after this
affair did nothing to improve the governments image.
Another revelation affected Health Minister Mariusz Lapinsky,
his deputy, Waldemar Deszynski, and the head of health funds,
Aleksander Naumann. It emerged that preferential treatment had
been given to certain pharmaceutical companies after forms of
recompense had been made to officials. After the affair became
public, Lapinski was removed from both the government and the
SLD.
The connections of the ruling party to criminal elements became
apparent once again in Starachowice, when it was revealed that
the SLD MP Andrzej Jagiello had warned the local SLD council that
the central police agency of Poland was planning a specific operation.
Members of the local council had established relationships with
organised crime.
At the beginning of March 2003, the ruling PSL-SLD coalition
fell apart. The PSL could no longer walk the tightrope of basing
itself on rural layers and at the same time carrying out attacks
against the weakest layers of society. In opinion polls, the PSL
had increasingly lost ground to Samoobrona. Since then, the SLD
has been running the country with a minority government that has
little popular support. The corruption incidents have once again
demonstrated the gap between the criminal elements at the top
of Polish society and the majority of the population.
Polands EU membership will not bring social security
and democracy for the Polish population. The country is being
run by corrupt layers that have enriched themselves at the expense
of the majority. Millions of people have been impoverished by
structural reforms and privatisation. On the other hand, the ruling
elites of western Europe will use the social conditions of the
Polish workers as a lever to lower the living standards of their
own working class. The unification of the European states is an
important basis for the welfare of the Poles and all other Europeans.
However, it cannot be organised by the ruling elites of the EU,
but only in opposition to them based on a broad popular movement.
See Also:
Poland: Democratic
Left Party heads new coalition government
[12 October 2001]
Polish electionsDemocratic
Party of the Left announces plans for further attacks on social
gains
[10 September 2001]
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