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On eve of Polands entry into the EU
Polish prime minister resigns amid mass opposition to social
devastation
By our reporters
1 April 2004
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Polish Prime Minister Leszek Miller resigned last week in the
wake of mass discontent with the social devastation brought about
by his governments plans for the reform of the
Polish economy and its support for the US war in Iraq. This latest
crisis for the Polish government has erupted on the eve of the
countrys entry into the European Union (EU).
On May 1 of this year, Poland will formally take up membership
in the EU. However, under no circumstances will this step bring
any improvement to the current social misery facing the Polish
population. On the contrary, for the majority of Poles, entry
into the EU will mean a worsening of their social position.
Since the collapse of the Stalinist bureaucracies in Eastern
Europe in 1989, every subsequent Polish government has attempted
to push through the complete privatisation of industry and agriculture,
as well as the liquidation of outmoded branches of industry like
mining and steel.
With so-called shock therapy and other government
policies, the living standards and jobs of the majority of the
population have been destroyed. Corruption and cronyism have increased
in the spheres of politics and business in an almost obscene fashion.
The anger and disgust of the population have led to the regular
voting out of the standing government, whose participating parties
then vanish from the scene, only to reappear shortly afterwards
in another form and with a different name.
The current minority government of former Prime Minister Leszek
Miller is based upon a coalition of the Alliance of the Democratic
Left (SLD), which arose from the old Stalinist state party, the
PZPR, and the Labour Union (UP). They came into office with the
aim of making Poland fit for entry into the EU. During their tenure,
they prosecuted both massive cuts to social welfare and privatisations,
as well as supported the US-led war against Iraq. As part of the
so-called Coalition of the Willing, they toed the line of American
imperialism and dispatched Polish troops to Iraq. Until now, however,
they have failed to see any rewards with respect to anticipated
reconstruction contracts.
The social situation in Poland has steadily deteriorated. Unemployment
is more than 20 percent, for youth more than 40 percent. According
to a study by Warsaw University, 40 percent of Polish households
cannot meet their basic requirements. Unemployment benefits are
extremely low and are handed out only in the most extreme cases.
The situation in rural areas is particularly precarious, with
only one in five Poles currently employed, even though agriculture
accounts for only 3.3 percent of national GDP. Various studies
show that 26 percent of agricultural businesses are no longer
viable. Many farmers produce only for their own personal subsistence;
their small plots of land are all that stand between them and
complete poverty. The next wave of planned structural reforms
will deprive these people of their very means of existence.
Polands finance minister, Jerzy Hausner, has in this
context pushed through an extensive austerity package. The so-called
Hausner Plan comprises more than 30 new laws that provide for
further brutal spending cuts of 32 billion zloty (6.7 million
euros) to 2007. The aim of these measures is to satisfy the criteria
for entry into the euro zone. This means cutting the current deficit
of 4.9 percent of GDP to less than 3 percent.
Especially hard hit will be the already minimal pensions. From
2005, they will no longer be adjusted yearly for inflation and
will only be raised if prices have increased at an annual rate
of 5 percent for two succeeding years. Claims for the minimum
monthly pension rate of around 500 zloty (140 euros) will only
be awarded to those who have worked for at least 25 years and
are older than 65. Until now, those who had worked for just 20
years were eligible. Invalid pensions will become more difficult
to obtain, and all benefits for early retirement abolished. In
addition, from 2014, the retirement age for women will be steadily
increased from 60 to 65 years.
A freeze will be imposed on all other social benefits, with
no adjustments made for inflation. The only exception will be
for the minimum wage. Sickness benefits will be reduced from 80
to 70 percent of the basic wage. Furthermore, social insurance
contributions will be increased for the majority of rural workers.
These measures will above all affect those who, through privatisations
and previous structural reforms, have lost their means of existence.
Leszek Balcerowicz, the current president of the Polish Reserve
Bank, but better known as a former finance minister and the Father
of Shock Therapy in the early 1990s, made the following
comment on the Hausner Plan: A first step in the right direction...
[T]he plan is necessary, although I would have administered a
stronger dose to the patients.
Following the resignation of Miller, the first step by the
Polish president, Alexander Kwasniewski, has been to propose a
replacement who will guarantee a stronger dose and
ensure that the gutting of the Polish welfare state continues.
Kwasniewski proposed his close confidant, Marek Belka, to replace
Miller on May 2.
Fifty-two-year-old Belka is a professor of finance who studied
in the 1980s under neo-liberal Milton Friedman in Chicago. On
two separate occasions, Belka has occupied the post of finance
minister in recent Polish governments. Only last year, Miller
sacked Belka from his government after the latter refused to make
any compromises regarding plans for the drastic overhaul of the
Polish economy. Since leaving his post in the Polish government,
Belka has occupied a central post in the US-led civilian authority
in Iraq with responsibility for economic and business reconstruction.
The latest proposal of Belka by President Kwasniewski sends
two unmistakable signals: first, the restructuring of the Polish
economy, with its devastating social costs for the broad population,
will continue; and second, in the face of widespread public opposition,
the Polish president remains firm in his commitment to supporting
the criminal US war in Iraq.
In the meantime, the SLD government faces opposition from a
large proportion of the population. Polls suggest that in a future
election it would receive only 11 percent of the vote. Anxious
to avoid fresh elections at this point, the SLD has already indicated
it will agree to the nomination of the unpopular Belka.
The policies of the Polish coalition government have paved
the way for an even more right-wing and brutal administration.
The opposition Citizens Platform (PO) is currently running at
around 30 percent in opinion polls, while the ultra-nationalistic
Samoobroona, led by Andrzej Lepper, is recording 23 percent. In
the next election, the Polish working class will once again have
no real choice and will be called upon to cast their vote for
either proponents of radical economic reorganisation or reactionary
nationalists.
See Also:
Countdown to Polands
entry into the European Union
[4 October 2003]
Poland sends troops
to Iraq
[7 August 2003]
Eastern European workers
to pay the cost of membership in European Union
[30 May 2002]
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