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Germany: establishment parties unite behind Hartz IV laws
By Ulrich Rippert
31 August 2004
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At a national press conference on August 18 that marked the
official end of the summer recess, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
gave his answer to the recent Monday demonstrations against his
plan to slash social benefits. There would be no concessions.
The Hartz IV laws on the reform of the labour market
would be fully implemented by 2005. The parallel decision to lower
the highest tax rate would take effect at the same time.
Two days before, tens of thousands of people participated in
demonstrations in more than 100 towns and cities, protesting against
the lowering of long-term unemployment benefits to the level of
social security. Speakers warned that the protests would continue
and expand. Schröders response was to declare that
he would not yield to pressure from the streets.
The German chancellor restated the propaganda slogans of his
government, claiming that there was no alternative
and that his reforms were aimed at providing the long-term
unemployed with a new perspective. The nature of this perspective
had been spelled out the previous day by Wolfgang Clement, the
Social Democratic Party (SPD) minister for labor and economy.
Clement announced the creation of 600,000 so-called one-euro-jobs,
which would supposedly enable the unemployed to earn an additional
1,000 euros a month.
These cheap-labour jobs, paying one euro an hour, are rightly
seen by many unemployed as a provocation. A good number of those
without jobs have completed one or more vocational training courses
spanning several years, or hold a university degree.
Such low-wage jobs serve to undermine decent pay and conditions.
Clement claimed that one-euro-jobs would be in large demand, because
towns and communities could not afford to pay regular employees.
This is just another way of saying that normal jobs in the public
sector are to be replaced by cheap labour.
It has been revealed that almost 400,000 elderly people who
have signed onto the so-called 58-regulation in recent
years will be hard hit by Hartz IV. Under the 58-regulation, workers
could, in lieu of being laid off, voluntarily go into early retirement
at the age of 58. They were guaranteed full unemployment benefits
until they reached the statutory retirement age.
Many workers agreed to retire under the 58-regulation because
they wanted to help younger colleagues keep their jobs. But under
Hartz IV, beginning in January 2005, these retirees will be rewarded
by being treated as social security recipients. Their benefits
will be reduced dramatically, and those who have accumulated assets
during their working life will be forced to use up all savings
(but for a small allowance) before they are entitled to any support
at all. This is a clear breach not only of trust, but of a legal
obligation.
In the course of his August 18 press conference, Schröder
called upon all cabinet members to fully defend the Hartz IV laws.
He also announced the launching of an advertising campaign. The
entire state and propaganda apparatus will be mobilized to break
the resistance of the people.
Schröders conduct is based on a broad alliance of
backers.
On the previous weekend, the candidate who challenged him in
the last national election, Edmund Stoiber of the Christian Social
Union (CSU), made a point of supporting the social cuts planned
by the federal government. In an interview with the Berliner
Zeitung, Stoiber, who heads the state government of Bavaria,
warned against any retreat in relation to the labour market reforms.
He declared, If one is convinced that one is doing the right
thing, one must not be led astray by demonstrations.
The leading employers associations also came out in support
of Schröder and called upon him to remain steadfast. The
Hartz IV laws have been decided upon jointly by the SPD, the Greens,
the Conservatives and the Free Liberals. This means that everybody
must stand by this decision now, said Ludolf von Wartenberg,
the managing director of the National Association of German Industry
(BDI), in an interview with the daily Handelsblatt.
According to a Reuters report, the president of the German
Chamber of Industry and Commerce (DIHK), Ludwig Georg Braun, criticised
the reform debate of previous weeks and the softening up
taking place within almost all parties. He demanded more
steadfastness, especially on the part of the Conservatives (Christian
Democratic Union [CDU] and Christian Social Union [CSU]). Despite
the upcoming state elections in Brandenburg and Saxony, the reforms
should not be slowed down, but accelerated, Braun said.
Two days later, the leading news magazine Spiegel carried
an article in its on-line edition with the headline, Merkel
Praises Schröder. Angela Merkel, chairwoman of the
CDU, while repeating her criticisms on some technical questions,
sent her party colleague and friend from Hamburg, Ole von Beust,
to express support for Hartz IV.
The new system had to be given a chance, von Beust told the
daily Hamburger Abendblatt. Von Beust praised the course
taken by the SPD-Green coalition government led by Schröder:
I have great respect for SPD Chairman Franz Müntefering
and also for Chancellor Gerhard Schröder for having rigorously
enforced this concept even within their own party. He accused
the Hartz opponents within his own party of populism,
saying, I have no sympathy with those in our ranks who have
called Hartz IV into question.
Both the Catholic and Protestant churches have published statements
expressing their support for labour market reforms that
will preserve the welfare state. The head of the Catholic
Bishops Convention, Karl Lehmann, told the tabloid Bild
am Sonntag that he rejected any kind of reform-blocking or
panic. He supported the argument of the government that all social
institutions should provide more information and advice, and called
for more help for those immediately hit. While Cardinal Lehmann
did not explicitly support the introduction of cheap labour schemes,
he stressed that the touchstone of the reform laws was whether
they lead to the integration of those seeking work, in particular,
the long-term unemployed and ill-qualified, into the labour market.
The head of the Protestant church in Germany, Wolfgang Huber,
was even more outspoken. In an interview with Spiegel magazine
headlined, More Courage for Reforms, he defended the
lowering of unemployment benefits to the level of social security.
A certain social descent will be inevitable, Huber
acknowledged. When asked whether it was possible to survive on
345 euros (in the west) or 331 euros (in the east), Huber expressed
his sympathy with those who found this difficult to accept, but
insisted that as a basic coverage, this has to do for the
moment.
Schröders arrogant behaviour and his provocative
snubbing of the Monday demonstrators at his national press conference
reflected his confidence in the support of all of the major political,
economic and religious institutions in Germany, which have formed
a de facto grand coalition in favor of Hartz IV.
There is, however, another factor. He is well aware of the
cowardice and weakness of those political organizations that are
seeking to gain control of the protest movement against Hartz
IV. He is able to differentiate between the anger and deeply felt
disgust of the people, on the one hand, and the official political
representatives of this movement, on the other.
Not only Oskar Lafontaine, who demonstrated back in 1999 that
he is inclined to run away once big business furrows its brow,
but also the trade union representatives who spoke at a number
of rallies, limited themselves to vague appeals to the government.
None of the speakers in Leipzig, Magdeburg or Berlin was prepared
to state the obvious fact that the struggle against Hartz IV requires
a long-term political perspective. They reject the conception
that it is not enough to put pressure on the government and that
a broad political offensive must be directed against the foundations
of the capitalist system itself. Instead they repeat time-worn
phrases about a social market economy and a return
to the social reform policies of the 1970s.
A typical example of the cowardice of these forces is the announcement
by the Election Alternative Jobs and Social Justice
(WASG) that they would in all probability refrain
from participation in the upcoming state elections in Schleswig-Holstein
and North Rhine-Westphalia. Despite the fact that these elections
are scheduled only a few weeks after the implementation of Hartz
IV early next year, which is almost certain to provoke new protests,
Klaus Ernst, a member of the WASG executive committee, declared
that there was not enough time to prepare a campaign.
This is an excuse, behind which lies the real reason. Both
states are currently governed by the SPD, and Klaus Ernst does
not want to run candidates against the social democrats. Thus,
the election alternative prefers not to run as an
alternative in the coming elections!
In a separate article, we have commented on the comparison
between todays Monday demonstrations and those of 1989.
They are very different in one particular aspect. Todays
demonstrators are not confronted with [East German] Stalinist
hacks like Hönecker, Krenz and Schabowski. These were representatives
of a bankrupt regime that sought salvation in a turn towards capitalism.
Schröder, however, is backed by a capitalist class that,
while in crisis and devoid of any solution to the great social
problems of the day, is determined to defend its power by all
means.
The most important issue raised by the struggle against Hartz
IV is the building of a political alternative that aims to mobilize
the working class on the basis of a socialist program.
See Also:
Germany: protests held in over 140 towns
and cities
[28 August 2004]
Germany: Which way forward in the struggle
against Hartz IV?
[21 August 2004]
Mounting protests against social cuts
in Germany
Monday demonstrations spread to more than 100 towns
[21 August 2004]
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