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Germany: Court ruling on Berlin budget deepens social divisions
By Peter Schwarz
25 October 2006
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The Süddeutsche Zeitung compared a ruling handed
down last week by the German Constitutional Court on Berlins
budget to the use of a wine-press to crush grapes. Journalist
Heribert Prantl wrote that the judgement presses Berlin
(and likewise other poor states in the Federal Republic) to undertake
even more cost-cutting measures. He forgot to add that the
grapes being pressed in this case are the growing ranks of poor
and socially deprived German citizens.
The Constitutional Court judges made their decision public
on October 19. They unanimously agreed that Berlin had no right
to a single euro of federal funds to offset its huge budget deficit
of 61.6 billion euros. The judges declared that the city, which
has implemented a drastic austerity program over the past few
years, still has the means to further reduce expenditures and
increase revenues.
This judgement by Germanys highest court is the latest
in a series of actions that have exacerbated social and regional
divisions in order to enforce a strict budgetary discipline. It
comes in the midst of a fierce and largely hypocritical debate
in Germany over whether one can term the increasing army of poor
citizens an underclass. The court ruling predictably
evoked near unanimous approval from business and political circles.
The decision by the judges represents a devastating indictment
of the policies of the Berlin Senate. The ruling coalition, consisting
of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Left Party, currently
involved in negotiations over a new term of office, has made drastic
cuts in the spheres of education, welfare and public services
while selling off tens of thousands of state-owned apartment buildings
to private investors. Such measures were necessary, according
to the mayor, Klaus Wowereit, and his finance senator, Thilo Sarrazin,
to demonstrate Berlins willingness to cut costs and win
additional federal subsidies, thereby improving the financial
situation for the city on a long-term basis.
The constitutional judges have drawn the opposite conclusion.
Following the implementation of painful cuts by the SPD and Left
Party, which managed to dampen down social unrest, the judges
concluded that the city can afford to tighten its belt even more.
The brutal austerity policies carried out by the SPD-Left Party
Senate strengthened the hand of the court in calling for even
further attacks on the population. There can be no doubt that
the SPD and Left Party will fall into line.
The decision by the Federal Constitutional Court is important
for a number of reasons.
In the first place, it forces all of Germanys 16 states
to intensify their current austerity programs. This applies not
only to Berlin, but also to other highly indebted states such
as Bremen and the Saarland. They too must give up any hope of
receiving additional federal subsidies or assistance from other,
better-off states.
The judges are evidently of the opinion that the German capital,
which as long been plagued by high unemployment and poverty, is
not poor enough. In his verbal report of the judgement, one of
the judges, Winfried Hassemer, cynically quoted words first used
by Mayor Wowereit, who described Berlin as poor, but sexy.
Hassemer remarked that one could conclude that Berlin is
perhaps so sexy because it is not so poor after all.
In its judgement, the court made clear where it thought further
savings could be made. It criticised Berlin for investing considerably
more in its universities and science and cultural facilities than
another large German city, Hamburg. In addition, it suggested
that Berlin sell off its remaining 270,000 state-owned apartmentsa
measure which will inevitably result in rent increases and evictions,
and deprive the Senate of an important means of influencing social
policy.
Berlin is already the frontrunner in Germany when it comes
to the privatisation of state property. A so-called Berlin
model was developed specifically for this purpose in the
1990s. This amounted to a policy of privatising publicly guaranteed
profits and assuming government responsibility for losses. The
tab must be paid by the population.
The partial privatisation of the Berlin water company resulted
in Berlin households paying an average annual water fee of 500
eurosaround 200 euros more than fees paid in Munich or Cologne.
The Senate bailout, with taxpayers money, of billions in
debt incurred by the Berlin Bank Company, is also part of the
Berlin model.
The constitutional judges had no criticisms of such policies,
just as they have waved through the governments tax handouts
to top earners and the wealthy. Instead, they suggested an increase
in commercial taxes, although the city has undergone a drastic
loss of industry and jobs since the reunification of Germany in
1990.
The Constitutional Court judgement has another important aspect:
it urges restrictions on the financial autonomy of states, while
maintaining existing conditions of competitiveness between the
states. It calls for legal rules stipulating the scale of indebtedness,
a reorganization of the distribution of finances between sates,
and the dissolution of smaller states with financial problems.
City-states such as Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen, or smaller states
such as the Saarland, would lose their autonomy.
Those states with a stronger financial base in the south of
the country have been demanding a redistribution of finances between
the states for a long time. They have made clear that they are
no longer prepared to provide any support for the poorer states
in the north and east of Germany. Predictably, Bavarian Prime
Minister Edmund Stoiber enthusiastically welcomed the judgement,
which he called a clear pointer towards a reform of
financial relations between the German Federation and individual
states.
Such a shift in relations is the aim of the proposed second
stage of the federalism reform. According to former German President
Roman Herzog, who at one time chaired the Constitutional Court,
such a reform would result in a tax, budget and expenditure system
based on more direct responsibility on the part of states.
Direct responsibility in this case means the individual
states will compete for the attention of investors and companies
through low rates of taxation, a flexible attitude
towards labour and environmental laws, and other location
advantagesinstead of mutually supporting one another,
as was the case up until now.
The result of such a development would be, on the one hand,
the depopulation of entire regions and, on the other hand, the
emergence of wealthy centres in which rents and living costs are
so exorbitant that the unemployed and other socially disadvantaged
layers could not possibly afford to live in themin other
words, an immense intensification of social and regional divisions.
The latest decision by the Federal Constitutional Court is
fully in line with its judgement of August 25, 2005. At that time,
the court legitimized the early dissolution of the German parliament
by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, although such a decision
violated the German constitution. In making its decision, the
Constitutional Court strengthened the power of the executive in
relation to parliament and the electorate.
The resulting new elections were aimed at bringing to power
a right-wing, neo-liberal government led by Angela Merkel (Christian
Democratic UnionCDU) and Guido Westerwelle (Free Democratic
PartyFDP), after Schröder encountered increasing popular
resistance to his programme of social and welfare cutsthe
so-called Agenda 2010. The electorate disrupted these
plans however, and the conservative parties and FDP failed to
win a majority. The result was a grand coalition (SPD, CDU and
Christian Social Union), which itself is now running into increasing
difficulties.
This judgement on the Berlin budget opens the way for a new
wave of attacks on the social conditions of broad social layers.
For much of the post-war period, the German Constitutional Court
acted as a moderating force, frequently reining in overzealous
politicians in the interests of maintaining social harmony. Now
it is increasingly assuming the role of a partisan agitator in
the class war being waged by the ruling elite against the working
masses.
See Also:
Germany: Mass demonstrations against
social and welfare cuts
[24 October 2006]
The bankruptcy of the "left"
state government in Berlin: political experiences and lessons--Part
2
[28 September 2006]
The bankruptcy of the "left"
state government in Berlin: political experiences and lessons--Part
1
[27 September 2006]
The extreme-right NPD wins
seats in German election
[23 September 2006]
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