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: Italy
Prodi governments budget attacks the Italian working
class
By Marc Wells
10 October 2007
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The 2008 budget approved by the Prodi government at the end
of September is a massive and cynical attack against the living
standards of millions of Italian workers who are progressively
losing decades of social gains while a small corporate oligarchy
is accumulating extraordinary profits.
While the so-called radical leftthe Party of Communist
Refoundation (PRC) and Italian Communists (PdCI)has voiced
limited opposition to some of the more blatant measures such as
the pension and welfare reform, neither party will
take any action to block passage of the budget in Congress.
Rather than bring down the government on such fundamental questions
as pensions, welfare, wealth redistribution, public expenditures,
job security or democratic rights, the left parties
ultimately agreed to support a regime that is deeply hostile to
the interests of the working class.
The Prodi budget limits the deficit to 2.3 percent and the
fiscal burden to 43 percent of the 2007 GDP, promising even better
numbers in the next three years, as primary expenditures are reduced
from 39.9 percent of GDP this year to 38.6 percent in 2011.
The centrepiece of the budget is a twofold policy thats
become the icon of neo-liberal agendas around the world: a diminution
of taxes and a slash of public funds. The beneficiaries of the
tax reduction are the large and medium corporations. The IRES
(Imposta sul Reddito delle Societàtax on the
income of corporations) is reduced from 33 percent to 27.5 percent;
consistently, the IRAP (Imposta Regionale sulle Attività
Produttivea regional tax on production activities of
large corporations) is lowered from 4.25 percent to 3.9 percent.
On the opposite pole of the social scale, an estimated 12.5
million Italiansmore than 20 percent of the total populationwill
receive a one-time token in the amount of 150 each. It must
be noted that the recipients of such rewards qualify
on the basis of their income being so low that no tax is even
due. The threshold is about 700 a month for employees, 4,800
a year for independent contractors, as reported by Il Messaggero.
Another tax cut regards the ICI (Imposta Comunale sugli
Immobili or local tax on real estate). This minute concession
will grant homeowners an additional tax credit of 200 on
their first home for the entire year, while renters will be entitled
to a 300 tax reduction (reduced to 150 in the case
of an income above 15.494 and up to 30,987).
One exception to fiscal austerity is the spending on Security
of the nationa recurring theme that reinforces the
official position of the Prodi government as a firm supporter
of the war on terror and other repressive and undemocratic
measures against immigrants. Under this slogan, at least 4,500
new police officers, 1,000 additional fiscal agents and 200 new
prison guards are being deployed, with a fund increase from 7.33
billion to 7.55 billion. While that section of the public
administration is getting a boost, the overall social expense
is suffering a cut of more than 4.5 billion.
Italian society is growing old, both relatively and absolutely,
with the birth rate well below the death rate (8.54 births against
10.5 deaths per 1,000 people) and the median age is on the rise,
with 20 percent of the population being 65 or older. In light
of this, technologically advanced healthcare and care for the
elderly should be a priority for the public administration. Instead,
both sectors are left to languish, with the burden left more and
more on the individual.
Another field suffering from underfinancing is education. Similar
to what occurred in the US in the early years of the Bush administration,
Prodis grant of small incentives being paid to selected
students for the purchase of new books marks a tendency of the
government towards the privatisation of the sector and its refusal
to allocate appropriate funds for the creation and maintenance
of an adequate and updated universal school system.
The pressure of the international financial crisis due to the
collapse of the US sub-prime mortgage market and to the collapse
of several banking institutions in Germany and the UK is an objective
cause of concern among the Italian ruling circles, especially
the big industrialists. Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, former president
of Ferrari, now president of FIAT and of the guild of industrialists
(Confindustria), has not hesitated to hail the budget as a
step in the right direction.
The Prodi budget is incapable of addressing the needs of millions
of workers who find themselves under attack. Public administration
jobs contracts are not being renewedthe government claims
that no funds can be allocated to that endleaving tens of
thousands of families uncertain about their future. The manoeuvre
is not an accident. The government is trying to amortise the impact
of the budget by administering the poisonous potion in stages.
The consequences will ultimately be devastating for the working
class.
Public employees will not see a salary increase or a tax reduction,
while temporary jobs, now defined seasonal, will be
offered on a maximum, non-renewable three-month term, according
to Il Messaggero. In other words, according to Prodis
budget, temporary jobs will not only have no chance of normalisation,
but they will irrevocably cease at the end of the term.
The complicity of the radical left, mainly composed of Rifondazione
(Communist Refoundation or PRC), Verdi (Greens) and the
Stalinist Comunisti Italiani (PdCI), has been predictable.
Their token participation in the formulation of the budget has
ensured its passage to the Senate. While they took pride in such
measures as establishing a measly and most inadequate fund of
400 million for the housing needs of the incapacitated or
the planting of a thousand new trees as an anti-pollution measure,
they have provided a fig leaf for the more reactionary aspects
of the new initiative.
Under the bankrupt slogan of choosing the lesser of two
evils, supporting Prodi to avoid Berlusconi, they consciously
block any struggle to challenge the entire profit system and its
supporters, the real cause of the attacks against the working
class.
Meanwhile, the newly formed Partito Democratico (Democratic
Party), resulting from the coalition of Democratici di Sinistra
(Left Democrats), La Margherita (Daisymainly ex-Christian
Democrats) and other small center-left parties, is holding its
primaries on October 14. The vote has been extended to people
from age 16 up, in an effort to divert the genuine dissatisfaction
of vast masses of youth toward the war, lack of job opportunities,
the decline of the educational system and growing social tensions
into a political blind alley.
The trade unions CGIL, CISL and UIL have announced an eight-hour
strike on October 26, supported by the left parties.
Workers should have no illusions on such initiatives and nominal
protests advanced by the very unions and parties that have already
capitulated to the pension and welfare reform.
For the Italian working class, as for the international working
class, there is only one way forward politically: a mobilisation
based on an international socialist perspective that is independent
from any and all of the various bourgeois and fake left
factions that support and prop up the profit system.
See Also:
Italian government pushes
through pension "reform"
Prodi completes what Berlusconi began
[13 August 2007]
Italy's former Communist Party
shifts further to the right
[12 May 2007]
Italian Pabloites back Prime
Minister Prodi in Senate confidence vote
[2 March 2007]
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