The Socialist

The Socialist 17 February 2010

Fight Council Cuts!

Fight council cuts!


Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament

 
 
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Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

THE ECONOMIC and political crisis in Greece and other member countries of the eurozone has thrown the single European currency into its deepest crisis since its introduction in 2002.

Kevin Parslow

Financial speculators are openly betting against Greece being so economically damaged by the recession that the country will have to leave the eurozone, or that the measures taken to bring Greece 'into line' will have such terrible effects on the eurozone as a whole that the project will be damaged.

They have devised a derogatory acronym 'PIGS' - short for Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain - for those countries most likely to put the euro under strain or even default.

Stability pact

Introduced in 2002, the euro was supposedly underpinned by the 'Stability and Growth Pact'. The main terms of this were that no government within the eurozone (or those wishing to join) should run a budget deficit of above 3% of gross domestic product (GDP), and that no government should have a national debt greater than 60% of GDP.

When Portugal in 2002 and Greece (2005) went over these barriers, they were threatened with fines and sanctions. But when France and Germany, the two heavyweights of the eurozone, both went over the 3% in 2005, the Stability and Growth pact was simply ignored and then modified!

Now, with budget deficits soaring due to the effects of the deepest recession since the 1930s and the measures taken to attempt to counter it, a number of countries are in danger of blowing the euro apart. This has led the leaders of the eurozone to demand savage austerity measures from the Greek government in return for unspecified 'support'.

Currencies crisis

The Socialist explained from the euro's conception that it would come up against the constraints of the capitalist system and national borders. In the European Union, these were inherent despite years of proclamations of 'unity'.

In the precursor of the single European currency, the Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) of the European Monetary System, both Britain and Italy were forced out in 1992 when crises saw their currencies crash below the agreed lower limit.

Speculators, including George Soros, made over $1 billion betting on Britain leaving the ERM, while the British government spent £27 billion trying to stay in! Italy later returned when the bands were widened to allow a 15% fluctuation of national currencies but Britain has stayed clear of returning to the ERM or joining the euro.

A similar development is now affecting the eurozone, and speculators are hovering, hoping to make a windfall now.

Greece

While the world capitalist economy advanced, even if most people benefited little from economic growth, the euro was able to maintain relative stability. But the onset of the recession has totally changed this.

In response to the economic crisis, European capitalist governments have taken measures against the jobs, conditions and services of the working class throughout the continent.

The Greek government is coming under the cosh of the euro's governors, led by the German capitalists. And the Greek and international capitalists want more; the Greek economy contracted by 2% in 2009 rather than the expected 1.2% and a Greek banker told the Financial Times: "It's hard to see how Greece can avoid a further tightening of fiscal policy."

Greek workers are protesting precisely against the savage austerity measures proposed by the Greek government, backed up by European governments, in order to prevent a euro default and collapse.

If they get the cuts through, European governments will come back for more and will demand sacrifices from Portuguese, Spanish and Italian workers, as well as the working class of any country who refuses to accept the blame for the crisis of the capitalist system. If the Greek workers stop the cuts, it will raise the confidence of workers internationally to fight the consequences of the recession.

The European working class, whether their countries are in or out of the eurozone, is facing massive attacks. An international struggle against cuts in pay and services and against job losses, would begin the struggle for genuine workers' unity and a socialist Europe.


In this issue

Fight council cuts!


Socialist Party campaigns

Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


Socialist Party news and analysis

New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


Workplace analysis

The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Socialist Students

Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Socialist Party feature

Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


International socialist news and analysis

Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament


 

Home   |   The Socialist 17 February 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Capitalist crisis:

triangleCapitalist crisis: 'Up to half of all Icelandic families are bankrupt'

triangleWorld economy in meltdown - we won't pay for capitalist crisis

triangleAs debt crisis deepens... Greek workers and youth in revolt

triangleWakefield Election Rally: Socialist Alternative to Capitalist Crisis

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Eurozone:

triangleLeeds North West Socialist Party: Greece and the Eurozone crisis

triangleWe stand 100% with the Greek workers

triangleGreece: Political earthquake sees pro-austerity parties' support collapse

triangleFrance: A weekend that shocked Europe

Capitalist:

triangleBuild a socialist alternative to austerity

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triangleFrench presidential election - An emerging left challenge

Euro:

triangleSolidarity with Greek workers

triangleRussia: Motorway construction through Khimkinsky forest halted

triangleBristol South Socialist Party: Where is the Euro going?

Greece:

triangleReading Socialist Party: What's happening in Greece?

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: Solidarity with Greek workers

triangleThem & Us

Recession:

triangleHard Times - but not for the 1%

triangleCon-Dems' autumn statement: 'pain now, pain tomorrow and more pain for longer'

triangleTragic effect of recession