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What Europe can learn from the South (June 2012)

19th June 2012

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After having caused a massive increase in inequality throughout the world, which led to the build-up of politely called “imbalances” and which fireballed into a financial, then economic, crisis, neoliberal policies are threatening to push many economies into a precipice with unknown political and social consequences. Yet, the European countries at the heart of this turmoil are showing little sign of resistance; the growing social movements opposing bailout and austerity have thus far failed to influence dominant parties and national policies. Instead, it appears that the very same policy mix of austerity and privatization which shattered African, Latin American and ex-communist countries in the 1980s and ’90s is being inflicted on Europe. The irony lies in the fact that most economists now agree that these policies have indeed had disastrous consequences. The belief that what led to a growth collapse and social disaster elsewhere will have positive consequences in Europe is an illusion which is sustained by the mainstream media and by powerful interest groups. Lambert (2012) thus highlights the French media’s predilection for consulting a coterie of economists who are closely linked to (or rather remunerated by) financial interests, and who invariably play down the responsibility of banks in the crisis and the usefulness of taxing finance rather than, say, ordinary citizens through increased value added taxes. In Italy, the “structural reforms” supposedly aimed at boosting growth focus on accelerating flexibilization of the labour market, in a context already marked by very high levels of precariousness.

Written by Nicolas Pons-Vignon, editor of the Global Labour Column and a Senior Researcher with the Corporate Strategy and Industrial Development (CSID) research programme, University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.

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Published by Global Labour Column and edited by CSID at Wits University.

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