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As markets applaud cuts
Argentine workers strike against austerity measures
By Bill Vann
25 July 2001
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International financial investors appeared satisfied, at least
for the moment, with a new round of economic austerity measures
that provoked crippling strikes by the Argentine workers last
week. The Buenos Aires stock market continued a moderate rebound
amid indications that the Peronist opposition as well as the petty-bourgeois
left FREPASO coalition are prepared to support the zero
deficit program advanced by President Fernando De la Rua
and his economy minister, Domingo Cavallo.
The economic plan calls for immediately slashing by 13 percent
all public employee salaries and pensions amounting to more than
500 pesos a month. (The Argentine peso is pegged to the US dollar.)
The government has also pledged to live within its means,
signifying that if revenues are not adequate, even more drastic
cuts in incomes and social spending will be automatically implemented.
In addition to the applause of the market investors, the Argentine
governments proposals also earned praise from the Group
of 8 meeting in Genoa, where the leaders of the major capitalist
powers expressed their support for the austerity measures.
Earlier this month, after the De la Rua government was compelled
to drastically increase interest rates on 90-day treasury bills
needed for debt refinancing, fear spread throughout the financial
markets that the country was on the verge of a default on its
$130 billion foreign debt. The financial impact was felt not only
in Latin America, but also in Africa, Eastern Europe and Asia,
with investors fleeing emerging markets stocks, bonds
and currencies. While Argentinas economy is considerably
smaller than those of countries that have previously been at the
eye of world financial crisesRussia, Korea, Mexicoit
accounts for approximately one fifth of the bonds in emerging
market portfolios held by overseas investors and one quarter of
all emerging market debt.
The entire political establishment in Argentina has spelled
out in unmistakable terms that its top priority is to placate
international investorsand to win the approval of an International
Monetary Fund crisis team visiting the country this weekat
the expense of the masses of Argentine working people. Only credible
cuts in the social welfare and income of the working class, the
government has concluded, can restore investor confidence and
thereby regain Argentinas access to affordable credit in
the international bond markets, which will in turn be shoveled
back into meeting the countrys staggering debt obligations.
The proposed cuts were met with mass walkouts, first by public
sector workers and then by the rest of the Argentine unions. Government
workers struck on July 19. Transport was interrupted as well as
public services, with workers shutting down hospitals, government
offices and banks throughout the country. The next day, the countrys
three trade union federations staged one of the largest strikes
Argentina has seen in years.
In a number of cities, workers blockaded highways, while in
Buenos Aires, workers and students demonstrated outside the stock
exchange until riot police backed by a water cannon dispersed
them. Aereolineas Argentinas, the national airlines, was shut
down entirely by the walkout, as were trains, bus service and
urban transport. An estimated 60 percent of the industrial sector
was paralyzed.
The government has responded to the opposition within the working
class with threats of repression and by seizing upon the corrupt
and reactionary character of the Peronist-dominated trade union
bureaucracy in an attempt to discredit the opposition from below
and swing public opinion against the strike movement. Government
officials announced that they were looking in to whether sedition
charges can be brought against union leaders over the walkouts.
Minister of Labor Patricia Bullrich, meanwhile, called on the
union bureaucrats to cut their own inflated salaries in accord
with the government plan as a patriotic gesture. Government
officials claimed that such a measure could produce $156 million
to aid the poor. Bullrich also appealed to the workers that
instead of going on strike, they donate an hour of their salaries
to collaborate with a solidarity fund.
In announcing the austerity package, De la Rua has vowed that
the plan is not negotiable, declaring, I will
give my life in this fight, because I am saving the people from
catastrophic consequences. He has defended the measures
by claiming that they are necessary to prevent a drastic worsening
of social conditions should the country default on its foreign
debt.
Many economists both in Argentina and internationally, however,
consider such a default inevitable, with only its timing and the
immediate regional and world impact in question. Others point
out that Argentina is already living the consequences that the
governments plan is supposed to avoid.
In the midst of the general strike last week, the Labor Ministry
released new figures showing that the countrys official
unemployment rate has risen from 15 percent last October to 16.4
percent this monththe highest rate in five years and one
of the highest rates throughout the hemisphere. According to the
governments own statistics, more than 10 million Argentines
are living in povertynearly one in threewhile homelessness
has become a pervasive phenomenon in the streets of Buenos Aires
and other cities.
What was once considered one of Latin Americas least
stratified societies has been sharply polarized in the years since
the coming to power of the military dictatorship in 1976. A thin
layer at the top has accumulated unprecedented wealth from stock
market investments and privatization schemes, while the masses
of workers and large sections of the countrys professionals
have sunk into misery. In increasing numbers, those who can are
attempting to emigrate, many returning to Spain and Italy, the
countries their forefathers left in the early part of the century
seeking a better life in Argentina.
International investors fear social unrest and have made it
clear that they expect the De la Rua government to carry out the
repression of working class resistance. The only thing that
will appease the markets is the belief the government is in control
of the situation, international credit-rating agency Standard
and Poors warned last week.
The thinking within international financial circles was further
spelled out in a recent column published by the Financial Times
of London. Written by David Hale, chief global economic analyst
for Zurich Financial Services, it points to growing concerns that
the financial crisis and the social unrest created by uninterrupted
austerity are leading inevitably to a new period of intense class
struggle in Latin America.
The Mercosur region is vulnerable to a serious crisis
if Argentina defaults because Brazil is also suffering from a
weak currency, rising interest rates and electricity shortages,
writes Hale. The government has become unpopular and opinion
polls are suggesting that the 2002 presidential election could
be won by a Marxist or populist demagogue who could set the stage
for a prolonged period of economic instability. The situation
could become so unsettled that it is even possible to imagine
scenarios in which both Argentina and Brazil could return to military
rule.
If these ruling class spokesmen are imagining a return to the
methods of dictatorship that dominated Latin Americas Southern
Cone from the late 1960s through the 1980s, it is because they
understand that the measures being demanded to stave off default
must inevitably provoke revolutionary upheavals.
See Also:
Divisions widen at Genoa in the face of
global economic downturn
[23 July 2001]
Argentina: Congress grants
Cavallo emergency powers
Wall Streets man in charge
[28 March 2001]
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