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Portuguese government launches emergency austerity measures
By Paul Mitchell
20 June 2005
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Portugals Socialist Party (PS) government, which came
into power in February, has launched a three-year plan of emergency
austerity measures. These include a gradual increase in the retirement
age for Portugals 700,000 civil servants from 60 to 65,
freezing public sector promotions and reducing sick-leave payments,
a 2 percent increase in Value-Added Tax (VAT) to 21 percent, a
rise in tobacco and fuel taxes and the creation of a new income
tax band of 42 percent on incomes greater than 60,000 ($US74,000).
Portugal is already one of Europes poorest countries
and has the widest wealth gap in the European Union. The countrys
workers, who earn an average monthly wage of 750, have been
a source of cheap unskilled labour, particularly in textile and
footwear manufacturing. However, in recent years, Portugal has
faced increased competition for investments and subsidies due
to the eastward expansion of the EU and the challenge from China.
Exports of Chinese-produced footwear to the EU, for example, increased
700 percent in the first four months of 2005. In addition, EU
subsidies for Portuguese agriculture have been diverted to the
new member states in eastern Europe.
In 2004, Portugal was the only country in the euro-zone where
the economy declined. In March 2005, unemployment rose to an eight-year
high of 7.5 percent and is predicted to rise further. During the
previous right-wing Social Democratic and Popular Party (SDP-PP)
coalition governments three-year rule, 150,000 jobs were
lost, mainly in industry and agriculture.
Finance Minister Luis Campos e Cunha said the governments
austerity plan would reduce public spending by 4 billion
($5 billion) and bring the deficit below the 3 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP) set by the euro-zone Stability and Growth
Pact by 2008. Other government officials warned that further deficit-fighting
policies could be implemented in the future. Teodora Cardosa,
head economist at the Portuguese bank BPI, told the business weekly
Semanario Economico that the untamable deficit
was caused by a refusal of governments to carry out serious
reforms to confront Portugals fiscal problems. For
a few years now, politicians have felt that placing blame and
masking deficits is preferable to correcting them, Cardosa
said.
Prime Minister Jose Socrates said his government is committed
to Portugals promise to the European Commission to be fiscally
responsible and to solve the countrys fundamental
structural problems that had been obscured by one-off measures
such as omitting state pension funds from budget calculations
and selling public assets. He justified the austerity measures
by saying there had been a serious change in circumstances,
which had been identified in a report published in May by a commission
he set up shortly after assuming power to investigate the true
state of Portugals finances.
Headed by the governor of the Bank of Portugal, Vitor Constancio,
the commission said Portugals projected deficit for 2005
will be 6.8 percentway above the figure of 2.9 percent posted
by the previous SDP-PP government and the largest-ever breach
of the 3 percent euro-zone limit. Estimates for economic growth
in 2005 were also cut from 2.4 percent to 0.8 percent.
Rumours had circulated throughout 2004 that the budget deficit
was higher than figures published by the SDP-PP government and
that the EU was investigating them. Recent revelations in Diario
Noticias seem to confirm this. It reported that in August
2004, the former finance minister, Bagao Felix, estimated the
deficit at 6.4 percent, but the cabinet kept to the previous figure
of 2.9 percent, fearing that an attack on the most problematic
budgets of the Health and Social Security departments would provoke
even greater opposition to its rule.
Socrates government has sent the austerity plan to the
European Commission in the hope that it will head off the threat
of fines and loss of EU aid that would further intensify the countrys
economic crisis. European Commission President and former Portuguese
Prime Minister Jose Manuel Durao Barroso said the plan will
have to be a significant effort, an effort which will demand much
determination to enable Portugal to control its budget deficit.
The commission will publish its verdict on June 22.
The government also hopes the austerity measures will meet
the March 2004 demands of the International Monetary Fund for
structural reforms, including cuts in the public sector wage bill,
reining in aging-related spending and concentrating
on the central role of wage restraint.
It was the attempt of the previous SDP-PP coalition government
to implement European Union and International Monetary Fund demands
(as well as opposition to its support for the US-led war on Iraq)
that led to its humiliating defeat in the February 2005 elections.
It froze civil servants salaries, ended tax breaks for first-time
home buyers and raised VAT from 17 percent to 19 percent. It also
faced a series of crises, including the month-long delay in the
start of the school year, a public dispute over tax-cut proposals,
the lowering of Portugals international credit rating and
attempts to discipline the private television station TV1 for
airing anti-government views.
In the elections, the SDP-PP coalition vote slumped to 36 percent,
from 49 percent in 2002, and the PS was elected with an outright
parliamentary majority, increasing its vote from 38 to 45 percent.
The Left Bloc polled 365,000 votes, rising from 2.8 percent in
2002 to 6.4 percent, and the United Democratic Coalition, comprising
the Portuguese Communist Party and the Ecology Party, increased
its vote from 7.0 percent to 7.6 percent.
The new PS administration benefited from a surge of popular
anger against the SDP-PP amongst a majority of the Portuguese
people, who were demanding a shift in economic, social and foreign
policy to the left. But it has made clear that it will not reverse
the SDP-PP attacks on working people.
In response to the austerity plan, Portugals largest
trade union confederation, the 800,000-member General Confederation
of Portuguese Workers (CGTP), has called a national day of protest
for June 17. The CGTP says that whilst it does not deny
the economic difficulties...the cost of the sacrifices fall again
on the workers and most vulnerable parts of the population and
weakens the values of the cohesion and solidarity.
The union calls for the government to tackle the issue of temporary
jobs, the illegal economy and tax evasion, which is estimated
at 11.4 billion euros. The Left Bloc has issued similar demands.
However, Socrates explained after a meeting of the Standing Council
for Social Dialogue, comprising trade union and big business leaders,
that the unions understand the urgency of the austerity
measures and that he was confident he would get the consensus
of the countrys social partners.
Portuguese President (and Socialist Party leader) Jorge Sampaio
called on workers to accept the measures as a sign of their patriotism,
saying he knew of no more patriotic act than that of someone
who earns little but continues to have hope.
See Also:
Portugal: New Socialist Party
government intensifies social attacks
[23 March 2005]
Portugal: political crisis
deepens ahead of February elections
[17 January 2005]
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