|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: France
French government slashes public spending
By Kumaran Ira and Pierre Mabut
14 April 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
French President Nicolas Sarkozy announced April 4 an austerity
budget aimed at reducing the public deficit of 50.3 billion
for 2007, accounting for 2.7 percent of GDP. While trying to palm
off the public spending cuts as reforms needed for efficient government,
everyone (including the right-wing bourgeois press) saw this budget
as a turning of the screw on ordinary peoples living standards.
Announcing cuts of 7 billion to be realised by 2011,
Sarkozy tried to give the impression of having things under control:
It is not savings that make reforms but the reform which
permits savings. France takes over the presidency of the
European Union in June, and has committed itself to reducing its
public deficit to zero by 2012, an unrealisable target without
making big inroads into social gains.
France has public spending levels at 53.4 percent of GDP, the
highest in the euro zone. A recent meeting of EU finance ministers
has backed the call for France to cut its deficit and reform public
spending more quickly. The EU Commission is demanding a balanced
budget by 2010, while France pushed this date back to 2012. The
deficit for the first two months of 2008 alone stands at 22.7
billion euros. Budget Minister Eric Woerth announced April 6 that
fresh savings were in the pipeline when the audit for social and
health-care spending is completed. This will not be the case before
summer.
At present France is lagging behind other European states with
a 40 billion trade deficit (a great part of this with Germany)
and projected economic growth of 1.5-1.7 percent in 2008 instead
of the much vaunted 2.5 percent promised by Sarkozy on taking
office nine months ago. The international finance crisis and rise
in the value of the euro have put paid to Sarkozys prediction.
Therefore another meeting is fixed for the Modernising Council
for Public Policy in May in order to deepen the necessary cuts
in the budget.
Prime Minister François Fillon made it clear that France
is bankrupt some months back. These measures therefore only
highlight the problems of French capitalism trying to confront
global competition over the past period. The effects on France
of the global recession forecast for 2008-2009 have yet to be
factored in.
The list of the present cuts (numbering 166) are therefore
just a glimpse of things to come. Among the measures are 35,000
job cuts in the government sector (one in two of retiring state
employees will not be replaced from 2009) and half of the payroll
savings to be redistributed to the remaining state employees.
Relatively well paid workers in rented low-cost municipal housing
(HLM) will see their ceiling on earnings lowered by 10 percent
in the calculation of their rent payments, leading to rent hikes.
The aim is to reduce from 70 percent to 60 percent the number
of households occupying controlled rented accommodations, thus
forcing sections of the lower middle class into the private sector
and pauperisation. All existing financial measures allowing workers
to take state aided early retirement are eliminated.
A strict limit will be imposed on those seeking financial aid
to get into work through the RSA policy (Active Solidarity Revenu)
intoduced by High Commissioner for Active Solidarity, Martin Hirsch.
Until now he has been used by the government as a humanitarian
cover for Sarkozys neo-liberal agenda. Hirsch was recruited
from his post as director of the Emmaüs charity foundation
to take the role of forcing the poor to find a job instead of
living on the minimum social welfare payment of 447 a month.
The RSA was to have cost 2- 3 billion to implement, but
now looks set to be abandoned as a result of calibrating
terms of what is affordable.
Hirsch has reacted forcefully, saying: I came with a
project, the fruit of a collective effort with trade unions, heads
of local associations, social partners [employers], elected members
of both right and left political parties; I am the projects
guardian , the line is clear.... If the RSA is abandoned
then everything else to alleviate poverty will be unbalanced.
Prime Minister Fillon said the project was not buried,
but was for the moment too costly.
A witch-hunt against social security fraud, savings in hospital
costs and so-called taxes designated to help the environment are
also part of the austerity package. No ministry will be
exempted from the necessity of reform, declared Sarkozy.
The education ministry has already said that 11,200 teaching posts
must be eliminated in September 2008. Sarkozy did not mention
the contententious issue, which has already brought tens of thousands
of high school students and teachers onto the streets in ever
increasing numbers in the past week.
Socialist Party leader François Hollande reacted by
saying that Nicolas Sarkozy was the [presidential] candidate
of purchasing power, he will (now] be the president of austerity.
Laurent Fabius, an ex-Socialist Party prime minister, criticised
Sarkozy for giving away 15 billion in tax breaks to the
rich at the beginning of the year. The government has created
a hole of 15 billion a year, and asks how can it fill this
gap? Fabius said. We must get back a big part of this.
Fabius called for measures to help small businesses, the
low paid and low pensions. Fabius has conveniently forgotten
how his own austerity budget, under President François
Mitterrand in 1984, attacked the living standards of the working
class.
The trade unions criticized the austerity measures as much
for their effects on their members as for their own lack of consultation
in their application. Jean-Christophe Le Duigou of the Stalinist-controlled
CGT (General Confederation of Workers) expressed the feelings
of all the union leaders when commented: Neither the public,
nor the citizens, nor the public sector workers, nor the unions
have been involved in the elaboration of these reforms.... Its
a technocratic approach from the wrong angle, we start with the
savings and then we will discuss, perhaps next, the public interest.
The tone of regret at not being involved in the consultation
process speaks volumes for the aquiesence of the unions in the
implementation of all of Sarkozys policies up to now. Le
Duigou was one of the union negotiators who betrayed the special
pension rights struggle of rail workers in November last year.
Sarkozys budget cuts are anything but technocratic. They
are aimed politically at the working population. The FSU public
sector workers union admitted the austerity plan will mean
a further deterioration of daily social and professional life
for the entire population, but especially the most weak and underpriveliged.
See Also:
French high school students protest education
cuts
[12 April 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |