Still relevant, I think...

M
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 13 Oct 1998 05:47:45 +0200
From: Viggo Andersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: (fwd) TEARING UP THE EUROPEAN RULEBOOK

http://www.egroups.com/list/chiapas-l/?start=7816

[Fwd: The unemployed loosen the noose]
Monday October 12, 1998 02:23 PM PST
By Monique Lemaitre @corn.cso.niu.edu

Le Monde diplomatique wrote:

  LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE - October 1998

  TEARING UP THE EUROPEAN RULEBOOK

  The unemployed loosen the noose

  Since the 1970s, unemployment has been part of the social landscape. Yet
  the unemployed themselves remained in some way invisible, their voices
  never directly heard. However, a few months ago they erupted on to the
  social and political scene in France, Germany, Italy and other European
  countries. The movement which they have started has been greeted with
  sympathy by the public at large. And it has inspired other new
  organisations determined to agitate for other economic and social
  priorities.

  by CATHERINE LIVY and CHRISTOPHE AGUITON *

  The new movement of the unemployed has turned itself into a physical
  presence and acquired a voice of its own. But it did not appear out of
  thin air: it was by walking, becoming pedestrians on France's roads,
  that the unemployed began to make their presence felt as a distinct
  group. In addition, for several years the movement has been the major
  component of a still larger grouping which is in turn now gathering
  behind it and helping it develop.

  Its history goes back as far as May 1994, when AC! (Action against
  Unemployment - Agir contre le chtmage) organised a number of
     marches in the provinces, converging in Paris. Over several weeks,
  the unemployed took to the roads, passing through towns and villages,
  talking to trade unionists and sympathetic activists who made them
  welcome. Twenty thousand people met up at Bastille, and the
  demonstration ended up by occupying an apartment building on rue
  Biranger. From that point on, the movement gathered strength month by
  month.

  In December 1994, a building in rue du Dragon, under siege by DAL (Right
  to Housing - Droit au logement), was occupied with, for the first time,
  help from the associations of the unemployed. Workshops were set up for
  the members of campaigning groups, trade unionists, researchers and
  teachers. Young members of the CDSL (Committee of the Homeless - Comiti
  des sans-logis) posed the question: how are you supposed to survive when
  you can't find a job and don't qualify for income support? For those who
  took part in these discussions, only one thing was sure: the state could
  not be relied on to change the equation between work and income. Every
  December since 1994, activists have organised more special actions.
  Because for those living on basic welfare, the acquisitive seasonal
  frenzy that grips most of the population is the final straw.

  In December 1995, in the middle of a major rail strike, an initiative by
  DD (Rights to the Fore - Droits devant) led to the occupation of the
  Beaubourg in Paris and the "manifesto of the have-nots". It was a
  significant date. The trade unions at the forefront of the strike were
  very much in evidence at the plenary meeting; but the mode of expression
  was new. Alongside the notion of rights (civic, political and social),
  there now arose its negative corollary: the absence of rights, a concept
  that has finally emerged as a dominant theme.

  So far, this was still just a movement in embryo, involving no more than
  a handful of trade unionists and other activists. But now it was to
  benefit from the fall-out from the railwaymen's action. There was a
  frenzy of activity: the requisition of housing by DAL and the CDSL; the
  requisition of jobs (1) by AC!, MNCP (National Movement of Unemployed
  and Insecure Workers - Mouvement national des chtmeurs et pricaires) and
  Apeis (Association for Employment, Integration and Solidarity -
  Association pour l'emploi, l'insertion et la solidariti); campaigns for
  access to free public transport; campaigns directed at workers in the
  major public utilities (Ilectriciti de France, Gaz de France) and
  intended to prevent people's supplies being cut off; the occupation, in
  December 1996, of the Maison des "ensemble" (Centre for Unity) in rue
  d'Aligre.

  Then, in May 1997, came the occupation of the Bank of France, seized as
  one of the symbolic high places of capitalism. Its directors finally
  agreed to meet the unemployed associations, the banking section of the
  CFDT (French Democratic Confederation of Labour - Confidiration
  frangaise dimocratique du travail), the financial section of the CGT
  (General Confederation of Labour - Confidiration ginirale du travail),
  the SNUI (Unified National Union for Taxes - Syndicat national unifii
  des imptts), the Group of Ten (2), DAL and DD. The protesters demanded
  access to financial rights and raised the problem of excessive debt.

  On 15 December 1997, activists from associations combating exclusion and
  insecurity, in conjunction with trade unionists, launched a week of
  action for "social emergency". It began with the occupation of the
  Pyramid at the Louvre and the holding of discussions in the Salle du
  Carrousel. The week culminated in the
  "Louvre appeal", signed by numerous organisations and demanding, among
  other things, increases in basic welfare payments and a Christmas bonus
  for the unemployed.

  In addition, all these groups gave their support to the struggle being
  fought by illegal immigrants. Within the movement, some people devoted
  themselves to the question of rights and how to see them exercised. Just
  as the public had felt that the right to a home had legitimised the
  "occupations", so the marches against unemployment (and other such
  actions) came to acquire a similar legitimacy. Their message was clear:
  no household with three members could survive on 3,000 francs a month.
  At the same time, occupying Assidic offices over a period of several
  weeks had the desired effect of publicising locations where all those
  unprepared to venture out on demonstrations could emerge from their
  state of isolation.

  The actions of the unemployed raised fundamental questions concerning
  the basic means of survival: despite the creation of the RMI and the
  overall increase in the number of beneficiaries, since
  1982 the amount spent by the state on basic welfare has remained
  unchanged at 1% of GDP. Average benefit therefore remains at best
  between 30% and 40% of average disposable income, at worst between
  20% and 30% - that is to say, significantly below the poverty line.
  (This remains true whichever definition is used: 50% of average income
  across the European Union, or 50% of median income as calculated by the
  Office of National Statistics.)

  Since 1982, the average standard of living of all households has
  increased by more than 15%. Over the same period, however, basic welfare
  levels have barely maintained their purchasing power, and some of those
  living on benefit have seen a decrease of 10% in the unemployment
  benefit (Action spicifique de solidariti - ASS) and
  20% in the emergency welfare benefit (allocation d'insertion - AI).

  The unemployed movement should also be seen, however, in a wider context
  than the mere raising of basic welfare levels. By denouncing
  inequalities, it is also laying claim to a more democratic deployment of
  fiscal policy. Currently, only 15% of revenues in the financial sector
  are taxed. Yet no income from permanent or temporary employment escapes
  the fiscal net. And casual and part-time work pay only very low wages,
  sometimes less than basic welfare. As a result, both the unemployed and
  those in work are mobilising around these forms of employment. A report
  by the Commission for Economic Planning has estimated that seven million
  people are affected by unemployment or are victims of unfair wage
  agreements arising from the economic policy currently pursued by most
  European governments.

  The movement of the French unemployed must thus be seen as part of a
  wider picture encompassing the different EU countries. It unites all
  those living on work-derived income who are struggling to make the
  question of insecurity and the creation of a new attitude to paid work a
  central issue within the European project. There are various forms of
  employment - involuntary part-time work ("under-employment"), fixed-term
  contracts, subsidised work, job-shares - that are really so many forms
  of partial unemployment. These shadowy areas are usually overlooked in
  European statistics. In 1993 (the last year for which figures are
  available), 57 million Europeans were categorised as "poor", of whom 35%
  were of working age and in employment.

  The European marches "against unemployment, insecurity and exclusion"
  have underlined this link between the situations in neighbouring
  countries. To march across Europe has, in effect, become the chosen
  means of expression of several thousand people who are either unemployed
  or in insecure jobs. In April 1997 they began walking through town and
  countryside in Italy, Spain, France, Greece, the United Kingdom, etc.
  Marching became an expression of solidarity, a way of discovering
  places, meeting people, and also of affirming the rejection of a present
  situation that seeks to impose itself permanently. Marching is another
  way of proving that there is still a story to be told, that the course
  of events can be affected. It makes the struggle against the insecurity
  of life visible. It allows us to demonstrate together in affirmation of
  our rights.

  The movement originated when representatives of organisations and trade
  unions from several European countries met in Florence in June 1996.
  Here in Tuscany - just as later in Brussels - the assembled activists
  wanted to set a European movement in motion. There was no general
  organisation of the marches. Instead, individual patterns emerged from
  the different national contexts, reflecting, in each country, the
  current state of the resistance to European policy.

  In France, the organisation of the "Euromarches" was atypical, with
  national trade union officials marching side by side with campaigning
  groups. In Italy, the movements of the unemployed and those in insecure
  work were organised at local level; and, although the two major
  centralised trade unions offered their services in organising the
  marches, they did not actually take part (3). Nevertheless, the
  "sincobas" (inter-sectional unions representing an important minority of
  the General Italian Confederation of Labour) took an active part in the
  movement at both national and local level, especially in Turin. In
  Spain, where various "reforms" to the labour code, signed by the two
  major groups of affiliated trade unions, have increased the insecurity
  of labour while reducing its cost, the marches brought together many
  organisations and associations organised both regionally and nationally.
  They set off on 14 April 1997, the anniversary of the Spanish Republic.

  In Belgium, 80% of the unemployed are members of trade union
  organisations, since these are responsible for paying unemployment
  insurance. Although demands by the unemployed for autonomy provoked
  tensions, they also sparked off debates on trade union democracy. In
  addition, many associations campaigned around the issue of the
  "social sick-room". There, as in Germany, emphasis was placed on the
  threat of workfare (the obligation placed upon the long-term unemployed
  to accept any job, preferably part-time and underpaid). This idea
  underpins a parliamentary bill being proposed by the Belgian government.

  In the Netherlands, as in Spain, the key issue is one of part-time work
  on fixed contracts: even the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
  Development (OECD) has corrected the Netherlands' unemployment figures
  from the official 5.3% to a more plausible 20% (4). The minority of
  Dutch trade unionists who support the marches have suggested that there
  are a million poor for whom public education and health services have
  become inaccessible.

  There, as in Belgium, the opposition of the trade unions is less
  unified, and the debate has penetrated cracks in the consensus on
  national policy. By making themselves visible, the "pedestrians of the
  highways" have raised a whole series of current social problems. A few
  years ago, when the English unemployed started their own marches - an
  example followed by activists from AC! - it created no more than a minor
  disturbance heard only by a few selective ears. Now, little by little,
  it is becoming heard of abroad.

  "How many of us are there?" asked some young members of the CDSL four
  years ago. Statistics always follow the same pattern and it takes a long
  time for the state to take account of those who live on the margins,
  without income or home. It is not just a question of access to civic and
  social rights. The existence of thousands of people is denied and there
  are often no structures able to take them into account. Official
  research is beginning in various countries, but until European
  institutions create a statistical apparatus common to all fifteen EU
  members, it will remain difficult to make precise comparisons between
  nations.

  Valid comparisons between the different earnings of the unemployed or
  those in insecure jobs are extremely complex to make. In France alone,
  there are eight basic welfare allowances, each specifically targeted
  (for example, housing benefit) and subtracted or added to the total on a
  case by case basis. Just for one country, the result is a complete
  jungle: the Commission for Economic Planning talks of
  "incoherence". Faced with the maze of provisions specific to each
  country, the idea of a relevant European comparison is unsustainable.

  Any assessment of the marches must take into account the hundreds of
  kilometres covered and the thousands of people encountered along the
  way. The marchers have changed traditional trade union attitudes,
  chalked up a new stage in the assessment of unemployment and job
  insecurity and contributed to the evolution of the political debate in
  the EU countries - even European institutions are now including them in
  their research programmes. The marchers have given concrete expression
  to the various claims being made right across Europe. Like a choir
  intoning the popular will, they have articulated and amplified
  criticisms of the inverted priorities of the European project, with its
  emphasis on monetary policy over employment. In this great concert,
  there may be a few dissonant voices questioning the process that has
  begun. But most share a common concern to voice a pressing social need.

  ______________________________________________________________

  * Respectively engineer at the Centre international de la recherche
  scientifique (CNRS) and spokesman for Agir contre le chtmage (AC!).

  (1) Advised by the trade unions of situations where certain companies
  were under-staffed, the unemployed went there, occupied the premises and
  demanded the creation of jobs

  (2) The Group of Ten, which transformed itself into a trade union last
  January, counts among its members many trade unionists from SUD
  (Solidaires, unitaires, dimocratiques), the Syndicat national des
  journalistes, and the Syndicat national unifii des imptts (SNUI)

  (3) Except for the FIOM (the metallurgy federation of the CGIL), which,
  as a national federation, worked beside them.

  (4) See Dominique Vidal, "Miracle or mirage in the Netherlands?", Le
  Monde diplomatique English Internet edition, July 1997.

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ) 1998 Le Monde diplomatique

  <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/inside/1998/10/11levy.html>

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