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GoaRedStar
6th April 2006, 18:56
I bring to you a rarity :lol: .

Its seem like the editing net at the International Herald Tribune let one good article slip through.

This is what one of the correspondent for libcom.org/blog said about the article


In this age of “La Pensée Unique” and corporate control of the mass media it’s rare to find articles that get through the editing control net. But this from the International Herald Tribune no less, is one of those rare ones,

enjoy…



Capitalism under fire
William Pfaff
PARIS The demonstrations by French students, workers and would- be workers, with unions and the French left riding on their bandwagon, have amounted to a spontaneous revolt in France against something that I suspect few of the participants fully appreciate.

The protests' ostensible purpose is to force withdrawal of a minor change in this French government's employment policy, but they have taken on a radically different significance.

The crowds in the street contest a certain form of capitalist economy that a large part, if not the majority, of French society regards as a danger to national standards of justice and, above all, to "equality" - that radical notion of which France is nearly alone in proclaiming as a national cause, the central value in its republican motto of "liberty, equality, fraternity."

Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin undoubtedly had little notion of the consequences when he launched what seemed to him a small but constructive employment initiative, intended to loosen current structural inhibitions to job-creation.

He inadvertently opened what many of the French see as a central question to their national future, just as two years ago they saw in the European constitutional referendum disturbing questions about the future nature of the European Union and about the model of capitalism that would prevail in Europe's future.

They are not alone in this concern. A kindred debate about "models" of capitalism has been a persistent factor in Germany, now suffering labor unrest, and in the European Commission itself, which since EU expansion to 25 members, has tipped away from the traditional European "social" model. Even in Britain last Tuesday there was the biggest strike since the 1920s, on the question of pensions.

The French, of course, have been against "capitalisme sauvage" ever since that rough beast loomed amid the satanic mills of Britain in the 19th century, subsequently making its trans-Atlantic journey to establish another lair.

A recent international opinion poll on the free-enterprise and free-market system, found that 74 percent of the Chinese say they think it the best system of all, compared to only 36 percent of the French. (The Germans were not far off the French.)

The essential question is, what capitalism are we talking about? Since the 1970s, two fundamental changes have been made in the leading (American) model of capitalism.

The first is that the "stakeholder," post-New Deal reformed version of capitalism (in America) that prevailed in the West after World War II was replaced by a new model of corporate purpose and responsibility.

The earlier model said that corporations had a duty to ensure the well- being of employees, and an obligation to the community (chiefly but not exclusively fulfilled through corporate tax payments).

That model has been replaced by one in which corporation managers are responsible for creating short-term "value" for owners, as measured by stock valuation and quarterly dividends.

The practical result has been constant pressure to reduce wages and worker benefits (leading in some cases to theft of pensions and other crimes), and political lobbying and public persuasion to lower the corporate tax contribution to government finance and the public interest.

In short, the system in the advanced countries has been rejigged since the 1960s to take wealth from workers, and from the funding of government, and transfer it to stockholders and corporate executives.

While that may seem an incendiary comment, it seems to me a simple factual observation. The criticism currently made of Europeans who resist "reform" is that their policies block managers from downsizing and outsourcing jobs, in order to add "value" to the corporation. (A recent headline in the International Herald Tribune read: "AT&T- BellSouth deal gets Wall St. applause. Merger would lead to 10,000 job cuts.")

I once called this "CEO capitalism," since corporate chiefs today effectively control their boards of directors and are also the biggest benefactors of the system, subject only to critical attention from investment-fund managers, themselves interested in maximizing dividends, not in defending workers or the public interest. (The well-known American fund manager, John Bogle, now retired, has taken up my argument and advances it in his recent book, "The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism.")

The second change that has taken place is globalization. The crucial effect of this for society in the advanced countries is that it puts labor into competition with the poorest countries on earth.

We need go no further with what I realize is a very complex matter, other than to note the classical economist David Ricardo's "iron law of wages," which says that in conditions of wage competition and unlimited labor supply, wages will fall to just above subsistence.

There never before has been unlimited labor. There is now, thanks to globalization - and the process has only begun.

It seems to me that this European unrest signals a serious gap in political and corporate understanding of the human consequences of a capitalist model that considers labor a commodity and extends price competition for that commodity to the entire world.

In the longer term, there may be more serious political implications in this than even France's politicized students suspect. What seems the reactionary or even Luddite position might prove prophetic.

link http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/03/29/news/edpfaff.php

And as the guys at libcom said

Enjoy......

redstar2000
6th April 2006, 20:19
Excellent piece!

You know, in the last decades of Russian Czarism, there were a few sensible aristocrats (usually called the "westernizers") who almost desperately argued for significant reforms to save the system! They repeatedly warned their peers and superiors that things were "going badly" and if "managed change" did not take place, then explosive change would be the inevitable consequence.

But, by and large, their warnings were ignored. A "senile" ruling class has lost the ability to perceive objective reality...they cannot imagine anything but "more of the same".

The alarm bells have begun to ring...and our ruling class has gone deaf.

Another good sign for us! :D

http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cool/123.gif

SmithSmith
6th April 2006, 22:57
Can someone explain this?


A recent international opinion poll on the free-enterprise and free-market system, found that 74 percent of the Chinese say they think it the best system of all, compared to only 36 percent of the French. (The Germans were not far off the French.)

Tekun
6th April 2006, 23:11
^74% of the chinese population believe that capitalism is the best economic system

Side note: China is not socialist country, they engage in market socialism I believe (China's very own version of capitalism ).....which is government regulated capitalism
They still see themselves as "socialists", but in a few years they'll identify themselves as full fledged capitalists, if not before

Clear it up?



Good piece BTW

Jormungand
6th April 2006, 23:26
The Chinese probably like capitalism for the same reason Ayn Rand liked capitalism - they live in an extremely authoritarian society and ignorantly associate capitalism with freedom and democracy.

SmithSmith
6th April 2006, 23:40
Originally posted by [email protected] 6 2006, 10:20 PM
^74% of the chinese population believe that capitalism is the best economic system


Thanks..........


I know, I was wondering why.


like, Jormungand said

they associate capitalism with freedom and democracy.

redstar2000
7th April 2006, 01:59
Also keep in mind that capitalism in China is young and vigorous -- living standards (in the cities) are visibly improving and people's expectations that "next year" will be "better" than "this year" are realistic.

It's far different in the "old" capitalist countries in Europe and North America...where the "best bet" is that things will be worse "next year" and the year after that as well. :o

http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cool/123.gif

GoaRedStar
9th April 2006, 03:16
Redstar look at this baby from the BBC. :D

The Bourgeois media it starting to give out its warning signal



France's problem with capitalism
By Caroline Wyatt

A new French law aimed at helping young people find work sparked riots across the country. Many French citizens see it as a sign that the centre-right government is trying to impose a British or American-style capitalist system on a thoroughly disgruntled nation. Caroline Wyatt has the feeling that the gulf between Britain and France has never been greater.

Demonstration in Marseille
More than a million people are estimated to have demonstrated against the new laws

When I first arrived in Paris after three years in Moscow, a Russian friend joked that France was the only truly successful communist country in the world.

At the time, I put that down to Russian humour.

How could a nation that gave the world joys such as champagne, or more than 200 different types of cheese, possibly be communist?

These days, though, I'm not so sure my Russian friend was joking.

Perhaps he had had a sneak preview of a recent survey, in which various countries were asked how they rated capitalism.

Three quarters of the Chinese said it was the best economic system for the future. But in France only a third of people agreed.

That came back to me earlier this week as I walked alongside the French strikers.

Impotent rage

Beneath the cherry trees just coming into bloom, they marched through Paris, the red of the trade unions' balloons silhouetted against a cloudless spring sky.


French companies buy up foreign firms with gusto but woe betide the foreigner who tries a takeover in France

The focus of their anger was the government's latest attempt to create the more flexible labour market French employers say they need to create new jobs.

Official figures suggest a quarter of the under 26s are without work.

Yet in reality, the anger was more diffuse - the jobs law being a focus for a kind of impotent rage against a globalised world and fears over France's place in it.

Once the French bestrode the planet like a Colossus, exporting everything from their language to their culture.

France may have lost an empire, but in the 60s, 70s and 80s - those glorious decades here - she was once again the envy of the world.

This was a nation of grand government projects: from its engineering prowess to the languid delights of French cinema, from the thrill of the high-speed TGV to the charms of the equally racy Brigitte Bardot.

France had sophistication and fabulous food and wine, while all Britain could offer in the 70s was tinned Spam and mushy peas.

1970s Britain

Yet as I walked alongside the strikers, I felt a weird sense of deja vu - as if in one nostalgic bound I was transported back to the Britain of the 1970s.

British workers on strike in 1979
Margaret Thatcher's promise to take on the unions helped her win power
My mother cooking by candlelight on a Calor gas stove.

Britain on a three-day week.

No electricity because the energy workers were on strike again. The shelves in the local shop yawned white and bare. No sugar and no bread - thanks to panic buying.

Not long afterwards, a prime minister called Margaret Thatcher took on the trade unions and changed Britain and its attitudes forever.

Here in France, a centre-right government has talked of reform but it has backed down again every time.

Perhaps France has not reached rock bottom as Britain had. The cafes here still brim with fresh baguettes and bottles of Bordeaux.

Few want a French Margaret Thatcher.

Seeking a French alternative

Instead, there's a desperate hope that France can find a different way, a better way than the bumpy Anglo-Saxon path.

Time and time again, the French insist that capitalism as practised abroad simply does not work for France.

Yet big French companies might disagree.

From firms such as L'Oreal - which recently bought the Body Shop - to its international banks, French companies are all successfully playing the Anglo-Saxon game.

Yet a journalist from Le Monde newspaper tells me France should follow the Scandinavian model, not that of the US, with its stark differences between the ghetto and the billionaire.

Nor the British model, where NHS dentists are a folk memory, like leprechauns - you hear talk of them but few believe they exist.

Social exclusion

But even under the French model of today, I already see so many inequalities.

Just look at the suburbs, the banlieues.

Fire in Lyon in November 2005
The French government imposed a state of emergency in November

Is it an equitable system that excludes up to 40% of people there from the world of work, offering them handouts for life instead?

The ghettoes already exist in France, even if their inhabitants have access to free health care and a decent dentist.

The riots here last November were a howl of despair from those excluded from the mainstream by virtue of being born poor or different, with a black face or a Muslim name.

This year it is France's middle class young who are in revolt, the marches their own scream of angst, as their hopes of the comfortable life their parents enjoyed slowly fade.

For all its talk of equality, fraternity and liberty, France in this troubled springtime feels like a society at war with itself, suffering a deep and growing divide between its citizens.

A divide between the public and the private sector, between politicians and the people, between those in work and those without.

And the greatest gulf of all: between those who look into the future and see only fear and those who believe and hope that France can change.

link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from...ent/4887560.stm (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/4887560.stm)

redstar2000
9th April 2006, 11:41
Ms. Wyatt's nostalgic memories of Margaret Thatcher must be rather unusual in the U.K. -- even The Economist referred to her as "the madwoman in the attic". :lol:

The poll referred to in Wyatt's article had a surprise in it for me: 24% of Americans polled disagreed with the statement "The free enterprise system and the free market economy is the best system on which to base the future of the world".

http://65.109.167.118/pipa/articles/home_p...nt=154&lb=hmpg2 (http://65.109.167.118/pipa/articles/home_page/154.php?nid=&id=&pnt=154&lb=hmpg2)

That's a quite surprising number of potential communists when you think about it. :D

But, not unexpectedly, France leads the world in being the likely setting for the first successful proletarian revolution of the new century.

http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cool/123.gif

Matty_UK
9th April 2006, 12:38
Originally posted by [email protected] 9 2006, 10:50 AM
Ms. Wyatt's nostalgic memories of Margaret Thatcher must be rather unusual in the U.K. -- even The Economist referred to her as "the madwoman in the attic". :lol:
That is true. Living in the north east which is somewhat working class I am yet to meet anyone who doesn't despise Thatcher.