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The deepening crisis of the monopoly capitalist system — imperialism — has exposed the deep structural crisis lying at its very heart. The crisis has also shown that the system is incapable of resolving its deep contradictions without resorting to a massive assault on the working conditions and living standards of working people and on the gains made by working people over decades of mass class struggle.
The system itself is incapable of resolving and finding solutions to the many and growing problems facing humanity, including mass poverty, starvation, and food shortages, and the urgent need to counter global warming.
The policy being pursued is to inflict mass unemployment, greater inequality, greater concentration of wealth, more monopolisation, greater exploitation of workers and the poor, the destruction of communities, increased militarisation, and wars.
The Irish
people, both north and south, are now being forced to pay a heavy price
for the failed policies of both the Irish and the British government.
These attacks are on a qualitatively new level, building in to budget
policies a deliberate reduction in public spending, structured attacks
on public services, attacks on social welfare, increases in both direct
and indirect taxes on working people and the poor, and the socialisation
of corporate debt while leaving wealth untouched.
The imposition by international finance capital and the European Union
of a four-year budgetary strategy is designed to circumvent and
undermine the democratic will of the people. Their approach is to build
structural readjustment programmes in to all economic and social
policies that any possible future Irish Government may wish to
implement. The polici of the European Union and the European Central
Bank (ECB) is to advance and protect the interests of German and French
monopoly finance capital and banks.
The policies of the IMF have left a trail of destruction across the
globe as they make working people pay for the policies and economic
strategies that local elites, in alliance with monopoly capitalism, have
inflicted on their countries.
The crisis has also exposed the damage done, both north and south, to
economic and social development by over-reliance on finance, insurance,
real estate, and transnational capitalism.
The European Union is taking full advantage of the crisis to push its
strategic approach of establishing greater control over the national
budgetary policies and the social and economic priorities of
member-states. Throughout Europe, workers, small businesses, the
self-employed, family farmers and those dependent on social welfare are
being forced to pay a heavy price for this crisis. In the peripheral
countries within the European Union these social strata are being asked
to carry an even greater burden to save German, French and British
finance capital — in fact to save the euro itself.
Resistance to these policies is growing throughout Europe. In Ireland,
as elsewhere, the labour movement is central to this opposition. The
promotion of a clear alternative within and by the trade union movement,
based on the interests of the mass of the people — not the employers and
the banks — is essential.
This means the rejection at every level of the
labour movement of the flawed and now clearly failed strategy of “social
partnership.” The employers are already making it clear that they have
no intention of protecting jobs or restraining wage cuts. It is also
clear that the trade union movement and public-sector workers were sold a
pup in the Croke Park agreement.
The Government and employers no longer require “social partnership” to
secure their strategic interests. The trade union leadership must make
it equally clear that they too have no lingering illusions about it.
What is required now is a vigorous, sustained campaign to oppose not
just the forthcoming budget but the whole Government economic strategy,
which is broadly supported by the main opposition parties, and total
opposition to the further privatisation of public services and the
selling off of public companies.
The trade union movement in Northern Ireland showed in the recent
mobilisation of thousands of working people that people will resist when
clear leadership and demands are presented. This is the lesson that the
labour movement throughout Ireland has to build upon. The Communist
Party of Ireland calls upon workers, small businesses, the self-employed
and the unemployed to support the mobilisation on 27 November being
organised by the ICTU.
It is not too late to assert the absolute necessity for the independent
mobilisation of workers. Workers need to present their own view of the
economic and social development needed. A necessary first step is to
reject the manufacturing of ideological consent, that we must all “share
the pain.”
As the crisis has presented state monopoly capitalism with
the opportunity to launch deeper and more sustained attacks on workers,
the labour movement must respond with its own demands and alternative
economic strategy. Working people must oppose the policies of both the
European Union and the IMF.
The deep structural weakness, north and south, can be overcome only by
taking a strategic all-Ireland approach to economic and social
development, a strategy that is politically, economically and socially
transformative. Only the development of a socially planned use of
capital and resources can overcome the anarchy and chaos of capitalism.
Central to any such alternative must be
• repudiating the debt; it is their debt, not ours;
• the return of fiscal powers from Brussels to the Irish people;
• the devolution of full economic and fiscal powers to the Northern Ireland Executive;
• the establishment of a state investment bank;
• the establishment of an all-Ireland economic development agency under democratic control;
• the social control of all natural and marine resources, to be developed in a sustainable manner by the people.
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