EU “rescue” operation for Ireland hera lds deepening euro crisis

Antid Oto aorta at HOME.NL
Thu Nov 18 10:49:26 CET 2010


REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl

EU “rescue” operation for Ireland heralds deepening euro crisis
By Barry Grey and Stefan Steinberg
18 November 2010

After two days of crisis meetings in Brussels, European finance ministers
dispatched a team of officials from the European Commission, the European
Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund to examine the books of
Ireland’s banks and prepare the way for a “rescue” plan that will shred Irish
political sovereignty and impose even more savage attacks on the working class.

The European and IMF intervention is being dictated by global bankers, who are
seeking to offload huge losses from the meltdown of Ireland’s banking system
onto the Irish population and establish a precedent for similar “stabilization
programs” in other heavily indebted countries in Europe and beyond.

In recent weeks, financiers and speculators have bet massively against the debt
of both the Irish government and the country’s essentially insolvent and
nationalized banks, partly in response to a proposal made in October, and since
withdrawn, by German Chancellor Angela Merkel that any future bailout in Europe
impose greater losses on private bondholders.

The cost of borrowing has soared not only for Ireland, but also for Portugal and
Spain, raising once again the specter of a chain-reaction of bank and sovereign
defaults that would likely spark a collapse of the world financial system. The
threat of a breakup of the single European currency, which receded last spring
with the bailout of Greece and the establishment of the €440 billion European
Financial Stabilization Facility (EFSF), has once again emerged.

EU Council President Herman Van Rompuy on Tuesday declared, “We’re in a survival
crisis,” and warned that the future of the European Union was at stake. German
Chancellor Merkel said, “Everything is at stake. If the euro fails, then Europe
will fail, and with it fails the idea of European values and unity.”

The European debt and euro currency crisis is itself a concentrated expression
of a broader global crisis. The crisis moves by the EU follow by only days the
failure of the G20 summit of leading economies in Seoul to resolve growing
economic imbalances and increasingly bitter currency and trade disputes,
particularly between the leading deficit country, the United States, and the
biggest surplus nation, China.

The post-World World II system of world economic relations is breaking down,
driven in the first instance by the vast economic decline and decay of American
capitalism. The growth of centrifugal forces tearing apart the European Union
and its single currency is one expression of this international crisis.

In particular, tensions are mounting between those countries with a relatively
low level of debt and currently enjoying growth—such as Germany and the
Netherlands—and a host of other countries saddled with mounting debts and
economies either in recession or stagnation, i.e., Ireland, Portugal, Greece and
Spain.

In another indication of growing tensions, the Austrian government threatened on
Monday to delay its share of the next tranche of emergency loans to Greece
because Athens had failed to meet its agreed deficit reduction target. EU member
Slovakia has already refused to take part in the €110 billion rescue, arguing
that it is even poorer than Greece.

One week earlier, the European parliament failed to pass its budget for 2011
following objections raised primarily by Britain and the Netherlands.

The Irish government had resisted demands by the eurozone countries and the
European Union as a whole that it formally apply for a bailout by the EFSF. It
had done so for both economic and political reasons.

The EU, led by Germany, has made it clear that in return for a bailout package
estimated at €80 billion, Ireland will lose control over its fiscal and economic
policy. The republican nationalist Fianna Fail government—and the entire Irish
bourgeoisie—is particularly concerned over calls from some European governments
that Ireland be forced to raise its bargain basement corporate tax rate of 12.5
percent.

Dublin also objects to the high level of interest—8 percent—on credit repayment
demanded by the EU. While lower than the inflated rates charged by international
bond markets, it is sufficiently onerous to bind Ireland to the EU, the European
Central Bank and the IMF for decades to come.

>From the mid-1990s to 2008, Ireland used its low tax rate to attract investment
from overseas, particularly from the US. The country—dubbed the “Celtic
Tiger”—recorded high growth rates as speculative money flowed into its banking
system, fueling a real estate bubble that burst two years ago, exposing the
basic insolvency of the banks.

Foreign banks poured money into Ireland and made bumper profits during the boom.
They are determined not to pay the price of the bust, but rather to pass the
cost onto the Irish people, who are to be made to pay for a bailout of the Irish
banks through unemployment even higher than the current 13.9 percent and even
more brutal cuts in wages and social programs.

With just 4 million inhabitants, Ireland has already slashed over €14 billion
from its budget since 2008 and plans a further €15 billion in cuts over the
coming four years. Per head of population, this total represents twice the
magnitude of the huge cuts introduced recently by the Conservative-Liberal
Democrat Cameron government in Britain.

Recent weeks have seen a wave of deposit withdrawals from the major Irish banks,
which are now totally dependent on loans from the European Central Bank for
their survival. Foreign banks have huge investments in these banks, with Britain
having the biggest exposure—140 billion pounds, according to new figures from
the Bank for International Settlements. But German, French and US banks also
have tens of billions invested in Ireland’s banking system.

The Fianna Fail government also has political reasons for appearing to reject EU
and IMF demands that it accept their bailout offer. Holding a narrow majority in
the parliament, it faces a crucial by-election on November 25 and is under
attack from the conservative Fine Gael party, which is accusing it of ceding
Irish sovereignty and caving in to the EU and the IMF.

Fianna Fail Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Brian Cowan hopes to hold out until after
the by-election and after his government presents its 2011 budget in December.
However, on Wednesday, he and other government officials publicly signaled their
inevitable acceptance of a package dictated by the banks—through the EU, the IMF
and the European Central Bank—by welcoming the team of officials who will
examine the books of Ireland’s banks beginning today.

While Cowan called it a “technical” mission and reiterated that Ireland had not
applied for a bailout loan, Irish European Affairs Minister Dick Roche was more
forthcoming, admitting that “the market has not responded” to the government’s
initial round of austerity measures, and adding, “We’ve taken hard medicine and
we are prepared to take more.”

In an editorial published Tuesday, the Financial Times gave an unusually frank
assessment of the basic social policy underlying the EU-IMF plan for Ireland.
Arguing that the scheme will only intensify the European debt crisis, the
newspaper wrote: “It would also give an official EU imprimatur on Europe’s dirty
secret: public treasuries will do anything to make private bank creditors whole.”

The “dirty secret” of which the Times speaks is the class policy being pursued
in every country—from the US to Europe to Japan and Australia—in response to the
financial breakdown of 2008: the looting of public funds to pay off the gambling
debts of the global financial elite.

In a grim editorial published Wednesday, headlined “Europe Heads Back into the
Storm,” the Financial Times warned that the Irish crisis is only the prelude to
a wider collapse.

“Only months after congratulating itself on a narrow escape,” the newspaper
wrote, “the eurozone is again hurtling back toward contagious defaults. Its
fumbling approach to the explosive instability of the Irish banking system
leaves little hope that the other ticking bombs with which Europe’s economies
are riddled are going to be disarmed in time.

“Ireland’s basic problem is that it now has to choose between its own sovereign
solvency and the solvency of its banks. Other European countries—in and out of
the eurozone—may soon face the same choice. In such a world, keeping banks
afloat with public capital risks sinking the sovereign—and with it, the whole
banking system.”

http://wsws.org/articles/2010/nov2010/euro-n18.shtml

**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********



More information about the D66 mailing list