Greece: From despair to resistance

By Panagiotis Sotiris I glr

On Sunday 12 February 2012 the people of Greece, in demonstrations and street fights all over the country expressed in a massive, collective and heroic way their anger against the terms of the new loan agreement dictated by the EU-ECB-IMF Troika. Workers, youths, students filled the streets with rage, defying the extreme aggression by police forces, setting another example of struggle and solidarity.

Greece is becoming the test site for an extreme case of neoliberal social engineering. The terms of the new bail-out package from the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, the so-called Troika, equal a carpet bombing of whatever is left of collective social rights and represent an extreme attempt to bring wage levels and workplace situation back to the 1960s.

Under the terms of the new agreement the following drastic changes are going to be put to vote:
The minimum wage, which up to now was determined under the terms of the National Collective Contract signed by the Trade Union Confederation and the Employers Associations, is going to be reduced by 22%. For new workers under 25 the reduction is going to reach 32%. This is going to immediately affect around 25% of total workforce in Greece. Moreover, wage maturities (the increases in wages according to the years of workplace experience) are going to be frozen.
This reduction is also going to affect all other private sector employees covered by collective contracts and agreements. With most contracts having reached or reaching their end, with a new system of collective bargaining and mediation in place that openly favors employers, the terms of the new agreement demand that also individual terms of employment are going to change leading in most sectors to wage reductions of up to 50% (until now even when a collective agreement expired individual contracts signed under its terms could not be altered). These wage reductions are going to be devastating, taking into consideration that drastic reductions in public sector pay have already been imposed and that labor cost in Greece is already down by 25%, helped by unemployment having reached unseen before levels (the official unemployment in November exceeded 20%)
All pensions are going to be reduced by more than 15%, a reduction that is following other reductions that had been earlier imposed. Moreover, the terms of the agreement demand a new overhaul of the pension system paving the way for more reductions and raising of age limits. Pension reductions are not only going to affect the living conditions of older people but will also limit inter-generational solidarity, a crucial aspect of social cohesion in Greece.
All forms of social spending are going to be drastically cut including funds for hospitals and health coverage and social benefits. Sincehospitals are already in critical condition because of earlier cuts, this new wave of cuts is expected to lead to a dramatic deterioration of health services in a country that is already facing a deteriorating health indicators.
A new wave of privatizations is demanded, including the sale of crucial infrastructure such as airports and ports and full privatization of public utilities.
A new wave of lay-offs of public sector-employees is going to be implemented, helped by a wave of closures of public institutions, including primary and secondary education schools, university departments and agencies such as the one responsible for public housing. Moreover, terms of employment in Public Utilities (partly owned by the State) and Banks are going to change, with all provisions for secure employment eliminated, leading to another wave of mass lay-offs.

The social cost of this transformation is going to be immense. For the first time since WWII large parts of Greek society are facing the danger of extreme pauperization. And the first signs are already here: increased homelessness, soup kitchens and a new wave of people immigrating from Greece in search for employment. And things are only going to get worse as traditional forms of solidarity, mainly through family relations, can no longer cope with the situation.

It is obvious that most of these measures have little or nothing to do with dealing with increased debt. Indeed, private sector wage reductions are reducing pension contributions, leading to more deficits. What is at stake is an attempt from the part of the EU-IMF-ECB troika and the leading fractions of the Greek bourgeoisie to violently impose a social ‘regime change’ in Greece.

According to the dominant narrative the problem with Greece is a chronic lack of export competitiveness which demands a new approach based on cheap labor and doing away with any environmental restrictions, urban planning regulations and archeological protections that could discourage potential investors. It aims at turning Greece into a big Special Economic Zone for investors. What is not mentioned in this narrative is that not only the social cost is going to be tremendous but also that low labour cost competitiveness necessarily would lead to a hopeless ‘race to the bottom’, since there are always going to be countries, even in the close vicinity such as Bulgaria, with lower wages. Moreover, it is a well known fact that competitiveness does not rely only on labour cost but also on productivity and this has to do with infrastructure, knowledge, collective experience and ability, exactly what is being dramatically eroded by the current economic and social situation in Greece.

What is missing from this narrative is the crisis of the Eurozone and of the whole European Integration project. It is becoming obvious that the problem is the euro, as a common currency in a region marked by great divergences in productivity and competitiveness. The euro in a previous period functioned as a constant pressure for capitalist restructuring through competitive pressure, but at the same time it created increased imbalances, mainly to the benefit of European core countries such as Germany. In a period of capitalist crisis the euro only makes thing worse, increasing imbalances and deteriorating the sovereign debt crisis. That is why the crisis of the Eurozone is a crucial aspect of the current global capitalist crisis and one of the main failures of neoliberalism.

At the same time, the European Union is going through a reactionary and authoritarian mutation. This is the logic of the European Economic Governance, as inscribed in the proposed new fiscal Eurotreaty. According to this member-states are going to include austerity measures such as balanced budgets in their national constitutions and European Union mechanisms will have the power to intervene and impose huge fines and funding cuts whenever they think that a member-state is not prudent enough with its finances. And to this end the ‘expertise’ of the IMF in imposing austerity and privatization is also used. The prevailing logic is one of limited sovereignty and to this direction Greece is a testing ground. Already under the terms of the bail-out packages by the EU-ECB-IMF troika, there are supervision mechanisms in place in all Greek government ministries which dictate policies in an almost neo-colonial way. This is going to be the norm if the logic of European Economic Governance is imposed. That is why although the current Greek government is acting in an almost servile way towards the EU, it is only receiving humiliating blows.

European Union is rapidly becoming the most reactionary and undemocratic institution in the European continent since Nazism. Talking about a ‘democratic deficit’ is not enough. What we are dealing with is an aggressive attempt towards a post-democratic conditions, with limited sovereignty and accountability and little or no room for political debate and confrontation regarding economic policy choices, since there are to be dictated by markets through the mechanisms of EU supervision. Seeing ex-ECB central bankers becoming prime-ministers, such as Monti and Papademos, is more than symbolic.

But putting the blame only on the current aggressively neoliberal and almost neocolonial configuration of the EU is not enough. The most aggressive sectors of the Greek capital (Banks, construction, tourism, shipping industry, energy), are openly supporting this strategy. Although sectors of capital have suffered from the prolonged recession, and despite the fact that the crisis has curtailed plans for a leading role in the Balkans, the dominant fractions are investing upon austerity, workplace despotism and doing away with all forms of worker’s rights as a means to regain profitability. However, the problem with this strategy is that an increase in exports cannot possibly compensate for the shrinking of domestic demand, which can affect even dominant fractions of capital.

The Papademos government has been trying to pass the terms of this devastating austerity package by ideologically blackmailing Greek society through the threat of default and exit from the Eurozone. But the question is not if Greece is going to default but how. The measures imposed are simply leading to some form of creditor led default – they have already taken the step of a debt restructuring and “haircut” of previous debt – with society taking the full cost.

That is why Greece defaulting on its own sovereign terms, that is choosing the immediate stoppage of debt payments and of annulment of debt, is the only viable way to avoid social default. At the same time it is also necessary to immediately exit the Eurozone. Stoppage of debt payments and reclaiming monetary sovereignty will help public spending on immediate social needs and will help stop the erosion of the productive base by imports. It is not a nationalist choice, as some tendencies of the Greek and European Left have argued, but the only way to fight the systemic violence of the current policies of the EU. Moreover, it is truly internationalist in the sense of the first step towards dismantling the aggressive neoliberal monetary and political configuration of the EU, something which is obviously in the interest of the subaltern classes all over Europe.

Stoppage of payments to the debt and exiting the Euro are not simple technical solutions. They must be part of a broader set of necessary radical measures that must include nationalization of banks and critical infrastructure, capital controls and income redistribution. But even these measures are not enough, what is needed is a radical alternative economic paradigm in a non-capitalist direction, that must be based on public ownership, new forms of democratic planning and workers’ control, alternative non commercial distribution networks, and a collective effort towards regaining control of social productive capabilities.

Rethinking the possibility of such radical alternatives is not a simple intellectual exercise. It is also an urgent political exigency. Against the current ideological blackmail and the attempt by the government, the ruling classes and the EU to present extreme austerity as the only solution, what is needed is not just to say no to austerity but to bring back confidence to the possibility of alternatives. Hegemony in the last instance is about who has the ability to articulate a coherent discourse about how a country and a society is going to produce, cater for social needs, be organized and governed. The crisis of neoliberal hegemony is indeed opening up a political and ideological space for the the emergence of such a counter-hegemonic alternative, but it is not going to last for ever. Moreover, in the absence of a positive vision the ruling classes are aiming at individualized desperation and sense of defeat as a means to maintain dominance. Rebuilding people’s confidence in the possibility of alternatives requires the collective work for a radical program based upon the experiences emerging in the terrain of struggles. This is one of the most urgent challenges the Greek Left is facing.

Despite the fact that a coalition government of ‘national unity’ under Papademos was practically imposed in November the political crisis is far from over. PASOK, the Socialist party is facing its biggest crisis, the conservative New Democracy is facing increased pressure from its base not to accept the measures, the far-right exited the coalition government. 22 members of parliament from PASOK and 21 from New Democracy voted against the loan agreement and were subsequently expelled from their respective parties, marking a new phase in an open political crisis.

The extreme pressures from the Troika, with functionaries of the IMF such as Pool Thomsen acting as colonial Governors only makes things worse. Even though the agreement was passed through parliament, since the PASOK and New Democracy had a combined wide majority that could compensate for dissenting parliamentarians, the political system is being stressed to its limits. Attempts to create new political parties are under way, including an attempt towards a “Papademos” party that could gather self proclaimed all those supporting the “regime change” process in place, but they are far from gaining any momentum.

In such a conjuncture the Left is getting increased support, but at the same time is showing the limits of its strategy and program. SYRIZA (Coalition of the Radical Left) is still insisting in the fantasy of a democratic EU and refuses to bring forward demands such as the exit from the euro. KKE, the Communist Party, despite its radical anticapitalist and anti-EU positions, has sectarian tactics and underestimates the necessity for an immediate transitory program. ANTARSYA the anticapitalist Left, has played an important role in the struggles and in articulating political goals such as the annulment of debt and the exit from the euro, but does not have the necessary access to large layers of the subaltern classes. What is needed is radical recomposition of the Greek Left, both in the sense of the collective elaboration of a radical alternative that can create the possibility of counter-hegemony and of a radical Left Front that could represent the emerging new subaltern unity evident in mass demonstrations and strikes, in forms of self-organization, in networks of solidarity, in collective experiences of struggle.

Currently Greece is entering a new phase of the protracted people’s war against the policies of the EU-ECB-IMF Troika. The 48hr general strike on 10 and 11 February and the mass demonstrations and street clashes on 12 February have become the new turning points in the struggle. The ‘people’s war’ is far from over. Facing the danger of an extreme historical backwardness, we refuse to despair. We insist on the ‘windows of opportunity’ for social change the current situation opens. We shall fight to the end.

20 responses to “Greece: From despair to resistance

  1. What is happening to you in Greece, is a test, from the “real powerpeople”, to see: are we strong enough to supres the people, they have used years in prepearing this, hidden under the agenda: “fighting teorrism”, almost a joke: “for your securety”.
    Belive me , it is going to happend to us all in EU.
    Educate yourself, seek alternative information:
    http://torrentchannel.com/
    http://www.dailypaul.com/
    http://concen.org/tracker/index.php (here you need to be member)
    http://www.infowars.com/ here you will find links to other sites

    Good luck in the fight, my greek brothers

    WE HAVE TO FIGHT ACTA, or they take the possibilty of getting this kind of inf. away from us.

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  3. Do you folks really think burning down your own country is a reasonable form of “resistance”? Not a single word of criticism on the irresponsible arsonists yet? Looks like you endorse that terrorism…

    • dear Gray,
      there is a slogan that radicals usually shout during demos: “you talk about profits and damages, we talk about human lives”… I think this directs attention to the right point
      the vast majority of the social movement does not endorse violence, but try to explain that to an unemployed youngster with no prospects for a better future…
      social violence “from below” is a social phenomenon which is directly analogous to the dominant violence “from above” – that of the neoliberals and the troika

      • “the vast majority of the social movement does not endorse violence”
        I would like to believe that, but where’s the evidence? The tens of thousands of nonviolent demonstrators apparently didn’t do anything to stop the hoodlums, at least I didn’t find any mention of that. The unions that organized the protest didn’t strongly condemn the rioters (and with the thousands of their members present, they certainly could have done something to stop the arsonists). And where’s the story, or even a paragraph, that opposes this madness and calls the offenders criminals here, at Greek Left Review? Not even in comments to be found. Instead, you even come up with excuses for them, kod!

        No, sorry, but this kind of false tolerance is basically the same as an endorsement. If you don’t show strong opposition to this molotov cocktail craze, you encourage the terrorists. Yes, that’s what they are, they use dangerous weapons as a mean to express their protests, with a shocking disregard to the disproportional damage they are inflicting and to the very real danger to life and health of other humans. Let’s not forget that already people have died, in the arson of the bank last year! Or that the dangerous RAF terrorists in Germany once started their “carreer” in the same way, by blowing up department stores.

        No, enough already, no tolerance for terrorists, never! As left wingers, we should be extra outspoken against violence in political conflicts, because that’s much more typical for the right wing, the nazis, fascists, kluxers and thug squads of right wing governments alll around the world and at all times of history (right now we see them reemerge in Hungary, of all nations!). We should be different, pursue our goals with creativity and commitment instead of terror, and not sink to the right wingers’ lousy ethics. And that’s in our own best interests, because we know from history that such riots will always be exploited by right wing hardliners as leverage to limit freedom of speech and to move towards a polic state (see Samaras’ recent statements as an example). So, NO to arsons and all kinds of terrorism! Let’s say that loud and clear.

      • all who seek info knows: earlier “secret” documents, that are now released (you can even find and read them with google) that far the most “terrorisme” was created by div. goverments agencies.
        On top of that: there are 1000’s of proven cases of disquised goverment paid people, doing these things, smashing thing, burning of things, to be able to say: “we have to stop these terrorists”

        Right now we have a situation: Israel claims that Iranien terrorists have bombed an Israeli ambassedor in India, and placed another bomb at the Israeli embasy”. How convinient, now that we all know that Israel and the west, are just looking for an excuse to take Iranien Oil.
        Well, if you belive that we took Iraq, because we wanted to help the people, and create democrasy, I proberly can say nothing to make you change your mind.

      • Reading this again, I may have reacted a bit too harshly on your explanations for the riots, kod. But please understand that this violence discredits the protests and only serves the right wing interests. So, while we more reasonable folks of course have to analyze what’s drving the youth to violence, we also have to make a determined stand against such terrorism and point out why it’s wrong, wrong, wrong. Showing any tolerance for this would be the wrong signal and dangerously backfire. We shouldn’t put any oil into the fires, but instead do our best to prevent further damage. Ok?

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  7. @Gray Not a singe word of address in your condescending lecture from afar (Britain? US? Boy, look at yourself in the mirror first) of the real issues raised in the article.

    Do YOU think burning things is the “real issue”? How about the anti-democratic capitalist dictatorship imposed upon Greece? Isn’t that the real issue?

    • Germany. And I have regularly adressed the politcal and social issues in other comments here. Even if i hadn’t done that, who are you to try to police me about what I’m allowed or forbidden to address in comments here?

      Apart from that, there is no “anti-capitalist dictatorship” in Greece right now, thank the lord. It’s a parliamentary democracy, with all the pros and cons of such a system. Still much better than the “reformed” “democracy” of Hungary now. However, if the arsons in Greece continue, this dangerously increases the risk that this will lead to the military declaring a state of emergency and taking matters in their hands again. The next Junta may be jsut around the corner!

      Btw, what would you say if it was uncovered that the arsonists are actually right wing hoodlums which try to discredit the left wing protests? Such stuff has happened before! If we falsely tolerate the arsons, by refusing to take a clear stand against this terrorism, we may fall into a trap and work into the hands of our politcal enemies. !No pasaran!

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