Thousands Protest Irish Nightmare Economy
Over the weekend in
Ireland, thousands of people demonstrated against austerity measures and
against bearing the burden of the Irish crisis. Just how did the Irish
miracle turn into the Irish nightmare? Now joining us from Toronto is
Leo Panitch. He's a distinguished research professor at York University,
teaches political science there, and he's the author of the book In and Out of Crisis: The Global Financial Meltdown and Left Alternatives.
Leo Panitch
is the Canada Research Chair in Comparative Political Economy and a
Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science at York University
in Toronto. Panitch is also the author of "Global Capitalism and
American Empire" and his most recent release "American Empire and the
Political Economy of International Finance".
PAUL JAY, SENIOR
EDITOR TRNN: Welcome back to The Real News Network. Over the weekend in
Ireland, thousands of people demonstrated against austerity measures and
against bearing the burden of the Irish crisis. Just how did the Irish
miracle turn into the Irish nightmare? Now joining us from Toronto is
Leo Panitch. He's a distinguished research professor at York University,
teaches political science there, and he's the author of the book In and Out of Crisis: The Global Financial Meltdown and Left Alternatives. Thanks for joining us again, Leo.
LEO PANITCH, PROF. POLITICAL SCIENCE, YORK UNIVERSITY: Hi, Paul.JAY:
So, in your view, how do we get from this miracle economy of Ireland
with so low unemployment, and apparently a booming middle class, to
bust?PANITCH: Well, we got to it via the bust of the
financial sector that Ireland certainly didn't cause. It was very much a
American-made crisis. But insofar as a good part of the Irish boom
involved Irish Banks borrowing short in order to lend long to their
property boom, and to some extent to lend to foreign investors who were
creating jobs, a lot of them American companies but borrowing from Irish
Banks, the result of that when the financial boom ended in the United
States was that the knock-on effect meant that Irish banks were
virtually bankrupt. And one of the first places on the face of the earth
that that was felt apart from Iceland was Ireland, and the Irish
government immediately guaranteed all bank deposits. And insofar as they
did so, they socialized, took onto the public shoulders the private
debt of the banks. And you see the consequences.JAY: So
people are saying what happened is the banks bet, helped create a real
estate bubble in Ireland. They bet on it, they lost the bets, and now
the Irish people are being asked to bail them out. Is that a fair
[inaudible] PANITCH: Yeah. And, you know, Ireland didn't
have a large public sector deficit, but it now does by virtue of having
taken on the burden of the private sector banking deficit. And the
result of that is what you see with the Irish debt, the Irish fiscal
debt, not being willing--the banking sectors, especially in Europe, who
provided most of this lending, not being willing to, as I said before,
roll over that debt, not being willing to, in other words, lend any more
when Irish bonds come due.JAY: Paul Krugman wrote a piece
recently where he compares what happened in Ireland to Iceland, where
he said Iceland took a different approach towards a somewhat similar
situation. What do you make of that?PANITCH: Yeah. They
tried to make the Dutch and the British bear some of the burden and came
under a lot of pressure from the Dutch and the British for this and had
to compromise somewhat, but they did spread it around a little. But you
shouldn't think that the Icelandic people [inaudible] to carry most of
that burden they have. Now, I must say, this is now a larger situation.
And when the Germans, who always do this, since they never want to take
responsibility for this themselves, it always falls more on the American
state to organize the bailout. The Germans said that in the future,
beginning in 2013, the banks ought to be taking some of the haircut
themselves, rather than have the EU states lend--or the IMF for the
Americans--lend the Irish state the money, provided they engage in this
terrible austerity program. And as soon as the German banks heard that,
and not only the German banks, they all the more wouldn't lend money to
Ireland, because they didn't want to be caught holding Irish debt if
they were going to be the ones who would have to take any of the haircut
for this.JAY: So first the banks get saved by the Irish
state, and then they beat the hell out of the Irish state 'cause they
may not be able to pay off the debt the Irish state took on to save
them.PANITCH: That's the situation, and there's nothing new about this.JAY: Brilliant system. So what are Irish people demanding? What do you think they should be? What's the alternative for Ireland?PANITCH:
You know, the austerity program involves raising the sales tax--the
value added tax, as it's called there--to 23 percent (look at the
hysteria here in Canada when we have a combined sales tax of 15
percent), that at a time when corporate taxes in Ireland are famously at
12 percent and it is being pledged that they will not be raised. And I
might point out that the American corporations that have been the
largest investors in Ireland in terms of manufacturing investment and
exports from Ireland are threatening they'll pull out unless this 12
percent corporate tax is maintained. So you see the enormous class
inequity that's built into this, the enormous demonstrations that have
taken place in Ireland. And they're not new. They occurred last year
when austerity measures were introduced as well, and being led by a
very, very moderate corporatist trade union leadership, which doesn't
want to engage in any class mobilization--less radical than the AFL-CIO,
but they're being forced into undertaking these demonstrations by
virtue of the anger of the people. They're not demanding nearly enough.
It's a very, very defensive set of demands they're engaged in. As I've
argued before, the only real solution here is for Ireland to lead the
way by defaulting on the debt, to do what Argentina did at the beginning
of this century. But that will mean, and I hope it will mean, a much
more radical set of responses in Europe, not only in Spain and Portugal
and Greece, but much more broadly, whereby people are given a lead in
terms of not just socializing the private banks' bad debts but actually
nationalizing the banking system and turning it into a public utility.
It'll mean breaking up the European Union, but reconstructing it on a
basis of democratic and cooperative economic planning, where the money,
our money that passes through the banking system, the people's money, is
actually allocated in a democratic way. That--we have had a banker's
Europe, a Europe based on free capital flows. It is inevitably one that
was highly volatile, inevitably producing one crisis after another. And
Ireland is facing the brunt of it at the moment. Greece faced it a few
months ago. Portugal's [inaudible] to face it at all.JAY:
But what do you make of the argument that the reason these countries are
in difficulty is 'cause there's too much entitlement programs, the
pension age is too low, unemployment insurance is too high, and so on?PANITCH:
I think it's ludicrous. This isn't the problem. The problem is not that
Irish workers are too well off. The problem is the enormous wealth
inequality, and above all inequality in power, and irrational investment
that has gone on in these countries. And it will mean, if people are
going to try to maintain something like the civilization that we've
known, it'll mean redefining what our standard of living is. It will
mean that we will not be able to engage in the kind of individual
consumption, and have to turn to the kind of collective services that
would be so rational and so needed--much more, much more extensive
public transit and freer public transit, rather than private transit
through automobiles that reproduces the ecological crisis and worsens
it. But the answer is not that, you know, the Irish working class (give
me a break) is so well off and wealthy, much less the Greek one. Now,
it's true that many of these states are corrupt and are indeed the kinds
of states that are built on clientalism. The type of democracies we've
had there, the types of capitalist democracies we've had there, have
involved bribing people, bribing people to--through agreeing to let them
not pay as much taxes or any taxes, through giving them kickbacks, etc.JAY: And you're using the public sector to make politicians rich.PANITCH:
Yes, and engaging in the type of relationships between politicians and
capitalists that are indeed very, very unsavory, which involve, if not
corruption, certainly scratching your back if you scratch mine. So
there's no sense pretending that these have been, you know, wonderful
democratic societies. And when one's calling for a different kind of
economy, one needs to call for a different kind of state.JAY: Thanks very much for joining us, Leo.PANITCH: Good to talk to you, Paul.JAY: Thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.
End of Transcript
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