- InformationRio+20 gives the opportunity to produce new proposals to conceive and organize the transition towards sustainable societies. This section will try systematically to gather them progressively during the process.
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November 28 2011
Beating poverty
Details of the Proposal
ContextSHAKING EUROPE: EUROPE’S MAIN FOCUS MUST ALWAYS BE ON PEOPLE! HAS THE EUROPEAN UNION LOST ITS WAY?
Lost up a blind alley governed by liberal economics, our social and united Europe is clearly struggling to gain traction. The European social model was to be “based on a high level of social protection, education and social dialogue […] a balance between economic prosperity and social justice” (Barcelona European Council, 2002).
Nowadays this model amounts to little more than a few cautious concessions made by inward-looking Member States. Or a collection of odds and ends supposedly intended to soften the blow of the crisis. Meanwhile government budgets are rapidly shrinking, social protection systems and intergenerational solidarity are being dismantled, the labour market is becoming insecure and so on.
The liberal globalisation model has failed to take into account the interests of citizens, and has not lived up to its economic promise. The result of all this is no social justice and no economic prosperity… It is high time we took another path, leading to a Europe in the service of its citizens!
Many different local, citizen and/or social and solidarity economy initiatives are being launched. But they are not well known and tend to have little collective impact, especially at European level. Such initiatives are readily recognised in their local area when they reduce the social inequality that public authorities are unable to manage. But they struggle to make their voices heard on their own proposals for alternative models for global governance.
The Charles Léopold Mayer Foundation for the Progress of Humankind, the European Movement International, and the Institut des Hautes Etudes des Communications Sociales decided to give these initiatives a platform, in the thematic proposal papers!
Esther Durin – IHECS
COMBATING POVERTY SHOULD NOT BE THE FIFTH WHEEL ON THE EUROPEAN CART! IS THIS CURTAINS?
Last year was 2010, the European year for combating poverty. But is the party over, now that it’s 2011? Do we turn off all the party lights? Do we lock the doors to the hall and move on to something else? Do we bring the curtains down?
The answer of course is no. Because nobody seriously imagined that the 2010 European year (whose activities were coordinated by the European Commission) would lead to almost miraculous structural changes in such a short space of time. A European year is designed to raise awareness, alert people and kick‐start action. Moreover the report on the ‘2010’ actions, at European level and in the Member States has still to be fine-tuned, with the necessary hindsight. Only when that is done will it be possible to measure the true impact of this ‘awareness‐raising’ on combating poverty over the twelve months.
Yet even before this report is delivered, it is clear that the 2010 European year has not changed the face of the world. Worse still, as far as European citizens are concerned, 2010 will have been an ‘annus horribilis’ from the viewpoints of social and daily living standards.
2010, AN ANNUS HORRIBILIS
In 2009, the EU Member States were hit hard, in a sort of domino effect, by the global banking crisis – the world’s most serious financial crisis since 1929. Europe soon felt the initial impacts. People’s savings held as shares, often accumulated by small savers over a lifetime, just melted away. Low‐income households found it increasingly hard to get loans. Credit was now being offered sparingly to small and micro‐enterprises, with the result that many of them became paralysed. And this despite the fact that small and micro‐enterprises are the greatest source of new jobs in Europe.
The Member States themselves stepped in to rescue the banking sector from bankrupcy by injecting huge financial aid. But they did little to ensure that this sector would not in future dabble again in similar speculative activities, which are harmful to the public interest. Member States loosened their purse strings, calling on taxes raised from their citizens. In 2010, due to a fall in consumption and the reduced ability of both individuals and small businesses to make investments, Member States also had to come to terms with the fact that they now had less revenue.
AN UNTENABLE SITUATION
Higher expenditure. Lower revenue. The situation is now untenable. In 2010, the ‘markets’ – in other words, the operators holding claims on State debts, the operators who oddly enough are often banking establishments that have benefited from subtantial financial gifts from the Member States – began to panic and speculate on those States in the most trouble. The markets imposed drastic increases in reimbursement rates, thus driving a number of the Member States (including Greece, Ireland and Portugal) to the brink of bankruptcy.
The euro is in danger. It can and must be saved. But the euro‐zone’s strongest Member States, led by Germany, are laying down their conditions. EU Member States close to bankruptcy, as well as all the European States, must be obliged to implement draconian public spending reduction plans.
IS THE PATH WE ARE TAKING JUST A BLIND ALLEY?
One way to rebalance the books would be to increase the tax base for some revenue. This could be done by raising a tax on financial transactions (the Tobin tax) or by harmonising at European level the taxation of business profits. Some military expenditure could for example also be reduced. Another option would be to invest massively in major projects that generate jobs, social welfare and well‐being in general – especially in education, culture, the environment, health, assistance for elderly people, support for young job‐seekers, and so on.
Yet that is not the path taken by the heads of State and government. Instead, it is tantamount to walking a path of forced austerity as well as to aggressive cuts in public spending in the social field. Only one thing can be taken for granted in future: these policies will lead to increasing social exclusion in every European nation. That is the key conclusion to be drawn for the year 2010. And the outlook for 2011 is just the same.
THE END OF THE WELFARE STATE, THE END OF A COMPROMISE
These ‘social engineering’ efforts would only be a lesser evil if they led to a sustainable recovery of social cohesion systems for the future, and if the current situation in terms of poverty and exclusion was not as serious as it looks today.
Since World War Two, there have been several phases in the Europe formerly known as the European Economic Community (EEC) and now the European Union (EU). Firstly, from 1945 to 1975, there was a 30‐year period of strong economic growth. Even if these years failed to produce evenly divided wealth, they did bring linear social progress for the most disadvantaged people.
Welfare States kept a close eye on developments, balancing the mechanism of the market economy with the mechanics of regulating the economy. They also called on strong systems aimed at reducing disparities, i.e. progressive direct income taxes, and social security.
Metro stations in cities were again filled with beggars. Workers laboured hard for small reward. But at least there was plenty of work available, allowing people to escape from abject poverty. Moreover, there was a working system of social mobility. Those able to follow higher education courses stood a good chance of improving their lives.
Then came the global oil crisis and a paradigm shift in the late 1970s. Growth collapsed. National debts has to be dealt with and the first reductions in social spending were made.
STANDING ON ONE’S OWN TWO FEET: AN IMPOSSIBLE GOAL?
The 1980s brought little improvement. Those without jobs increasingly became ‘long‐term’ unemployed. People excluded from society found it harder than ever to stand on their own two feet. Completed in 1992, the European Single Market was supposed to solve the problem by increasing employment; it was hoped that this would get social progress back on track. Disparity between the Member States certainly decreased. But notwithstanding the positive impact of the European Structural Funds, ‘free and fair’ competition could not prevent a large wealth gap developing between Europe’s regions.
Meanwhile, poverty is on the increase and not only in terms of the number of people who lack the standard of living considered necessary. Poverty is also affecting more categories of people, including young people (for the first time, they know they will have a tougher life than their parents), workers (who were formerly protected), elderly people (whose retirement pensions are gradually dwindling), and just recently even some of the middle classes.
We are seeing a dual phenomenon. Growing segments of the population lack job security, are faced with poverty and at risk of falling more easily off the top of the ladder. Meanwhile, those who have already fallen and are experiencing poverty find it increasingly tough to climb back up the slope.
GOOD INTENTIONS
So what solutions does the European Union propose, besides its current initiative of strict financial management, and cuts in public and social spending? In March 2010, Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, unveiled his proposal for a European strategy for the 2010‐2020 period, ‘A strategy for a smart, sustainable and inclusive growth’.
One of the five targets announced in this strategy is that 20 million fewer people should be at risk of poverty or social exclusion in the European Union. This sounds impressive, but how will these good intentions be put into practice?
CONCRETE ALTERNATIVES
The Foundation for the Progress of Humankind (FPH) is not a ‘lobby’ or a federation of organisations. It does not represent anyone or in particular any party. Its goal is to support, though the limited financial ressources it can mobilise, those who back initiatives. It also supports flagship schemes working for sustainable development, social cohesion, and fostering active citizenship.
In 2008, the FPH introduced a ‘Europe unit’, highlighting its faith in the feasibility of a democratic and citizens’ Europe. People want union and integration. But this necessary integration cannot be achieved without cohesion and social progress. Put another way, social progress is an integral part of the European project. Without the social component, Europe’s very foundations are threatened.
Proposals and abstracts
BEATING POVERTY…
Hands‐on organisations offer the European Parliament FIVE proposals, FIVE levers to shake things up… They propose:
- 1. The Portuguese association ‘In Loco’: TO boost disadvantagedregions, an integrated Community Initiative Programme SHOULDBE set up from 2013.
- 2. The French association ‘Habicoop’: TO improve access to housing, a European tax exemption SHOULD BE created for peopleliving in cooperatives.
- 3. The Belgian association ‘Dynamo International’: TO offer betterhelp to vulnerable young people, a European status SHOULD BEcreated for ‘street workers’.
- 4. The French association ‘Les Pactes Locaux’: TO combatpoverty, social innovation SHOULD BE included at the heart of the Structural Funds 2014‐2020.
- 5. The Romanian foundation ‘Tiabari’: TO tackle health inequalities in rural areas, primary health care SHOULD BE built into a ‘universal service’.
Regions
Europe
Themes
Economic Globalization ◾ Economy and the organization of society ◾ Public finances ◾ Social cohesion ◾ Social economy ◾ Territories and local governance ◾ Work and employment
Joined documents