First in a decade: Yellow Vests end French austerity, finally

Ramin Mazaheri for The Saker Blog



One thing is certain: the Yellow Vests have shown that persistence and bravery counts a lot in any fight.  Because the mainstream media is anti-Yellow Vest and pro-austerity, very few seem to have registered what the Yellow Vests have achieved. Given these reminders, we should ask in 2019: How many millions and millions of people have marched in France in the past nine years to end austerity, either openly or indirectly?

The Yellow Vests forced the French government to not present an austerity-laden annual budget for the first time in a decade. You should be saying, “Wow, that is a historic achievement.”

Please be clear: this is joyous, uplifting, pro-democracy, once-in-a-decade good news! An end to austerity is why France elected Francois Hollande in 2012, whose slogan was, “The change is now” – the “change” was away from far-right, neoliberal austerity.

The entire history of austerity is pretty pathetic, and I have covered it daily from the beginning:

It was first a screaming conservative-capitalist reaction to the huge plunge in global economic growth. When the hysteria wore off and some sort of logical, verbal explanation became required, they decided it was necessary to appease the “confidence fairy” of investors. When people tired of belt-tightening to avoid giving financial speculators a bit of indigestion, it became necessary in order to appease Brussels’ totally arbitrary “3% fiscal deficit rule”. And then…people just stopped talking about it altogether, as I wrote. Austerity went on so long it was just viewed as unstoppable and vitally necessary – the idea of a spending program instead of spending cuts stopped being discussed after Marine Le Pen lost the presidential election. Emmanuel Macron’s first budget was the 2nd-harshest in postwar French history.

They all failed – the Yellow Vests did not.

Furthermore, anyone who thought the Yellow Vests are useless have been proven totally wrong. The Yellow Vests have proven themselves to be more powerful than any other group – unions, NGOs, political parties, and also even Brussels, central bankers, the investor class, the mainstream media – because the French government ultimately bowed to the demands of the Yellow Vest demands and not those other groups.

The French government openly said that that a full decade of budget austerity was not possible in the context of massive social protest. No Yellow Vests? Tenth year of austerity, no doubt about it. Far-right Le Figaro’s headline read, “A 2020 budget to not wake up the Yellow Vests.” Make no mistake: the government did not derail budget austerity because they finally listened to the Yellow Vests, but because they fear them.

So… voila. The Yellow Vests ARE good, ARE effective, ARE anti-capitalist (at least neoliberal capitalism), and the previous 10+ months of repression have NOT been ineffective, 10+ months of sacrifices and risk have NOT been wasted, 10+ months of anti-mainstream democratic involvement have NOT gone unnoticed and unheeded.

Austerity: same as it ever was… only effective at increasing inequality

To remind those who may need a concise refresher of what budget austerity is…

Budget austerity has three primary components: increased taxes on individuals and households, cuts to government services and decreased taxes on the wealthy and corporations. The goals are, in associated order: to weigh people down with so much debt as to make them fearful & compliant workers & citizens; to achieve the neoliberal/libertarian goal of reducing the government as much as possible, as only the government can provide socio-economic constraints on the 1%; to create profits for the 1%, which are going to “trickle down” at some unknown time (this hype – not hope – has been going on since Ronald Reagan).

What is the problem with austerity?

Well, morally (to take an economic tack never conceived in the West and in non-socialist inspired economies), taxing the poor to feed the rich is simply wrong.

However, putting morality aside, economic austerity is a guaranteed recipe for low growth and especially in the context of a global slowdown. Thus, it is ineffective, wasteful and increases lasting socioeconomic inequalities.

Since Lehman Brothers in 2007 there has been a global economic slowdown, but for some unknown reason I seem to be the only reporter who has talked about the undeniable, factual “Lost Decade” in the Eurozone (2008-17). Annual economic growth averaged 0.6% during this era, a rate worse than either of Japan’s two recent Lost Decades; it’s also 3.5 times less than the global average of 2.1% over this timeframe. Thus, the idea that austerity has been a total failure cannot be denied no matter where your ideas lay on the economic spectrum

We are now widely expecting not just a global economic slowdown but a global economic recession. The blame is absurdly laid at the feet of China – for daring to grow at 7% instead of 8% – when the obvious culprit is the enormous stagnant backwater that is Europe. They remain the weakest link in the global macro-economy […]
Source: First in a decade: Yellow Vests end French austerity, finally

5 thoughts on “First in a decade: Yellow Vests end French austerity, finally

  1. It’s a good article, Dr. Bramhall, but ironically, anything that can slow down the rate of so-called economic growth is a good thing considering the very serious “side effects” of unchecked economic growth. In the 70’s our environmental groups and speakers called such growth a cancer on the planet certain to lead to serious consequences. I think it safe to say now that they have. Why should we still push for more economic growth? Don’t we know by now such a concept is cancerous as well as unsustainable in a finite environment? Are we certifiable? Is that a rhetorical question?

    Like

  2. Pingback: First in a decade: Yellow Vests end French austerity, finally | Worldtruth

  3. Sha’Tara, I agree totally that we need to end economic growth and return to a steady state economy. However I also believe this winding down needs to be carefully planned. At the moment deflation (or growth decline) in an industrialized economy means that the most vulnerable lose their jobs and (in most cases) face homelessness and hunger. At present those without employment have no way to provide for themselves and their families.

    Like

    • We are living in a nightmarish unsustainable and planet destroying system. People could have made a difference long ago had they wanted to put in the effort. Now, in my estimation of historical trends and current events I am convinced that any and all efforts at putting a check on the system are wasted. We’ve gone from empire implosion to global civilization implosion due to madly driven global “economics” that guaranteed that when one major entity collapses the entire house of cards would come down. The desire for change, even among those who have the most to lose if none is made, doesn’t exist. Greta Thunberg is being increasingly vilified and mocked, and that says much of the global mindset. So people will, as always, suffer through the death of a system the insist on trusting and supporting. Their choice for not thinking seriously about the ultimate consequences. I know what comes next and it is horrible to even think about: billions will die, of famine, of disease, of war, of genocide, of drugs and of suicide. Literally billions. Many of us alive today will not live out this life to see the worst of it but when we leave we will already know the inevitable is in play. I do not wish to engage myself any longer to prolong the agony of the patriarchy and its chosen system of oppression called predatory capitalism so I choose instead to observe and comment while keeping a cool head and a hand ready to help my neighbours. I’ve shrunk my social involvement to a few square miles of land and water beyond which only chaos and madness exists. I learned two things over the long years: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. If it can’t be fixed, don’t bother trying.” This can’t be fixed no matter how much duct tape, WD40 or king sized band aids are used.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Pingback: First in a decade: Yellow Vests end French austerity, finally — The Most Revolutionary Act – Blog of Staś

Leave a reply to Sha'Tara Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.