04) WORKING PEOPLE
DIDN'T
CAUSE THE CRISIS
(The
following
article is from the March 16-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
source is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low
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Central Executive Committee, Communist Party of Canada
Maybe you work in the Alberta oil
patch, or an auto plant in southern Ontario, or a call centre in New
Brunswick. You could be a forestry worker, a bank teller, or a
university teaching assistant. Wherever you live, your future is on the
line as the global economic crisis sweeps across Canada, and layoffs
and shutdowns spread like a wildfire. You could already be one of the
1.3 million Canadians "officially" unemployed, or one of the millions
who survive on part‑time, temporary, low wage jobs. Perhaps you are
among the two‑thirds of jobless workers who aren't eligible to collect
benefits from the EI fund built up from your pay deductions.
And the
crisis is just
beginning. At least 50 million workers will lose their jobs across the
world this year. Production has dropped by up to fifty percent in some
countries, and food shortages are spreading. A real global economic
recovery could be years away. Who created this mess? Who should pay for
the crisis? What policies can help working people instead of the rich?
So who's responsible?
It would be
easy to pin the
blame for the economic meltdown on a few greedy individuals. It's true
that a handful of global billionaires and gigantic transnational
corporations have artificially inflated and manipulated the values of
real estate, high tech, stocks, commodities, even national currencies.
"Bubble capitalism" has reaped enormous fortunes for the ultra‑rich,
while billions of working people and the poor ended up deeper in debt.
The
neoliberal policies of
right‑wing governments made matters worse, through privatization,
deregulation, tax cuts for the rich, and social program cuts. They
claimed these neoliberal policies would increase everyone's wealth.
Instead, the gap between the rich and working people has widened to
staggering proportions, and labour and democratic rights are under
increasing attack.
Capitalism
always heads towards
crises. Individual capitalists and corporations, competing for higher
profits, seek to maximize their return on investment by cutting labour
costs; this process always cuts spending power, leaving working people
without the necessary income to purchase the goods and service we
produce. Throughout history, this cycle results in frequent economic
crashes, followed by recoveries. Every time, workers pay the price,
while the bosses end up getting richer.
Are we really in the same boat?
We are told
that "everyone's in
the same boat" during this economic depression. Maybe if it's the
Titanic - the wealthy have plenty of lifeboats while most of us are
locked below decks. In Canada, as in most countries, the first response
by pro‑capitalist governments was to "bail out" corporations facing
financial ruin - the same corporations which reaped record profits for
years, at the expense of taxpayers and workers. While millions of
working people lose their jobs, homes, and pensions, fat cat CEOs still
get huge bonuses and bloated salaries. The Tory budget introduced in
late January hands billions of dollars to corporate shareholders, while
most working people laid off by these companies can't even collect EI.
Same boat, all right!
What should be done?
Instead of
making workers pay
for the crisis through wage cuts and unemployment, those who have
enjoyed billions in profits must pay. We need to unite and fight for an
emergency program to protect jobs and incomes for working people, and
put Canada back to work. Such an anti‑crisis plan should include
measures to:
* expand EI to cover all workers for
the full duration of unemployment, with benefits at 90% of former
earnings;
* protect and expand manufacturing
industries on the basis of a comprehensive industrial policy, and
introduce plant closure legislation;
* place a moratorium on evictions and
mortgage foreclosures and utility cut‑offs due to unemployment;
* increase the minimum wage to
$15/hr. and take other steps to raise incomes and stimulate domestic
consumption;
* take emergency action to improve
the social and economic conditions of Aboriginal peoples;
* invest in a massive public
construction program to build affordable social housing, rebuild
Canada's infrastructure, and protect the environment;
* shift the tax burden from working
people onto the corporations and the wealthy;
* protect universal public
healthcare, education and other social programs, including a publicly
administered system of quality, affordable childcare with Canada‑wide
standards; and
* immediately withdraw from the
disastrous war of occupation in Afghanistan and cut military spending
by 50%.
These
immediate anti‑crisis measures should be strengthened by more
transformative steps, including:
* nationalize the big banks,
insurance and other financial institutions and place them under public,
democratic control;
* nationalize the energy industry to
guarantee domestic supply and to provide the material basis to rebuild
Canadian industry and create hundreds of thousands of jobs, especially
in renewable energy and mass transit;
* place the "Big Three" automakers
under public ownership and democratic control, and build a reliable,
fuel‑efficient Canadian car;
* immediately withdraw from NAFTA,
and adopt a diversified, multilateral trade policy based on mutual
benefit; and
* introduce a liveable, guaranteed
annual income (GAI), and a shorter work week with no loss in take‑home
pay.
Such a plan
would move our
country in a fundamentally new direction, by placing the needs of
working people and our environment before corporate greed, establishing
a foreign policy based on peace and disarmament, and reversing the
erosion of our sovereignty.
How can we achieve these goals?
We can't
move in this direction
by meekly accepting pay cuts and job losses - that's the lesson from
the last "great depression". We need a massive campaign to block the
Tory‑corporate attack and to demand pro‑people alternatives. Instead of
summit meetings with corporate leaders, we need people's summits,
bringing together the organized labour movement, Aboriginal peoples,
youth and students, women, farmers, seniors and all democratic forces
engaged in the struggle for peace, the environment, and equity rights,
to unite and fight back at this crucial moment.
We need to
build a real People's
Coalition, in the streets and communities and at the electoral level,
to curb the power of the corporations and resolve the crisis in the
interests of working people.
The
Communist Party of Canada,
the party that led the crucial working class struggles during the
"Dirty 30s", pledges to do everything in our power to help build such
struggles. We urge you to take up these issues in your unions, your
workplaces and schools, your communities. If you agree with our
proposals, contact us today. Join and build the party that combines
today's urgent fightback with the vision of a socialist future, one in
which unemployment, hunger, exploitation, oppression, war and
environmental degradation will be ended forever!
These figures don't lie!
* The richest 10% of Canadian
families with children earn over 80 times more than the poorest 10% of
families, who earn less than $10,000 per year on average.
* Canadian households used to save
about 20% of their after‑tax income. Today, the savings rate averages
zero, and personal debt is at an all‑time high.
* About 2.2 million Canadian workers
(16% of the total, including 19% of women workers and 12% of men) had
jobs in 2005 that paid less than $10 an hour. Thirteen per cent of all
jobs in Canada pay less than $8 an hour.
* Corporate profits as a percent of
GDP rose from less than 5% in 1992 to historic highs of over 14% by
2005, and remain at this record level.
* Total annual operating profits of
corporations in Canada rose from $40 billion in 1992, hitting the $100
billion mark by 1997, $150 billion by 2003, and up to $216 billion in
2008.
* Corporate taxes as a percentage of
total profits have fallen from the 35‑40% range during the late 1980s,
down to less than 25% in recent years.
* After adjustments for inflation,
wages for full‑time Canadian workers were virtually stagnant from 1992
to 2005, at about $730 per week.
* Workers' share in the overall
"economic pie" has declined sharply, from 68% in 1992 to 61% by 2005.
Meanwhile, the share going to profits rose from 22% up to 33%.
(Data from
Statistics Canada and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives)