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As a newcomer here I had no idea you're work has been published by Le Monde (are you John Evans?) and I now have a much better take on where you are coming from.  I think the argument you make - in your previous pieces - is sustainable and shows up the ideological nature of much of the "reform" discourse, and in particular, the degree to which it seeks to cover up the extremely unequal nature of recent growth in "free market" economies.  As the UN HDI figures indicate, the "social market" model has been at least as successful in absolute terms, and more so in relative internal terms.

That is not to say, however, that France's "dirigiste" model doesn't require some adjustment to be as successful in the future, particularly in the context of globalisation, European integration, and the seemingly widening disconnect (or class division) between state functionnaires and the majority of French citizens who do not enjoy the same level of acquired rights.

It is interesting that the very people who could be targeted by Sarkozy "reform" of retirement ages (the older age groups) also supported him disproportionately.  Perhaps many actually want the choice/option to work.  Perhaps they are just worried that their benefits will be diluted by the sheer scale of the expansion of the retired population (the I'm safely retired syndrome - but that doesn't mean I want everyone after me to share the same benefits!).

Index of Frank's Diaries

by Frank Schnittger (mail Frankschnittger at hot dotty communists) on Sat Dec 1st, 2007 at 02:05:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]

the seemingly widening disconnect (or class division) between state functionnaires and the majority of French citizens who do not enjoy the same level of acquired rights.

You mean, the fact that functionnaires have not seen their wages increase in the past 5-6 years, as opposed to private sector workers? The fact that their wage levels, for equal education levels, are significantly below that of the private sector (and look good overall only because of the large proportion of teachers, which are better paid than the average, but much less paid than the average university graduate is).

And, of course, the way to breach the supposed 'disconnect' is to take away rights for those that have them, rather than give the same to the others?

Sarkozy got is majority with the above -65s, ie people that will never be impacted by his supposed "reforms." And he was elected because he played the Le Pen immigrant-bashing card shamelessly, with the results we see today. He was ministry of the interior for most of the past 5 years under Chirac, and he was the n°2 of these governments - he is fully responsible for what's been happening lately in the cités, and the rise of crime that he's been riding on. But nobody cares to point that out.

In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes

by Jerome a Paris (etg@eurotrib.com) on Sun Dec 2nd, 2007 at 05:00:56 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Although I think the retirement at 60 rule should be loosened, I don't think for a minute that the over-65s who voted for Sarkozy were hoping to be able to go back to work! Sorry, that betrays an understanding shaped by the English-language media which systematically ignore Sarko's authoritarian hard-right populist side to concentrate on "Sarko the American" (no one in France calls him that) and the "Is he the French Thatcher? (that we know France so desperately needs to fix its dying economy)".

Similarly, the perception that the difference in treatment between public sector (20%) and private-sector (80%) workers poses a vital problem that needs to be tackled as a priority, has been fostered by the media (in French too). It's in fact a handy angle of attack for Sarko because it's easy to be confrontational about, and to get public opinion riled up about. So, he has repeated the mantra that he will not give in over the change from 37.5 years of pension contributions to 40 (private sector and most public sector). Of course, most people don't disagree. But the point for him is not to settle a problem (concerning a tiny proportion of the working population, in fact), but to establish his image as a tough reformer. He uses it to surf on.

What matters is what follows. I just watched the head of the French bosses' union, the MEDEF, Laurence Parisot, in a TV interview. It now seems established (to hear the journalists and Mme Parisot), that the 35-hour working week is going to be abolished. But hardly had Mme Parisot explained that it was much more reasonable to fix working hours in internal negotiations, enterprise by enterprise*, that she was saying that French businesses could not go on staggering under the weight of "contributions to this social system that costs so much". This is what "reform" means in the minds of these people: to do away with the "social economy" and install an Anglo-American type of neolib free-market economy.

These are the real stakes. The public-private sectors debate is a sideshow. And, though I don't see why there should not be a fairly-negotiated review of certain pension schemes (for example), I object to the way that has been whipped up into a major essential problem. And so I come down on the strikers' side.

* Given the small size of many French businesses, that means the boss will decide without negotiation.

 

by afew (afew(a in a circle)eurotrib_dot_com) on Sun Dec 2nd, 2007 at 07:56:38 AM EST
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