1. Introduction:
why examine austerity measures from a democratic and social rights
point of view?
“Europe’s big illusion consists in the belief that the crisis
was generated by irresponsible budget management.” – US Economist
Paul Krugman (Nobel Prize 2008) in Der Spiegel, 23 April 2012
1. All member States of the Council
of Europe are in some way confronted with the impact and consequences
of the current financial and economic crisis. Starting as a financial
crisis in 2008, the crisis quickly became an economic one. A recovery
seemed on the horizon in 2010, but instead the crisis transformed
into the so-called “sovereign debt crisis”. Strategic political
and economic decisions are currently being taken in many countries
in connection with the crisis. Many European countries are preparing
or already implementing austerity programmes that very often involve
far-reaching cuts in public spending and in the remuneration of
civil servants, privatisations, decreases in minimum wages, a decrease
in the number of persons employed by the public sector, or tax increases
on consumption, for political (ideological) or economic reasons
(obligations resulting from membership of the eurozone or based
on demands of international creditors).
2. On 15 September 2011, the Council of Europe Commissioner for
Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg, in a report on a country visit
to Ireland in June 2011, stated that “budget cuts planned in Ireland
may be detrimental for the protection of human rights. It is crucial
to avoid this risk, in particular regarding vulnerable groups of
people”.
In
the light of the first measures taken in member States since 2010,
it has indeed rapidly become evident that austerity measures lead
to reductions in social assistance benefits (pensions, disability, unemployment
benefits, etc.) and to cuts in the quality of social services in
general (health, education, childcare, etc.). As these consequences
often concern categories of the population which are already economically
and socially disadvantaged, austerity measures become an issue of
social cohesion and of the protection of vulnerable groups.
3. The way in which many governments proceed to submit their
national budgets to austerity programmes should also be questioned
from the point of view of democratic standards. Very often, the
sovereignty of States and governments facing crisis situations diminishes;
decisions are taken on the basis of very short-term considerations,
alleged urgent necessities and by following urgent procedures, whilst
the aspects of transparency and democratic processes are neglected.
In some cases, austerity programmes are imposed by international
creditors (International Monetary Fund (IMF), European Union) as
a precondition for granting further loans. This has been the case
in a dramatic manner in Greece, where the so-called “troika” of
the IMF, the European Commission and the European Central Bank (ECB)
imposed drastic austerity measures. In the light of such tendencies,
the rapporteur considers that governments should give citizens a
say in if, how and when the State debt should be cut and should
respect their international commitments and obligations with regard
to democratic standards.
4. In the face of the impact of national austerity programmes
on both social services and democratic decision-making processes,
protests started to emerge worldwide throughout the year 2011. The
main “nuclei” of the so-called “occupy movement”, which also received
the highest media attention, were the “Spanish Indignados” movement
initiated in May 2011 in Madrid, the “Occupy Wall Street” movement
in September 2011 and the “Occupy London” encampments in October
2011. In Greece, Portugal and Spain in particular, austerity measures
led to huge public demonstrations. In order to take the broadest
possible view, the rapporteur also wished to hear the arguments
of some of the representatives of these movements as regards the
political responses to be given to the worldwide crisis. This broad
approach is reflected by the two expert hearings organised on this
matter by the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable
Development in January and March 2012.
5. When adopting its opinion on “Over-indebtedness of States
– A danger for democracy and human rights” in April 2011, the former
Social, Health and Family Affairs Committee decided to suggest that
a separate report be prepared on the austerity measures currently
being implemented by a number of member States; a suggestion that
was followed by the Parliamentary Assembly which referred the attendant
motion to the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable
Development for report.
6. On the basis of this mandate, the rapporteur wishes to explore
the objectives and consequences of various austerity programmes
in member States. Given that, at the beginning of 2012, new effects
of current austerity policies have emerged almost every week, the
present report could be continuously updated – an obviously impossible
task. The purpose of this work therefore is to give an overview
of the consequences of austerity measures that have already become
evident until May 2012, and to develop, on this basis, a set of recommendations.
These are intended to contribute to public management and economic
approaches involving long-term perspectives, transparent and democratic
decision-making processes and the highest respect for European human
rights standards, including social rights standards as enshrined
in the revised European Social Charter (ETS No. 163).
2. Austerity programmes and their objectives
across Europe
7. The central argument promoting
austerity programmes across Europe has been that they were needed to
overcome major public budget deficits often said to have been caused
by extensive spending under social welfare budgets during the financial
and economic crisis. Increasingly, however, many experts and international
organisations are questioning the effectiveness of such consolidation
programmes and have started to recognise that the financial crisis
and the enormous rescue packages for European banks are amongst
the root causes of the crisis situation, and not one of its consequences.
2.1. Background:
developments having led to the “sovereign debt crisis” persisting
in 2012
8. The financial and economic
crisis, which started to touch Europe in 2007, had been building
up since the end of 2006 following the breakdown of the real estate
market in the United States. It reached one of its peaks on 15 September
2008 with the bankruptcy declared by the American investment bank
Lehmann Brothers, which plunged international financial markets
into turmoil. Throughout the period of 2008/09, the crisis evolved in
nature and scope and transformed into a larger economic crisis in
many countries, whilst the underlying financial crisis continued
and debates on future reforms and regulation of financial markets
were pursued amongst governments worldwide, in particular in the
framework of the G20 group. Meanwhile, the last Financial Stability
Review by the ECB states that “Risks to euro area financial stability
increased considerably in the second half of 2011, as the sovereign
risk crisis and its interplay with the banking sector worsened in
an environment of weakening macroeconomic growth prospects” and
that “the transmission of tensions among sovereigns, across banks
and between the two intensified to take on systemic crisis proportions
not witnessed since the collapse of Lehman Brothers three years
ago”.
9. From late 2009, a so-called “sovereign debt crisis” started
evolving as a result of the rising government debt levels around
the world, and intensified in early 2010 and thereafter. According
to further figures by the ECB, general government gross debt has
risen steadily since 2007, with an important increase between 2008 and
2010 and a slower but continued increase in the general government
debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio from 66.2% of GDP (in
2007) to 88.5% (expected for 2012).
From the very beginning, public money
was used to save the financial system from collapse, and debt ratios
which hardly raised an eyebrow before came to be seen as too high.
Investors lost confidence amidst alarming reports from the private
ratings agencies which dominate the market.
10. Amongst the root causes to be examined more closely is a dysfunction
of the Stability and Growth Pact of the European Union:
initially
intended to ensure that member States maintain budget discipline
by imposing limits of annual (3% of GDP) and overall debt for State
budget deficits as well as a so-called “no-bail-out principle”,
these rules have often been bent or even bypassed by many member
States, including so-called “core” countries such as Germany and
France. This situation was made possible by one of the weaker points of
the Monetary Union from its very beginning: the distinction between
a joint monetary policy and decentralised budgetary policies which
remain in the hands of each national government.
2.2. European
responses to the “sovereign debt crisis”
11. The “sovereign debt crisis”
has then been accelerated by the downgrading of the sovereign debts
of different countries by the "Big Three" global credit rating agencies,
US-based Standard and Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch Ratings: firstly
Greece, Portugal and Ireland, later on also the United States (in
August 2011) and nine eurozone countries (in January 2012). In the
meantime, experts have started calling for better regulation of
rating agencies in order to ensure more transparency and competitiveness.
12. In the course of these events, on 9 May 2010, governments
of European Union member States created the European Financial Stability
Facility (EFSF) including a rescue package of at least 440 billion
euros aimed at ensuring financial stability across Europe. To fulfil
this mission, the EFSF has been authorised to raise the funds needed
to provide loans to countries in financial difficulties and to finance
recapitalisations of financial institutions through loans to governments,
including non-programme countries.
13. However, any financial assistance to a country in need is
linked to strict policy conditions which are set out in a memorandum
of understanding between the country concerned and the so-called
“troika” including the European Commission, the European Central
Bank and the International Monetary Fund; they often include measures
such as the requirement of fiscal increases and State expenditure
cuts or structural measures aimed at liberalising the labour market
and certain protected sectors. Decisions about the maximum amount
of a loan, its margin and maturity, and the number of instalments
to be disbursed are taken unanimously by the eurozone member States’
finance ministers. If a country in difficulty fails to meet the
conditions, the loan disbursements and the country programme would
be interrupted until the review of the country programme and the memorandum
of understanding is renegotiated.
14. European leaders furthermore agreed to introduce a balanced
budget amendment.
While the
interest rates in particular reached very worrying levels in a few
eurozone countries, such as Belgium, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal
and Spain,
the “sovereign debt crisis” has
always been perceived as a problem for the whole eurozone.
In addition to the EFSF, the European
Stability Mechanism (ESM) was established by the European Council
on 24 June 2011 as a permanent crisis resolution mechanism and is
intended to be ratified by mid-2012 following a decision taken at
the end of March 2012.
2.3. Increasingly
controversial interpretation and perception of austerity programmes
15. Since the beginning of the
“sovereign debt crisis” in 2009, austerity measures applied by individual member
States have been imposed as a precondition for the reduction of
public debt, the consolidation of public budgets, increases in international
competitiveness and, eventually, economic recovery. This idea, initially
promoted by the IMF and European Union institutions, was acknowledged
by the national governments of most member States. Austerity programmes
were therefore developed all over Europe, and not only in the countries
most concerned by the crisis, and not least due to the pressure
that member States of the eurozone exert on one another to follow
the same path.
16. Only at the beginning of March 2012 was Greece granted a debt
swap after agreement by holders of 85.8% of the debt who are subject
to Greek law and 69% of its international debt holders, thus ensuring
the country an additional bailout by the European Union and the
IMF amounting to 130 billion euros. However, the Greek bailout was
to be granted on the condition that the country would be implementing
a further round of austerity measures, including a decrease in minimum
wages, a reduction of 150 000 public servants by 2015, the continuation
of privatisation, and the prohibition of collective wage negotiations
against the rights stated in the revised European Social Charter,
the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and the respective
International Labour Organization (ILO) agreements.
Underlying this tendency, the short-term considerations
of the financial sector still seem to be prevailing over the long-term
considerations of public policies intending to stimulate sustainable
economic recovery.
17. Doubts about the short- and long-term effectiveness of austerity
measures have been expressed by many international experts and organisations
(see also Chapter 3 below). Some commentators called austerity programmes
“an ideology masquerading as an economic policy”.
At the beginning of 2012, even the International
Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade Organization issued
a warning about the economic and social risks of austerity programmes
in a “call to action” designed to boost growth and fight protectionism,
and in their joint statement called upon member States to “manage
fiscal consolidation to promote rather than reduce prospects for
growth and employment” and to apply it “in a socially responsible manner”.
They were most recently joined by
the ILO which, in its “World of work report 2012”, called the global
employment situation “alarming” and warned against the “devastating
consequences” of austerity measures which were judged counterproductive
from the point of view of their objectives of supporting confidence
and the reduction of public deficits.
Finally, several European leaders,
such as Angela Merkel and François Hollande, recently agreed with
ECB President Mario Draghi’s proposal to round off the European fiscal
pact’s austerity measures with a “growth pact”, even though there
does not seem to be common agreement on the precise lines to be
followed.
18. In some countries which have been applying austerity programmes
since 2010, such as Greece, Ireland or Portugal, it can already
be observed that the measures taken led to further economic recession
which affected growing sections of the population, thus deepening
the crisis, without necessarily providing the expected effects for
public finances and the economy more generally. The crisis also
entered into its next round in Spain, where another bailout is expected
to be required by the banking sector before the end of the year.
At the same time, unemployment has reached almost 25% and austerity
budgets significantly pushed up education and health charges, thus
further undermining household incomes and prolonging the recession.
Likewise, the recession in Italy
is expected to be longer and deeper than expected after a collapse
in consumer spending following cuts in wages, benefits and pensions.
Whilst average youth unemployment
is rising in the European Union as a whole, rates in Spain and Greece
in particular remain over 50%.
19. However, member States continue to follow strict austerity
approaches such as the one promoted by the ECB, whose president
argued only in February 2012 that the European welfare State was
an obsolete model and that austerity measures needed to be rigidly
pursued in order to prevent immediate market reactions; thus calling
upon governments to make financial considerations a central determinant
of their political decisions.
The long-term and self-energising
effects of such tendencies are not to be underestimated: according
to the former Commissioner for Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg,
“Austerity measures which exacerbate inequalities will only postpone
problems and in some fields make it even more costly to resolve
them at a later stage”.
3. The
negative impact of austerity measures on democracy and social rights
20. Since 2010, austerity programmes
have been applied in a number of European States and have been widely
justified as painful but indispensable measures. However, increasingly,
the austerity versus growth debate has forced its way into the political
discourse, namely the idea that comprehensive and positive economic
recovery programmes are required instead of defensively responding
to requirements of financial markets and undertaking further cuts
in social services which were amongst the first to be affected by
austerity programmes.
Moreover, with the first negative
effects of austerity measures becoming visible, and the way in which
some of the relevant decisions were taken, large sections of the
population have started to feel increasingly threatened in their
social rights and concerned about the state of democracy.
3.1. Misconception
of the crisis as one of the root causes of ineffective austerity
programmes
21. For some of the austerity programmes
implemented since 2010 (in Greece, in particular), it has already become
evident that they will not live up to the original expectations
and that more positive approaches to economic recovery will be needed
instead. The rapporteur in particular considers that certain of
the root analyses of the current situation were misconceived: the
rescue packages for European banks were amongst the origins of the
current crisis, or they retroacted on State budgets, whilst affecting
social rights (amongst human rights) and democratic processes. He
is therefore convinced that the austerity programmes currently applied
across Europe will not reach their objectives, but will further
deepen the crisis with its implications for vulnerable parts of
society, unless complementary measures to promote economic recovery
are taken.
22. This evaluation is confirmed by recent analyses of international
economic bodies. Thus, the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) stated in its 2011 trade and development report that:
(1) the fiscal imbalances to be observed in many countries are a
result and not a driving factor of the current crisis; (2) the significant
increase of public debt in most European countries concerned could
only be observed after the crisis and not before.
23. According to UNCTAD’s findings, the austerity programmes imposed
upon certain countries – currently and in the past – by the IMF
have in many cases had a negative impact on GDP growth and fiscal
balances by deeply altering public revenue schemes, thus cancelling
any intended positive effects. Research has shown that the real
outcomes of such programmes stayed far behind the initial IMF forecasts
and that the positive effects of IMF programmes were therefore largely
overestimated.
The organisation
estimates that currency devaluation is a more sustainable measure
to increase an economy’s competitiveness. As such, devaluation is
not possible in the eurozone; the only possible measures are either
internal devaluation (by diminishing salaries and social charges),
which leads to a reduction of internal demand immediately, or else
the generation of positive development stimuli. Finally, if austerity
measures are to be effective, they have to address the wealthier
population segments by increasing taxes on high incomes and property,
as such measures only slightly affect private expenditure and thus
have higher “multiplier effects”.
24. The perception of a certain inefficiency of austerity programmes
is backed up by a recent study of the German Friedrich-Ebert Foundation
(Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung) presented to the committee in March 2012
by one of its authors, Professor Arne Heise. According to him, many
of the current austerity programmes (of which seven were examined
in depth as examples) focused too strongly on expenditure cuts and
had negative redistributive effects. They therefore catalysed the
crisis and failed to provide long-term solutions to the most pressing
European problems such as unemployment, poverty, regional imbalances
or public infrastructure. The study also consolidated the hypothesis
that austerity measures applied in the context of the “sovereign debt
crisis” were, in many countries, used as a pretext for social expenditure
cuts that had been planned beforehand.
25. In the context of the mentioned study, the example of Iceland
was particularly highlighted as it was apparently one of the countries
that had placed particular emphasis not only on budgetary cuts as
consolidation measures, but on tax increases aimed at achieving
a positive primary balance in the shortest time possible. In this
respect, the Icelandic Government took a number of socially positive
measures: it not only increased social insurance contributions from
5.34% to 7%, raised VAT by half a percentage point and increased
a number of consumption taxes, but it also raised the capital levy
on yields from 10% to 15% and introduced a supplementary tax on
high incomes, whilst an increase in corporation tax is planned.
Furthermore, the introduction of a stronger control mechanism for
the financial sector and the nationalisation of private banks played
a crucial role in overcoming the crisis. Although Iceland, as one
of the countries not part of the eurozone, and thus not submitted
to the same constraints as some of the member States, is in a special
situation, it still chose an ambitious and positive approach to
budget consolidation which should generally inspire all member States
of the Council of Europe.
In
May 2012, the economic indicators of the country were at their best: economic
growth in 2011 had stabilised at 3%, inflation was under 3% and
unemployment had gone back to 7%. According to Icelandic decision
makers, this success was due to “steadfastness” against pressure
from the European Union and respect for the political principle
that losses of the private sector must not be “nationalised”.
26. Notwithstanding the first critical voices raised with regard
to responses to the crisis and the first examples of where alternative
measures have been implemented successfully, most countries seem
to continue to follow the recommendations made by the European Commission
in 2010 according to which fiscal consolidation based on expenditure
cuts was considered more effective and having a longer lasting impact than
consolidation by tax increases whatever their nature.
However, more recently this approach
has been increasingly questioned by economic analysts and political
decision makers. The European Parliament’s “CRIS Committee” (Special
Committee on the Financial, Economic and Social Crisis) in a 2011
resolution, for example, recommended a broader response to the crisis
which relied on the principle of deepening European integration
and the strengthening of the welfare State by supporting social
inclusion, job creation and sustainable growth. It furthermore called
for a long-term vision for Europe, for a “comprehensive, socially inclusive
and cohesive reform package addressing the weakness of the financial
system and aiming at fostering long-term investments for sustainable
growth and employment creation”, whilst more strictly regulating
the financial sector and its players.
3.2. Impact
on democratic processes
27. As the Assembly already stated
in its
Resolution 1832
(2011) on national sovereignty and statehood in contemporary
international law: the need for clarification, European integration,
in particular the introduction of the euro, has entailed the transfer
to the European Union of a number of policy areas which were traditionally under
national sovereignty, particularly in matters of economic and monetary
policies, and is increasingly affecting choices of fiscal and social
policies. Increasing economic integration is having similar effects
even on countries which are not members of the eurozone or the European
Union. In times of crisis and austerity programmes, a clear diminution
of national autonomy can thus be observed, which means that crucial
political decisions are transferred from national democratic processes
to a level of decision making much further away from the individual
citizen.
28. The core problem with Europe’s economic governance is lack
of democratic accountability. The fundamental question is how member
States’ governments can tell each other what to do, when some of
them have been democratically elected to do something else. In this
context, there are regular calls for a democratic economic government
of the eurozone, which had already been suggested by some during
the early years of monetary construction.
29. Within different countries, various threats could recently
be observed concerning democratic decision-making processes. In
Germany, the rapporteur’s own country, for example, Chancellor Merkel,
in a 2011 press statement concerning the European Financial Stability
Facility, underlined that it was important to find ways of “designing
parliamentary participation in such a manner that it will be in
line with the markets and will generate appropriate signals there”.
Worrying news had already come from
Spain in 2010 where the government proclaimed a “state of alert”
according to military law when faced with a major strike by air
traffic controllers reacting to pressure on their salaries and working
conditions and to the government’s intention to privatise some of
the airports.
30. From the rapporteur’s point of view, any decision-making process
linked to the current crisis should be submitted to close parliamentary
scrutiny. This should also include scrutiny of international rating
agencies. Another tool to be considered, wherever appropriate and
provided for by the constitution, could be referenda allowing for
direct citizen participation in major decisions. Currently, such
measures are highly contested amongst European decision makers.
In April 2011, Icelandic voters rejected the debt repayment plan
which had been approved by the government and parliament, and was
intended to repay the £3 billion requested by the United Kingdom
and the Netherlands from the crash of the banking system in 2008.
In autumn 2011, many were taken
aback by the announcement of the Greek Prime Minister to hold a
referendum on the proposed “debt swap” and the subsequent austerity
measures;
a measure that was abandoned by
Prime Minister Papandreou himself shortly afterwards upon national
and international criticism.
31. Nevertheless, the question of referenda found its way back
onto political agendas in February 2012, when Irish Prime Minister
Kenny announced that Ireland, probably as the only European State,
would hold (in May 2012) a referendum on the European Union’s new
fiscal treaty.
According to activist movements
like Attac, which takes a very critical view of neo-liberal trends,
the European Union fiscal pact as currently debated would significantly
limit one of the principal rights of national parliaments – for
budgetary competence – in order to transfer greater parts of it
to the European Commission. In an open letter to members of the
German Bundestag, Attac therefore called upon parliamentarians to
refuse the relevant treaty already at its first reading on 25 March
2012.
32. The rapporteur very much supports the path chosen by countries
like Ireland, given that, according to some legal experts, the fiscal
pact process currently circumvents the legal procedures that would
have guaranteed the participation and endorsement of national parliaments
as well as the European parliament.
He draws attention to the way in
which traditional democratic processes are threatened by speedy
decision-making processes justified by the urgency of the “sovereign
debt crisis” and strongly advises against further undermining the
democratic
acquis of Europe.
An attempt at preserving traditional democratic processes is currently
(spring 2012) being made in the rapporteur’s own country, Germany,
where the Bundestag is examining the possibility of guaranteeing
its participation in decisions related to the ESM mechanism and
the European fiscal pact through a specific fiscal pact participation
law (Fiskalpakt-Beteiligungsgesetz (FBG)).
33. At Council of Europe level, very few binding instruments exist
as far as democratic standards are concerned. However, the Strategy
on Innovation and Good Governance at Local Level, developed by the Council
of Europe in 2007, and endorsed by its Conference of Ministers responsible
for Local and Regional Government in November 2007, could be of
interest in this matter. The strategy includes 12 universal principles of
“good democratic governance” – including participation, transparency,
ethical conduct and long-term orientation – that could possibly
serve as a reference for any modern democracy.
3.3. Impact
on the guarantee of human rights standards, including social rights
standards, across greater Europe
34. The examination of various
national situations reveals that social rights standards are severely compromised
in some of the countries concerned, given that austerity measures
are often applied to public social services and programmes, and
thus tend to affect those already dependant on social welfare or disadvantaged
with regard to accessing more costly services such as complementary
services in the health sector.
35. Recent research has shown that women are disproportionally
affected by the financial and economic crisis. First, they are not
included in decision-making processes on an equal basis and can
therefore not assert themselves to put forward their own political
priorities. Second, when it comes to tax and benefit reforms, women
are often more affected than men, as a report by the Institute for
Fiscal Studies in the United Kingdom shows. In particular, single
women lose more as a percentage of their income than single men,
largely because more than 90% of lone parents are women and because
lone parents are a group that loses a particularly large amount
from tax and benefit changes.
Finally, women also suffer from
other types of cuts in social services, such as those concerning
child benefits and childcare centres, which disproportionally affect
single mothers and women on low incomes.
36. Another report of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, commissioned
by the Family and Parenting Institute, shows that many families
carry much of the burden of austerity programmes. Again in the United
Kingdom, incomes among homes with children are expected to fall
in real terms by 4.2% between 2010-11 and 2015-16. Families with
three children are predicted to see their incomes fall by 6.8% by
2015-16, compared with those with only one child, who are set to
see a 3.3% fall. Subsequently, experts warn that 500 000 more children
will fall into absolute poverty between 2010-11 and 2015-16, with
most coming from households where the youngest child is aged under
5.
37. The most important legally binding instrument at European
level is the revised European Social Charter, which ensures broad
protection of social rights and includes, for example, protection
against poverty and social exclusion (Article 30) and the right
to housing (Article 31). However, a certain number of countries
have not yet ratified this revised instrument. Amongst these countries
are also some of those who applied austerity programmes to their
public budgets and will continue to do so, such as Germany, Greece,
Spain and the United Kingdom. In the face of continuous austerity
policies, one should continue to urge these countries to ratify
the revised Charter and respect a minimum level of social standards
in any decision taken subsequent to the crisis. In addition, the
particular situation of groups in need of special protection such
as single parents, the elderly or children needs to receive special
attention.
38. At European level, such data were confirmed by a 2011 OECD
study taking stock of income inequality levels and trends across
Europe presented to the committee in March 2012 by Ms Monika Queisser,
Head of the Social Policy Division of OECD.
With regard to the “sovereign debt
crisis”, she underlined that, whilst initial crisis responses generally
raised social protection, pension reforms and reductions of pension
levels subsequently resulted in widening income gaps, affecting
mainly the poor. She considered that there was room for improvement
of current tax systems by making these more progressive, for example
by increasing relative taxes for high income categories.
39. Most recently, the serious social effects of austerity programmes
have been highlighted by experts such as Cephas Lumina, United Nations
independent expert on foreign debt and human rights, who considered
that “the implementation of the second package of austerity measures
and structural reforms, which includes a wholesale privatization
of State-owned enterprises and assets, is likely to have a serious
impact on basic social services and therefore the enjoyment of human
rights by the Greek people, particularly the most vulnerable sectors
of the population such as the poor, elderly, unemployed and persons
with disabilities”.
40. The present report will look into further specific national
situations, but the consultation of various sources has shown that,
beyond member States of the eurozone and the European Union, many
member States of greater Europe united under the Council of Europe
have in some way been concerned by the recent financial and economic
crisis, and are also affected by the ongoing “sovereign debt crisis”
to a greater or lesser extent. For Ukraine, for example, it has
recently been estimated that economic growth is expected to slow
down this year and could even decline sharply if commodity prices
drop as a result of the recession in the eurozone.
41. Even those countries which do not belong to this zone are
thus closely linked to it in their economic development.
The impact of the financial and
economic crisis was also confirmed by the global wage report 2010/11
of the ILO, which showed that the largest impact of the global financial
and economic crisis on wages could be seen in central and eastern
Europe and central Asia.
Therefore all member States of the
Council of Europe should strengthen consultation and co-operation
in order to promote economic and social progress, not only because
they can learn from one another's good practices, but also because
their situations are closely interconnected. One of the aspects
not at all addressed by the present report, but of growing concern
for Europe’s future, is intra-European migration, which will, if
not addressed by specific policy responses, lead to the development
and growth of entire States being left behind.
3.4. Perception
of the crisis and austerity programmes “on the ground”
42. The exchange of views with
NGO representatives from some of the countries most concerned has allowed
the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development
to get an idea of how the financial and economic crisis has changed
or continues to influence people’s everyday life. For Spain, for example,
Ms Rebeca Mayorga Fernández, audiovisual journalist and student
from Madrid, one of the early members of the “Spanish Indignados”
movement, provided some insight into the current economic situation
of many of her generation, including herself. She described a context
where highly qualified young people could not find access to permanent
employment and were obliged to move from one precarious job to the
next, to continue their studies at their families’ expense, to apply
for social benefits straightaway or to leave the country and work
abroad if they had the educational (and financial) capacities to
do so. Moving to make labour markets yet more flexible, governments
continued to serve financial interests, whilst those most concerned
were entirely left out of decision-making processes.
43. The Indignados viewpoint
was confirmed by Mr Luca Scarpiello, Vice-President of the European
Youth Forum, who, in March 2012, pointed out to the committee how
important it was to facilitate in particular the transition between
training and employment for young people and avoid that their later
careers be marked by years spent on internships at the beginning
of their professional lives. He also recalled that a lack of support for
young people profoundly affected society in the long term: the forum
estimated that financial losses linked to youth unemployment – through
social benefits paid out, non-contribution to social security schemes
or exclusion from consumption – accounted for 100 billion euros
per year in EU countries alone. On the same occasion, British entrepreneur
Ms Madi Sharma, representing the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC)
of the European Union, reminded parliamentarians of the importance
of fostering entrepreneurship, specifying that about 98% of growth
was generated by small and medium enterprises, which were neither
taken sufficiently seriously by many banks, nor sufficiently involved
in early stages of policy design.
44. Information on Spain was completed by a similar report on
Greece by Ms Sonia Mitralia, representative of
the Women’s Initiatives against Debt and Austerity Measures (part
of the Committee for the Abolition of Third World Debt – CADTM and
its network). According to her, Greek decisions makers had in the
meantime admitted that the “recipes” applied were expected to remain
largely inefficient: the current objective of austerity measures
was to reach a public debt level of 120% of GDP in 2020, that is
to say the level of 2009 when the whole crisis started. Social cuts
introduced by austerity programmes increasingly affected the middle
class which had lost much of its purchasing power. Some of the consequences
were that many children were not able to eat in school canteens,
the number of homeless had significantly increased, unemployment
rates had reached 20% in general and over 50% for young people,
public services were cut and even basic medical services, such as
those related to childbirth, had become unaffordable for some. Amongst
the groups most exposed were young women, the elderly and mono-parental
families.
45. Further examples for such negative effects can be found almost
daily in the European press: only at the end of January, the Ministry
of Education in Greece announced that food vouchers would be handed
out to those pupils and their families who were most affected by
the crisis, following media reports about undernourished pupils
fainting during classes (concerning which the ministry reproached
teachers’ unions for having disseminated populist propaganda against
austerity measures by the State).
“Recorded suicides have roughly
doubled since before the crisis … according to the Greek Ministry
of Health and a charity organisation called Klimaka” in September
2011.
Their link to the economic, social
and political crisis can be seen in the tragic suicide of a Greek
retired pharmacist who expressed in his suicide note his view of
an occupying government that nullified his ability to survive on
a decent pension.
4. Conclusions
and recommendations
46. The rapporteur is convinced
that financial and economic policies, austerity measures and the
question of regulation of financial actors increasingly affect human
rights (including social rights) in Europe and the democratic foundation
of Council of Europe member States. He thus invites the Assembly
to convey a strong message to member States.
47. An important reference is the revised European Social Charter,
which is yet to be ratified by a number of member States. In the
field of democracy, few binding standards exist at European level.
Furthermore, the Strategy on Innovation and Good Governance at Local
Level, and its 12 principles of “good democratic governance”, developed
by the Council of Europe in 2007, could certainly, beyond local
democracy, serve as a general reference for any modern democracy.
48. Many of the decisions that were recently taken concerning
the “sovereign debt crisis” or are expected to be taken in the near
future do not meet the highest democratic standards, as they are,
under the pretext of required urgent action, taken speedily by institutions
which lack democratic legitimacy and are far removed from the concerns
of the European people. Attempts to raise critical voices in the
framework of referenda or protest movements are in many cases ignored,
denigrated or brushed aside. Awareness of such threats to democracy
should be raised whenever possible and European democratic standards,
which are amongst European core values, should be protected and
even developed by aspiring to higher and more modern standards of
democracy, inclusion and participation.
49. From an economic point of view, cuts in government expenditure,
social safety nets or wages are not effective measures against the
current crisis, given that they especially affect lower income groups
and further undermine their purchasing power and self-subsistence.
Instead of trying to reach balanced budgets through public expenditure
cuts, there is a need to address the wealthier social groups by
increasing their taxes and introducing new ones. Such measures only
affect private expenditure slightly and thus have higher “multiplier effects”.
50. The rapporteur is convinced that, rather than improving the
situation, the recent and current European “bailout funds” worsen
the crisis and do not sufficiently hold to account those responsible,
such as worldwide financial institutions. The long-term question
of public finances should be largely disconnected from private financial
markets and their specific dynamics and short-term interests. Furthermore,
the rapporteur strongly supports the idea of reinforcing regulation
of the financial sector as currently debated at European Union level where
a relevant debate has been initiated by the Commissioner for Internal
Market and Services, Mr Michel Barnier, who recently launched proposals
to limit the risks of financial services and to regulate Europe's financial
sector, including the so-called shadow banking market.
51. Wherever policies aimed at lowering budget deficits are deemed
necessary, it needs to be ensured that they do not disproportionally
affect middle and lower income groups and those categories of the
population which are in need of special protection (children, the
elderly, people with disabilities, migrants, etc.) or reduce their
living standards. Alternatively, cuts in budget lines whose social
consequences are limited, such as armaments policies, should be
considered. Finally, the long-term consequences of some of the consolidation measures
should be taken into account: some of the austerity programmes include
the massive privatisation of public services which could then result
in a lack of transparency and democratic control, as well as a threat to
the quality of and equal access to some of these services, such
as health services or family-oriented services.
52. Member States of the Council of Europe should also develop
positive stimuli for social, sustainable and ecological economic
development and comprehensive economic recovery programmes, especially
in favour of the younger generation, which finds it more and more
difficult to access stable employment and to contribute to the European
economy in a sustainable manner.
53. In the light of these conclusions, the rapporteur suggests
that the Assembly recommend that the Council of Europe member States:
- prevent the undermining of existing
democratic standards when it comes to decisions linked to the “sovereign
debt crisis” and possible joint European action to be taken;
- reflect on how such processes could be made more democratic
in the future, also with regard to future economic policy making
at the European level and, in the meantime, act with utmost transparency
in taking any far-reaching decisions which profoundly affect a country’s
economy;
- consider measures aimed at modernising democratic structures
and processes by means of new forms of participation and consultation
of citizens, such as referenda, wherever the constitution or legislation provide
for such possibilities;
- re-examine current austerity programmes from the point
of view of possible harm inflicted upon social rights standards;
- where appropriate after such an analysis, redirect austerity
programmes towards sustainable economic growth in harmony with social
and ecological standards;
- launch comprehensive and positive economic recovery programmes
aimed at overcoming high rates of unemployment, especially amongst
the young generation, and all their negative economic and social consequences;
- disconnect the long-term question of public finances from
financial markets and their specific dynamics and short-term interests;
- pursue and support efforts undertaken to increase the
regulation of the financial sector;
- introduce new taxes to be applied to high incomes and
consider further measures aimed at increasing public resources in
the future;
- consider applying a stronger approach to tax havens and
introducing new taxes on financial transactions across Europe; these
two issues are not developed further here given that the first was
treated in depth in a report debated by the Assembly in April 2012, and the latter will be dealt with
in a report currently being prepared by the Social, Health and Family
Affairs Committee.
54. Member States of the Council of Europe should generally co-ordinate
their action concerning the current crisis situation so as to ensure
coherent and effective policy responses. The mutualisation of debts
and joint negotiations with financial institutions by different
European Union member States could be one possible approach. However,
such measures need to be taken in a context of expansion of democracy
to European levels as they could otherwise represent a further reduction
of national governments’ autonomy in responding to crisis situations
and elaborating economic policies.
55. Beyond individual measures of this kind, co-ordinated policy
responses could possibly, in the long term, lead to a renewed vision
of the future European economy and a new European social model based
on social rights as an integral part of human rights.
56. The Parliamentary Assembly, as greater Europe’s parliamentary
forum and “democratic conscience”, should call on member States
to ensure the participatory rights of all democratic bodies and
movements existing in a given country, in particular national parliaments,
and to find new ways of giving citizens a say in the design and
implementation of fiscal and economic policy measures which have
a significant impact on the living conditions of the population.