From: Jari-Pekka Raitamaa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [luokkataistelu] Argentina: workers rise, presidents fall.

Argentina: workers rise, presidents fall.

Argentina's economic collapse has sparked a colossal movement. Presidents
count their terms in days, sometimes hours, as worker and middle-class
pressure forces them out.

Eight general strikes in 18 months. Mass protests by hundreds of thousands
of workers and middle-class people. The stock markets closed for all but a
few days since December because dealers have no funds. Debt default and five
presidents in fewer weeks. These are the symptoms of the revolutionary
crisis which has erupted in Argentina, following total economic collapse in
the wake of four years of recession.

Today, the crisis in Argentina has many elements of what Marxists would call
a pre-revolutionary situation. The main elements of which can seen in the
following factors.

There are open splits amongst the ruling class which for a while in December
was in a state of near paralysis as president succeeded president in a
matter of days. All three of the main capitalist candidates who contested
the last elections in 1999 have now been in power, tested and rejected by
the masses. The middle class is bordering on being destroyed, plunged into
mass pauperisation. It has consequently entered the struggle, employing many
of the methods of the working class.

Workers have been fighting the neo-liberal policies of successive
governments in a series of strikes and general strikes, the most recent of
which took place on 13 December. This was followed by mass protests in
central Buenos Aires largely composed of the ruined middle classes.

The crisis has also undoubtedly affected the state machine - the army and
police. The government has used vicious repression by the riot police. But
the social conditions and undermining of the armed forces following the
military regimes of the 1976-83, alongside the defeat in the
Malivinas/Falklands conflict in 1983, have prevented the ruling class from
using the military to repress the movement at this stage. The declaration of
a state of siege by the government on 19 December was a decisive factor that
brought the masses onto the streets to topple president Adolfo Rodríguez Saá
after a few days in office.

Years of economic decline, corruption and the accumulated hatred of all the
capitalist political parties and coalitions have resulted in deep mistrust
and even opposition to the parties and institutions of capitalism. The
masses have developed a universal hatred against what they regard as 'the
political class'. In Argentina the emergence of a caste of corrupt political
bureaucrats divorced from the mass of the population has acquired an extreme
form. It is, however, part of an international trend. The collapse in the
support of these instruments of capitalist rule and the scale of the
pauperisation of the middle class have many features that resemble the
crisis which developed in Germany during the 1920s.

At the same time, however, the explosion of anger and opposition to
neo-liberal policies and the parties of capitalism have not been channeled
into the overthrow of capitalism and the taking of power by a workers'
government because of the weakness of crucial 'subjective factors'.

The most important of these is the lack of independent organisation by the
working class and other strata exploited by capitalism. The absence of a
revolutionary socialist party with mass support and influence amongst the
working class is holding back the mass movement. Although the working class
is fighting neo-liberalism and capitalism, its political consciousness has
not embraced the alternative of socialism. In part, this is a legacy of the
collapse of the Stalinist regimes of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe
around 1990. The Argentinean workers' political outlook is also influenced
by the experience of Peronism in the past. It will need a series of
upheavals for a mass socialist consciousness to develop. This means that the
crisis will unfold over a protracted period of time. It could, therefore, be
characterised as a 'pre-pre-revolutionary' situation.

The dramatic events in Argentina have many lessons for the international
workers' movement. The scale of the economic collapse and the mass
pauperisation of the population are a warning to the working class in Europe
and the imperialist countries of what the future holds if the capitalist
system is not replaced by socialism.

Collapse in living standards
Argentina is not a 'typical' Latin American country. Historically, it was a
relatively developed economy. By 1933 it was the tenth-richest economy in
the world. A decade later it was ninth. At one point it was richer than
France and, in 1945, boasted a higher standard of living than Canada. Until
recently it enjoyed the highest standard of living in Latin America.

The economic growth that took place in the 1930s meant that Argentina became
an escape route for tens of thousands of European workers and middle-class
people who fled the effects of the economic recession that gripped Europe.
Economic migrants who arrived in Buenos Aires marveled at the wealth of what
was dubbed the Paris of Latin America. The economic migration of the 1930s
is reflected in the make-up of the country. At least ten million of the
38-million population are half-Italian.

Today, the wheel of history has turned full circle as tens of thousands try
to flee Argentina in despair at the scale of the collapse. Applications to
claim Italian citizenship and passports have tripled in two weeks. The
queues outside the Spanish consular office in Buenos Aires have increased
from 800 to 3,000 people every day! During the second week of January the
Jewish Agency for Israel processed 1,400 applications for migration to
Israel - ten times the usual number.

Even these dramatic figures do not fully reveal the speed and scale of the
economic collapse which has triggered this migration. With 40% of the
population now living below the official poverty line, being joined by four
more every hour, it is now the middle class that is being devastated. The
Financial Times reported that 100 children die every hour from starvation
and disease. This follows years of attacks on wages and conditions that have
been imposed on the working class. Architects, technicians and accountants
now find themselves jobless, homeless and hungry. Shanty towns on the
outskirts of Buenos Aires have banners over the entrance proclaiming,
"Bienvenido a la clase media" - welcome to the middle class.

The hated former Minister of the Economy, Domingo Cavallo, cut the wages of
civil servants and pensions by 13% in an emergency package introduced in
July 2001. Wages as a percentage of national income fell from 30% in 1989 to
only 18% in 1994 and are now even lower. Yet this is not enough for
capitalism. According to the Financial Times, economists are demanding that
real wages be cut by a further 30% (2 January). The historic perspective on
this decline in living standards is clearly illustrated if it is compared
with the percentage of national income going to wages at the peak of
Argentina's economic growth. In 1943 it was 44% and under Juan Perón rose to
60% in 1950!

The brutal driving down of living standards of the working class rapidly
accelerated during the 1990s. It is the middle class that is being
devastated and almost driven out of existence economically. The Financial
Times brutally explained when commentating on the prospects for un-pegging
the Argentinean peso from the US dollar: "Argentina can no longer afford its
middle class".

Return of the conquistadores
The onslaught on living standards in the 1990s was linked to the long-term,
historic decline of Argentina and the introduction of free market
neo-liberal polices which were implemented at lightning speed. When Carlos
Menem was president in the early 1990s, Argentina was regarded as a 'worthy
child' by international capital and speculators. Menem's programme was
dominated by wholesale privatisation and linking the peso to the US dollar
at a one-to-one exchange rate in 1991.

These measures represented a historical about turn of Peronist policies,
which had previously championed state intervention. They were an Argentinean
version of what Tony Blair was to impose on New Labour and the British
workers. They resulted in a financial bonanza for international capital.
Multinational companies, particularly from Western Europe - mainly Spain and
Italy - moved in. They bought up local services and industry at giveaway
prices and plundered the economy. Throughout Latin America it was joked that
the modern 'conquistadores' had returned. This time they came in business
suits with first-class plane tickets, armed with cheque books to buy up
whatever was up for auction.

The national airline, Aerolineas Argentinas, was sold-off to Spain's Iberia
airline company and some private Argentinean investors. The state telephone
company, ENTEL was split in two and sold-off to Spain's Telefónica and its
Italian counterpart, STET. When Aerolineas Argentinas was privatised in
1991, congressmen calculated that the three Boeing 747s owned by the airline
had been sold for $590,000 each, less than 10% of their value. An old Boeing
707 was sold for $1.50 - less than the price of a toy model of the same
plane in a Buenos Aires toyshop! Billions of dollars flowed into the country
in a bout of speculation unprecedented for Latin America.

Menem invested his political prestige in the peso-dollar convertibility plan
just as his European counterparts are doing today with the euro. This policy
was initially popular as it was deemed responsible for ending the
hyper-inflation that rocked Argentina during the 1980s, when it reached
3,000% per annum in 1989. The long-term consequences, however, were
disastrous.

It effectively handed control of the government debt burden to foreign
creditor banks. As a result, the foreign debt rose from $65 billion in 1991
to $160 billion in 2000. Moreover, as the value of the dollar rose,
Argentinean exports became increasingly uncompetitive and were delivered a
knock-out blow when Brazil - Argentina's biggest trading partner - devalued
its currency, the Real, in 1999/2000. The convertibility policy was economic
nonsense and endured as long as it did because to abandon it would have
provoked massive bankruptcies (as loans were taken out in US dollars
un-pegging the peso would force a devaluation and increase the total debt)
and for reasons of political prestige.

By 1998 these policies and the effects of the South-East Asian currency
crisis on the world economy combined to plunge the economy into one of its
deepest ever recessions. Foreign investment dried up and the government ran
out of state assets to sell off: the family silver had been sold or given
away to the foreign speculators. The high dollar priced Argentinean goods
out of the world market.

A string of austerity packages demanded by the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) only compounded the crisis. The nine 'stabilisation' programmes
demanded by the IMF since 1983 have ended up with Argentina carrying out one
of the largest national debt default's since 1945!

The crisis in Argentina is already having serious repercussions in the
international economy. Among the recent 'victims' are the speculators who
plundered the economy during the 1990s. Spanish companies estimate they have
invested up to ?44 billion ($50bn) in Argentina and will lose at least ?3
billion ($3.4bn). However, it is likely that far more will be lost. Five of
Spain's largest companies have substantial investments in Argentina,
including the banking monopoly BBVA. Merrill Lynch & Co estimates the crisis
could cost BBVA $940 million. The front-page headline of the Spanish daily
newspaper, El Mundo, summed up the pessimism: "Spanish companies fear that
Argentina will make them pay for the crisis". The international
repercussions will not only be felt in Spain but are certain to spill over
into Brazil, the rest of Latin America and the world financial markets.
Moreover, the debt default now threatens to be repeated in other countries
of the neo-colonial world.

State intervention
The scale of the economic collapse and the degree of the social explosion
has left the Argentinean ruling class floundering as one government after
another has fallen in the face of a mass revolt of the working and middle
classes. These historic developments have forced the now Peronist-led
government of Eduardo Duhalde to halt the neo-liberal policies and revert to
some measures of state intervention and protectionism, and to un-peg the
peso from the dollar. This is despite the fact that Duhalde served as vice
President for two years under Carlos Menem's neo-liberal government in the
early 1990's.

This dramatic turnabout will not resolve the crisis. However, it represents
an important new phase in the international situation. The change in policy
in Argentina illustrates how the policies of neo-liberalism - which have
been universally applied during the 1990s - and the process known as
globalisation, can be checked and even go into reverse under the impact of
economic and social crises. Recoiling from the effects of neo-liberal
policies, Duhalde declared when he had taken office: "For many years in
Argentina they have made us believe that amid this new world order there is
only one possible economic model. That is a complete falsehood".

This change has many important lessons for future developments
internationally, including in Europe. For example, these events question the
prospects for maintaining the euro during a major economic recession or
slump. As in Argentina, the onset of economic and social crises can, at a
certain stage, compel the ruling class to pull out of the economic
straitjacket of the euro, which will lead to its unraveling.

Gripped in the jaws of economic and social crisis, Duhalde's shaky
government has been compelled to abandon the neo-liberal policies
implemented during the 1990s. This change of policy has provoked the wrath
of some international commentators. Martin Wolf blames Duhalde for "turning
a disaster that at least offered some glimmer of hope into a disaster".
(Financial Times, 16 January 2002)

Duhalde's policy shift has not been implemented out of concern for the
plight of the working class or even the interests of the middle class. His
new administration has been forced to change policy by the pressure of the
massive social explosion that is taking place and in a desperate attempt to
try and defend the interests of an extremely battered Argentine capitalist
class which has been increasingly weakened by the intervention of foreign
capital during the last two decades.

The measures that Duhalde has begun to apply amount to a balancing act
between the different classes. Remaining within the capitalist system,
however, he will be unable to resolve the devastation that faces all of the
exploited classes. They are an attempt to return to elements of a more
classic Peronist policy of state intervention and support for 'national
Argentinean companies', rather than the neo-liberalism practiced by Menem,
'Menemismo' as it became known.

Juan Perón
However the re-embracing of classic Peronism is being done under entirely
different conditions to those which confronted Juan Perón in the 1940s and
1950s. Then it was possible for Perón, a military general, to win the
support of the workers. The post-1945 economic growth, in particular,
allowed his governments to dramatically increase living standards and
implement social reforms which lasted for a relatively long time. This
growth was possible because starving Europe imported huge amounts of
Argentinean beef under favourable economic terms. This allowed reforms and
concessions to be made to the working class in this period.

Peronism developed as a nationalist-populist movement which was supported by
the mass of workers and militants on the 'left', as well as by extreme
right-wing nationalists. The Peronists were able to develop and maintain
their basis amongst the working class because of the mistaken policies and
orientation of the Communist Party. In 1950 the main trade union federation,
the CGT, dropped its support for 'socialism' and declared its backing for
Perón.

Resting on the support of the workers, but defending the interests of the
bosses, Perón balanced between the opposing interests of the working class
and the ruling capitalist class. For a time, living standards rose and Perón
introduced measures which helped strengthen the trade unions, striking some
blows against certain specific capitalist interests. When Perón came to
power in 1946 trade union membership stood at 877,000. By 1950 it had
reached nearly two million and eventually included 42% of the workforce.

At the same time, he defended capitalism and was capable of striking bloody
blows against the working class. For example, in 1951 his regime placed the
whole of the striking workforce on the railways under military rule.

Perón wanted a 'corporate capitalism' and fought attempts by the working
class to independently organise itself either politically or industrially.
Trade union leaders who had formed a 'Labour Party' - following the Labour
victory in Britain in 1945 - supported Perón in the presidential elections
which he won in 1946. They then found their party 'dissolved' as he launched
his own Peronist party.

Perón's 'corporate capitalism', as one union leader pointed out at the time,
"allowed the unions to build workers' homes, clinics, holiday camps and
sports facilities". These reforms were not intended to break capitalism but
to maintain it.

Perón urged the employers, "Not to be afraid of my trade unionism. I want to
organise workers through the state. to neutralise ideological and
revolutionary currents in its midst which might place our capitalist society
in danger. We have to give the workers some improvements and they will be an
easily managed force". Having won the 1950 election with 60% of the vote,
Perón was overthrown by a military coup in 1955 following which he was to
spend nearly 18 years in exile until his return in 1972. The contradictory
character of the Peronist movement was graphically shown when Peron returned
to Buenos Aires. He was greeted by more than one million people and a gun
battle broke out between left-wing and right-wing Peronists.

Balancing act
Today Duhalde's government confronts a bankrupt economy and mass opposition
and hatred of all capitalist politicians - including the Peronist leaders.
The popular view that they are all corrupt gangsters is fully justified.
Menem, who was planning his return to government in elections scheduled for
2003, is currently being investigated on two counts of illegal arms
smuggling to Croatia and Ecuador!

Duhalde's economic measures represent a balancing act. With the left hand,
he is reverting to state intervention and giving some minor concessions to
the mass of the population only to take them back with further attacks on
living standards, with the right hand. Price controls on the utilities have
been introduced along with taxes on the petrol industry. And protectionist
measures to help some Argentinean sections of the economy have been applied.

Un-pegging the peso from the dollar has resulted in a 40% devaluation of the
currency which, potentially, could have triggered more bankruptcies and
plunged even bigger sections of the middle class into ruin. At least 80% of
mortgages and other loans were taken out in dollars when the exchange rate
was one-to-one. A straight devaluation would immediately increase the debt
by the equivalent devaluation. This has been partly offset by a decree that
loans of $100,000 and less will be exchanged at the earlier one-to-one rate.
This has enraged the banks which lost out. Duhalde accompanied the
un-pegging of the peso from the dollar with strong denunciations of foreign
banks.

The crisis has been further compounded by a flight of capital. Rich
Argentineans have moved billions of dollars off-shore to foreign bank
accounts. $130 billion has been taken out of Argentina and used to secure
loans with local banks. Between March and December 2001 an estimated $18
billion left the country.

Duhalde still has to defuse the problematic issue of banking controls. These
were introduced to restrict the amount of money which can be withdrawn from
accounts in an attempt to stave off a run on the banks which would trigger
their collapse. He said: "These damned bank curbs are a time bomb that has
to be deactivated. If the bomb explodes nobody gets any of their money
back". The question is, how? Dulhade admits, "This is a depression. We don't
know with great precision how to solve this problem because there are no
experiences like this". At the same time, the minister of the economy, Jorge
Remes Lenicov, insisted that "the government was committed to slashing
public spending and eliminating waste to balance the budget".

The new-found 'Peronist' policies of Duhalde will not be able to resolve
Argentina's problems. The mass protests against some of his government's
measures have continued and clearly point to the fact that the crisis is not
over. It will deepen in the coming weeks and months. In recent opinion
polls, 90% of the population supported the demonstrations against Dulhalde's
government. The bleak future of a capitalist Argentina is illustrated by
commentators who argue that a further five to ten years of recession are
necessary before the economy can return to competitiveness.

The need for socialism
Duhalde has been appointed until 2003 although it is not certain he will
last until then. It is essential that the working class builds its own
independent alternative. A struggle to force new elections to a constituent
assembly needs to be organised alongside the building of an independent
socialist alternative of the working class and all other exploited classes.
A new mass workers' party with a socialist programme is essential to begin
the task of overthrowing capitalism.

No trust or confidence can be given to Duhalde's government. The struggle
against poverty and hunger needs to be taken forward. There has to be an
investigation by committees of working people into the corruption of the
capitalist politicians and speculators. It is urgent that local committees
of struggle are formed, made up of delegates from the workplaces, the unempl
oyed, students and small businesses. Such committees of struggle should
undertake the distribution of food from the big supermarkets and retailers
to the hungry on an organised basis.

The committees of struggle need to link up on a citywide, regional and
national basis to establish an alternative government of the workers and
other people exploited by capitalism. Such a government must immediately
implement an emergency programme of public works to provide jobs for the
unemployed and begin the task of building the houses, schools, hospitals and
transport system needed by all working-class people.

Interest charges and the debts to the banks of small and medium debtors
should be cancelled. A minimum wage and the reduction in the working week to
35 hours need to be implemented. Capitalism must be broken through the
introduction of a democratic socialist plan of production based on the
nationalisation of the banks and major companies under democratic workers'
control and management.

Such policies need to be spread to the rest of Latin America, the US and on
to other continents. The establishment of a voluntary, democratic, socialist
federation of Latin America will be the only way to defeat capitalism and
imperialism. This would be able to begin the task of building an alternative
to capitalism and the horrors it means for the vast majority of the
population in 2002.

If such a mass socialist alternative is not built, then other forces can
emerge to fill the vacuum that exists because of the embittered hatred of
all the main capitalist political parties. Initially, other radical left
popular forces, such as ARI, may win support. If capitalism remains then, at
a certain stage, new forces of a populist-nationalist character could emerge
from the military. The threat of a collapse of Argentinean society could
also threaten the return of a right-wing military regime at a certain stage
although this is not an immediate perspective for the reasons explained
earlier. Such forces could win support to 'restore order' and 'end the
crisis' and would alternate between radical populist policies and repression
of the mass movement and nationalism.

The crisis in Argentina is likely to unfold over a period of months and even
years. The task of building a socialist alternative is now more urgent than
ever.

Tony Saunois, CWI
19 January 2002


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