France’s Socialist Party is preparing a new offensive against long-established 
trade union and worker rights - the foremost “structural reform” being sought 
across the eurozone, but especially in France and Italy, the two largest 
economies in he currency union after Germany. In essence, European employers 
want the “flexibility” to replace full time unionized workers with temporary, 
part-time and cheaper labour, which requires dismantling the legislative and 
collective bargaining protection won by militant European trade unionists and 
their allies over generations. 

Syriza’s bowing to similar pressures for the rollback of union rights in Greece 
has evidently persuaded France’s Socialist government that it now has the 
latitude and legitimacy to win acceptance from its party base to pursue a 
similar course. That’s the kind of cross-border “contagion” European 
financiers, industrialists, and politicians like to see.

*       *       *

French prime minister vows to deepen economic reform
Adam Thomson
Financial Times
August 30 2015

Manuel Valls, the French prime minister, has pledged to deepen the government’s 
economic reforms, promising to “revise thoroughly” the country’s labour laws to 
give more flexibility to employers and wage earners. 

Speaking at his Socialist party’s annual conference in the Atlantic port of La 
Rochelle, Mr Valls described France’s existing work code as “so complex that it 
has become inefficient: curbed activity; wage earners who no longer know their 
rights”. 

Before flag-waving party faithful, Mr Valls said: “We have to give more 
latitude to employers, to wage earners and to their representatives so that 
they can decide for themselves.” 

Among other things, he said the reforms would mean “more flexibility for 
companies”. 

His comments, which wrapped up two days of debate among Socialist party 
members, will doubtless be warmly received by the country’s private sector, 
which has long complained that labour regulations are too rigid. 

The prime minister’s remarks also come at a particularly testing time for 
President François Hollande’s government, which is battling to reinvigorate a 
stubbornly sluggish economy and reduce unemployment, which remains at 
near-record highs. 

In response, Mr Hollande has adopted more business-friendly proposals in an 
effort to get the economy going. But the tack has also deepened divisions on 
the left. 

Days earlier, Emmanuel Macron, economy minister, had riled many party members 
as he appeared to criticise France’s 35-hour week — a sacred cow for the left. 

Speaking to France’s Medef employers’ federation, Mr Macron said the left in 
France had thought at one time that “politics was done against businesses, or 
at least without them”. To rapturous cheers, he added: “It thought that France 
would do better by working less.”

But the prime minister said the forthcoming reforms would not touch the 35-hour 
week.

“That debate is closed,” said Mr Valls, who, according to one opinion poll on 
Sunday is ahead of Mr Hollande as the figure leftwing sympathisers would most 
like to see run as the Socialist candidate for the 2017 presidential election. 
“What interests me is not the past but the future.”

In a long and wide-ranging speech that touched on Europe’s migration crisis, 
terrorism and the environment, as France prepares to host the Paris climate 
summit in December, Mr Valls said the government would lower taxes next year. 

Avoiding specific details, the Spanish-born prime minister said the government 
would propose a cut in income tax for households in the 2016 budget, to 
complement reductions that were already in place. 

He said 9m middle-class and working-class households were already benefiting 
from reduced tax bills, which had meant, on average, savings of €300. 

Mindful of regional elections at the end of this year — the last electoral 
contest before parties compete for the presidency in 2017 — Mr Valls urged 
Socialist party members to unite. 

But he also warned the party that it had to be “inventive” and “adapt itself to 
the realities of the world”.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to