Sunday, June 23, 2024

UK

Post-election battlegrounds for climate and social justice 

By Simon Pirani

JUNE 18, 2024

On 4th July, the climate-trashing Tory government will be replaced, as good as certainly by Keir Starmer’s ‘changed’ Labour party.

For all its talk of ‘green prosperity’, Labour plans to work closely with the corporations that profit from North Sea oil and gas and from generating electricity – and who intend to produce, and use, fossil fuels for as long as they can.

Labour’s plans for cutting greenhouse gas emissions from homes and cars are hopelessly timid, because of its conviction that private business does it best.

Under Labour, we will in my view make progress against social injustice and climate change only insofar as social movements and the labour movement:

(i) confront and confound the government, and

(ii) show that action on climate change, far from costing ordinary people money as the extreme right claim, is 100% compatible with combating social inequalities.

In this article I try to identify the likely battlegrounds between our movements and a Starmer-led Labour government:

Fossil fuel production and the path away from it (Part 1); electricity generation at national (Part 2) and local (Part 3) levels; avoiding false technofixes (Part 4); and changing the way energy is used in homes and transport (Part 5). Part 6 is about bringing these separate, but connected, issues together.

1. Transition away from fossil fuel production on the North Sea

The election-time slanging match about the North Sea’s future has featured politicians’ and union leaders’ cynicism at its worst. In opposition to this, our movement needs serious conversation about how to fight for working people’s livelihoods and run down oil and gas production simultaneously.

The political war of words has focused on Labour’s commitment not to issue new licences to explore for oil and gas in the North Sea.

The Scottish National Party, which fears losing parliamentary seats to Labour, has lashed out with a claim – shown by BBC Verify to be false – that this would cost “100,000 jobs”. This is “a clear about-face” from the SNP, which last year “committed to a built-in bias against granting new licences”, the Politico web site reported.

“Exaggeration and misinformation helps no-one”, given the urgent need for “a clear-eyed conversation about how to ensure that Scottish workers benefit from the transition away from oil and gas,” Tessa Khan of the climate advocacy group Uplift said.

But exaggeration and misinformation is exactly what leaders of the Unite union, which represents many North Sea workers, contributed. They withheld support for Labour’s manifesto, because of its North Sea policy (as well as for much better reasons, such as its employment policies) and endorsed SNP leader John Swinney’s nonsense.

Unite leader Sharon Graham suggests that a ban on oil and gas licences is the main threat to North Sea jobs. That is not true. It usually takes more than ten years from licence issue for a field to start production, so there is only a very indirect connection. In recent years, oil corporations’ decisions to slim down their North Sea operations has posed a far more immediate threat.

If Labour reverses its ban on new licences, the only beneficiaries will be those corporations – while the planetary disaster threatened by climate change would come one step closer, as the heads of the UN and International Energy Agency have pointed out. Indeed there is a powerful case for scrapping the already-granted licence for the giant Rosebank field.

Unite says it wants to “see the money and the plan” for the transition away from oil and gas. But as its leaders well know, plans already exist.

The Sea Change report, published five years ago, showed how the North Sea workforce could expand, with investment in wind power and other renewables. The oil companies and Tory government have other ideas, set out in the North Sea Transition Deal – which proposes spending £15 billion on their pet technofixes, carbon capture and hydrogen. (See also Part 4 below.)

Unite, along with other unions, accepts these false solutions, and calls for investment in hydrogen and carbon capture, as well as wind power. 

At a recent gathering of trade unionists concerned with climate policy, Pete Cannell of the campaign group Scot E3 argued that, given the dominance of this technofix narrative, “it’s legitimate to ask whether ‘just transition’ is any longer the right framing.”

Perhaps we should be talking about “rupture, rather than transition,” he said, to make gains for social justice and tackling climate change. This starts with uniting oil workers and Scottish working-class communities more broadly. This is the conversation we urgently need.  

2. Public ownership in the electricity system

Labour will set up a “publicly-owned clean power company”, GB Energy, paid for by a windfall tax on oil and gas producers. But GB Energy will own few, if any, electricity generation assets and will focus on partnerships with private capital. Labour also plans to leave the electricity transmission and distribution grids in private hands, and to leave largely unchanged the neoliberal electricity market rules that allowed corporations to reap billions by impoverishing households in the 2022 ‘energy crisis’. 

Labour intends to capitalise GB Energy with £8.3 billion over the next five years: £3.3 billion for a potentially useful Local Power Plan (see Part 3 below), and £5 billion to “co-invest in new technologies” including floating offshore wind and hydrogen, and “scale and accelerate mature technologies” including wind, solar and nuclear.

Labour’s loud claim that GB Energy will “lower [electricity] bills because renewables are cheaper than gas” is not credible. This would require, at least, an investment far greater than £5 billion, allied to a root-and-branch overhaul of electricity markets.

More likely, GB Energy will, at best, fund new technologies that financial markets prefer not to risk their own money on – or even follow in the footsteps of Tony Blair’s disastrous Private Finance Initiative, with which corporations milked billions from the NHS. The Guardian, apparently briefed by Keir Starmer’s team, reported that GB Energy will probably start with “investments alongside established private sector companies”, including the chronically over-budget Hinkley Point, Sizewell C and Wylfa nuclear projects.

The Greens and others slammed Starmer, when he finally clarified on 31st May that GB Energy will essentially be an investment vehicle. But a trenchant critique had already been published last year: Unite’s Unplugging Energy Profiteers report, which warned that “unless combined with a public purchasing monopoly, or significant market reform intervention, [GB Energy] will have no impact on distorted pricing in the wholesale market”, and “by concentrating very limited resources on de-risking experimental forms of generation, GB Energy will use public resources to underwrite and further increase future potential profits for the private sector.”

Unite, and the Trades Union Congress, call for public ownership to be extended not only in electricity generation, but also in the supply business and in transmission and distribution networks. Labour made similar calls in 2019, but has now ditched them.

Under-investment in these networks is a scandal as damaging as the water companies’ rip-off: tens of billions of pounds’ worth of network upgrades are needed to facilitate renewable generation and close the gap on missed climate targets.

Already, there are 10+year queues for renewables to be connected to the grid; house-builders are fitting climate-trashing gas boilers because they cannot access electricity for heat pumps; battery storage lies unused because companies’ computer systems are out of date… all while distribution networks paid out £3.6 billion in dividends to shareholders in 2017-21.

The system is in such a state that even Rishi Sunak’s dysfunctional government took regulatory powers away from National Grid and put them in the Future System Operator. Nick Winser, the electricity network commissioner, warned the government that unchanged, the system would leave “clean, cheap domestic energy generation standing idle, potentially for years.” “Very few new transmission circuits have been built in the last 30 years,” he said: unless jolted, companies could take up to 14 years to build them.

To make the electricity network fit for the transition away from fossil fuels, wider public ownership is crucial. Our movement needs to work out how to coordinate the fight for it.

3. Community energy and decentralised renewables

Labour promises to spend £3.3 billion on a Local Power Plan, under which GB Energy will “partner with energy companies, local authorities and cooperatives to develop up to 8GW of cheaper, cleaner power by 2030.” Up to 20,000 renewable projects will return “a proportion” of their profits back to communities. But “the detail on these plans is sparse,” the New Statesman reported – and so it is surely up to community organisations and the labour movement to discuss effective ways this money could be spent.  

Until now, central government has been a wrecking ball for community energy. In 2015, it changed planning rules, effectively blocking onshore wind projects. In 2019, it scrapped the feed-in tariff paid for electricity supplied to the grid from small-scale renewables. And for years – as decentralised renewables technology leaped forward internationally – it ignored calls to overhaul market rules. Small renewables projects were locked out of the grid by the need for a £1 million + licence, and other obstructions.

The Green New Deal all-party parliamentary group last year called for the regulatory system to be turned upside down, to end its bias in favour of the “big five” generators. It proposed a “European style ‘right of local supply’”; changes to rules on planning and public procurement; mandatory transparency of grid data; and other measures.

Such changes would make it possible to replicate the success of Energy Local in Bethesda, north Wales, which supplies locally-produced hydro power to households at below-grid prices. In April, the Common Wealth think tank proposed a “public-commons partnership” as the institutional form under which local authorities could develop such projects.

All this will take a fight, though. Otherwise, electricity corporates will spread their tentacles into decentralised renewables, as they are doing in the US and Australia.

Furthermore, we need to overcome the official labour movement’s residual reluctance to support community energy projects. The TUC’s recent renewables policy paper, which lists offshore wind, wave, nuclear and “zero carbon hydrogen” (?) as energy technologies – but not decentralised wind and solar – is, unfortunately, indicative.

Decentralised renewables, developed with cooperative, community and local authority forms of ownership and governance, can help to break corporate control of electricity provision, and open the way to democratise and decommodify it.

4. Opposing false technological solutions

False technofixes, including hydrogen and carbon capture, use and storage (CCUS) feature prominently in Labour’s election manifesto – the outcome of lobbying by the oil industry, for which they comprise a survival strategy. Nuclear power – expensive, dangerous, and beloved of the military – is there too, grabbing funds from proven, socially useful technologies such as home insulation, public transport and decentralised renewable power.

While the case against nuclear has been made, and the false logic of CCUS exposed, over decades, the drive for hydrogen is more recent: it is the oil companies’ alternative to electricity-centred decarbonisation. Energy systems researchers argue that, while hydrogen may be needed in future, for example, for steelmaking or energy storage, it will never be suitable for home heating, and hardly ever for transport. 

The Tory government has invested heavily in hydrogen, and the 2023 Energy Act provided a framework for its commercial development. But attempts to bribe communities into testing it out for home heating have hit setbacks. A planned test at Whitby, Merseyside, was cancelled last year after vigorous opposition by local residents and the HyNot campaign group. This year a second planned test at Redcar, Yorkshire, and a third one in Fife, Scotland, were both postponed.   

Catherine Green Watson of HyNot said: “These postponements are great progress for our campaign. But on Merseyside we still have strong local political support for hydrogen in industry, which should not be the priority. Instead, we need to concentrate on upgrading the electricity grid.”

We need a discussion in the labour movement and social movements about the social role of these technologies. We could work towards unity around the principle that they should not receive state funding that could go to quicker, more effective decarbonisation paths.

5. Energy use in our homes and transport 

Labour has scaled back its promises to invest in its Warm Homes Plan that will fund grants and low-interest loans for insulating homes and replacing gas boilers with heat pumps. Shadow Energy Secretary Ed Miliband last year talked about “up to £6 billion a year”; by the time Labour’s manifesto was published last week, this had shrunk to “an additional £6.6 billion over the course of the next parliament” (that is, over five years). Talk of upgrading 19 million homes had stopped; now it’s 5 million.

Labour has stuck with commitments to take railways back into public ownership, and to support municipal ownership and franchising of bus services. But it is also promising to “forge ahead with new roads”, and keep the transport system centred on private cars, at a time when researchers argue that this cuts dangerously across tackling climate change.

If Labour sticks to this course, determined by its neoliberal fiscal rules and by corporate lobbying, then key opportunities to cut UK carbon emissions, while improving people’s lives, will be missed. Researchers have been screaming for years that insulation and heat pumps, and superseding the car-centred transport system with better, cheaper public transport, are desperately needed to decarbonise homes and transport, the two largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions.

Battles on effective energy conservation in homes, transport and throughout the economy are part of the war to limit climate change.

Labour’s commitments are too timid to reverse the disasters caused by Tory policies. In the decade from 2012, annual completions of home insulation upgrades fell by nine-tenths. The measures announced by government last year would take 190 years to improve the energy efficiency of the UK housing stock and 300 years to hit the government’s own targets for reducing fuel poverty, National Energy Action stated.

As for roads, the government could cancel the £10 billion Lower Thames Crossing scheme, final approval of which has been delayed until October, and apply to all future projects the principle adopted by the Welsh government – that they can only go ahead if compatible with climate policy.  

Labour may not only fail to deal with these gigantic sources of carbon emissions, but actually open up new ones. A grim example is Labour’s threat to overrule communities who question tech corporations who want to build fuel-guzzling data centres – which will help trash climate targets, to the benefit of those corporations alone.

6. Bringing the issues together

The stakes are high. Every new assessment by climate scientists underlines the conclusion reached by leading British researchers four years ago: that the UK’s decarbonisation targets are half as stringent as they need to be, to make a fair contribution to tackling global heating. The government’s own climate change committee says non-power sectors of the economy need to decarbonise four times faster than they are doing.

Tackling climate change, while reversing the effects of 14 years of neoliberal austerity policies, will not be easy. Indeed, Labour does not intend to: both decarbonisation and social policy will be subordinated to their fiscal rules.

The labour movement and social movements need to challenge and push back Labour’s pro-fossil-fuel, pro-austerity approach.  

We need to unite our forces and find the pressure points – be it saying ‘no’ to the Lower Thames Crossing project and similar, or finding openings for collective action, for example in the Local Power and Warm Homes plans.

To act effectively on climate, we need to keep in mind the necessity of holistic solutions, and reject illusory technofixes and greenwash narratives that claim to reduce emissions with one hand, and pour them into the atmosphere with the other.

Simon Pirani is honorary professor at the University of Durham, and writes a blog at peoplenature.org, where this article first appeared.

Image: A protest at government offices against the Rosebank oil field project, January 2023. Photo by Steve Eason


UK

The NHS has lost £10 million-a-week to private profits since 2012 – We Own It

“Profits removed from all private/outsourcing contracts given out by the NHS between January 2012 and May 2024 are estimated to be £6.7 billion.”

By We Own It

A new analysis by We Own It reveals that £6.7 billion, or £10 million each week, has left the NHS’s budget in the form of profits on all private contracts given by the NHS from January 2012 to May 2024.

This finding is based on an analysis of NHS contracts data supplied to public ownership campaign organisation We Own It by public sector contracts specialists, Tussell, involving up to 72,258 contracts worth a total of £130.7 billion.

Looking specifically at outsourcing contracts for services that the NHS can and does already deliver in many places, We Own It analysis shows that out of the £6.7 billion total profits that have left the NHS, £5.2 billion, or 78%, were on contracts for services.[1]

Analysis:

Because of the massive number of contracts involved, we chose a statistically representative portion to analyse and then apply the findings to the total of contracts. 

We chose all contracts over the value of £1 million:

  • These made up 12.5% of the total number of contracts –  9093/72258
  • But 94% of the total value of contracts (in £ terms) –  £123.1 billion/£130.7 billion

Tussell’s dataset includes profit estimates for the vast majority of the 72,258 contracts. They use Moody’s market analysis tool, Bureau van Dijk (BvD), to extract their profit estimates.[2] 

Tussell data indicates that the average contract worth over £1 million had an average estimated profit margin of 5.18%.

We then applied this estimated profit margin to the totality (in terms of value) of contracts given out by the NHS at national, regional and local levels since January 2012. We applied an estimated profit margin of 5.18% to £130.7 billion.

Profits removed from all private/outsourcing contracts given out by the NHS between January 2012 and May 2024 are estimated to be £6.7 billion.

  • Or £558 million each year
  • Or £45 million each month (£44.9 million to be exact)
  • Or £10 million a week (£10.3 million to be exact)

The above figure incorporates the NHS in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The NHS in all the nations are funded through a grant from the UK government.

Total amounts that have left the NHS in profits from outsourcing contracts given by each non-English nation between January 2012 and May 2024:

  • Scotland – £374.3 million
  • Wales – £282.4 million
  • Northern Ireland – £90.2 million

The cost of NHS privatisation – for individual party pledges:

Below is a partial list of how each of the main parties could factor in savings from ending NHS privatisation into the costings of their manifesto policies:

  1. It can cover the Liberal Democrat’s £4 billion plan to give cancer patients the legal right to start treatment within two months of referral and still have £2.7 billion left.
  2. It can more than triple Labour’s £2 billion plan to create 40,000 new GP appointments per week, 700,000 new dentist appointments per year and double the NHS’s diagnostic capacity.
  3. It can cover the cost of the Conservative £1 billion-per-year plan to build 100 GP surgeries per year in England, for almost 7 years.
  4. It would cover the cost of the Royal College of Nurses proposed student loan forgiveness for NHS nurses for up to 28 years.
  5. Given the Labour manifesto has committed to continuing the Conservatives’ 40 new hospitals project, the amount that has left the NHS in profits since 2012 would cover the cost of building 10 of those new hospitals.

ENDNOTES

  1. NHS private contracts fall under a number of categories, such as contracts for “works”, “products”, “supplies”, “services”, “not applicable” and “not specified”. The £6.7 billion profits figure applies to all contracts across all these categories. The more specific £5.2 billion profits figure applies to just “services”, which tend to be for things like surgeries, tests, catering, cleaning, etc contracts. The NHS does these things in some parts, which means the NHS can provide those services by itself if they decided to bring those contracts back in house.
  2. It should be said that Moody’s BvD provides an estimate of the profit margins of companies as a whole, but Tussell (and we) make the assumption that there is a strong similarity between a company’s profit margins on all revenue and their profit margin on revenue from one particular source, such as an NHS contract.

 

Seeing the reality of life in occupied Palestine – Christina McAnea, UNISON

“The Israeli presence is everywhere in the West Bank. It’s clear the Israeli government controls all the borders, all the roads, movement of people & goods, & even the flow of water.”

By UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea

Travelling from Amman in Jordan to Ramallah the administrative centre of the Palestinian West Bank, as I did recently, gave me a first-hand view of the grim reality of being in an occupied territory.

I was there in the last week in May as part of an international trade union delegation, at the request of the Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions (PGFTU), pictured above.

It was the first time all eight international union federations had come together, representing over 200 million workers across 170 countries.

I was there as part of Public Services International (PSI) along with PSI general secretary Daniel Bertossa.

We all travelled in a minibus through a mountainous desert landscape, passing the Jordan River, through Jericho to Ramallah.

We saw many Israeli settlements on high ridges, distinctive because of the protected barriers and telecoms masts.

The Israeli presence is everywhere in the West Bank. It is clear that the Israeli government controls all the borders, all the roads, movement of people and goods as well as money and even the flow of water.

Roads are closed and checkpoints appear at will, making life difficult for ordinary Palestinians.

While there, we met ministers and President Abbas from the government of the Palestinian Authority run by Fatah. Gaza is controlled by Hamas.

The president was clear “we are against killing civilians, whatever their background”.

He condemned the killings on 7 October 2023 and the devastation and death toll inflicted on Gaza and in the West Bank. He asked for the trade union movement’s support in getting recognition for the State of Palestine.

I also met Palestinian workers, including those providing public service, and hearing about their daily lives and challenges had a huge impact. Workers only get paid for 2-3 days per week as there is no money for public services, while they face daily challenges in just moving around.

Everyone told stories of journeys of just a few kilometres taking hours because of Israeli checkpoints, and described the fear and worry about their families and friends in Gaza.

Everyone spoke of the need for help in rebuilding Gaza and supporting those still there.

All of the union federations are calling for an immediate and lasting ceasefire alongside increased aid.

But, daily life, of course, often comes down to simple things. I spoke to a public service worker from the Jenin refugee camp and his dream was for a night where he didn’t worry about Israeli soldiers coming into the camp and for a small patch of ground where he could play safely with his children. Such modest dreams yet so out of his reach.

On my return journey to Jordan, at the border crossing, this was once again under the scrutiny of Israeli guards – even though this is not Israel but Palestine.

I felt inspired and motivated, more than ever, to campaign and fight for justice for all Palestinians.


International solidarity on World Refugee Day

“This day serves as a reminder of the resilience and courage of refugees and the urgent need for global action to ensure their protection”
Luc Triangle

This World Refugee Day, 20 June, the International Trade Union Confederation stands in solidarity with the millions of refugees and people forcibly displaced by climate change, conflict, persecution, and violence.

A new ITUC briefing on climate change and migration outlines some of the solutions demanded by trade unions to improve support for refugees.

ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle said: “This day serves as a reminder of the resilience and courage of refugees and the urgent need for global action to ensure their protection. Trade unions are uniquely placed to support people seeking refuge by protecting their right to work and democratic, workplace rights. This is what we do; they are core values for the trade union movement, and central to the ITUC For Democracy campaign.”

We call on governments, employers, and communities worldwide to uphold the principles of solidarity, equality, and inclusivity, and take the following actions to support refugees:

  • Ensure access to decent work: Refugees must have access to decent work. This is essential for their economic independence, their dignity, and self-worth. All countries must remove legal and practical barriers that prevent refugees from participating fully in the labour market.
  • Protect labour rights: Refugees often face exploitation and abuse in the labour market. Labour standards and protections must be enforced for all workers, regardless of their status.
  • Promote social inclusion and integration: Refugees should be welcomed into our communities and their inclusion must be supported. This includes access to social protection, quality public services and measures to recognise their skills and provide them with skills development and life-long learning opportunities.
  • Strengthen international cooperation and responsibility-sharing: International solidarity is crucial to address the root causes of displacement and implement durable solutions. Wealthier countries must share responsibility by creating humanitarian pathways for displaced persons and providing adequate resources and support to countries hosting large numbers of refugees.

ITUC General Secretary Luc Triangle concluded: “The ITUC reaffirms its commitment to advocating for the rights of refugees and combatting discrimination and xenophobia. By supporting refugees, we not only uphold our humanitarian obligations but also build stronger, more resilient societies.”

The UNHCR estimates that there are around 130 million people forcibly displaced from their homes in 2024. This includes refugees, asylum-seekers, and millions of displaced people both within their countries as well as across borders due to adverse impacts of climate change.




World Refugee Day 2024

JUNE 20, 2024

Sara De Witt outlines why it’s important to highlight the plight of refugees and reflects on a scheme from fifty years ago which governments today could learn from.

Today is World Refugee Day .This has been marked globally since 2001, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Convention on the Status of Refugees.

On this date we think about those people who have been forced to escape areas of conflict or persecution. It is aimed at raising awareness, promoting empathy and also understanding. The message is to support refugees while upholding their rights

Currently there is a trend reflected in the media from politicians mainly from the right about immigrants and refugees. Usually the information provided is not factual and is aimed at creating fear and division among communities. They present a picture aimed at  making the public believe the UK is being invaded by people coming in small boats.

Until 2021 there were 27.1 million refugees in the world. The majority of them were living in neighbour countries. The UK had accepted a small number of refugees until then, nearly1%.  

Countries like Syria have produced  6.8 million displaced people, Afghanistan 2.7 million refugees, Venezuela 4.6 million of displaced people and the list continues with South Sudan, Myanmar and so on.

There is no legal way to travel to the UK for people seeking asylum. The UK has no refugee quotas. There have been recent schemes aimed at accepting refugees under certain conditions, such as the Ukrainian and Afghanistan schemes. The schemes for resettlement and family reunion managed by the UN in cooperation with individual countries are very complicated and rather slow. The number of people assisted in reuniting with relatives living in the UK is very small.

People seeking asylum in the UK usually have a long wait until their situation is resolved. They are not allowed to work  although many of them have skills and experience,  which would benefit the domestic economy.  They have to survive on £6.43 per day for all their needs, unless they have been placed in a settings which provides food, in which case their financial support is reduced.

It is difficult to see any understanding and empathy under the current system dealing with asylum seekers in the UK. They have the threat of being sent to Rwanda hanging over them. They also, in some cases, are placed in hostile environments. There have been a number of concerns related to the mental health of asylum seekers placed at Wethersfield, related to suicide attempts and self-harm. These people live in a setting similar to prison, isolated from the community and waiting for information about their future. They are people who escaped a situation fearing for their lives, with many having experience of torture and prison.

The Labour Party is promising to launch a new Border Security Command with 100 investigators with counter-terror powers to smash criminal gangs and strengthen our borders, but it has not said anything about setting up legal and safe ways for asylum seekers. This measure, if implemented, will contribute to people dying while trying to get asylum in the UK.

There is no mention of respecting asylum seekers’ rights. These people are not illegal; they could request asylum in any country they chose: they do not have to do it in the first county they arrive in.

The Chilean scheme

On 11th September 1973 the democratically elected government of Salvado Allende in Chile was violently overthrown by Agusto Pinochet. Allende had been elected in 1970; he had a radical programme of government, lifting millions of people out of poverty, using the country’s natural resources – cooper – to pay for this. The United States government and the CIA, with some support from richer countries, started a process of destabilization, because the Chilean example could have spread to the rest of Latin America.

Chile did not have access to any loans from international agencies. Those promoting destabilization stopped foreign investment and trade with Chile. They financed right wing media and provided money and arms to right wing extremist groups. In 1973, Pinochet, head of the armed forces, overthrew the Allende government and began the persecution, detention, torture and killing of thousands of people. Many people escaped the country and others sought refuge in the embassies of democratic countries in Santiago, the capital.

In  Great Britain the solidarity of many people started a process which would culminate in saving the life of many Chileans. Academics for Chile may have been one of the first organizations which established links with persecuted and imprisoned academics and students, putting pressure for them to receive sanctuary. The World University Service under Alan Phillips enlisted the support of Judith Hart, Labour Minister for Overseas Development after 1974. This support towards the Chileans at risk in their own country was pivotal. 

The World University Service worked with Chileans from October 1973 to 1985 and helped more than 900 Chileans complete or continue their studies in the UK. They also provided practical and moral support. They also helped some Chileans return to their country once conditions were safe.

The work of the World University Service opened the way for more integrated work with other organizations such as Oxfam, British Refugee Council. Other organizations which also provided support to Chileans refugees were the Joint Working Group for Chilean/Latin American Refugees and the Chile Committee for Human Rights – not to mention many trade unions and student unions.

Some 3,000 Chilean refugees settled in the UK. They were able to live in  Scotland, Wales and Great Britain, among their communities. They were able to work, pay taxes, study and contribute to the society which had welcomed them. Nearly half of these refugees returned to Chile once the dictatorship ended.

Hopefully, the next Labour government will set up safe and accessible routes for asylum seekers, while processing their applications promptly. In 2022, 75% of the initial decisions for those asking for asylum were granted.

This should be accompanied by a policy and practice of respect and empathy. Governments of rich countries should learn from history about the consequences of destabilizing countries. The Chilean case shows that the violation of human rights generated an exodus of people looking for sanctuary.

Sara De Witt was completing her Social Work training in Chile, when she was detained by the secret police. She  spent nearly two years in detention. After her release, she had to leave the country due to threats from the secret police. She came to the UK in December 1976,. The World University Service provided a grant and she completed a Public and Social Policy BA at Bradford University and later a Social Work training qualification at Swansea University. She subsequently worked in Social Services.

 

How Capitalism really works – Grace Blakeley’s Vulture Capitalism Review

Grace Blakeley’s new book covers not only the scandals but also the structural corruption of capitalism, writes Walden Bello

Vulture Capitalism is not just a muckraking book, a collection of juicy scandals. Where a New York Times investigation ends is where Grace Blakeley really begins her work, which is to “look at how capitalism really looks.”


Vulture Capitalism is, at one level, a really good read, for the scandals that it brings together in one volume – like the Boeing 737 MAX debacle, where the pursuit of profits, lack of regulation, and corporate cost-cutting culture resulted in two crashes that killed hundreds of people, or the ways most of the $800 million allocated by Washington for the Paycheck Protection Plan (PPP) to enable workers to get through the COVID 19 pandemic actually ended up with their employers. Among the direct or indirect beneficiaries of the PPP were House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell’s wife, and Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, the notorious far-right conspiracy theorist. All owned businesses or were part-owners of enterprises that siphoned off PPP dollars meant for workers.

But don’t get fooled by the title, which was probably the bright idea of the publisher’s marketing department. Vulture Capitalism is not just a muckraking book, a collection of juicy scandals. Where a New York Times investigation ends is where Grace Blakeley really begins her work, which is to “look at how capitalism really looks.” For her, the scandals illustrate not just the doings of corrupt individuals or corporations but the larger, deeper, more encompassing structural corruption that is embedded system of capitalism itself.

Market Versus Plan

Blakeley begins her deconstruction of capitalism by taking up the market-versus-planning debate that continues to animate the economics profession. Neoliberals make out state planning as the greatest enemy of the market, the source of all the inefficiencies, distortions, and screw-ups in what would otherwise be a plain-sailing economic journey. Keynesians say the economy must be managed or “planned” to avoid market failures. Blakeley comes out straightforwardly and declares the debate to be largely a false one. Giant corporations can have a major distorting influence on the market, and their size and resources enable them to plan production not only at a corporate but at a social level. Effective control of the market by a few giants allows them to do large-scale planning even as they compete with each other.

Blakeley is refreshingly an unapologetic Marxist, and Marx could not have articulated his insights on the relationship between the market and planning for a contemporary audience better than her:

Capitalism is a system defined by a tension—a dialectic—between markets and planning, in which some actors are better able to exert control over the system than others, but in which no one actor—let alone individual—can control the dynamics of production and exchange entirely.  Capitalism is a system that teeters on the knife edge between competition and coordination; this tension is what explains both its adaptability and rigid inequalities.

So, the real conflict is not between markets and planning, but the ends of planning, with accumulating profit being the goal of planning under capitalism, and—in theory at least—the general interest being the aim of socialist planning.

Making Economics Accessible

Blakeley does not introduce a new theory about the way capitalism works. “Most of the ideas discussed in this book are not new,” she tells us right from the beginning. “My argument is constructed based on the analysis of the work of well-known economists, with which academic readers will already be familiar.” She wants to make their ideas accessible to people. Given the well-deserved reputation of orthodox economics being the contemporary equivalent of the medieval theological preoccupation with how many angels could stand on the head of a pin, this task is not to be sneered at, since the alternative that many opt for is conspiracy theory, which is the default mode of analysis in populist circles on both the Left and the Right.

But making economic theories accessible does not mean making their ideas sound simplistic. Even when it comes to economists Blakeley disagrees with, like Friedrich Hayek, Ronald Coase, and Joseph Schumpeter, she is not dismissive and accords their views the critical analysis they deserve.

In the case of Schumpeter, for instance, the notion of the process of “creative destruction” destroying monopolies may have once been a powerful reflection of the dynamics of early twentieth-century capitalism. But it is a theory that has outlived its usefulness, Blakeley contends, because today’s corporations, with their massive assets, can control the process of technological innovation, buying out or stifling the growth of innovative corporations that may threaten their stranglehold on the market.

Blakeley brings aboard not only political economists to help us understand the dynamics of contemporary capitalism. She draws on the insights of the French thinker Michel Foucault to show that neoliberalism not only seeks to shape the economy but the personalities of people as well. Foucault pointed to the creation of the entrepreneurial self or homo economicus who is engaged mainly in terms of maximizing his self-interest. This self-conceptualization has the effect of undermining the possibility of collective action, resulting in the “destruction of society itself, and its replacement with a structured competition between individual human capitals—but on a fundamentally unequal playing field.”

The State under Capitalism

According to neoliberals, the contradiction between market and planning is a manifestation of the larger conflict between the market and state as the principal organizing principle of the economy. The reality is that both the market and the state serve the interest of capital. For the most part, this is not done in a direct, instrumental fashion like extending benefits and perks to individual capitalists, though there is no lack of cases where government contracts or legislation favors particular business interests, as the cases of Boeing and the PPP debacle illustrate. More important is the fact that the state pursues the “general” and “long-run interest” of the capitalist class. Instead of conceiving the state as an instrument of the capitalist class, one must see the state as an institution or set of structured relations that “organize capitalists into a coherent group, conscious of its interests and able to enact them.”

Blakeley is expressing here the view articulated by the French philosopher Louis Althusser, the Greek-French political economist Nicos Poulantzas, and the American political sociologist James O’Connor: that the state is characterized by its “relative autonomy” from economic power relations because its primal role is to stabilize a mode of production that is marked by sharp social contradictions. Perhaps the best conceptualization of this relationship between the political and the economic was provided by O’Connor who saw the relative autonomy of the state as stemming from the tension between its two functions: that is, it has to balance the needs of capital accumulation that increases the profits of the capitalist class and the system’s need for legitimacy to maintain stability. Welfare spending by the state may cut into capital accumulation, but it is necessary to create political stability. This tension gives rise to a stratum of technocrats to manage the tradeoffs between the two primordial drives of capital accumulation and legitimation. Management of this tension, which expressed itself in, among others, the trade-off between inflation and unemployment, was erected into a “science” by the followers of John Maynard Keynes, but this drew the ire of Hayek and his followers, who regarded the Keynesians tinkering with the market as courting economic inefficiency and subverting political freedom.

But Blakeley puts things in perspective. Keynes’s technocrats may engage in social spending but the purpose is to keep the system stable and preserve the class division between those who benefit from the system because they own the means of production and those who are exploited by it despite their being the beneficiaries of some crumbs from social spending. Proponents of reform capitalism were elated by the massive government stimulus programs during the Covid 19 pandemic, but, as in the case of the PPP—where workers received one dollar for every four allocated by the program, with the rest going to business owners like the Trump fanatic Marjorie Taylor Greene—it was the corporate elite and its allied upper middle entrepreneurial and professional strata that cornered most of the benefits of the U.S. government’s fiscal spending and monetary easing policies.

Needed: Another Book

Vulture Capitalism focuses on the class division between owners and workers central to capitalism and its ramifications throughout the system. There are, however, key dimensions of capitalism that Blakely does not tackle but which are central to understanding how it operates. Among these are the social reproduction of the system, where gender inequality and patriarchal oppression play a decisive role, and the way racism stratifies and differentiates the working class, providing what the great sociologist W.E.B. Dubois called a “psychological wage” that coopts white workers into supporting the system. But there is only so much one can pack into as single volume, so it can only be hoped that Blakeley will come out with another volume that will bring to these and related issues the same clearsighted analysis and engaging style she displays in her current book.

Also deserving of further analysis is democratic planning. The final section of the book presents us with examples of exciting possibilities for progressive planning, such as the detailed plan proposed by the workers of Lucas Aerospace Corporation to turn this British arms manufacturer into a producer of socially useful commodities and the innovative “participatory budgeting” formulated by the city government of Porto Alegre that spread to over 250 other cities in Brazil.  Blakeley’s discussion of various democratic and socialist initiatives is a valuable complement to the late sociologist Erik Olin Wright’s book Envisioning Real Utopias.

It would have been useful, however, for Blakeley to draw out lessons from the failure of central planning in the Soviet Union and how democratic planning would be different, since many people associate socialist planning with the Soviet Union. Here, it would also be important to contrast Soviet central planning with Chinese planning, which allowed market forces to develop non-strategic sectors of the economy while restricting foreign investment in sectors considered strategic and prioritizing the transfer of technology from transnational corporations to key industries. True, there are some major problems with China’s technocratic development model, but an annual growth rate of 10 percent over 30 years and the radical reduction of poverty to two percent of the population (according to the World Bank) is not to be ignored, even by partisans of democratic planning, especially since, despite its technocratic bias, the “Chinese Model” is finding so many partisans in the Global South. Indeed, what else can one take away from the Biden administration’s adoption of industrial policy in its effort to catch up with China except Washington’s moving away from neoliberalism and the triumph of planning?

Again, you can only pack so many topics into one volume, but I raise these concerns related to democratic planning in the hope that, whether in articles or in books, Grace Blakeley will apply to them the same analytical acuity and clear exposition she has displayed in analyzing class conflict, the market, and the state in Vulture Capitalism.



 

Forget free markets – it’s all about global domination!

Mike Phipps reviews Vulture capitalism: Corporate Crimes, Backdoor Bailouts and the Death of Freedom, by Grace Blakeley, published by Bloomsbury.

JUNE 22, 2024

In the Introduction to this book, Grace Blakeley says her aim is to show that “capitalism is not defined by the presence of free markets, but by the rule of capital; and that socialism is not defined by the dominance of the state over all areas of life, but by true democracy.” How far does she succeed?

The first premise is amply illustrated – from the huge sums of government money thrown at the under-regulated and cost-cutting American aviation industry, to the state bailouts for the US car industry which allowed Ford and others to continue to pay huge dividends to shareholders. Embracing neoliberalism has certainly not resulted in a smaller state: what has changed under its system is who benefits.

Pandemic piñata

The Covid pandemic underlines this. The US’s “Paycheck Protection Program” saw workers receive just $1 out of every $4 distributed through the initiative. The rest went to business and has mostly never been repaid. Many of the companies involved use tax havens to cut their tax bills. Several members of Congress benefited financially from the scheme, as did lobbyists. Meanwhile, millions of workers lost their jobs or were evicted by companies that received public money.

Likewise in the UK, “dozens of large companies that had accessed government support through the Bank of England’s Covid Corporate Financing Facility went on to lay off workers and pay out dividends to shareholders.”

Similarly, all of France’s top companies received some form of government support and paid out 34 billion euros to shareholders while cutting 60,000 jobs around the world. A recent report noted that “public assistance to the private sector now exceeds the amount paid out in social welfare.”

In Australia, a colossal A$12.5 billion of government money was given to companies that were “largely unaffected “ by the pandemic. All over the world, the same picture emerges.

The precedent for such largesse was set during the financial collapse of 2008. Although the crash is often blamed on corporate greed, in reality the investment banks would never have taken the risks they did without the implicit insurance of the central bank, and behind it the government. The crisis’s global dimension “was driven as much by crooked coordination between powerful actors as it was by unrestrained ‘free market’ capitalism. And when the crisis did hit, once again the state stepped in to shield powerful vested interests from the consequences of their own greed.” Prosecutions in its wake were almost unheard of.

Permanent subsidies and rigged rules

Big corporations expect a government bailout in a crisis, but for many industries public subsidies are a permanent state of affairs. The fossil fuel industry gets a staggering $5.9 trillion of public money worldwide.

In the world of exports, ‘free markets’ don’t really explain the dominance of the companies of the Global North over poorer countries, for all the neoliberal rhetoric about free trade. Attempts by the Global South to use industrialization to escape the cycle of dependency enshrined in their export of raw materials, have repeatedly been thwarted by richer countries, whether by direct political interference – as in the US-sponsored coup in Guatemala in the 1950s – or through Western-imposed trade rules. These prevent governments in poorer countries from protecting their fledgling industries against Western imports, themselves often state-subsidised.

Investor-state dispute settlements (ISDSs) are part of this international architecture, dreamed up  – and arguably rigged – by the West. When after a lengthy legal battle, the Ecuadorian courts ordered Chevron to pay $9.5 billion in compensation for a massive toxic waste spillage in the country’s rainforest, the company closed all its Ecuadorian operations and launched an ISDS claim, which overturned the judgment. To add insult to injury, the Ecuadorian government was then ordered to pay $800 million of the company’s legal costs.

Blakeley concludes: “ISDSs are part of a growing body of international law that, with the active support of powerful states, has helped to routinise corporate crime on a mass scale.” They can be used to get compensation for companies whenever a government passes a law to discourage smoking or protect the environment. Canada, Mexico and Germany have all been forced to abandon or dilute environmental regulations and pay compensation to corporate polluters in recent years.

And this is just one mechanism that allows Western capital to penetrate overseas markets on unequal terms. The state-assisted exploitation of less developed countries can be violent and barbarous. “One of the first things the US government did with occupied Iraq was sell off state assets en masse. In doing so, the planners of the 2003 US invasion sought to share the spoils of the invasion with US businesses and introduce the disciplining hand of American capital into Iraqi society.”

Blakeley is hardly the first economist to highlight capitalism’s monopolistic tendencies. But what’s new here is how today’s giant companies use their privileged position not just to corner the market or raise prices, but to establish for themselves as much sovereignty as possible. This applies not just internally, for example in the case of Amazon’s ruthless approach to suppressing trade union organisation, but also externally, as with corporations involved internationally in human rights abuses.

In this sense, modern corporations constitute a form of private government, hierarchically centralised and controlled, and often unconstrained by the national laws of weak governments – in poorer countries especially, but not exclusively. And in many fields, such companies are empowered to act using force – from private armies to outsourced contracts for immigration detention and removal activities.

Democratic alternatives

Blakeley’s focus on economic democracy as an expression of nascent socialism is a lot shorter. The 1976 Alternative Plan for Lucas Aerospace was a significant milestone, but it may be overstating its importance to say “it provided inspiration for workers all over the world for the next several decades.” In any case, as one reviewer pointed out, “it was swatted aside by management.”

However, the author does produce some interesting examples of human cooperation and democratic planning: the New South Wales Builders Labourers Federation which refused to allow its labour to be used for harmful purposes; the Union of Farm Workers’  occupation of land in Andalusia after the death of the fascist dictator Franco in 1975; the Brazilian Workers Party’s experiment in participatory budgeting pioneered in Porto Alegre in 1989, which spread to over 250 cities in Brazil and another 1,500 around the world; the People’s Plan in the Indian state of Kerala in 1996; the post-2008 Better Reykjavik initiative in which 40,000 people pitched ideas to improve Iceland’s capital in an online consultation; the Preston Council experiment in Community Wealth Building; and quite a few others. While the levels of genuine popular participation in these experiments vary considerably and most proved short-lived, they do demonstrate the potential of this kind of democratic planning.

For Blakeley, the 1970-3 Popular Unity government in Chile showed that “it is possible to begin building democratic institutions at scale.” However, it also underlined that full control of the state apparatus is vital, to prevent not just capital strikes and flight, but also the possibility of a violent military coup of the kind that toppled Allende.

Democratising society through activity in trade unions and community campaigns falls some way short of this critical goal. The author’s section on “Democratise the state” says nothing about dismantling its repressive apparatus.

Vulture Capitalism is certainly worth reading for its well-argued critique of contemporary capitalism and the historical alternatives it explores. However, as with many books in this vein, how we proceed from the current mess to a more enduring socialist alternative is less clear.

Mike Phipps’ book Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: The Labour Party after Jeremy Corbyn (OR Books, 2022) can be ordered here.