Trichet’s rate increase is nail in coffin for PIGS economies

Fictitious ‘independence’ of ECB needs to be replaced by democratic control

Fictitious ‘independence’ of ECB needs to be replaced by democratic control

The European Central Bank’s decision to increase interest rates by 0.25% will have devastating consequences for mortgage holders across Ireland. For many, this extra €500 a year or more will be the straw that breaks the camel’s back and can leave them facing eviction.

Jean-Claude Trichet’s announcment. is also a further nail in the coffin of economies like Greece, Ireland and Portugal which are in need of low interest rates to assist in stimulating economic growth. It also has the potential to ignite the smouldering massive Spanish housing crisis, which in turn can result in Spain completing the quartet of so-called PIGS countries hurling towards default.

The ECB’s ‘independence’ is something that is much trumpeted by right-wing economists. This latest rate increase underlines the fact that this independence is purely fictitious and ECB policy is being determined by the interests of the capitalist class in the so-called ‘core’ Euro countries, like Germany. The trade union movement and Left across Europe must campaign to bring the ECB under democratic control with monetary policy being implemented in the interests of working people across Europe.

 

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New book charts economic, social and political decay of America

 

“No one can say when the unwinding began – when the coil that held Americans together in its secure and  sometimes stifling grip first gave way. Like any great change, the unwinding began at countless times, in  countless ways – and at some moment the country, always the same country, crossed a line of history and  became irretrievably different”.

So begins George Packer in this tremendous book, The Unwinding, which paints a devastating picture of US  capitalism in decline. Similar to Packer, Karl Marx described the collapse of the Spanish Empire as a “slow and  inglorious decay”. The difference is that Spain’s decline took place over centuries, whereas the astonishing  collapse of the US – still, nevertheless, the strongest capitalist power on the planet – has been compressed  into 50 or 60 years!