Pension

No to Macron’s pension cuts! Workers will not pay for war!


After 3 million workers in France marched Tuesday against President Emmanuel Macron’s pension cuts, strikes are spreading across Europe.

A line of riot police officers divides protestors at the end of the demonstration against plans to push back France’s retirement age, at the Invalides monument, Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2023 in Paris. [AP Photo/Thibault Camus]

Anger is erupting against austerity and soaring prices for energy and food that are impoverishing workers worldwide.

The same day as the French protests, Belgian medical workers marched in Brussels against the hospital crisis triggered by COVID-19. Finnish tech workers and half a million workers in Britain also went on strike.

The French strikes raise questions sharply posed to workers internationally. It is impossible to turn back the escalating assault on the social rights of the working class without building a movement against the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine and the mounting danger that it will escalate into a global, nuclear conflict.

Macron is under no illusion that raising the minimum retirement age to 64 to cut overall pension spending by over 5 percent—or around €13 billion per year—is popular or democratic. Polls show 70 percent of French people oppose it, and 79 percent say a social explosion is “possible” in the coming months. Yet Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne has declared the cuts are “non-negotiable” and is mobilizing tens of thousands of riot police to assault workers and youth protesting the cuts.

To justify his authoritarian policies, Macron is recklessly sending tanks to Ukraine to fight Russia and raising French military spending by nearly €100 billion, to €413 billion over 2024–2030. He then cynically claims cutting pensions is “indispensable” to “save the system” from state bankruptcy. He has blamed this on Russian President Vladimir Putin: “There are no more peace dividends as a result of Russia’s aggression against Ukraine.”

Macron is championing the demands of the ruling classes in every imperialist country. In its Tuesday editorial, “Why France Needs Pension Reform,” the Wall Street Journal echoed the arguments of the imperialist bourgeoisies at the outbreak of the two world wars of the last century: Waging great-power war requires drastically cutting workers’ living standards.

It wrote, “Spending to meet the threats won’t be possible without reforms that make pensions and entitlements more sustainable. This is a debate that needs to take place across Europe and in the US. The end of the Cold War created the illusion that welfare states could coast along with ever-more generous benefits. But they can’t if democracies want to defend themselves against authoritarian threats.”



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