Category: Austerity

  • On May 1, hundreds of events commemorating International Workers’ Day took place across Europe, with tens of thousands of workers mobilizing for better working conditions, an end to austerity, and a radical rethinking of the region’s role in the world. Rallies and marches sought to reclaim the political significance of May Day, as left and progressive groups joined trade unions to reaffirm the need for a militant labor movement to confront the far right, militarization, and exploitation.

    Demands ranged from workplace-centered issues, like improved health and safety and shorter working hours, to broader international calls for peace, the severing of ties with Israel, and a rejection of racism and austerity.

    The post May Day In Europe Unites Struggles And Resistance appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Protests against the pro-austerity and pro-militarization plans of Belgium’s Arizona coalition government continue. On Sunday, April 27, thousands of people demonstrated in Brussels, demanding an end to policies that would severely impact workers’ pensions and incomes, and calling for the introduction of a real millionaire’s tax and a politics of peace.

    “The parties in government want everyone to work longer for less pension, particularly by introducing a malus or weakening pension indexation,” said Raoul Hedebouw, leader of the Workers’ Party of Belgium (PTB-PVDA), during Sunday’s protest.

    The post Belgians To Government: ‘We Won’t Sacrifice Pensions For Warplanes’ appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Philadelphia, PA – Philadelphia’s transit system, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transit Authority (SEPTA), released a budget on April 10 that includes draconian cuts in services, increased fares and reduced hours of operation. Claiming a $213 million deficit, the budget due to take effect July 1 would impose a 45% service cut, a 21.5% fare increase and layoffs of transit workers.

    Under the proposed plan, some service cuts would go into effect on Sept. 1, along with the fare increase. Between Aug. 24, 2025, and Jan. 1, 2026, fifty bus routes would be shut down and 16 others shortened. On Jan. 1, 2026, five Regional Rail lines between neighboring suburbs and the city would be eliminated and a 9 p.m. rail curfew would go into effect.

    The post Philadelphia Protest Against Transit System’s Proposed Draconian Cuts appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The Trump administration is imposing tariffs on a growing list of countries in a desperate effort to find leverage for protecting US interests abroad and to ostensibly re-industrialize the United States. Clearing the FOG speaks with Jon Jeter, author of “Class War in America: How the elites divide the nation by asking are you a worker or are you white?”, about the motives behind the trade war and how this may impact both the global and domestic economies. Jeter explains that the United States is entering uncharted territory as it increasingly isolates itself from the rest of the world and hurtles toward another Great Depression. For the first time, the US may experience a situation in which the shelves are empty and families are unable to afford what is left.

    The post Trade War And Austerity: The Final Stages Of US Capitalism appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Keir Starmer has done next to nothing to address the Conservative Party-led austerity cuts that decimated Birmingham city council between 2010 and 2020. The maintenance of George Osborne’s legacy under Labour is austerity 2.0. This is the root cause of the Birmingham bin strike over the removal of a role.

    It amounts to a pay cut of up to £8,000 per year for some. Through comparisons with that role, the council owed £250 million in equal pay claims from workers that were assessed to be doing the same job for less pay. But instead of using equal pay to raise wages, the council wants to bring wages down to end the claims.

    Birmingham bin strike: austerity, continued

    It’s clear Birmingham council’s cuts to staff, wages and children’s social services stem from central government austerity. In the decade from 2010 to 2020, the government forced the council to make £736 million in austerity cuts. And the council’s spending power decreased by over 36%. This has also led to a council tax rise of 7.5%, even though Starmer pledged to freeze that very tax. In February, Starmer issued £180 million for the council. That’s far less than the Conservative cuts, and it is in the form of loans that the council must pay back.

    Deputy prime minister Angela Rayner has drawn ire through urging the bin workers to take a new deal to end the dispute. But Unite General Secretary Sharon Graham said the offer was only “a partial deal on pay protection for a few”.

    And one Unite union member made quite the observation:

    The council are saying that we should share the pain but not one councillor, including the leader of the council, has been asked to give up a quarter of their pay. We thought when Labour came in they would stop what was happening, we were wrong.

    Workers taking part in the Birmingham bin strike have been demonstrating just how necessary their work is. Footage shows large piles of rubbish on streets of Birmingham attracting flies, foxes and other animals.

    An idea to consider

    One option to avoid situations like the Birmingham bin strike, which would also increase people’s stake in the public sector, is that more of us could dedicate a portion of their time to public sector work. If the UK’s 10.7 million unemployed and ‘economically inactive’ people spent ten hours a week doing a public sector job, half of the total public sector work would be covered. That’s without considering the current public sector workers, where roles could be job shared. And if everyone of working age dedicated five hours a week to public sector work, the entire public sector would be sorted.

    46% of public jobs are specialist like police officers, teachers, nurses etc, and require more dedication and practice. But it is an idea of how we could address at least some of the more menial work without people committing a 40 hour week to such a role. It could also address the fact that some people are working long weeks and some people are unemployed and ‘economically inactive’.

    In Birmingham, equal pay should mean a rise, not a decrease. But it’s clear legacy austerity is to blame for the Birmingham bin strike – and Labour’s ushering in of austerity 2.0.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By James Wright

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Hundreds of organized workers, representing a variety of unions including the United Auto Workers (UAW), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), the National Educational Association (NEA), the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), the Communication Workers of America (CWA), the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), the United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America (UE), among other groups, took to the streets in demonstrations across the country opposing planning Trump administration cuts to the National Institutes of Health.

    The post Labor Fights Back Against Trump’s Medical Care And Research Cuts appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Kelly Smith, a 57-year-old New York City resident, is part of the Nonviolent Medicaid Army (NVMA), a growing national movement of poor people who are organizing to stop proposed cuts to Medicaid and promote health care as a human right.

    “The need for health care unites us all,” Smith told Truthout. “Right now, I’m terrified of losing Medicaid and being unable to get injections for pain control. They’re the only thing that makes it possible for me to be on my game.”

    Nonetheless, she says that her health is somewhat fragile. Not only is she a breast cancer survivor, but she also has severe scoliosis and takes medication for hypertension, high cholesterol and depression — all covered by Medicaid.

    The post Resistance Grows As Proposed Cuts Threaten Health Care For Millions appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The plans of Elon Musk — the richest man on Earth — to slash Social Security and force mass layoffs will cause tens of thousands more Americans to die while waiting for their disability benefits to be approved, a new report by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont) has found. Right-wing cuts to Social Security have already caused an erosion in services over the past decades, and in recent years…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • More than 2,000 people joined the We Demand Change summit in London on March 29, taking a stand against the anti-people agenda of Keir Starmer’s Labour Party, as well as the racism and warmongering embedded across Britain’s mainstream political landscape. Organized by groups including the Peace and Justice Project, the Stop the War Coalition, and several trade unions, the summit was described as the beginning of a national resistance-building effort, with local meetings to follow.

    “The government and the employers tell us that they can’t afford decent pay or afford to fund our schools and hospitals but when it comes to wars, there is a bottomless pit,” reads the summit’s statement.

    The post We Demand Change Summit Charts Resistance To Labour Austerity appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The Labour Party government is in turmoil, marked by a significant slide in approval ratings following a controversial Spring Statement delivered by chancellor Rachel Reeves. Specifically, it seems that the planned Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) cuts that have sparked outrage among chronically ill and disabled people across the UK are a factor in Labour’s approval slump.

    Labour: hated by nearly everyone…?

    A recent YouGov poll, highlighting a mere 14% approval rating for Labour, indicates that public sentiment has turned sour, with 68% of respondents voicing disapproval. This nets the current administration an alarming rating of minus 54, a figure that echoes the lowest recorded levels of popularity since Keir Starmer’s government assumed office in July.

    The fallout from the Spring Statement has contributed to this decline, plunging the government’s standing amid rising economic challenges.

    This is because the cuts to disability and sickness benefits, announced by DWP boss Liz Kendall, have generated widespread concern.

    As the Canary previously reported, the DWP under Labour is changing the eligibility criteria for Personal Independence Payment (PIP). It is also freezing chronically ill and disabled people’s Limited Capability for Work and Work-Related Activity (LCWRA) elements of Universal Credit, at £97 a week – and reduced them to £47 a week for new claimants – with only people with the most severe conditions able to apply for LCWRA. People under the age of 22 will no longer be able to claim these top-ups under Universal Credit at all.

    Initially, the government had claimed that Reeves’ proposed DWP cuts would save them £5 billion. However, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has had to clarify that the savings will actually be £3.4 billion – hence the freeze in LCWRA rates.

    The government has also revised down its economic growth forecast, further complicating its position. Senior Labour figures, as reported by the Daily Record, are already placing blame on Reeves for these politically damaging decisions.

    DWP cuts: tanking government favourability

    The chancellor’s DWP cuts, particularly affecting PIP and Universal Credit, have not only drawn ire from opposition parties but have also incited potential rebellion within Labour ranks. When the bill for these is laid before parliament in the coming months, already dozens of party MPs have said they’ll be voting against it.

    Speaking to the Express, insiders noted that Labour’s recent decline in public support follows closely on the heels of Reeves’ Spring Statement, which many find difficult to swallow. The announcement has led to fears that the government, which campaigned on promises of economic growth, is veering sharply away from its foundational commitments. As Labour MPs express their discontent with the cuts, it becomes increasingly clear that the party’s cohesion is at risk due to the backlash against these welfare reforms.

    On top of this, April is shaping up to be a particularly challenging month for family finances, with multiple bills rising astronomically.

    The latest political landscape raises questions about the Labour Party’s ability to resonate with its core constituents, particularly those most affected by these austerity measures.

    As key bills loom and the economic landscape evolves, the stakes are higher than ever for those affected by DWP policies, who are now looking to Labour to reconsider its approach and prioritise support for the most vulnerable in society.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • “In short: they lied,” declared the General Labour Federation of Belgium (FGTB-ABVV) in an announcement of the general strike launched on March 31, in coordination with the Confederation of Christian Trade Unions (ACV-CSC). The statement refers to the recently inaugurated Arizona coalition government, which, despite campaign promises to improve living standards, is pursuing over €1 billion in cuts to social services at the national level – while simultaneously boosting spending on militarization and so-called defense.

    The post Belgium On Strike Against Arizona Coalition’s Austerity Plans appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Households across the UK are bracing for a series of bill increases that have come into effect today, marking the beginning of an economically taxing period dubbed “Awful April.” This surge in costs is hitting  those on the lowest incomes hardest, with their finances stretched woefully thin. This is to the point where nearly half their income will go on just six bills – and that doesn’t even include rent.

    Awful April – well, for poor people, anyway

    Citizens Advice has issued a stark warning, stating that even prior to these changes, individuals and families with the lowest incomes were already spending around 41% of their earnings on essential bills including water, energy, broadband, and car insurance.

    In contrast, those in the middle-income bracket were spending only 11%, and the wealthiest households a mere 5%. Clare Moriarty, chief executive of Citizens Advice, elaborated on the dire situation, saying:

    After years of cost-of-living pressures, households across the country are about to feel the extra shock of rising essential bills. But for those on the lowest incomes, these unavoidable costs are already eating away at their finances, leaving their budgets stretched beyond breaking point.

    Moriarty also highlighted the need for action:

    Social tariffs could be an effective safety net and put money back in people’s pockets, but the Government and providers must work together to make sure nobody struggling to make ends meet misses out.

    Local councils, particularly those in England, are expected to impose maximum hikes to council tax, reaching an average increase of 4.99%—a move that could further burden families already facing these rising costs.

    High-profile councils like Birmingham, Newham, and Trafford are among those that have received special permission to increase their rates even higher, further signalling the alleviate pressures on their budgeting.

    The hikes are here

    Starting from today, households will see a noticeable hike in several key areas:

    Energy Costs: The energy price cap, regulated by Ofgem, has increased, which translates to an added £9.25 monthly, or £111 annually, for the average household relying on direct debit payments. The cost of gas has surged from 6.34 pence per kilowatt-hour to 6.99 pence, while electricity has jumped from 24.86 pence to 27.03 pence per kilowatt-hour. With energy bills already reaching an average of £1,738, these increases will contribute significantly to the financial strain many families face.

    Water Bills: In what has been described as “extortionate” by concerned advocacy groups, households across England and Wales can expect their water bills to increase by an average of £86 in just the next year—a staggering rise of 20%. Companies like Southern Water and Severn Trent will see increases soaring upwards of 47%, pushing many families deeper into financial difficulty.

    Council Tax: The anticipated surge in council tax will leave millions of households grappling with an increase. The projected new annual figure for a typical Band D property is set to reach £2,280. All councils across Merseyside, for instance, are imposing the maximum allowed increase. Families are encouraged to investigate any available support options from their local councils to help mitigate this financial hit.

    Mobile and Broadband: Added to the financial burden, broadband and mobile contracts are also seeing price hikes, with average increases of £21.99 and £15.90 respectively. Households that are locked into inflation-link contracts could be particularly affected, witnessing bills rise significantly without warning. There are suggestions that consumers should actively check their contracts to explore potential savings through switching providers.

    TV Licence Fee: In today’s increases, the standard price of a TV licence has risen by £5 to £174.50, further impacting household budgets. It remains crucial for eligible claimants, particularly those over the age of 75, to remember that they can still apply for exemptions under specific conditions, ensuring they do not miss out on necessary financial support.

    Car Tax: Lastly, an increase in car tax adds to the woes. New standard rate taxes for cars registered post-April 2017 will go up by £5, while owners of electric vehicles will no longer enjoy exemption from car tax. This is a notable shift, especially for those who switched to electric cars with the promise of being free from tax burdens.

    Awful April: making ends meet?

    Of course, on top of all of this is the fact that social housing rents also go up by more than inflation every April. This is thanks to the previous Conservative government dropping a freeze on how much housing associations could increase rents by.

    So, as households brace themselves for the financial repercussions of these new rates, the undercurrent of frustration and helplessness among benefit claimants, disabled people, and jobseekers persists.

    With the ongoing pressures imposed by significant increases across essential services, the reality presents a challenging landscape for those already struggling to make ends meet.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Shockat Adam isn’t just the optometrist who helped to free Leicester from Jon Ashworth. He’s also been a consistent opponent of Israeli war crimes and prime minister Keir Starmer’s elitist government. And as part of the Independent Alliance alongside Jeremy Corbyn, he’s become a real progressive leader in parliament.

    Following the awful Spring Statement last week, he joined a number of prominent progressive figures in calling for an alternative to Labour Party austerity by signing a Dignity Declaration. This highlighted rising living costs and deepening poverty urgent crises, criticising the political establishment for letting society’s richest people “off the hook” and shielding them from the supposedly “tough choices” of austerity. Adam told the Canary:

    The country needs a real change of direction. People didn’t vote for cuts to disability benefit, or the winter fuel allowance or keeping the two child benefit cap. The government’s own figures show three million families will be worse off as a result of the spring statement, with the poorest hit hardest. The chasm between the rich and poor is ever widening and is unsustainable for a safe and secure future for our country. The ‘Dignity Declaration’ shows a different way, starting with taxing the wealthiest to rebuild public services and I am very happy to put my name to it.

    Shockat Adam: “Labour are betraying the people who voted for change”

    Shockat Adam had also said last week that:

    The Labour government talks about change and bringing growth, but its actions mean more of the same failed austerity and stalled growth.

    He added that:

    While the super-rich see their wealth growing as they gobble up public and private assets, ordinary families worry how to pay their rent and mortgages, meet the ever increasing cost of energy and water and see their public services turn to squalor.

    To end “this cycle of austerity and despair”, he said, parliament should be “taxing the wealthiest to raise the billions needed for public services and infrastructure investment”. But instead, he emphasised that:

    Labour are betraying the people who voted for change last year. We simply cannot afford another four years of more of the same.

    The Dignity Declaration and increasing unity on the left

    Last week’s declaration could help to pave the way for greater unity among progressives, which is sorely needed right now. As it stressed:

    The government claims there is no money to lift people out of poverty, yet it finds billions for war and weapons. This isn’t about scarcity—it’s about priorities. And their priorities are clear: no money for us all, endless money for war.

    To “shape our world based on human need, not corporate greed”, it called for:

    properly taxing multinational corporations and those with assets over £10 million so we can rebuild our schools and hospitals… bringing in rent controls to tackle the housing emergency… ending the disaster of privatisation in energy, water, rail and healthcare… protecting our planet by standing up to fossil fuel giants and building a new green energy system… [and] investing in welfare, not warfare.

    The Dignity Declaration comes amid numerous local and national initiatives on the left that in many cases are coordinating to help build a network that could eventually present a real challenge to the political dominance of the blue and red wings of the UK corporate party. And despite Shockat Adam being a newcomer to mainstream politics, he’s already made a very positive contribution to that struggle.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Ed Sykes

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • This February, President Luis A. Ferrao Delgado of the University of Puerto Rico resigned after attempting to suspend 64 educational programs. The measure targeted core disciplines such as history, philosophy and comparative literature, stunning the university community and provoking bitter opposition. Eleven days of protests followed, compelling Ferrao to reverse the decision before stepping down.

    The university showdown is the latest chapter in a two-decade struggle against austerity, as Puerto Rico grapples with a debt crisis and economic stagnation.

    The post Puerto Rico Protests Against Higher Education Cuts appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • This February, President Luis A. Ferrao Delgado of the University of Puerto Rico resigned after attempting to suspend 64 educational programs. The measure targeted core disciplines such as history, philosophy and comparative literature, stunning the university community and provoking bitter opposition. Eleven days of protests followed, compelling Ferrao to reverse the decision before stepping down.

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • On March 20, US President Trump signed an executive order to begin the process of dismantling the Department of Education. The order aims to move education funding from the federal government to the states, and coincides with the plan outlined in Project 2025 by the right-wing think tank the Heritage Foundation, which set eliminating the DOE as a goal. The DOE, which, among other objectives, plays a key role in providing funding for impoverished and low income students, students with disabilities, and other underserved students, has been a target of conservatives in the US for decades.

    The post Trump Begins Process Of Dismantling Department Of Education appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • When 14 years of Tory austerity led to declining living standards, support for the ruling party collapsed, and the Labour Party walked the 2024 election. Labour’s plan to undo austerity was to magically grow the economy by repeating the word ‘growth’ over and over. Now that this plan has failed, Reeves is having to justify Labour’s actions, and she’s doing a horrible job of that on both the BBC and Sky News:

    In this piece we’re going to look at what Reeves had to say for herself. We’re also going to compare what she’s saying now to what the experts are saying (and to what she herself said in the past), as we argue that Labour’s agenda is one of austerity, inequality, and decline.

    Labour: austerity continues

    Immediately after returning to power, Labour went after elderly people with its cuts to the Winter Fuel Allowance. Now, it’s going after chronically ill and disabled people with its planned cuts to Personal Independence Allowance (PIP) and Universal Credit, as Hannah Sharland wrote for the Canary:

    The same day the Labour Party government launched its plans for a sweep of devastating welfare cuts, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) published a piece of research quantifying the cost of chronically ill and disabled people to society. Or, in effect, the Labour-led DWP was putting a price-tag on chronically ill and disabled people’s lives – just as it readies to strip some of their benefits, and drastically cut them for others.

    All aboard for the disabled people-are-benefit-scroungers-and-burdens-to-society government gravy train to wherever the fuck ministers want to make their killer corporate salaries next.

    On Sunday 23 March, Laura Kuenssberg interviewed Reeves, with the BBC summarising one exchange as follows:

    Reeves says there are currently 1,000 people per day on Personal Independence Payments (PIP).

    Laura pushes back, saying viewers are getting in touch quoting what Prime Minister Keir Starmer has previously said – that the “broadest shoulders should hold heaviest brunt”. Is it really pensioners, the sick or disabled people that should carry that burden, Laura asks.

    Reeves says she increased taxes on the wealthiest.

    Despite Labour pledging to end austerity, it has unfortunately returned to the same slash and burn politics of David Cameron. This latest U-turn is turning Keir Starmer and his Labour Party into a laughing stock:

    Labour MPs and politicians are among those speaking out:

    It’s not Tory austerity…

    In the Sunday interviews, Reeves denied that Labour’s plan to cut benefits, entitlements, and government spending was a return to austerity. Her argument is that it can’t be austerity because the cuts aren’t being made across the board:

    Last year, I put £100 billion more into capital spending than the previous government had committed to, we put more than £20 billion into the National Health Service.

    That is a far cry from what we’ve seen under Conservative governments in the last 14 years.

    The problem with her argument is that it’s still austerity whether it’s targeted against sick and disabled people or whether it’s affecting everyone. Reeves also said:

    We’ll set all that out when we do the spending review, but we can’t just carry on like we have been spending on the same things that the previous government spent on.

    People want to know we’re getting value for money, when people are paying more in tax that they’re getting more in return.

    While the public did object to the Tories wasting money on dodgy PPE contracts, they didn’t object to disabled people having tolerable living standards (the mainstream media objected to that, but that’s an entirely different thing).

    People aren’t buying the Labour lie that this isn’t austerity:

    They’re also pointing out that austerity just doesn’t work:

    Labour announced the changes to PIP on Wednesday 19 March, and polling since then suggest their plans aren’t going down well:

    Stats for Lefties also had a very good point about the nation’s obsession with benefits:

    So, if austerity is unpopular ineffective, and unethical, why pursue it?

    We’ll explore that throughout this piece.

    Reeves’s war on workers

    Labour’s austerity proposals are going to mean that we lose jobs in the civil service, but Reeves is being purposefully vague on how many it will mean in practice:

    Speaking on on Sky News, Trevor Phillips said to Reeves:

    But you have to be straight with people. How many civil servants are going to lose their jobs in broad terms? Okay. I’m not asking you for, you know, 532 or 5,027 – but broadly speaking, is it 5,000? Is it 10,000? Is it 15,000?

    Reeves responded:

    We’ve said 10-15% by the end of the parliament reduction in admin budgets. … So that includes consultancy. It includes travel budgets. It includes communications, budgets. So it doesn’t all have to be about people.

    Phillips came back:

    But some of it is going to be about people. You can’t say this is going to be pain free.

    Reeves responded:

    No. It’s not. But what I am saying is it will deliver better public services, because I would rather we had people employed by the NHS working in our hospitals rather than in a government department. So this is about doing things differently.

    Reeves seems to be making the argument that the size of the government currently is the maximum it can be, and that if you grow one part you have to shrink another. Other people argue that we can grow the government by reducing income inequality in this country (i.e. taxing the rich) – something we’ll get to later.

    Back to the interview, Phillips continued:

    But forgive me chancellor, this is what people say about politicians. I ask you a question that says, broadly speaking, how many roles are going to get lost? I cannot believe that you’re telling your colleagues we need to take 10% out without any idea how many of those are going to be actual jobs. I just cannot believe that that’s what you’re doing.

    Phillips is right to push on this. If it’s true that Reeves is pushing these cuts without any plan, then she’s acting in the same reckless fashion as Elon Musk and his so-called ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ (DOGE):

    People are also highlighting precisely why Musk is such a dangerous person to appease or imitate:

    A point that Phillips doesn’t bring up is that stable and well-paid government jobs have a positive effect on the job market. When people can secure rewarding work-for-life roles in the public sector, businesses have to offer better conditions to attract workers. Musk and Reeves are pushing to reduce the number of these jobs because their friends in the private sector want this state of affairs to end.

    The Rowntree Report

    Kuenssberg also questioned Reeves on a recent report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF).

    As summarised by the Observer:

    In what it describes as a “dismal reality”, the JRF said its detailed analysis shows that the past year could mark a high point for living standards in this parliament. It concludes that the average family will be £1,400 worse off by 2030, representing a 3% fall in their disposable incomes. The lowest income families will be £900 a year worse off, amounting to a 6% fall in the amount they have to spend.

    The JRF also said that if living standards have not recovered by 2030, Starmer will not only have failed to pass his No 1 milestone but will also have presided over the first government since 1955 to have seen a fall in living standards across a full parliament.

    Comparing 2030 with 2025, it said the average mortgage holder is set to pay about £1,400 more in ­mortgage interest annually and the average renter about £300 more in rent a year, while average earnings are set to fall by £700 a year. The JRF said the poorest third are being disproportionately affected by rising housing costs, falling real earnings and frozen tax thresholds.

    Reeves’ and Labour’s takeaway from this seems to be that growing poverty means we need more austerity, rather than that austerity causes poverty. She’s also dismissing the JRF report out of hand:

    In the video above, a stuttering Reeves says the following when Trevor Phillips highlights the JRF’s findings that living conditions will continue to worsen under Labour’s austerity regime:

    I-I-I reject that.

    It’s weird that Reeves thinks she can cut her way to prosperity now, because the following posts show Reeves once understood that austerity doesn’t work:

    Would you believe that Reeves has literally criticised the effects of austerity on PIP?

    The Observer interviewed the JRF’s director of insight and policy who is pushing against further cuts, arguing:

    There is no doubt the government is facing an unenviable list of economic pressures and uncertainties, ranging from the domestic to the international. But how you manage these risks is a matter of political choice..

    It is wrong, and ultimately counterproductive, to try and rebuild the public finances through cuts to disability benefits. Instead, government should be addressing hardship and raising living standards directly, as part of their strategy for growth.

    Fiscal pressures should be met through tax reform. There are a number of options to raise revenue from those with the broadest shoulders, while also supporting growth by removing perverse incentives in the tax system and staying within the government’s manifesto commitments.

    The Inequality Agenda

    As noted above, Labour claims to have increased taxes on the wealthiest. If you live in the UK, you may have missed this happening. While it’s true that Labour has made some changes here and there, there’s still much more which must be done to end the income inequality which is destroying the very fabric of society.

    In response to Reeves’ latest appearances, some people highlighted this interview with union leader Mick Lynch from 2024:

    Lynch isn’t the only one highlighting the problem. Groups like the Equality Trust and Tax Justice UK are explaining the extent of inequality in the UK and the harmful consequences of it continuing to grow. As The Equality Trust notes:

    By 2023, the richest 50 families in the UK held more wealth than half of the UK population, comprising 33.5 million people. If the wealth of the super rich continues to grow at the rate it has been, by 2035, the wealth of the richest 200 families will be larger than the whole UK GDP.

    £466 billion – Wealth of the richest 50 families in the UK

    £466 billion – The combined wealth of half of the UK population

    The group lists the following ‘impacts’ of inequality (you can read more on each impact here):

    • Economic – Less equal societies have less stable economies. High levels of income inequality are linked to economic instability, financial crisis, debt and inflation.
    • Social Mobility & Education – Unequal societies have less social mobility and lower scores in maths, reading and science.
    • Crime – Inequality increases property crime and violent crime. A reduction of inequality from Spanish levels to Canadian levels would lead to a 20% reduction in homicides and a 23% reduction in robberies.
    • Health – Living in an unequal society causes stress and status anxiety, which may damage your health. In more equal societies people live longer, are less likely to be mentally ill or obese and there are lower rates of infant mortality.
    • Trust, Participation, Attitudes & Happiness – Inequality affects how you see those around you and your level of happiness. People in less equal societies are less likely to trust each other, less likely to engage in social or civic participation, and less likely to say they’re happy

    Tax Justice UK highlights ways in which we can make tax fairer in the 21st century:

    • New taxes on wealth – We’re campaigning for a new wealth tax: a 2% levy on individuals who own assets worth more than £10 million – it would affect 0.04% of the UK population and would raise £24 billion a year. We’re also campaigning to apply national insurance to investment income, raising up to £10.2 billion a year.
    • Reform existing taxes on wealth – Those who get their income from stocks, shares and other assets often pay far less tax than those who work. We campaign for the tax rates on these forms of income to be equalised with income tax. So we all pay the same rates. It could raise £16.7 billion a year.
    • Clamp down on tax havens – Hundreds of billions of pounds are lost every single year to tax avoidance via tax havens. We campaign for global action against tax havens. We’re demanding more transparency – and global minimum rates of tax, so countries aren’t undercutting each other.

    Former DWP minister professor Helen Goodman wrote to the Guardian to highlight some other areas where Labour could target the broadest shoulders:

    We should take a deeper look at the tax system. There remain big loopholes and unfairnesses: because capital gains tax is lower than income tax, people like Rishi Sunak pay 23% on a £2.2m income – equalising these rates is worth £14bn; bringing the tax relief on pension contributions for high earners back to the standard rate would bring in £13bn; tackling the tax and national insurance loopholes on City lawyers’ partnerships could be worth £8bn; the failure to tax internet giants is unfair on high street retailers, as noted by Iceland boss Richard Walker; and basing council tax on a property valuation that is more than 30 years old fails to take any account of the huge north-south disparity in house prices that has arisen.

    Another person with a lot to say on inequality is economist Gary Stevenson:

    Gary is currently asking his viewers whether he should conduct an interview with Labour, which is something the party is now requesting following his meteoric rise to prominence. You can have your say on that under the following video.

    Instead of getting any of the above, however, it looks like Labour is going to cave to demands from Trump:

    Austerity is a snake that eats itself

    Let’s remind ourselves on what the Equality Trust said on how inequality affects health:

    Living in an unequal society causes stress and status anxiety, which may damage your health. In more equal societies people live longer, are less likely to be mentally ill or obese and there are lower rates of infant mortality.

    It’s not a coincidence that growing inequality combined with increased job insecurity is leading to more people being signed off work for stress. It’s also not rocket science to work out that we could reverse this trend by reversing the trajectory of inequality.

    What’s happening in the UK is austerity worsens living conditions, politicians use declining standards to justify more austerity, and then austerity makes things even worse. It’s a snake eating its own tail, and it won’t stop until we make it clear that we won’t tolerate it any longer.

    Featured image via the BBC

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • “Why organize the future? Because the present we face is repulsive.” With these words, Marta Collot began her speech at Potere al Popolo’s national assembly in Rome on March 15, marking the culmination of months of organizing and political discussion. The assembly launched a new program, developed through a bottom-up process rooted in labor and territorial struggles, outlined to serve as a framework for truly organizing the future.

    According to Maurizio Coppola, a member of Potere al Popolo’s national coordination, the process was launched for multiple reasons.

    The post ‘Organize The Future’: Potere Al Popolo Charts Resistance To Militarization And Cuts appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • We, the social organizations of the Alba-Movimientos., strongly condemn the brutal repression unleashed by the government of Javier Milei and his Minister of Security, Patricia Bullrich against pensioners, football fans and social organizations that mobilized peacefully to reject the neoliberal austerity to which the government of La Libertad Avanza is subjecting the Argentine people. The excessive use of force, with tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon, resulted in 114 people being illegally detained — including children — 20 people being injured and the photographer Pablo Grillo being seriously injured after being hit in the head by a tear gas canister.

    The post Solidarity With Argentine People Against The Fascist Government appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The last few weeks have been the most destabilizing for Social Security in its 90-year history.

    America’s historic retirement security program has survived world wars, pandemics, and recessions. But without a rapid course correction, it may not survive Donald Trump and Elon Musk.

    In mid-February, Musk demanded access to private Social Security data. When the Acting Commissioner of the Social Security Administration (SSA) declined, President Donald Trump immediately replaced her. He leapfrogged over 120 more senior employees to install a DOGE sympathizer, Leland Dudek.

    The post The Greatest Threat To Social Security In Its 90 Year History appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The last few weeks have been the most destabilizing for Social Security in its 90-year history.

    America’s historic retirement security program has survived world wars, pandemics, and recessions. But without a rapid course correction, it may not survive Donald Trump and Elon Musk.

    In mid-February, Musk demanded access to private Social Security data. When the Acting Commissioner of the Social Security Administration (SSA) declined, President Donald Trump immediately replaced her. He leapfrogged over 120 more senior employees to install a DOGE sympathizer, Leland Dudek.

    The post The Greatest Threat To Social Security In Its 90 Year History appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Higher education — colleges and post-secondary education — has been a target of right-wing, reactionary attacks for decades, but the Musk-Trump-MAGA grouping has brought a new, vicious intensity to this campaign.

    The Department of Education has threatened schools with losing all federal funding if they have policies supporting diversity, equity and inclusion. The MAGA assault on DEI is intended to roll back civil rights and other efforts that address historic inequities.

    Much of the research funds in science, technology and clinical work has been frozen. Research and publishing on cultural and gender issues have been actively suppressed.

    The post A Higher Education Union’s Response To Trump’s Attacks appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Among the Republican voters experiencing buyer’s remorse are more than a few military veterans who chose Trump over Harris by a margin of 65 to 34%, according to some exit polls.

    Their shock and dismay surfaced in DC this month during the legislative conference of the reliably conservative and hawkish Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), which has 1.4 million members.

    In the run-up to that annual event, VFW national commander Al Lipphardt, urged his members to “march forth” and “engage with lawmakers” to “stop the bleeding” at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

    The post Who’s Fighting Back (And Not) Against Cuts in Veteran’s Administration appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Proposed salary increases for local council bosses, averaging 12%, have provoked a backlash among community members and council workers. Amidst financial strains and rising council taxes, critics describe the plan as insensitive, while concerns grow over NHS staffing shortages and operational challenges.

    Council bosses want even more money

    In Scotland, there is growing discontent regarding proposed salary increases for council bosses. According to the Daily Record, council leaders are contemplating average pay rises of approximately 12% for these high-ranking officials, which could translate to an average increase of about £19,000 each.

    This proposal has sparked considerable concern among community members and local workers, particularly as many council employees agreed to a modest wage rise just last year amidst cuts to essential services.

    The context of this discussion lies in a persistent financial crisis affecting local authorities across Scotland. For over a decade, councils have faced significant resource constraints, prompting public outcry over essential services like education and infrastructure, which have been underfunded.

    The freezing of council tax rates has been a focal point of criticism, with local authorities describing their financial situations as dire. However, the juxtaposition of these claims against potential pay raises for the highest-paid council staff has left a bitter taste among taxpayers and ordinary council workers.

    A slap in the face

    Critics argue that the proposed salary increments are grossly insensitive, particularly as council taxes have been raised to their highest levels in two decades, evidencing financial strain on households.

    The Daily Record highlighted that this plan would be perceived as a “slap in the face” to council workers and taxpayers who have made sacrifices during hard times, suggesting that executive pay should align more closely with the raises afforded to general council staff instead.

    In a parallel issue, Scotland’s National Health Service (NHS) continues to come under scrutiny as operational challenges persist. Patients are reportedly facing long waits in Accident and Emergency departments, with some waiting days for treatment. Concurrently, hundreds of thousands of individuals remain on waiting lists, and the ambulance service has been grappling with known difficulties.

    Public services under strain – yet council bosses want even more cash?

    Experts are now sounding alarms regarding the inadequate number of GPs within the Scottish health system. Both the British Medical Association (BMA) and the Royal College of General Practitioners have indicated that Scotland currently lacks about 800 GPs.

    However, Dr Chris Black, a member of the campaigning group Rebuild General Practice, suggests that the actual shortage could be closer to 1,800. He attributes this shortfall to declining funding for general practice, stating that bolstering the number of GPs could facilitate increased appointment availability and ultimately drive improvements in patient care.

    The ongoing dialogue concerning both local governance and healthcare highlights significant issues facing Scottish communities, with experts and residents alike calling for equitable treatment and resources in both public service sectors. The future of these proposals and their impact on community members remains to be seen.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By The Canary

    This post was originally published on Canary.

  • Europe’s militarization has been accelerating long before Donald Trump’s return to the White House. In the past three years, Poland has increased its military spending to nearly 4% of GDP, French President Emmanuel Macron has pledged to “transform” the French military for a new era, and most recently, Britain’s Labour government announced plans to slash international aid to fund a “generational” boost in defense spending.

    This renewed focus on expanding arsenals is growing while the region remains subordinated to US interests.

    The post What Are European Leaders Going To Choose: People Or War? appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Over 100 workers’ collectives, health groups, and organizations mobilized across Argentina on Thursday, February 27, in protest against President Javier Milei’s devastating policies. A central march took place in Buenos Aires, denouncing the purposeful underfunding of the health system, deteriorating working conditions, and pressures on public hospitals. Among the demonstrators were health workers, patients, and the Mothers of Plaza de Mayo.

    “Health is a fundamental human right, and defending it is the responsibility of all society,” organizers declared ahead of the protest.

    The post Health Workers, Patients, Activists Unite Against Milei’s Healthcare Cuts appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • [This article titled The History of Regime Change in Ukraine and the IMF’s Bitter “Economic Medicine” by Prof. Michel Chossudovsky was first published by Global Research. You may read it here.]

    Author’s Introduction

    We must understand the history of the U.S.-sponsored February 2014 Coup d’Etat which paved the wave for the adoption of IMF-World Bank shock treatment, namely the imposition of devastating macro-economic reforms coupled with conditionalities. This process –imposed by the Washington Consensus– was applied in developing countries since the 1980s, and in Eastern Europe and in the countries of the Soviet Union starting in the early 1990s.

    Below is an the article describing the IMF reforms which I wrote in early March 2014, in the immediate wake of the Euromaidan Coup d’Etat which was led by the two major Nazi “parties”: Right Sektor and Svoboda, with the financial support of Washington.

    What Is the End Game

    The World Bank and the IMF reforms –while establishing the ground work– are no longer the main actors, representing the country’s creditors.

    The traditional IMF-World Bank reforms are in many regards obsolete.

    The Neoliberal Endgame for Ukraine –resulting from unsurmountable debts– largely attributable to military aid is the outright privatization of an entire country by BlackRock which is a giant portfolio company controlled by powerful financial interests with extensive leverage.

    BlackRock signed an agreement with President Zelensky in November 2022.

    The Privatization of Ukraine was launched in liaison with BlackRock’s consulting company McKinsey, a public relations firm which has largely been responsible for co-opting corrupt politicians and officials worldwide, not to mention scientists and intellectuals on behalf of powerful financial interests.

    The Kyiv government engaged BlackRock’s consulting arm in November to determine how best to attract that kind of capital, and then added JPMorgan in February. Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced last month that the country was working with the two financial groups and consultants at McKinsey.

    BlackRock and Ukraine’s Ministry of Economy signed a Memorandum of Understanding in November 2022. In late December 2022, president Zelensky and BlackRock’s CEO Larry Fink agreed on an investment strategy.

    https://www.globalresearch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/blackrock-zelensky.png
    Michel Chossudovsky, April 27, 2024

    The February 23, 2014 Coup d’Etat

    In the days following the Ukraine coup d’Etat of February 23, 2014 leading to the ousting of a duly elected president, Wall Street and the IMF –in liaison with the US Treasury and the European Commission in Brussels– had already set the stage for the outright takeover of Ukraine’s monetary system.

    The EuroMaidan protests leading up to “regime change” and the formation of an interim government were followed by purges within key ministries and government bodies.

    The Governor of the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) Ihor Sorkin was fired on February 25th and replaced by a new governor Stepan Kubiv.

    Stepan Kubiv is a member of Parliament of the Rightist Batkivshchyna “Fatherland” faction in the Rada led by the acting Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk (founded by Yulia Tymoshenko in March 1999). He previously headed Kredbank, a Ukrainian financial institution largely owned by EU capital, with some 130 branches throughout Ukraine. (Ukraine Central Bank Promises Liquidity To Local Banks, With One Condition, Zero Hedge, February 27, 2014)

    Kubiv is no ordinary bank executive. He was one of the first field “commandants” of the EuroMaidan riots alongside Andriy Parubiy, co-founder of the Neo-Nazi Social-National Party of Ukraine (subsequently renamed Svoboda), and Dmitry Yarosh, leader of the Right Sector Brown Shirts (centre in image below), which now has the status of a political party.

    Kubiv was in the Maidan square addressing protesters on February 18, at the very moment when armed Right Sector thugs under the helm of Dmitry Yarosh (image above, centre) were raiding the parliament building.

    The Establishment of an Interim Government

    A few days later, upon the establishment of the interim government, Stepan Kubiv was put in charge of negotiations with Wall Street and the IMF.

    The new Minister of Finance Aleksandr Shlapak (image below) is a political crony of Viktor Yushchenko –a long-time protegé of the IMF who was spearheaded into the presidency following the 2004 “Colored Revolution”. Shlapak held key positions in the office of the presidency under Yushchenko as well as at the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU). In 2010, upon Yushchenko’s defeat, Aleksandr Shlapak joined a shadowy Bermuda based offshore financial outfit IMG International Ltd (IMG), holding the position of Vice President. Based in Hamilton, Bermuda, IMG specialises in “captive insurance management”, reinsurance and “risk transfer.”

    Minister of Finance Aleksandr Shlapak works in close liaison with Pavlo Sheremeto, the newly appointed Minister of Economic Development and Trade, who upon his appointment called for “deregulation, fully fledged and across the board”, requiring –as demanded in previous negotiations by the IMF– the outright elimination of subsidies on fuel, energy and basic food staples.

    Another key appointment is that of Ihor Shvaika (image below), a member of the Neo-Nazi Svoboda Party, to the position of Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food. Headed by an avowed follower of World War II Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera, this ministry not only oversees the agricultural sector, it also decides on issues pertaining to subsidies and the prices of basic food staples.

    The new Cabinet has stated that the country is prepared for socially “painful” but necessary reforms. In December 2013, a $ 20 billion deal with the IMF had already been contemplated alongside the controversial EU-Ukraine Association Agreement. Yanukovych decided to turn it down.

    One of the requirements of the IMF was that “household subsidies for gas be reduced once again by 50%.”

    “Other onerous IMF requirements included cuts to pensions, government employment, and the privatization (read: let western corporations purchase) of government assets and property. It is therefore likely that the most recent IMF deal currently in negotiation, will include once again major reductions in gas subsidies, cuts in pensions, immediate government job cuts, as well as other reductions in social spending programs in the Ukraine.” (voice of russia.com, March 21, 2014)

    Economic Surrender: Unconditional Acceptance of IMF Demands by a Puppet Government

    Shortly after his instatement, the interim (puppet) prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk casually dismissed the need to negotiate with the IMF. Prior to the conduct of negotiations pertaining to a draft agreement, Yatsenyuk had already called for an unconditional acceptance of the IMF package: “We have no other choice but to accept the IMF offer”.


    (Image: Neo Nazi Svoboda Party glorify World War II Nazi Collaborator Stepan Bandera)

    Yatsenyuk intimated that Ukraine will “accept whatever offer the IMF and the EU made” (voice of russia.com, March 21, 2014).

    In surrendering to the IMF, Yatsenyuk was fully aware that the proposed reforms would brutally impoverish millions of people, including those who protested in Maidan.

    The actual timeframe for the implementation of the IMF’s “shock therapy” has not yet been firmly established. In all likelihood, the regime will attempt to delay the more ruthless social impacts of the macroeconomic reforms until after the May 25 presidential elections (assuming that these elections will take place).

    The text of the IMF agreement is likely to be detailed and specific, particularly with regard to State assets earmarked for privatization.

    Henry Kissinger and Condoleezza Rice, according to Bloomberg, are among key individuals in the US who are acting (in a non-official capacity) in tandem with the IMF, the Kiev government, in consultation with the White House and the US Congress.

    The IMF Mission to Kiev

    Immediately upon the instatement of the new Finance Minister and NBU governor, a request was submitted to the IMF’s Managing director. An IMF fact-finding mission headed by the Director of the IMF’s European Department Rez Moghadam was rushed to Kiev:

    “I am positively impressed with the authorities’ determination, sense of responsibility and commitment to an agenda of economic reform and transparency. The IMF stands ready to help the people of Ukraine and support the authorities’ economic program.” (Press Release: Statement by IMF European Department Director Reza Moghadam on his Visit to Ukraine)

    A week later, on March 12, 2014, Christine Lagarde met the interim Prime Minister of Ukraine Arseniy Yatsenyuk at IMF headquarters in Washington. Lagarde reaffirmed the IMF’s commitment:

    “[to putting Ukraine back] on the path of sound economic governance and sustainable growth, while protecting the vulnerable in society. … We are keen to help Ukraine on its path to economic stability and prosperity.” (Press Release: Statement by IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde on Ukraine)

    The above statement is wrought with hypocrisy. In practice, the IMF does not wield “sound economic governance” nor does it protect the vulnerable. It impoverishes entire populations while providing “prosperity” to a small corrupt and subservient political and economic elite.

    IMF “economic medicine” while contributing to the enrichment of a social minority, invariably triggers economic instability and mass poverty, while providing a “social safety net” to the external creditors. To sell its reform package, the IMF relies on media propaganda as well as persistent statements by “economic experts” and financial analysts which provide authority to the IMF’s macroeconomic reforms.

    The unspoken objective behind IMF interventionism is to destabilize sovereign governments and literally break up entire national economies. This is achieved through the manipulation of key macroeconomic policy instruments as well as the outright rigging of financial markets, including the foreign exchange market.

    To reach its unspoken goals, the IMF-World Bank –often in consultation with the US Treasury and the State Department– will exert control over key appointments including the Minister of Finance, the Central Bank governor as well as senior officials in charge of the country’s privatization program. These key appointments will require the (unofficial) approval of the “Washington Consensus” prior to the conduct of negotiations pertaining to a multibillion IMF bailout agreement.

    Beneath the rhetoric, in the real world of money and credit, the IMF has several related operational objectives:

    1) to facilitate the collection of debt servicing obligations, while ensuring that the country remains indebted and under the control of its external creditors.

    2) to exert on behalf of the country’s external creditors full control over the country’s monetary policy, its fiscal and budgetary structures,

    3) to revamp social programs, labor laws, minimum wage legislation, in accordance with the interests of Western capital,

    4) to deregulate foreign trade and investment policies, including financial services and intellectual property rights,

    5) to implement the privatization of key sectors of the economy through the sale of public assets to foreign corporations,

    6) to facilitate the takeover by foreign capital (including mergers and acquisitions) of selected privately owned Ukrainian corporations, and

    7) to ensure the deregulation of the foreign exchange market.

    While the privatization program ensures the transfer of State assets into the hands of foreign investors, the IMF program also includes provisions geared towards the destabilization of the country’s privately-owned business conglomerates. A concurrent “break up” plan entitled “spin-off” as well as a “bankruptcy program” are often implemented with a view to triggering the liquidation, closing down or restructuring of a large number of nationally-owned private and public enterprises.

    The “spin off” procedure –which was imposed on South Korea under the December 1997 IMF bailout agreement– required the break up of several of Korea’s powerful chaebols (business conglomerates) into smaller corporations, many of which were then taken over by US, EU and Japanese capital. Sizeable banking interests as well highly profitable components of Korea’s high tech industrial base were transferred or sold off at rock bottom prices to Western capital. (Michel Chossudovsky, The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order, Global Research, Montreal, 2003, Chapter 22).

    These staged bankruptcy programs ultimately seek to destroy national capitalism. In the case of Ukraine, they would selectively target the business interests of the oligarchs, opening the door for the takeover of a sizeable portion of Ukraine’s private sector by EU and US corporations. The conditionalities contained in the IMF agreement would be coordinated with those contained in the controversial EU-Ukraine Association agreement, which the Yanukovych government refused to sign.

    Ukraine’s Spiraling External Debt

    Ukraine’s external debt is of the order of $140 billion.

    In consultations with the US Treasury and the EU, the IMF aid package is to be of the order of $15 billion dollars. Ukraine’s outstanding short-term debt is of the order of $65 billion, more than four times the amount promised by the IMF.

    The Central Bank’s foreign currency reserves have literally dried up. In February, according to the NUB, Ukraine’s foreign currency reserves were of the order of a meagre $13.7 billion, its Special Drawing Rights with the IMF were of the order of $16.1 million, its gold reserves $1.81 billion. There were unconfirmed reports that Ukraine’s gold had been confiscated and airlifted to New York, for “safe-keeping” under the custody of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.

    Under the bailout, the IMF –acting on behalf of Ukraine’s US and EU creditors– lends money to Ukraine which is already earmarked for debt repayment. The money is transferred to the creditors. The loan is “fictitious money.” Not one dollar of this money will enter Ukraine.

    The package is not intended to support economic growth. Quite the opposite: Its main purpose is to collect the outstanding short-term debt, while precipitating the destabilization of Ukraine’s economy and financial system.

    The fundamental principle of usury is that the creditor comes to the rescue of the debtor: “I cannot pay my debts, no problem my son, I will lend you the money and with the money I lend you, you will pay me back”.

    The rescue rope thrown to Kiev by the IMF and the European Union is in reality a ball and chain. Ukraine’s external debt, as documented by the World Bank, increased tenfold in ten years and exceeds 135 billion dollars. In interests alone, Ukraine must pay about 4.5 billion dollars a year. The new loans will only serve to increase the external debt thus obliging Kiev to “liberalize” its economy even more, by selling to corporations what remains to be privatized. (Ukraine, IMF “Shock Treatment” and Economic Warfare by Manlio Dinucci, Global Research, March 21, 2014)

    Under the IMF loan agreement, the money will not enter the country, it will be used to trigger the repayment of outstanding debt servicing obligations to EU and US creditors. In this regard, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) “European banks have more than $23 billion in outstanding loans in Ukraine.” (Ukraine Facing Financial Instability But IMF May Help Soon – Spiegel Online, February 28, 2014)

    What Are the “Benefits” of an IMF Package to Ukraine?

    According to IMF’s managing director Christine Lagarde, the bailout is intended to address the issue of poverty and social inequality. In actuality what it does is to increase the levels of indebtedness while essentially handing over the reins of macro-economic reform and monetary policy to the Bretton Woods Institutions, acting on behalf of Wall Street.

    The bailout agreement will include the imposition of drastic austerity measures which in all likelihood will trigger further social chaos and economic dislocation. It’s called “policy based lending”, namely the granting of money earmarked to reimburse the creditors, in exchange for the IMF’s “bitter economic medicine” in the form of a menu of neoliberal policy reforms. “Short-term pain for long-term gain” is the motto of the Washington-based Bretton Woods institutions.

    Loan “conditionalities” will be imposed –including drastic austerity measures– which will serve to impoverish the Ukrainian population beyond bounds in a country which has been under IMF ministrations for more than 20 years. While the Maidan movement was manipulated, tens of thousands of people protested they wanted a new life because their standard of living had collapsed as a result of the neoliberal policies applied by successive governments, including that of president Yanukovych. Little did they realize that the protest movement supported by Wall Street, the US State Department and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) was meant to usher in a new phase of economic and social destruction.

    History of IMF Ministrations in Ukraine

    In 1994 under the presidency of Leonid Kuchma, an IMF package was imposed on Ukraine. Viktor Yushchenko –who later became president following the 2004 Colored Revolution– had been appointed head of the newly-formed National Bank of Ukraine (NBU). Yushchenko was praised by the Western financial media as a “daring reformer”; he was among the main architects of the IMF’s 1994 reforms which served to destabilize Ukraine’s national economy. When he ran in the 2004 elections against Yanukovych, he was supported by various foundations including the National Endowment for Democracy (NED). He was Wall Street’s preferred candidate.

    Ukraine’s 1994 IMF package was finalized behind closed doors at the Madrid 50 years anniversary Summit of the Bretton Woods institutions. It required the Ukrainian government to abandon State controls over the exchange rate leading to a massive collapse of the currency. Yushchenko played a key role in negotiating and implementing the 1994 agreement as well as creating a new Ukrainian national currency, which resulted in a dramatic plunge in real wages:

    Yushchenko as Head of the Central Bank was responsible for deregulating the national currency under the October 1994 “shock treatment”:

    • The price of bread increased overnight by 300 percent,
    • electricity prices by 600 percent,
    • public transportation by 900 percent.
    • the standard of living tumbled

    According to the Ukrainian State Statistics Committee, quoted by the IMF, real wages in 1998 had fallen by more than 75 percent in relation to their 1991 level. (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft /scr/2003/cr03174.pdf )

    Ironically, the IMF sponsored program was intended to alleviate inflationary pressures: it consisted in imposing “dollarised” prices on an impoverished population with earnings below ten dollars a month.

    Combined with the abrupt hikes in fuel and energy prices, the lifting of subsidies and the freeze on credit contributed to destroying industry (both public and private) and undermining Ukraine’s breadbasket economy.

    In November 1994, World Bank negotiators were sent in to examine the overhaul of Ukraine’s agriculture. With trade liberalization (which was part of the economic package), US grain surpluses and “food aid” were dumped on the domestic market, contributing to destabilizing one of the World’s largest and most productive wheat economies, (e.g. comparable to that of the American Mid West). (Michel Chossudovsky IMF Sponsored “Democracy” in The Ukraine, Global Research, November 28, 2004, emphasis added)

    The IMF-World Bank had destroyed Ukraine’s “bread basket.”

    By 1998, the deregulation of the grain market, the hikes in the price of fuel and the liberalisation of trade resulted in a decline in the production of grain by 45 percent in relation to its 1986-90 level. The collapse in livestock production, poultry and dairy products was even more dramatic (see this). The cumulative decline in GDP resulting from the IMF-sponsored reforms was in excess of 60 percent from 1992 to 1995.

    The World Bank: Fake Poverty Alleviation

    The World Bank has recently acknowledged that Ukraine is a poor country. (World Bank, Ukraine Overview, Washington DC, updated February 17, 2014):

    “Evidence shows Ukraine is facing a health crisis, and the country needs to make urgent and extensive measures to its health system to reverse the progressive deterioration of citizens’ health. Crude adult death rates in Ukraine are higher than its immediate neighbors, Moldova and Belarus, and among the highest not only in Europe, but also in the world.”

    What the report fails to mention is that the Bretton Woods institutions –through a process of economic engineering– played a central role in precipitating the post-Soviet collapse of the Ukrainian economy. The dramatic breakdown of Ukraine’s social programs bears the fingerprints of the IMF-World Bank austerity measures which included the deliberate underfunding and dismantling of the Soviet era health care system.

    With regard to agriculture, the World Bank points to Ukraine’s “tremendous agricultural potential” while failing to acknowledge that the Ukraine bread-basket was destroyed as part of a US-IMF-World Bank package. According to the World Bank:

    “This potential has not been fully exploited due to depressed farm incomes and a lack of modernization within the sector.”

    “Depressed farm incomes” are not “the cause,” they are the “consequence” of the IMF-World Bank Structural Adjustment Program. In 1994, farm incomes had declined by the order of 80% in relation to 1991, following the October 1994 IMF program engineered by then NUB governor Viktor Yushchenko. Immediately following the 1994 IMF reform package, the World Bank implemented (in 1995) a private sector “seed project” based on “the liberalization of seed pricing, marketing, and trade.” The prices of farm inputs increased dramatically leading to a string of agricultural bankruptcies. (Projects: Agricultural Seed Development Project | The World Bank, Washington DC, 1995)

    The IMF’s 2014 “Shock and Awe” Economic Bailout

    While the conditions prevailing in Ukraine today are markedly different to those applied in the 1990s, it should be understood that the imposition of a new wave of macro-economic reforms (under strict IMF policy conditionalities) will serve to impoverish a population which has already been impoverished.

    In other words, the IMF’s 2014 “Shock and Awe” constitutes the “final blow” in a sequence of IMF interventions spreading over a period of more than 20 years, which have contributed to destabilizing the national economy and impoverishing Ukraine’s population. We are not dealing with a Greece Model Austerity Package as some analysts have suggested. The reforms slated for Ukraine will be far more devastating.

    Preliminary information suggests that IMF bailout will provide an advance of $2 billion in the form of a grant to be followed by a subsequent loan of $11 billion. The European Investment Bank (EIB) will provide another $2 billion, for a total package of around $15 billion. (See Voice of Russia, March 21, 2014)

    Drastic Austerity Measures

    The Kiev government has announced that the IMF requires a 20% cut in Ukraine’s national budget, implying drastic cuts in social programs, coupled with reductions in the wages of public employees, privatisation and the sale of state assets. The IMF has also called for a “phase out” of energy subsidies, and the deregulation of the foreign exchange markets. With unmanageable debts, the IMF will also impose the sell off and privatisation of major public assets as well as the takeover of the national banking sector.

    The new government pressured by the IMF and World Bank have already announced that old-aged pensions are to be curtailed by 50%. In a timely February 21 release, the World Bank had set the guidelines for old-age pension reform in the countries of “Emerging Europe and Central Asia” including Ukraine. In an utterly twisted logic, “Protecting the elderly” is carried out by slashing their pension benefits, according to the World Bank. (World Bank, Significant Pension Reforms Urged in Emerging Europe and Central Asia, Washington Dc, February 21, 2014)

    Given the absence of a real government in Kiev, Ukraine’s political handlers in the Ministry of Finance and the NUB will obey the diktats of Wall Street: The IMF structural adjustment loan agreement for Ukraine will be devastating in its social and economic impacts.

    Elimination of Subsidies

    Pointing to “market-distorted energy subsidies”, price deregulation has been a longstanding demand from both IMF-World Bank. The price of energy had been kept relatively low during the Yanukovych government largely as a result of the bilateral agreement with Russia, which provided Ukraine with low-cost gas in exchange for Naval base lease in Sebastopol. That agreement is now null and void. It is also worth noting that the government of Crimea has announced that it would take over ownership of all Ukrainian state companies in Crimea, including the Black Sea natural gas fields.

    The Kiev interim government has intimated that Ukraine’s retail gas prices would have to rise by 40% “as part of economic reforms needed to unlock loans from the International Monetary Fund.” This announcement fails to address the mechanics of full-fledged deregulation which under present circumstances could lead to increases in energy prices in excess of 100 percent.

    It is worth recalling, in this regard, that Peru in August 1991 had set the stage for “shock treatment” increases in energy prices when gasoline prices in Lima shot up overnight by 2978% (a 30-fold increase). In 1994 as part of the agreement between the IMF and Leonid Kuchma, the price of electricity flew up over night by 900 percent.

    “Enhanced Exchange Rate Flexibility”

    One of the central components of IMF intervention is the deregulation of the foreign exchange market. In addition to massive expenditure cuts, the IMF program requires “enhanced exchange rate flexibility” namely the removal of all foreign exchange controls. (Ukraine: Staff Report for the 2012 Article IV Consultation, See also http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2012/cr12315.pdf)

    Since the outset of the Maidan protest movement in December 2013, foreign exchange controls were instated with a view to supporting the hryvnia and stemming the massive outflow of capital.

    The IMF-sponsored bailout will literally ransack the foreign currency reserves held by the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU). Enhanced exchange rate flexibility under IMF guidance has been endorsed by the new NBU governor Stepan Kubiv. Without virtually no forex reserves, exchange rate flexibility is financial suicide: it opens the door to speculative short-selling transactions (modelled on the 1997 Asian crisis) directed against the Ukraine’s currency, the hryvnia.

    Institutional speculators, which include major Wall Street and European Banks as well as hedge funds, have already positioned themselves. Manipulation in the forex markets is undertaken through derivative trade. Major financial institutions will have detailed inside information with regard to Central Bank policies which will enable them to rig the forex market.

    Under a flexible exchange rate system, the Central Bank does not impose restrictions on forex transactions. The Central Bank can however decide –under advice from the IMF– to counter the speculative onslaught in the forex market, with a view to maintaining the parity of the Ukrainian hryvnia. Without the use of exchange controls, this line of action requires Ukraine’s central bank (in the absence of forex reserves) to prop up an ailing currency with borrowed money, thereby contributing to exacerbating the debt crisis.

    The graph below indicates a decline of the hryvnia against the US $ of more than 20% over a six-month period.


    (Source: themoneyconverter.com)

    It is worth recalling in this regard that Brazil in November 1998 had received a precautionary bailout loan from the IMF of the order of $40 billion. One of the conditions of the loan agreement, however, was the complete deregulation of the forex market. This loan was intended to assist the Central Banking in maintaining the parity of the Brazilian real. In practice it spearheaded Brazil into a financial crash in February 1999.

    The Brazilian government had accepted the conditionalities. Marred by capital flight of the order of $400 million a day, the money granted under the IMF loan –which was intended to prop up Brazil’s central banks reserves– was plundered in a matter of months. The IMF loan agreement to Brasilia enabled the institutional speculators to buy time. Most of the money under the IMF loan was appropriated in the form of speculative gains accruing to major financial institutions.

    With regard to Ukraine, enhanced exchange flexibility spells disaster. Contrary to Brazil, the Central Bank has no forex reserves which would enable it to defend its currency. Where would the NBU get the borrowed forex reserves? Most of the funds under the proposed IMF-EU rescue package are already earmarked and could be used to effectively defend the hryvnia against “short-selling” speculative attacks in the currency markets. The most likely scenario is that the hryvnia will experience a major decline leading to significant hikes in the prices of essential commodities, including food, fuel and transportation.

    Were the Central Bank able to use borrowed reserves to prop up the hryvnia, this borrowed money would be swiftly reappropriated, handed over to currency speculators on a silver platter. This scenario of propping up the national currency using borrowed forex reserves (i.e. Brazil in 1998-99) would, however, contribute in the short-term to staving off an immediate collapse of the standard.

    This procedure provides “extra time” to the speculators, who are busy plundering the Central Bank’s (borrowed) currency reserves. It also enables the interim government to postpone the worst impacts of the IMF’s “enhanced exchange rate flexibility” to a later date.

    When the borrowed hard currency reserves of the Central Bank run out –i.e. in the immediate aftermath of the May 25 presidential elections– the value of hryvnia will plunge on the forex market, which in turn will trigger a dramatic collapse in the standard of living. Coupled with the demise of bilateral economic relations with Russia pertaining to the supply of natural gas to Ukraine, energy prices are also slated to increase dramatically.

    Neoliberalism and Neo-Nazi Ideology Join Hands: Repressing the Protest Movement Against the IMF

    With Svoboda and Right Sector political appointees in charge of national security and the armed forces, a real grassroots protest movement directed against the IMF’s deadly macroeconomic reforms will, in all likelihood, be brutally repressed by the Right Sector’s “brown shirts” and the National Guard paramilitary led by Dmitry Yarosh on behalf of Wall Street and the Washington consensus.

    In recent developments, Right Sector Dmitry Yarosh has declared his candidacy in the upcoming presidential elections. (Popular support for the Yarosh is less than 2%)

    “Russia put Yarosh on an international wanted list and charged him with inciting terrorism after he urged Chechen terrorist leader Doku Umarov to launch attacks on Russia over the Ukrainian conflict. The ultra-nationalist leader has also threatened to destroy Russian pipelines on Ukrainian territory.” (RT, March 22, 2014)

    Meanwhile, Ukraine’s State prosecutor, who also belongs to the Neo-Nazi faction, has implemented procedures which prevent the holding of public rallies and protests directed against the interim government.

    The post The History of Regime Change in Ukraine and the IMF’s Bitter “Economic Medicine” first appeared on Dissident Voice.

    This post was originally published on Dissident Voice.

  • In the first month of the new Trump administration, there has been a widespread assault on federal workers led by billionaire Elon Musk and his new ‘agency’ called DOGE. Thousands of federal workers have lost their jobs, funding for government programs has been suspended and technocrats under Musk have entered agencies and demanded access to privileged data. Clearing the FOG speaks with a current federal worker, John, who is being kept anonymous for protection, about what is happening within federal agencies, the legality of the attacks and how workers are organizing and fighting back. John warns that most federal workers are going to be fired and services are going to be cut without a plan for protecting and serving the public. 

    The post A Federal Worker Speaks Out: ‘Many Jobs And Services Will Disappear’ appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The world’s richest man has shown his determination to use his unelected position within the Trump presidency to wage war on the working class in the United States. Elon Musk’s latest accusation of widespread fraud within the Social Security system in the US could represent yet another major offensive against workers, who nearly universally rely on the country’s largest social service for current and future retirement plans.

    Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an invention of the Trump administration that has pursued broad cuts to federal departments and regulations, has pursued access to sensitive information of millions of people in the US, held by the Social Security Administration.

    The post Trump And Musk’s Next Target: Social Security appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Cancer Research UK has published a new cancer study, specifically on death rates across the UK. Crucially, it identified enormous health disparities for people living in the most deprived areas of the country. Too any paying attention, this pointed to the deadly impacts of more than a decade of callous neoliberal capitalist policies.

    However, the findings have triggered a wave of hand-wringing over people’s so-called lifestyle choices. This was with the obvious implication that poor people are to blame for their own worse off health. Of course, in reality, this couldn’t be further from the case – and it was shameful that anyone implied otherwise.

    Cancer study: deaths higher for deprived communities

    As the Guardian reported:

    Cancer death rates are 60% higher for people living in the most deprived areas of the UK compared with those in more affluent areas, according to new analysis.

    There are 28,400 extra cancer deaths across the UK each year due to deprivation, the equivalent of 78 additional deaths every day, Cancer Research UK found.

    For all cancers combined in the UK, mortality rates are almost 1.6x higher in people living in the most deprived areas compared with the least (337 deaths per 100,000 against 217 deaths).

    Crucially, it highlighted that:

    Almost half (47%) of these were caused by lung cancer, where the death rate was almost three times higher in the most deprived areas.

    Predictably, politicians, NHS officials, and medical scientists honed in on this. They were quick to point the finger at long waiting times for diagnosis treatment:

    Meanwhile, the Independent quoted Health Secretary Wes Streeting saying:

    Our new targets for cancer diagnosis and treatment will mean around an extra 100,000 patients are seen on time next year, and we have also started using the latest digital AI technologies to help catch the disease earlier

    Symptoms of an underlying systemic problem

    However, let’s be clear. While long waitlists for diagnosis, lack of GP appointments, and access to treatment in deprived areas is undoubtedly contributing to this, these are all simply symptoms of a more obvious underlying cause.

    It was the mainstream liberal media outlet’s image choice that really underscored the problem with this. Crucially, it drove home a huge issue in the way the press and political establishment were interpreting the research.

    In a cropped photo, it pictures a person lighting a cigarette into cupped hands. This sat above a caption that read:

    Lung cancer death rates are almost three times higher in the most deprived areas of the UK

    Straight away, that’s a choice to focus on smoking in its feature image. Yes, the report did find lung cancer caused the most mortalities. But a few things here. One: smoking is not the only driver of this. Poor air quality from industrial and commercial pollution is undoubtedly a factor. Two: the report explored multiple forms of cancer, not only lung cancer anyway.

    What it immediately implies is that it’s people choosing to smoke that’s driving its headline “death rates 60% higher in deprived areas”. If a picture says a thousand words, this one is an essay on poor people making bad life choices, and causing themselves a premature death.

    Moreover, the Guardian wasn’t the only one making this out – in not so many words. The article cited Cancer Research UK’s inequalities programme lead Karis Betts arguing that:

    Sustainably funding support to help people stop smoking will avoid so many cancer cases in deprived areas. But we also need new and better ways to diagnose cancer at an early stage, like targeted lung screening, which is proven to help save lives in at-risk communities.

    That little head nod to “funding support to help people stop smoking” again subtly suggested the same idea. That is, that it’s poor people’s smoking habits that’s at fault.

    The lifestyle choice mantra is back with a vengeance again

    Invariably, all were some version of putting the onus on poor communities to make better life choices. Some might have cursorily acknowledged that there’s an element of lack of healthcare, so didn’t fully foist the onus on people’s life choices – at least not so directly. But each time, it still came back to that same wearying, disgusting argument.

    On Wednesday, the Canary reported that life expectancy improvements across Europe had slumped. England had the sharpest decline for the period between 2011 and 2019. However, instead of joining the dots between more than a decade of callous austerity-addled policies, it laid the blame squarely at the feet of the country’s population.

    In effect, it singled out England’s populace as somehow more inept at all things diet and exercise, than every other civilian citizenry in Europe.

    The bigger picture for this cancer study too could almost be a rinse and repeat of what we underscored in that one. Notably, we emphasised that:

    An aggressive and deadly combination of callous policies punching down on the poorest and most marginalised communities were the recipe for this classist, ableist act of eugenics.

    In short, the doctrine of neoliberal capitalism was fomenting this stall life expectancy growth. And of course, its the Whitehall political establishment that’s responsible. Yes, this means the Tories of fourteen years past. So too, it includes the Labour Party government now – and not forgetting new Labour in the early millennium either. We wrote as well that the study’s researchers should:

    Try living in poverty, overworked with piss-take pay, without access to healthy food, time to exercise or cook

    All this is relevant again for this research. This is because, once more, the egregiously dangerous lifestyle choices mantra is rearing it head.

    There was nothing said about the Tories gutting public services either. If we’re going to take the idea of a lack of support, at a bare minimum, it needed to acknowledge that. After all, these spiralling waitlists for diagnosis and treatment are a product of fourteen years of neoliberal wreck and ruin.

    What’s more, poor people have less access to healthy food that manufacturers haven’t pumped full of harmful oils, and chemical additives. That’s sure to have an impact on their health – and likely their chances of developing various cancers too.

    And lest we forget, landlords lumping poor residents with toxic mold-riddled, damp properties aren’t exactly helping lungs and health either:

    Policies pushing poverty are killing people, as cancer study shows

    When this research references ‘deprived areas’, it’s worth remembering that the government uses what’s known as the Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD).

    As the name suggests, this takes into account different forms of deprivation. It assesses 39 separate indicators across seven “domains of deprivation”. These are: income, employment, education, skills and training, health and disability, crime, barriers to housing and services, and living environment.

    All these deprivations compound on people’s health. Yet, takes on the findings seem to ignore all these factors. It’s little wonder then that politicians and healthcare experts have ignored the political ideology underpinning them too.

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has previously shown that mortality rates are literally higher for people in the most deprived areas. For instance, in 2020, those living in the most deprived areas were more than double as likely to die avoidable deaths than people in the least deprived areas.

    After decades of politicians peddling policies that have entrenched more and more people into ever deeper poverty, this is the result. Worse life expectancies, higher cancer rates, higher mortality all round.

    Ultimately, this was another rerun of the neoliberal capitalist penchant for gaslighting marginalised communities for the problems it has fomented. Plenty of people on X recognised the symptoms from the societal illness:

    The festering rot at the heart of these harrowing figures? Class war – and when all is said and done, that’s the real crux of this.

    Featured image via the Canary

    By Hannah Sharland

    This post was originally published on Canary.