Bolkestein's
Monster
November 6, 2006 14:43 | by
Steve McGiffen
Steve McGiffen reports on the return of the Bolkenstein directive
- coming soon to a parliament near you.
THE Bolkestein directive is back. The measure, which threatens to
throw essential services in every European Union member state to the
wolves of the market, has been sent back to the European Parliament
for re-examination.
Last February, following an impressive mass mobilisation of trade
unions across the continent, MEPs agreed to remove the directive's
worst excesses, reducing its scope by exempting social housing provision
and some aspects of health care. Explicit reference to the notorious
country of origin principle was removed, though critics said that
the ambiguity of the remaining text would allow the European Court
of Justice effectively to restore it.
Most parties in the so-called Socialist group supported this compromise,
though progressive MEPs organised in the United Left Group (GUE/NGL)
voted against. No matter, as GUE/NGL leader Francis Wurtz said when
the reply to the parliament's amendments arrived from the Council
of Ministers and the European Commission, what these two bodies were
saying, in so many words, was "you can amend whatever you like,
as we won't take a scrap of notice."
The Council of Ministers, consisting of the employment ministers of
each of the 25 member states, at first promised to respect the parliament's
amendments. When the council's official response arrived, it had in
effect restored the original proposal, so restricting the parliament's
exemptions - designed to protect services of general interest - that
the text was even criticised by Austria's right-wing employment minister.
Austria's being the current holder of the rotating EU presidency should
at least have given it the power to delay the passage of the council's
revised text, but apparently the minister's reservations were insufficient
to block an agreement.
Many Members of the European Parliament are up in arms about this
flouting of any semblance of democracy. Wurtz has attacked the council
text for "introducing a series of alarming ambiguities, both
on public services and consumer protection," adding that it has
also "given the European Commission an outrageous right of scrutiny
over national legislation." In other words, any law seen to be
in violation of complete freedom of establishment of and trade in
services will be declared null and void by an unelected bureaucracy
now exclusively composed of fanatical neoliberals.
The Parliament will make a further attempt to water down the text,
which must now go through its second reading, in the near future.
Even if it succeeds, however, the results will be no better than the
compromise rejected by the left in February. Parliament rules mean
that only amendments carried at first reading but then rejected by
the council may be presented at second reading.
Moreover, however extreme the final measure, you can be sure that
most national parliaments will nod it through. And extreme it is,
representing nothing less than a declaration of war on the labour
rights, working conditions and social provisions won by workers in
most western European countries over the last century or more.
The latest text returns to an approach which treats all services as
equal, ignoring their actual importance to the public interest. Competition
rules and access to national markets for foreign firms takes precedence
over all other interests.
Demands that no single European market in services should be considered
until a directive is in place exempting services of general interest
have been ignored, despite the fact that it is now almost a decade
since the European Commission first promised to introduce such a measure.
The text also hugely restricts the degree to which member states can
regulate service activities within their national borders. The county
of origin principle will allow a firm registered in a country with
very low standards of labour protection or very lax environmental
legislation to conduct activities in, for example, Britain. France
or the Netherlands with no regard for national law. Provided that
it complies with the law in the country in which it was registered,
it would be operating entirely legally.
Even if standards in its country of registration were acceptable,
inspectors from the host country would have no right to enforce them.
The idea that Lithuania or Cyprus is going to send an inspector to
ensure that a firm operating in Belfast or Copenhagen, Stockholm or
Munich is following the rules is, of course, laughable.
Whether a single market in services is desirable at all is highly
debatable. However, if companies are going to operate abroad, then
they should surely follow national laws and regulations.
The adoption of minimum standards to apply throughout the EU would
seem, moreover, to be an essential corollary of any attempt to encourage
cross-border competition. Yet the draft directive excludes any possibility
of such standards being introduced.
As is generally the case, we are going to have to rely on ourselves
if we are to win this vital battle. The Directive on Services in the
European community is an attack on all working people in every EU
member state.
Neither the European Parliament, national parliaments nor member state
governments are going to stop it. It is vital that workers across
the EU participate in the mass mobilisations which, presuming the
directive becomes law, will greet any attempt to implement it.
Steve McGiffen is editor of Spectrezine and author of The European
Union: A Critical Guide, which is published by Pluto
see also
http://www.spectrezine.org/europe/Kartika3.htm
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