Co-authored
by English Green Euro-MP Caroline Lucas and Oxford City Councillor
Mike Woodin , The Euro or a Sustainable Future for Britain? offers a concise and well-argued
presentation of the progressive, internationalist case against
the EUs single currency, and Britains possible membership
of it. Lucas and Woodin place the Euro precisely where
it belongs, in the context of a neo-liberal globalisation engineered
by corporate capital. EMU is nothing but the form taken by this
redesign of our planets economy in one particular corner
of it. Or, as the authors put it, In
EMU we are witnessing nothing other than the creation of the
European branch of the globalised economy
The pamphlet
explains how globalisation is a process decided upon and managed
by big capital and the governments which serve its interests.
More particularly, the idea for the single currency itself,
and the extreme monetarist criteria spelled out at Maastricht
to govern its introduction and functioning, originated with
the European Round Table of Industrialists, the principal lobby
at EU level for multi-national corporations.
The pamphlets
arguments will be familiar to regular Spectre readers, and those
more red than green will welcome the Green Party of England
and Wales as a valuable ally, in stark contrast to Greens in
continental Europe, who have joined the EU (and in most cases,
NATO) bandwagon. As well as the single currencys tainted
origins and the undemocratic way in which it was foisted on
the peoples of most of the euro-zone, The
Euro or a Sustainable Future looks at the malign consequences
(and sheer illogic) of establishing a single rate of interest for
twelve (or more) very different, and the way in which EMU will
widen regional disparities, undermine democratic decision-making
procedures and concentrate power in unelected bodies, principally
the European Central Bank.
Finally,
the Greens propose an alternative based on a set of mutually
reinforcing policies, which have, as their goal, stronger and
more diverse local economies, with high environmental, social
and democratic standards. These would include curbs on
multinationals, Europe-wide re-regulation of finance capital,
taxes on short-term speculative flows and a co-ordinated
Europe-wide attack on corporate tax evasion.
How
we get from here to there is not discussed, but this is an omission
not limited to this pamphlet or to Greens. The Treaty of Rome
makes much of what is proposed illegal, or otherwise impossible.
As you can read elsewhere in Spectre, even a mild version of
the Tobin Tax, which enjoys support well beyond the left or
green movements, is outlawed by the EU.
One
criticism which has nothing to do with the content: why does
such a small pamphlet cost £5? Why is not printed on recycled
paper and in a cheaper format? And why on earth does it carry
a copyright notice? We suspect the answer has to do with the fact that it is published
by new europe, a body also supported by right wing
organisations and luminaries such as David Owen and Martin Taylor,
former Chief Executive of Barclays Bank. No problem with that
if the UK is to be rescued from Blairs plans to
take the country into the Euro-zone, the crescendo of lies and
waffle which he will visit upon his unfortunate compatriots
will need to be answered from all sides. But this is a pamphlet
which needs and deserves to be read by people to whom a fiver represents a substantial sum.
Maybe its available on the internet, but I couldnt
find it. To buy a copy,
email or go to this website
for
more information.
[NB: This pamphlet is now available in an online version,
free of charge. Go to this website
to access it. 16/9/01]
The reviewer, Steve McGiffen, is Spectres
editor and the author of The European Union: A Critical Guide (Pluto Press, 2001) He has
been campaigning against the single currency since it was nothing
but an evil gleam in the Agnelli dynastys eyes.