The general strike in France on 19 January brought to the streets at least 2
million demonstrators belonging to all categories; this is supported by both LaRépublique En Marche and the Front National who oppose Macron's project to bringthe limits of the retirement age from 62 to 64 . The minimum age required toaccess social security treatment (l'âge légal) should rise three months everyyear, for all those born after 1968, so as to reach 63 years and three months in2027, at the end of the five-year period by Macron and reach the final goal in2030, when the pension system should be able to become sustainable again.Furthermore, the special regimes that characterize the different pensiontreatments of the categories should be greatly reduced. [1]For the first time in 12 years, workers' organizations are united in contestingthe government's choices, while an Ifop-Fiducial survey shows that 68% of Frenchpeople are against raising the retirement age.In the light of the electoral results, the President's party alone does not havethe necessary votes to get the reform approved and would therefore need thesupport of at least the Républicains, who would be willing to vote on the measuredesired by Macron under two conditions: the increase generalization of thecurrent minimum benefits and a slower progression of the retirement age, so as toreach 64 in 2032 and not in 2030. With the support of the neo-Gaullists, thegovernment could avoid recourse to article 49-3 of the Constitution, which allowsfor some laws to be passed (explicitly: the financial one, and interventions onsocial security) without parliamentary approval and subject to a vote of censure.On 23 January, the Government officially presented its project and it wastherefore learned that the reform, in any case, is not limited to the increase inthe retirement age, for which exceptions are envisaged (58 years for those whostarted working before the age of 16, 62 for other "long careers".The projectprovides for an extension of contributions to obtain the "full" pension to 43years, a level to be reached in 2027 and no longer in 2035 as envisaged by thereform desired by Marisol Touraine , the Socialist Minister in 2014. Most of thespecial schemes, which have made the French social security system very complex,will however be abolished.The minimum pensions will also be raised to 1,200 eurosnet for all pensioners and not just for new ones as it was initially expected.While the majority intensifies its search for political support, all the unionsare preparing for a new general strike called for January 31 which is preceded bystrikes in a series in many sectors such as transport, energy and logistics,strikes which they will certainly continue well beyond January 31, opening aphase of intense social conflict such as that which France has repeatedlyexperienced, an inevitable conflict imposed by the structural conditions of theclass conflict taking place on access to the enjoyment of goods for thesatisfaction of primary needs.Capitalist accumulation, demographic crisis and income distribution.It is quite clear that the class war has been fought and that the bosses have wonit, but this does not mean that the struggle will not continue, but rather thatthe struggle between capital and labor can, must and will continue. To do this,the structural problems posed by demography and the general economic conditionsconnected to these cannot be ignored. If this is the case, it is necessary tostart from the fact that Europe, which hosts 10% of the world's population,constitutes the area of greatest consumption for expenses for social services andfor the person as much as 20% of its resources. Meanwhile, its population isageing, due to improving living standards and life spans while the number ofyoung people fit for work decreases. This means that the resources available forwelfare are inexorably reduced.Europe is only the first on this road because the phenomenon will soon appear ona gigantic scale in China due to the lack of family welfare also due to theabandonment of the countryside and the prospective decrease in the share of thepopulation fit for work. This means that the social structure needs to berethought and that this is one of the limits of development which adds to theclimate and energy crisis which find their greatest enemy in the capitalistsystem, due to the growing inequality in the distribution of resources andincomes. This is one of the structural causes/reasons that determine thenecessity/inevitability of class struggle.To perpetuate the vitality of the system of exploitation, capitalism, unable tofully use war as a system of zeroing development to then restart accumulation,conditioned by the consequences of the use of atomic weapons, resorted to thethird war piecemeal world war that is being fought globally without exclusionwith an intensity that risks total destruction, as in the Ukraine.The only possible solution is to increase the share of class power, set a limitto exploitation, increase the weight of deferred wages and find the necessaryresources in reducing the share destined for profit in the eternal competitionbetween capital and labour.The stakes are great and go far beyond any possible prediction: a not improbabledefeat brings French society and not only closer to an inevitable clash that willbe increasingly radical.[1] Gianni Cimbalo, France: a new cycle of struggles?, Newsletter, UCAdI n. 15,19 May 2021; Gianni Cimbalo, Union Struggles in France, UCAdI Newsletter n. 126,December 2019The editorial staffhttp://www.ucadi.org/2023/02/01/ce-nest-quun-debut-continuons-le-combat/_________________________________________A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca
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