Kathimerini English

The world is changing. Are we?

- BY ALEXIS TSIPRAS* * Alexis Tsipras is the leader of the main opposition SYRIZA party and a former prime minister, serving from 2015 to 2019.

A few years after the fall of the Berlin Wall (1989) and almost two centuries after the French Revolution (1789) – when the Right-Left political distinctio­n was historical­ly establishe­d – Norberto Bobbio attempted to define the dividing line between the two political wings in his book “Right and Left.”

According to Bobbio, the stance of political ideologies toward inequaliti­es defines their difference. The Right considers inequaliti­es “sacred or inviolable, natural or inevitable.” The Left, on the other hand, believes that “they can and should be reduced or eliminated.”

If Bobbio’s work seems too dated, one can look at the work of Thomas Piketty, who says the same thing in a new way.

Employees of digital platforms know first-hand what this discussion is about. They experience the uncertaint­y of the self-employed combined with the exhaustion of the worker, while being controlled by the “electronic employer” without any possibilit­y to respond.

However, the dominance of neoliberal doctrine, based as it is on the ideas of the Right, is being challenged headon for the first time after four decades. The pandemic, the climate crisis, and movements for the protection of rights have brought focus back to values and needs that had been forgotten or neglected. First among them is the need to protect human life through strong healthcare and welfare systems. Second, the need to stop the destructio­n of the environmen­t is finally being given attention. Third, the need to restore social cohesion, which has been dangerousl­y fragmented by the frenzied growth of inequaliti­es between developed and developing countries, but also within Western societies, is brought to the fore.

Research shows that 1% of the global population owns 50% of global wealth, while at the same time 1% is responsibl­e for the emissions of more than twice as much CO2 into the atmosphere than the poorest 50% of the global population.

The new US president seems determined to respond effectivel­y to the challenge of inequaliti­es: “It’s time for big business and the richest 1% of the country to pay what’s fair.” As he said in his historic speech to Congress, social spending will increase, but will not be paid by the middle class, but by the richest. The speech signals much more than a change in the economic model of the USA. President Joe Biden brought common sense back into the discussion on inequaliti­es. Humanity is at too critical a juncture to keep following doctrines that have failed. And it is almost certain that what President Biden’s stance brings will sooner or later affect Europe as well.

Unfortunat­ely, the government in our country is still fighting a rearguard action to defend the old world. It is not following President Biden’s initiative­s on increasing the minimum wage, taxing wealth by using new tools and strengthen­ing state interventi­on in the market. It is inspired, rather, by what Kyriakos Mitsotakis himself said before the TIF Forum in 2017: “I do not have illusions about a society without inequaliti­es. That would run contrary to human nature.”

The problem with Mr Mitsotakis’ strategy is not that he belongs to the Right. It is that he vigorously defends the principles of a world that seems to have run its course. And even though he desperatel­y tries to spin every backward reform as somehow signifying progress, he is in fact unable to understand the radical changes that are taking place on all levels, also due to the pandemic.

His party’s stance on issues such as citizenshi­p, integratio­n of refugees and immigrants, LGBT rights, police violence, or the Prespes agreement, is indicative. As indicative is the way in which he passionate­ly attacked, almost as an automatic reflex, the proposal for waiving vaccine patents when it had just started gaining momentum.

Even if one were to dismiss the issue of vaccines and patents as extraordin­ary, the structural problem inherent in his positions becomes even more clear in the glaring case of labor reform. At a time when the global labor market is changing, when the necessary fiscal space is there, and when public discourse revolves around proposals to reduce working hours, Mr Mitsotakis is planning outdated reforms inspired by Reaganite and Thatcherit­e policies, such as abolishing collective bargaining and the eighthour workday.

But our world is changing very fast. And the sooner the country starts to keep pace with and to play a leading role in this change, the faster and more effectivel­y it will emerge from the crisis, serving the interests of the majority.

It is extremely crucial, for example, to use the resources of the recovery fund and the new National Strategic

Reference Framework in a way that will finally transform our economic model and turn it in a sustainabl­e direction. A transforma­tion that will distribute wealth and profits fairly, that will protect small and medium-sized enterprise­s, and that will reduce inequaliti­es. European resources need to finance the necessary reforms to establish an economic model based on a shift to quality products and high value-added services. Greece cannot and should not compete with other countries on the basis of reducing labor costs – in short, wages – but rather on the basis of increasing productivi­ty and investing in training, research and innovation.

It is extremely crucial that the restructur­ing of our economic model and our technologi­cal capacity goes hand in hand with the necessary steps toward a green transition and a digital transforma­tion of the economy. We need to build a modern, efficient and decentrali­zed state with the active participat­ion of society. It is only a strong society – not market forces – that can lead to strong sustainabl­e developmen­t. Reforms must therefore aim at establishi­ng a universal welfare state, a guarantor of real social security.

At this historical turning point, it is necessary for our country to be on the right side of history. But that requires a new government, a progressiv­e government. A government that, when faced with the question of where it stands in terms of political dividing lines, will always choose to be on the side of the interests of the majority. On the side of working people and the productive, innovative forces of Greek society. After all, they are the ones who built Greece. Not the few families who chose to send their money abroad during the crisis, share the country’s spoils, and once again, today, expect to become the main beneficiar­ies of the recovery fund.

It is extremely crucial to use the resources of the recovery fund and the new National Strategic Reference Framework to transform our economic model and turn it in a sustainabl­e direction

The restructur­ing of our economic model and our technologi­cal capacity must go hand in hand with the necessary steps toward a green transition and a digital transforma­tion of the economy

 ??  ?? ‘Greece cannot and should not compete with other countries on the basis of reducing labor costs – in short, wages – but rather on the basis of increasing productivi­ty and investing in training, research and innovation,’ says SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras.
‘Greece cannot and should not compete with other countries on the basis of reducing labor costs – in short, wages – but rather on the basis of increasing productivi­ty and investing in training, research and innovation,’ says SYRIZA leader Alexis Tsipras.

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