• EU: Damning draft report on the implementation of the Return Directive

    Tineke Strik, the Green MEP responsible for overseeing the passage through the European Parliament of the ’recast Return Directive’, which governs certain common procedures regarding the detention and expulsion of non-EU nationals, has prepared a report on the implementation of the original 2008 Return Directive. It criticises the Commission’s emphasis, since 2017, on punitive enforcement measures, at the expense of alternatives that have not been fully explored or implemented by the Commission or the member states, despite the 2008 legislation providing for them.

    See: DRAFT REPORT on the implementation of the Return Directive (2019/2208(INI)): https://www.statewatch.org/media/documents/news/2020/jun/ep-libe-returns-directive-implementation-draft-rep-9-6-20.pdf

    From the explanatory statement:

    “This Report, highlighting several gaps in the implementation of the Return Directive, is not intended to substitute the still overdue fully-fledged implementation assessment of the Commission. It calls on Member States to ensure compliance with the Return Directive and on the Commission to ensure timely and proper monitoring and support for its implementation, and to enforce compliance if necessary.

    (...)

    With a view to the dual objective of the Return Directive, notably promoting effective returns and ensuring that returns comply with fundamental rights and procedural safeguards, this Report shows that the Directive allows for and supports effective returns, but that most factors impeding effective return are absent in the current discourse, as the effectiveness is mainly stressed and understood as return rate.”

    Parliamentary procedure page: Implementation report on the Return Directive (European Parliament, link: https://oeil.secure.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/popups/ficheprocedure.do?reference=2019/2208(INI)&l=en)

    https://www.statewatch.org/news/2020/june/eu-damning-draft-report-on-the-implementation-of-the-return-directive
    #Directive_Retour #EU #Europe #Union_européenne #asile #migrations #réfugiés #renvois #expulsions #rétention #détention_administrative #évaluation #identification #efficacité #2008_Return_Directive #régimes_parallèles #retour_volontaire #déboutés #sans-papiers #permis_de_résidence #régularisation #proportionnalité #principe_de_proportionnalité #AVR_programmes #AVR #interdiction_d'entrée_sur_le_territoire #externalisation #Gambie #Bangladesh #Turquie #Ethiopie #Afghanistan #Guinée #Côte_d'Ivoire #droits_humains #Tineke_Strik #risque_de_fuite #fuite #accord #réadmission

    –—

    Quelques passages intéressants tirés du rapport:

    The study shows that Member States make use of the possibility offered in Article 2(2)(a) not to apply the Directive in “border cases”, by creating parallel regimes, where procedures falling outside the scope of the Directive offer less safeguards compared to the regular return procedure, for instance no voluntary return term, no suspensive effect of an appeal and less restrictions on the length of detention. This lower level of protection gives serious reasons for concern, as the fact that border situations may remain outside the scope of the Directive also enhances the risks of push backs and refoulement. (...) Your Rapporteur considers that it is key to ensure a proper assessment of the risk of refoulement prior to the issuance of a return decision. This already takes place in Sweden and France. Although unaccompanied minors are rarely returned, most Member States do not officially ban their return. Their being subject to a return procedure adds vulnerability to their situation, due to the lack of safeguards and legal certainty.

    (p.4)
    #frontières #zones_frontalières #push-backs #refoulement

    Sur les #statistiques et #chiffres de #Eurostat:

    According to Eurostat, Member States issued over 490.000 return decisions in 2019, of which 85% were issued by the ten Member States under the current study. These figures are less reliable then they seem, due to the divergent practices. In some Member States, migrants are issued with a return decision more than once, children are not issued a decision separately, and refusals at the border are excluded.

    Statistics on the percentage of departure being voluntary show significant varieties between the Member States: from 96% in Poland to 7% in Spain and Italy. Germany and the Netherlands have reported not being able to collect data of non-assisted voluntary returns, which is remarkable in the light of the information provided by other Member States. According to Frontex, almost half of the departures are voluntary.

    (p.5)

    As Article 7(4) is often applied in an automatic way, and as the voluntary departure period is often insufficient to organise the departure, many returnees are automatically subject to an entry ban. Due to the different interpretations of a risk of absconding, the scope of the mandatory imposition of an entry ban may vary considerably between the countries. The legislation and practice in Belgium, Bulgaria, France, the Netherlands and Sweden provides for an automatic entry ban if the term for voluntary departure was not granted or respected by the returnee and in other cases, the imposition is optional. In Germany, Spain, Italy, Poland and Bulgaria however, legislation or practice provides for an automatic imposition of entry bans in all cases, including cases in which the returnee has left during the voluntary departure period. Also in the Netherlands, migrants with a voluntary departure term can be issued with an entry ban before the term is expired. This raises questions on the purpose and effectiveness of imposing an entry ban, as it can have a discouraging effect if imposed at an early stage. Why leave the territory in time on a voluntary basis if that is not rewarded with the possibility to re-enter? This approach is also at odds with the administrative and non-punitive approach taken in the Directive.

    (p.6)

    National legislation transposing the definition of “risk of absconding” significantly differs, and while several Member States have long lists of criteria which justify finding a risk of absconding (Belgium has 11, France 8, Germany 7, The Netherlands 19), other Member States (Bulgaria, Greece, Poland) do not enumerate the criteria in an exhaustive manner. A broad legal basis for detention allows detention to be imposed in a systematic manner, while individual circumstances are marginally assessed. National practices highlighted in this context also confirm previous studies that most returns take place in the first few weeks and that longer detention hardly has an added value.

    (p.6)

    In its 2016 Communication on establishing a new Partnership Framework with third countries under the European Agenda on Migration, the Commission recognised that cooperation with third countries is essential in ensuring effective and sustainable returns. Since the adoption of this Communication, several informal arrangements have been concluded with third countries, including Gambia, Bangladesh, Turkey, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, Guinea and Ivory Coast. The Rapporteur regrets that such informal deals are concluded in the complete absence of duly parliamentary scrutiny and democratic and judicial oversight that according to the Treaties the conclusion of formal readmission agreements would warrant.

    (p.7)

    With the informalisation of cooperation with third countries in the field of migration, including with transit countries, also came an increased emphasis on conditionality in terms of return and readmission. The Rapporteur is concerned that funding earmarked for development cooperation is increasingly being redirected away from development and poverty eradication goals.

    (p.7)
    #développement #aide_au_développement #conditionnalité_de_l'aide

    ping @_kg_ @isskein @i_s_ @karine4 @rhoumour

  • The neoliberal era is ending. What comes next?

    In a crisis, what was once unthinkable can suddenly become inevitable. We’re in the middle of the biggest societal shakeup since the second world war. And neoliberalism is gasping its last breath. So from higher taxes for the wealthy to more robust government, the time has come for ideas that seemed impossible just months ago.

    There are those who say this pandemic shouldn’t be politicised. That doing so is tantamount to basking in self-righteousness. Like the religious hardliner shouting it’s the wrath of God, or the populist scaremongering about the “Chinese virus”, or the trend-watcher predicting we’re finally entering a new era of love, mindfulness, and free money for all.

    There are also those who say now is precisely the time to speak out. That the decisions being made at this moment will have ramifications far into the future. Or, as Obama’s chief of staff put it after Lehman Brothers fell in 2008: “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”

    In the first few weeks, I tended to side with the naysayers. I’ve written before about the opportunities crises present, but now it seemed tactless, even offensive. Then more days passed. Little by little, it started to dawn that this crisis might last months, a year, even longer. And that anti-crisis measures imposed temporarily one day could well become permanent the next.

    No one knows what awaits us this time. But it’s precisely because we don’t know because the future is so uncertain, that we need to talk about it.

    The tide is turning

    On 4 April 2020, the British-based Financial Times published an editorial

    likely to be quoted by historians for years to come.

    The Financial Times is the world’s leading business daily and, let’s be honest, not exactly a progressive publication. It’s read by the richest and most powerful players in global politics and finance. Every month, it puts out a magazine supplement unabashedly titled “How to Spend It” about yachts and mansions and watches and cars.

    But on this memorable Saturday morning in April, that paper published this:

    “Radical reforms – reversing the prevailing policy direction of the last four decades – will need to be put on the table. Governments will have to accept a more active role in the economy. They must see public services as investments rather than liabilities, and look for ways to make labour markets less insecure. Redistribution will again be on the agenda; the privileges of the elderly and wealthy in question. Policies until recently considered eccentric, such as basic income and wealth taxes, will have to be in the mix.”

    What’s going on here? How could the tribune of capitalism suddenly be advocating for more redistribution, bigger government, and even a basic income?

    For decades, this institution stood firmly behind the capitalist model of small government, low taxes, limited social security – or at most with the sharpest edges rounded off. “Throughout the years I’ve worked there,” responded a journalist who has written for the paper since 1986,

    “the Financial Times has advocated free market capitalism with a human face. This from the editorial board sends us in a bold new direction.”

    The ideas in that editorial didn’t just appear out of blue: they’ve travelled a very long distance, from the margins to the mainstream. From anarchist tent cities to primetime talk shows; from obscure blogs to the
    Financial Times.

    And now, in the midst of the biggest crisis since the second world war, those ideas might just change the world.
    Literary star

    To understand how we got here, we need to take a step back in history. Hard as it may be to imagine now, there was a time – some 70 years ago – that it was the defenders of free market capitalism who were the radicals.

    In 1947, a small think tank was established in the Swiss village of #Mont_Pèlerin. The #Mont_Pèlerin_Society was made up of self-proclaimed “neoliberals”, men like the philosopher Friedrich Hayek and the economist #Milton_Friedman.

    In those days, just after the war, most politicians and economists espoused the ideas of John Maynard Keynes, British economist and champion of a strong state, high taxes, and a robust social safety net. The neoliberals by contrast feared growing states would usher in a new kind of tyranny. So they rebelled.

    The members of the Mont Pèlerin Society knew they had a long way to go. The time it takes for new ideas to prevail “is usually a generation or even more,” Hayek noted, “and that is one reason why … our present thinking seems too powerless to influence events.”

    Friedman was of the same mind:
    “The people now running the country reflect the intellectual atmosphere of some two decades ago when they were in college.” Most people, he believed, develop their basic ideas in their teens. Which explained why “the old theories still dominate what happens in the political world”.

    Friedman was an evangelist of free-market principles. He believed in the primacy of self-interest. Whatever the problem, his solution was simple: out with government; long live business. Or rather, government should turn every sector into a marketplace, from healthcare to education. By force, if necessary. Even in a natural disaster, competing companies should be the ones to take charge of organising relief.

    Friedman knew he was a radical. He knew he stood far afield of the mainstream. But that only energised him. In 1969, Time magazine characterised the US economist as “a Paris designer whose haute couture is bought by a select few, but who nonetheless influences almost all popular fashions”.

    Crises played a central role in Friedman’s thinking. In the preface to his book Capitalism and Freedom (1982), he wrote the famous words:

    “Only a crisis – actual or perceived – produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around.”

    The ideas that are lying around. According to Friedman, what happens in a time of crisis all depends on the groundwork that’s been laid. Then, ideas once dismissed as unrealistic or impossible might just become inevitable.

    And that’s exactly what happened. During the crises of the 1970s (economic contraction, inflation, and the Opec oil embargo), the neoliberals were ready and waiting in the wings. “Together, they helped precipitate a global policy transformation,” sums up historian Angus Burgin. Conservative leaders like US president Ronald Reagan and UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher adopted Hayek and Friedman’s once-radical ideas, and in time so did their political adversaries, like Bill Clinton and Tony Blair.

    One by one, state-owned enterprises the world over were privatised. Unions were curtailed and social benefits were cut. Reagan claimed
    the nine most terrifying words in the English language were “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help”. And after the fall of communism in 1989, even social democrats seemed to lose faith in government. In his State of the Union address in 1996, Clinton, president at the time, pronounced “the era of big government is over”.

    Neoliberalism had spread from think tanks to journalists and from journalists to politicians, infecting people like a virus. At a dinner in 2002, Thatcher was asked what she saw as her great achievement. Her answer? “Tony Blair and New Labour. We forced our opponents to change their minds.”

    Literary star

    And then came 2008.

    On 15 September, the US bank Lehman Brothers unchained the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. When massive government bailouts were needed to save the so-called “free” market, it seemed to signal the collapse of neoliberalism.

    And yet, #2008 did not mark a historic turning point.
    One country after another voted down its leftwing politicians. Deep cuts were made to education, healthcare, and social security even as gaps in equality grew and bonuses on Wall Street soared to record heights. At the Financial Times, an online edition of luxury lifestyle magazine How to Spend It was launched a year after the crash.

    Where the neoliberals had spent years preparing for the crises of the 1970s, their challengers now stood empty-handed. Mostly, they just knew what they were against. Against the cutbacks. Against the establishment. But a programme? It wasn’t clear enough what they were for.

    Now, 12 years later, crisis strikes again. One that’s more devastating, more shocking, and more deadly. According to the British central bank, the United Kingdom is on the eve of the largest recession since the winter of 1709.
    In the space of just three weeks, nearly 17 million people in the United States applied for economic impact payments.

    In the 2008 financial crisis, it took two whole years for the country to reach even half that number.

    Unlike the 2008 crash, the coronavirus crisis has a clear cause. Where most of us had no clue what “collateralised debt obligations” or “credit default swaps” were, we all know what a virus is. And whereas after 2008 reckless bankers tended to shift the blame to debtors, that trick won’t wash today.

    But the most important distinction between 2008 and now? The intellectual groundwork. The ideas that are lying around. If Friedman was right and a crisis makes the unthinkable inevitable, then this time around history may well take a very different turn.

    Three dangerous French economists

    “Three Far-Left Economists Are Influencing The Way Young People View The Economy And Capitalism,” headlined a far-right website in October 2019.

    It was one of those low-budget blogs that excel in spreading fake news, but this title about the impact of a French trio of economists hit the nail right on the head.

    I remember the first time I came across the name of one of those three: Thomas Piketty. It was the fall of 2013 and I was browsing around economist Branko Milanović’s blog as I often did because his scathing critiques of colleagues were so entertaining. But in this particular post, Milanović abruptly took a very different tone. He’d just finished a 970-page tome in French and was singing its praises. It was, I read, “a watershed in economic thinking”.

    Milanović had long been one of the few economists to take any interest at all in researching inequality. Most of his colleagues wouldn’t touch it. In 2003, Nobel Laureate Robert Lucas had even asserted that research into questions of distribution was “the most poisonous” to “sound economics”.

    Meanwhile, Piketty had already started his groundbreaking work. In 2001, he published an obscure book with the first-ever graph to plot the income shares of the top 1%. Together with fellow economist Emmanuel Saez – number two of the French trio – he then demonstrated that inequality in the United States is as high now as it was back in the roaring twenties. It was this academic work that would inspire the rallying cry of Occupy Wall Street:

    “We are the 99%.”

    In 2014, Piketty took the world by storm. The professor became a “rock-star economist” – to the frustration of many (with the Financial Times mounting a frontal attack).

    He toured the world to share his recipe with journalists and politicians. The main ingredient? Taxes.

    That brings us to the specialty of number three of the French trio, the young economist Gabriel Zucman. On the very day Lehman Brothers fell in 2008, this 21-year-old economics student started a traineeship at a French brokerage firm. In the months that followed, Zucman had a front row seat to the collapse of the global financial system. Even then, he was struck by the astronomical sums flowing through small countries like Luxembourg and Bermuda, the tax havens where the world’s super-rich hide their wealth.

    Within a couple of years, Zucman became one of the world’s leading tax experts. In his book The Hidden Wealth of Nations (2015), he worked out that $7.6tn of the world’s wealth is hidden in tax havens. And in a book co-authored with Emmanuel Saez, Zucman calculated that the 400 richest US Americans pay a lower tax rate than every single other income group, from plumbers to cleaners to nurses to retirees.

    The young economist doesn’t need many words to make his point. His mentor Piketty released another doorstopper in 2020 (coming in at 1,088 pages),

    but Zucman and Saez’s book can be read in a day. Concisely subtitled “How the Rich Dodge Taxes and How to Make Them Pay,” it reads like a to-do list for the next US president.

    The most important step? Pass an annual progressive wealth tax on all multimillionaires. Turns out, high taxes need not be bad for the economy. On the contrary, high taxes can make capitalism work better. (In 1952, the highest income tax bracket in the United States was 92%, and the economy grew faster than ever.)

    Five years ago, these kinds of ideas were still considered too radical to touch. Former president Obama’s financial advisers assured him a wealth tax would never work, and that the rich (with their armies of accountants and lawyers) would always find ways to hide their money. Even Bernie Sanders’s team turned down the French trio’s offers to help design a wealth tax for his 2016 presidential bid.

    But 2016 is an ideological eternity away from where we are now. In 2020, Sanders’s “moderate” rival Joe Biden is proposing tax increases double what Hillary Clinton planned four years ago.
    These days, the majority of US voters (including Republicans) are in favour of significantly higher taxes on the super-rich.
    Meanwhile, across the pond, even the Financial Times concluded that a wealth tax might not be such a bad idea.

    Beyond champagne socialism

    “The problem with socialism,” Thatcher once quipped, “is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.”

    Thatcher touched on a sore spot. Politicians on the left like talking taxes and inequality, but where’s all the money supposed to come from? The going assumption – on both sides of the political aisle – is that most wealth is “earned” at the top by visionary entrepreneurs, by men like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk. This turns it into a question of moral conscience: shouldn’t these titans of the Earth share some of their wealth?

    If that’s your understanding, too, then I’d like to introduce you to Mariana Mazzucato, one of the most forward-thinking economists of our times. Mazzucato belongs to a generation of economists, predominantly women,
    who believe merely talking taxes isn’t enough. “The reason progressives often lose the argument,” Mazzucato explains, “is that they focus too much on wealth redistribution and not enough on wealth creation.”

    In recent weeks, lists have been published all over the world of what we’ve started calling “essential workers”. And surprise: jobs like “hedge fund manager” and “multinational tax consultant” appear nowhere on those lists. All of a sudden, it has become crystal clear who’s doing the truly important work in care and in education, in public transit and in grocery stores.

    In 2018, two Dutch economists did a study
    leading them to conclude that a quarter of the working population suspect their job is pointless. Even more interesting is that there are four times more “socially pointless jobs” in the business world than in the public sphere. The largest number of these people with self-professed “bullshit jobs”

    are employed in sectors like finance and marketing.

    This brings us to the question: where is wealth actually created? Media like the Financial Times have often claimed – like their neoliberal originators, Friedman and Hayek – that wealth is made by entrepreneurs, not by states. Governments are at most facilitators. Their role is to provide good infrastructure and attractive tax breaks – and then to get out of the way.

    But in 2011, after hearing the umpteenth politician sneeringly call government workers “enemies of enterprise”, something clicked in Mazzucato’s head. She decided to do some research. Two years later, she’d written a book that sent shockwaves through the policymaking world. Title: The Entrepreneurial State.

    In her book, Mazzucato demonstrates that not only education and healthcare and garbage collection and mail delivery start with the government, but also real, bankable innovations. Take the iPhone. Every sliver of technology that makes the iPhone a smartphone instead of a stupidphone (internet, GPS, touchscreen, battery, hard drive, voice recognition) was developed by researchers on a government payroll.

    And what applies to Apple applies equally to other tech giants. Google? Received a fat government grant to develop a search engine. Tesla? Was scrambling for investors until the US Department of Energy handed over $465m. (Elon Musk has been a grant guzzler from the start, with three of his companies – Tesla, SpaceX, and SolarCity – having received a combined total of almost $5bn in taxpayer money.)

    “The more I looked,” Mazzucato told tech magazine Wired last year, “the more I realised: state investment is everywhere.”

    True, sometimes the government invests in projects that don’t pay off. Shocking? No: that’s what investment’s all about. Enterprise is always about taking risks. And the problem with most private “venture” capitalists, Mazzucato points out, is that they’re not willing to venture all that much. After the Sars outbreak in 2003, private investors quickly pulled the plug on coronavirus research. It simply wasn’t profitable enough. Meanwhile, publicly funded research continued, for which the US government paid a cool $700m.

    (If and when a vaccine comes, you have the government to thank for that.)

    But maybe the example that best makes Mazzucato’s case is the pharmaceutical industry. Almost every medical breakthrough starts in publicly funded laboratories. Pharmaceutical giants like Roche and Pfizer mostly just buy up patents and market old medicines under new brands, and then use the profits to pay dividends and buy back shares (great for driving up stock prices). All of which has enabled annual shareholder payments by the 27 biggest pharmaceutical companies to multiply fourfold since 2000.

    If you ask Mazzucato, that needs to change. When government subsidises a major innovation, she says industry is welcome to it. What’s more, that’s the whole idea! But then the government should get its initial outlay back – with interest. It’s maddening that right now the corporations getting the biggest handouts are also the biggest tax evaders. Corporations like Apple, Google, and Pfizer, which have tens of billions tucked away in tax havens around the world.

    There’s no question these companies should be paying their fair share in taxes. But it’s even more important, according to Mazzucato, that the government finally claims the credit for its own achievements. One of her favourite examples is the 1960s Space Race. In a 1962 speech, former president Kennedy declared

    “We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.”

    In this day and age, we also face tremendous challenges that call for an enterprising state’s unparalleled powers of innovation. For starters, one of the most pressing problems ever to confront the human species: climate change. Now more than ever, we need the mentality glorified in Kennedy’s speech to achieve the transformation necessitated by climate change. It’s no accident then that Mazzucato, alongside British-Venezuelan economist Carlota Perez, became the intellectual mother of the Green New Deal, the world’s most ambitious plan to tackle climate change.

    Another of Mazzucato’s friends, US economist Stephanie Kelton, adds that governments can print extra money if needed to fund their ambitions – and not to worry about national debts and deficits. (Economists like #Mazzucato and #Kelton don’t have much patience for old-school politicians, economists, and journalists who liken governments to households. After all, households can’t collect taxes or issue credit in their own currency.)

    What we’re talking about here is nothing less than a revolution in economic thinking. Where the 2008 crisis was followed by severe austerity, we’re now living at a time when someone like Kelton (author of a book tellingly titled The Deficit Myth) is hailed by none other than the Financial Times as a modern-day Milton Friedman.

    And when that same paper wrote in early April that government “must see public services as investments rather than liabilities”, it was echoing precisely what Kelton and Mazzucato have contended for years.

    But maybe the most interesting thing about these women is that they’re not satisfied with mere talk. They want results. Kelton for example is an influential political adviser, Perez has served as a consultant to countless companies and institutions, and Mazzucato too is a born networker who knows her way around the world’s institutions.

    Not only is she a regular guest at the World Economic Forum in Davos (where the world’s rich and powerful convene every year), the Italian economist has also advised the likes of senator Elizabeth Warren and congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the US and Scottish first minister Nicola Sturgeon. And when the European Parliament voted to pass an ambitious innovation programme last year, that too was drafted by Mazzucato.

    “I wanted the work to have an impact,” the economist remarked drily at the time.

    “Otherwise it’s champagne socialism: you go in, talk every now and then, and nothing happens.”

    How ideas conquer the world

    How do you change the world?

    Ask a group of progressives this question and it won’t be long before someone says the name Joseph Overton. Overton subscribed to Milton Friedman’s views. He worked for a neoliberal think tank and spent years campaigning for lower taxes and smaller government. And he was interested in the question of how things that are unthinkable become, in time, inevitable.

    Imagine a window, said Overton. Ideas that fall inside this window are what’s deemed “acceptable” or even “popular” at any given time. If you’re a politician who wants to be re-elected, you’d better stay inside this window. But if you want to change the world, you need to shift the window. How? By pushing on the edges. By being unreasonable, insufferable, and unrealistic.

    In recent years, the Overton Window has undeniably shifted. What once was marginal is now mainstream. A French economist’s obscure graph became the slogan of Occupy Wall Street (“We are the 99%”); Occupy Wall Street paved the way for a revolutionary presidential candidate, and Bernie Sanders pulled other politicians like Biden in his direction.

    These days, more young US Americans have a favourable view of socialism than of capitalism
    – something that would have been unthinkable 30 years ago. (In the early 1980s, young voters

    were the neoliberal Reagan’s biggest support base.)

    But didn’t Sanders lose the primaries? And didn’t the socialist Jeremy Corbyn suffer a dramatic election defeat just last year in the UK?

    Certainly. But election results aren’t the only sign of the times. Corbyn may have lost the 2017 and 2019 elections, but Conservative policy wound up much closer to the Labour Party’s financial plans than to their own manifesto.

    Similarly, though Sanders ran on a more radical climate plan than Biden in 2020, Biden’s climate plan is more radical than that Sanders had in 2016.

    Thatcher wasn’t being facetious when she called “New Labour and Tony Blair” her greatest achievement. When her party was defeated in 1997, it was by an opponent with her ideas.

    Changing the world is a thankless task. There’s no moment of triumph when your adversaries humbly acknowledge you were right. In politics, the best you can hope for is plagiarism. Friedman had already grasped this in 1970, when he described to a journalist how his ideas would conquer the world.

    It would play out in four acts:

    “Act I: The views of crackpots like myself are avoided.

    Act II: The defenders of the orthodox faith become uncomfortable because the ideas seem to have an element of truth.

    Act III: People say, ‘We all know that this is an impractical and theoretically extreme view – but of course we have to look at more moderate ways to move in this direction.’

    Act IV: Opponents convert my ideas into untenable caricatures so that they can move over and occupy the ground where I formerly stood.”

    Still, if big ideas begin with crackpots, that doesn’t mean every crackpot has big ideas. And even though radical notions occasionally get popular, winning an election for once would be nice as well. Too often, the Overton Window is used as an excuse for the failures of the left. As in:

    “At least we won the war of ideas.”

    Many self-proclaimed “radicals” have only half-formed plans for gaining power, if they have any plans at all. But criticise this and you’re branded a traitor. In fact, the left has a history of shifting blame onto others – onto the press, the establishment, sceptics within their own ranks – but it rarely shoulders responsibility itself.

    Just how hard it is to change the world was brought home to me yet again by the book Difficult Women, which I read recently during lockdown. Written by British journalist Helen Lewis, it’s a history of feminism in Great Britain, but ought to be required reading for anyone aspiring to create a better world.

    By “difficult”, Lewis means three things:

    It’s difficult to change the world. You have to make sacrifices.
    Many revolutionaries are difficult. Progress tends to start with people who are obstinate and obnoxious and deliberately rock the boat.
    Doing good doesn’t mean you’re perfect. The heroes of history were rarely as squeaky clean as they’re later made out to be.

    Lewis’s criticism is that many activists appear to ignore this complexity, and that makes them markedly less effective. Look at Twitter, which is rife with people who seem more interested in judging other tweeters. Yesterday’s hero is toppled tomorrow at the first awkward remark or stain of controversy.

    Lewis shows there are a lot of different roles that come into play in any movement, often necessitating uneasy alliances and compromises. Like the British suffrage movement, which brought together a whole host of “Difficult Women, from fishwives to aristocrats, mill girls to Indian princesses”. That complex alliance survived just long enough to achieve the victory of 1918, granting property-owning women over age 30 the right to vote.

    (That’s right, initially only privileged women got the vote. It proved a sensible compromise, because that first step led to the inevitability of the next: universal suffrage for women in 1928.)

    And no, even their success could not make all those feminists into friends. Anything but. According to Lewis, “Even the suffragettes found the memory of their great triumph soured by personality clashes.”

    Progress, it turns out, is complicated.

    The way we conceive of activism tends to forget the fact that we need all those different roles. Our inclination – in talk shows and around dinner tables – is to choose our favourite kind of activism: we give Greta Thunberg a big thumbs up but fume at the road blockades staged by Extinction Rebellion. Or we admire the protesters of Occupy Wall Street but scorn the lobbyists who set out for Davos.

    That’s not how change works. All of these people have roles to play. Both the professor and the anarchist. The networker and the agitator. The provocateur and the peacemaker. The people who write in academic jargon and those who translate it for a wider audience. The people who lobby behind the scenes and those who are dragged away by the riot police.

    One thing is certain. There comes a point when pushing on the edges of the Overton Window is no longer enough. There comes a point when it’s time to march through the institutions and bring the ideas that were once so radical to the centres of power.

    I think that time is now.

    The ideology that was dominant these last 40 years is dying. What will replace it? Nobody knows for sure. It’s not hard to imagine this crisis might send us down an even darker path. That rulers will use it to seize more power, restrict their populations’ freedom, and stoke the flames of racism and hatred.

    But things can be different. Thanks to the hard work of countless activists and academics, networkers and agitators, we can also imagine another way. This pandemic could send us down a path of new values.

    If there was one dogma that defined neoliberalism, it’s that most people are selfish. And it’s from that cynical view of human nature that all the rest followed – the privatisation, the growing inequality, and the erosion of the public sphere.

    Now a space has opened up for a different, more realistic view of human nature: that humankind has evolved to cooperate. It’s from that conviction that all the rest can follow – a government based on trust, a tax system rooted in solidarity, and the sustainable investments needed to secure our future. And all this just in time to be prepared for the biggest test of this century, our pandemic in slow motion – climate change.

    Read Rob Wijnberg’s article ‘Why climate change is a pandemic in slow motion (and what that can teach us)’.

    Nobody knows where this crisis will lead us. But compared to the last time, at least we’re more prepared.

    https://thecorrespondent.com/466/the-neoliberal-era-is-ending-what-comes-next/61655148676-a00ee89a
    #néolibéralisme #néo-libéralisme #le_monde_d'après #capitalisme #crise_financière #crise #coronavirus #covid-19 #économie

  • #Crise économique : les leçons de #1848
    18 AVRIL 2020 PAR #ROMARIC_GODIN

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/180420/crise-economique-les-lecons-de-1848

    La violence de la crise économique du Covid-19 n’a guère de précédents en France en temps de paix que la crise de #1929 et celle de 1848. Cette dernière porte en elle un certain nombre de leçons et de mises en garde
    #Mediapart

    l’histoire ne se répète pas, c’est entendu. Pourtant, certaines circonstances du passé éclairent l’époque et mettent en garde contre les tentations de penser trop vite notre présent. La crise du #coronavirus a mis à terre l’économie capitaliste que l’on croyait invincible. Le commerce et l’industrie sont à l’arrêt, la « richesse » créée sera peut-être cette année la plus faible depuis quinze ans. Le PIB pourrait chuter de 10 à 15 %. Partout, l’État s’active pour amortir le choc, vient, en pompier du capitalisme, compenser les pertes. Les milliards pleuvent et les gouvernements aiguisent leurs discours les plus sociaux pour apaiser une éventuelle colère et former une hypothétique « union nationale ».

    Ce type de situation est assez rare en régime capitaliste en période de paix. Mais il est un précédent qui mérite qu’on s’y penche, celui de 1848. Certes, les deux époques sont différentes et les deux crises très lointaines en apparence. D’un côté, un virus, indépendant de la volonté des hommes, de l’autre, une révolution, produit de cette volonté. D’un côté, une économie capitaliste très avancée, de l’autre, un capitalisme naissant dans une société encore très largement rurale. Il ne s’agit pas de plaquer le passé sur le présent, mais de montrer comment les forces économiques et sociales ont réagi à une crise qui présente des éléments communs

    Le trône de Louis-Philippe est brûlé par les révolutionnaires en 1848 !. © DR

    Car ces éléments ne manquent pas. La crise de 2020 n’arrive pas comme un coup de tonnerre au cœur d’un temps radieux. Elle frappe un capitalisme en crise latente, qui se cherche, qui peine à se remettre de la crise de #2008 et qui souffre d’une croissance structurellement faible de sa productivité. Or la #révolution de février 1848 en France se produit dans un contexte économique du même type. Le capitalisme naissant subit depuis #1846 une crise financière et économique mondiale : l’emballement boursier autour des « nouvelles #technologies » d’alors, notamment les chemins de fer, s’est transformé en # qui a éclaté. La #surproduction générale est devenue évidente et plombe l’activité.

    Au début de 1848, la crise semble s’apaiser, mais au prix d’une forte intervention des autorités financières. La Caisse des dépôts a racheté massivement les actions de chemins de fer, la Banque de France a multiplié les avances aux entreprises, le Trésor a inondé le pays d’argent à coups d’émissions de dettes. Comme avant 2020 finalement, l’économie était sous perfusion et les moyens pour la soutenir immenses. Marie d’Agoult, femme de Franz Liszt (et mère de Cosima Wagner), résumait la situation en ce début d’année dans son Histoire de la révolution de 1848, qu’elle publia sous le pseudonyme de Daniel Stern : « Tous les ressorts étaient tendus, le moindre événement survenu à l’improviste pouvait les briser. »

    Cet événement inattendu fut la révolution des 22, 23 et 24 février 1848. Certes, avec la crise économique, la situation politique s’est tendue depuis deux ans en France. Le régime de Louis-Philippe se sent pourtant suffisamment fort pour refuser toute ouverture et toute réforme, notamment celle de l’élargissement du droit de vote. La période des révolutions parisiennes, nombreuses dans les années 1830, semble achevée. C’est donc sans inquiétude qu’il interdit un banquet de l’opposition prévu le 22 février. Et personne au sein de l’opposition n’y voit une occasion de renverser le régime. C’est pourtant ce qui se produit. Les Parisiens renversent la monarchie constitutionnelle en deux jours. Un gouvernement provisoire est installé qui proclame la République.

    La surprise est totale. Et, dans les milieux économiques, elle s’accompagne d’une panique complète. Car, comme l’ont souligné Karl Marx et Friedrich Engels en entame de leur Manifeste du Parti communiste paru en janvier, « un spectre plane sur l’Europe, celui du communisme ». La France est le laboratoire des pensées socialistes et communistes avec des penseurs comme Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Louis Blanc, Étienne Cabet ou encore les disciples de Charles Fourier et du comte de Saint-Simon. De plus, le retour de la République, proclamé le 24 février, fait craindre un retour à la terreur de l’an II et ses mesures d’économie administrée. Le fameux choc tant redouté par Marie d’Agoult se produit.

    • “ Au début de 1848, la crise semble s’apaiser, mais au prix d’une forte intervention des autorités financières. La Caisse des dépôts a racheté massivement les actions de chemins de fer, la Banque de France a multiplié les avances aux entreprises, le Trésor a inondé le pays d’argent à coups d’émissions de dettes. ”

    • Selon les données du Projet Maddison, qui reconstitue les PIB du passé, en 1848, le PIB par habitant de la France a reculé de 6,5 % en parité de pouvoir d’achat de 1990. C’est un chiffre exceptionnel en temps de paix. D’après la même source, et jusqu’à cette année, une telle chute annuelle du PIB par habitant ne s’était jamais rencontrée depuis, en dehors des trois guerres de 1870, 1914-1918 et 1939-1945, que lors de la grande crise de 1929 où le PIB par habitant a reculé de plus de 7 % en 1931 et 1932. À titre de comparaison, la révolution de 1830 n’avait amputé cet agrégat que de 2,5 %, tandis que la crise de 2008 l’avait réduit de 3,5 %. Autrement dit : en 2020 comme en 1848, nous vivons un choc économique d’une violence rare en temps de paix, causé par un choc externe en partie politique (n’oublions pas que le confinement, origine de la crise actuelle, est une décision politique).

  • POLITIQUE MONÉTAIRE
    Alerte rouge sur le marché monétaire
    18 SEPTEMBRE 2019 PAR MARTINE ORANGE

    Pour la première fois depuis 2009, la #Réserve_fédérale a dû intervenir en urgence sur le marché monétaire, en y injectant 130 milliards de dollars. Les responsables tentent de rassurer en expliquant qu’il s’agit d’un mauvais concours de circonstances. Les raisons semblent beaucoup plus profondes : le système financier croule sous trop de #dettes à court terme.

    Tous y pensent. Forcément. L’intervention en urgence de la #Réserve fédérale américaine mardi 17 septembre sur le marché monétaire a ravivé de mauvais souvenirs. « Cela ressemble au scénario d’août 2007, quand les #banques n’arrivaient plus à trouver d’argent sur les marchés », relève l’économiste spécialiste du monde financier, Laurence Scialom, professeur à l’université Paris Ouest.

    Spontanément, l’ancien banquier Jean-Michel Naulot fait lui aussi le rapprochement avec août 2007, considéré désormais comme le début de la #crise financière. « Jean-Claude Trichet [alors président de la #BCE – ndlr] s’était félicité par la suite des interventions spectaculaires mises en œuvre pour enrayer la crise de liquidité. Il avait débloqué alors 90 milliards d’euros », se rappelle-t-il.

    La FED a décidé d’agir de façon encore plus spectaculaire mardi. En une seule journée, elle a débloqué 53 milliards de dollars pour assurer les financements sur le marché monétaire. Dans la soirée, elle a annoncé qu’elle allait remettre 75 milliards de dollars mercredi pour stabiliser le marché.

    C’est la première fois depuis l’automne 2009 que la #banque centrale américaine est obligée de s’engager sur le marché monétaire pour ramener les #taux d’intérêts à des niveaux plus supportables sur le marché du « #repo » (repurchase agreement). Ce marché permet aux intervenants financiers (banques, #fonds, #hedge_funds) de trouver l’argent dont ils ont besoin le temps d’une nuit. En échange des fonds prêtés, ils déposent des titres en garantie, le plus souvent des bons du Trésor ou des obligations d’État. Considérés comme très peu risqués car à très court terme et garantis, ces prêts sur le marché du « repo » évoluent à des taux avoisinants ceux de la FED, autour de 2-2,25 %.

    Sauf que mardi, tout s’est déréglé. Dès l’ouverture, les signaux rouges ont commencé à clignoter : les taux étaient à plus de 4 % et ont continué à s’envoler pour aller jusqu’à 10 %. Jusqu’à ce que la Fed annonce en catastrophe qu’elle apportait les liquidités nécessaires pour assurer les opérations de refinancement et prévenir une contagion qui commençait à gagner d’autres marchés, notamment celui des créances commerciales.

    L’effet de son intervention n’a tenu que quelques heures. À la clôture, les taux sur le « repo » étaient à nouveau à plus de 4 %, obligeant la Réserve fédérale à faire une nouvelle annonce d’apport de 75 milliards de dollars de liquidités supplémentaires pour mercredi.

    Une intervention d’une banque centrale sur les marchés, et encore plus quand il s’agit de la FED, est porteuse de doutes et d’inquiétudes. Les premiers messages envoyés se sont donc voulus très rassurants. Ce qui s’était passé mardi n’était lié qu’à une addition de facteurs techniques, un malheureux concours de circonstances, à en croire certains analystes.

    Le 15 septembre, les entreprises américaines devaient payer leurs impôts, ce qui a réduit le volume des financements disponibles sur le marché, expliquent-ils. Dans le même temps, le Trésor américain a lancé de nouvelles émissions correspondant à 78 milliards de dollars, qui devaient être payées en début de semaine, ce qui a participé au siphonnage des liquidités existantes. De plus, le même Trésor américain aurait souhaité augmenter ses réserves, jugées trop basses, auprès de la Fed, ce qui aurait contribué à encore diminuer l’argent. Enfin, les attaques contre les infrastructures saoudiennes auraient provoqué un choc en retour sur les marchés.

    L’ennui de toutes ces explications circonstanciées est qu’elles résistent mal aux faits : les tensions sur le marché monétaire n’ont pas commencé mardi ni même lundi. Depuis août, des observateurs commencent à s’inquiéter des problèmes de liquidités sur les marchés. Dès la semaine dernière – c’est-à-dire avant la date d’échéance des impôts pour les sociétés, les enchères du Trésor américain, ou les attaques contre l’Arabie saoudite –, des alertes clignotaient ici et là, des traders parlaient des difficultés rencontrées pour trouver des refinancements.

    Les responsables politiques et nombre d’observateurs n’ont pas pris conscience de ce qui se joue actuellement. Pour eux, le critère de la bonne santé économique et financière se limite aux marchés actions. Or, ceux-ci volent de record en record, affichant « la plus grande déconnexion avec l’économie réelle depuis 2007 », comme le souligne Saxobank dans son dernier rapport trimestriel. Mais sur les autres marchés – monétaires, obligataires, des changes… – des frictions se nouent, loin du regard du public, et commencent à émerger, se traduisant par des volatilités accrues.

    « Il semble qu’il y a quelque chose de sous-jacent dont on ne sait rien encore », confie Scott Skyrm, trader sur les marchés des « repos » au Wall Street Journal. « Les crises de liquidités, compte tenu de leur effet déflagrateur, se gèrent dans le plus secret. Ce n’est qu’après que l’on apprend ce qui s’est passé. Mais je pense que la Réserve fédérale, qui s’était engagée dans un resserrement monétaire, a eu des signaux de tensions dès décembre. D’où sa volte-face sur sa politique monétaire en janvier », poursuit Jean-Michel Naulot.

    Alors que les banques centrales ont déversé plus de 6 000 milliards de dollars dans le système financier, que les marchés croulent littéralement sous l’argent, comment est-il possible que la liquidité vienne à manquer ? « Le problème, ce n’est pas un manque de liquidités, mais la question de sa circulation, de son affectation. Trop d’argent a été alloué à de mauvais endroits », relève Laurence Scialom.

    Ce sont les raisons profondes des soubresauts actuels : la création monétaire laissée à la disposition du monde financier, totalement en roue libre, a conduit à un système basé sur la dette. Une dette, notamment privée, qui a pris des proportions encore plus astronomiques depuis la crise financière. Dans tous les secteurs, sur tous les marchés, des positions de plus en plus risquées ont été prises, en s’appuyant sur des effets de levier gigantesques. « Et c’est de la dette à très court terme », relève Laurence Scialom. C’est ce que traduisent aussi les difficultés sur le marché du « repo » : il s’agit de positions financières prises à très court terme, pouvant se déboucler très rapidement, et qui sont refinancées au jour le jour sur le marché, pas d’investissements « durs » dans l’économie réelle.
    « L’augmentation des “repos” et des autres taux à court terme est révélatrice de la réduction du montant du bilan que les intermédiaires financiers souhaitent ou sont capables de fournir à ceux qui recherchent un financement à court terme », avertit Tony Crescenzi de la société de gestion Pacific Investment Management. D’autant qu’au même moment, ajoute Jean-Michel Naulot, « l’accroissement du #déficit budgétaire américain, qui risque de dépasser les 1 000 milliards de dollars, crée des besoins de financement extraordinaires ».

    Alors que les incertitudes sur l’économie mondiale grandissent, le choix des intermédiaires financiers qui ont de l’argent à placer est vite fait : ils achètent des bons du trésor et autres titres souverains américains, considérés comme le meilleur placement sans risque dans les temps compliqués. Ce qui participe à raréfier les possibilités de refinancement.

    Ces convulsions sur le marché monétaire tombent au pire moment pour la FED. Mercredi et jeudi, les membres de la Réserve fédérale se réunissent pour définir la politique monétaire dans les mois à venir. Mis sous pression par Donald Trump depuis des mois, le président de la FED, Jerome Powell, avait déjà évoqué la possibilité de renouer avec une politique monétaire plus accommodante, et d’abaisser les taux afin de soutenir l’économie américaine dans ces temps incertains. Mais il va peut-être être condamné à faire plus, beaucoup plus. 

    Car l’intervention de la #FED pour calmer la fièvre sur le #marché monétaire a jeté le doute et le trouble dans les esprits. Inévitablement, la question de la confiance va se poser sur les #marchés. Les #investisseurs risquent de recommencer à traquer les actifs les plus risqués, les acteurs ou les sociétés jugées les faibles, au risque de provoquer une crise qu’ils redoutent.

    Pour rétablir la confiance, la FED va devoir mettre tout son crédit dans la balance. Déjà certains prédisent le retour prochain – avant la fin de l’année, disent-ils – et inévitable du #quantitative_easing (programme de rachats de titres), seul moyen, selon eux, d’assurer la #liquidité nécessaire pour refinancer les risques fous pris depuis des années et de préserver la stabilité du système financier. Mais il n’est pas sûr cette fois que cela suffise.

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/economie/180919/alerte-rouge-sur-le-marche-monetaire

    #finance #argent #monnaie #2008

  • Un #journaliste du « #Financial_Times » admet avoir caché la gravité de la crise en #2008
    https://www.nouvelobs.com/economie/20180909.OBS2050/un-journaliste-du-financial-times-admet-avoir-cache-la-gravite-de-la-cris

    « Tout ce dont j’avais besoin, c’était un photographe. Quelques clichés de tous ces #banquiers bien habillés, faisant la queue pour retirer leur argent, avec une légende explicative. Nous ne l’avons pas fait. »

    Dans une série d’articles parus ces derniers jours à l’occasion du dixième anniversaire de la crise bancaire de 2008, le journaliste du « Financial Times » John Authers retrace comment le quotidien économique de référence a couvert l’événement en temps réel. Dans un billet à part publié samedi 8 septembre, il se livre à une confession éclairante sur les dilemmes du journaliste en période de crise : « Il est temps pour moi d’admettre qu’un jour, j’ai délibérément dissimulé des informations importantes à mes lecteurs », écrit-il.

    #auto-censure

    • Je crois que ce qui me choque le plus c’est ça :

      Did you consider by not telling the whole story you directly contributed to the rise of populism (including #Brexit/#Trump) and potentially undermined what would have been a much better policy response to the financial crisis

      Réponse du gars : « No »

      Dégré zéro de l’éthique : la pensée utilitariste. Bravo... Et en revanche il dit que quand ça concernera les retraites par capitalisation il ne sera plus obligé de la boucler, ce qui pose deux questions :
      – qu’est ce qui l’obligeait à la boucler ? l’article en question en va pas trop titiller la question...
      – pourquoi est-ce que dans ce qu’il croit être la prochaine crise il ne la bouclera pas ? Parce que ça ne concerne pas système bancaire ? Parce qu’il sera proche de la retraite ?

      Vu sa posture utilitariste je pencherais pour la deuxième solution (mâtinée de la première parce qu’il semble vouer une espèce de culte au système bancaire).

  • la crise (de 2008) qui vient, suite

    le public est en train de découvrir ce que les experts savent en revanche depuis très longtemps, à savoir que les institutions financières les plus puissantes du monde, celles sur lesquelles repose la stabilité économique de la planète tout entière, ces banques que l’on appelle systémiques, n’ont finalement rien appris de la crise de 2008 et, pire encore, se sont encore davantage approchées du précipice.

    #crise #banque #finance #banques_systémique #2008 #DeutscheBank #régulation #dérégulation #krach

    https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/la-r%C3%A9alit%C3%A9-de-linsolvabilit%C3%A9-bancaire-jean-francois-faure

  • Sur Arte, Jean Quatremer psychanalyse la Grèce
    http://www.acrimed.org/article4558.html

    Mardi 20 janvier, Arte rediffusait le documentaire coréalisé par Jean Quatremer, « Grèce, année zéro ». S’agissait-il, à l’approche des élections législatives en Grèce, de fournir aux téléspectateurs français l’occasion d’approfondir les enjeux autour de la situation critique du pays et des élections du 24 janvier ? Difficile de l’imaginer, avec ce film de 52 minutes qui enfile les clichés sur la Grèce et la nécessité de « la réforme », en se concentrant presque exclusivement sur la fraude et la corruption. De ces maux bien réels, le documentaire propose une explication culturelle ou historique (ou encore une « psychanalyse », selon les mots de Quatremer lui-même), au détriment d’une mise en perspective économique et politique de la crise et des « remèdes » possibles. (...) Source : (...)

  • #Palestine #2008 - #2009 / Gaza 22 (pendant #Plomb_durci)
    http://www.larevuedesressources.org/palestine-2008-2009-gaza-22-pendant-plomb-durci,2739.html

    Gaza 22 est chronologiquement la première des deux œuvres co-réalisées sur la Palestine occupée et sur Gaza par le vidéaste italien #Simone_Camilli, à la fois artiste et journaliste. Celle-ci est un documentaire de création qui compose des prises des deux camps en train de s’affronter et selon les divers endroits de la Palestine et de Gaza les réactions, pendant l’offensive Plomb durci, en 2008-2009, (la plus meurtrière de toutes jusqu’à #Bordure_protectrice, cette année). Simone Camilli était aussi le (...)

    Productions Vidéo & Cinéma

    / #Cinéma_documentaire, #Hommage, #Journalisme, Palestine, #Israël, #Guerre_coloniale, 2008, Bordure protectrice, Simone Camilli, #Ali_Abu_Afash, #Rahed_Taysir_al-Hom, Associated Press (AP), Dan Balilty, #Arts_visuels, 2009, #Jérusalem_Est, #East_Jabalya, Gaza (...)

    #Productions_Vidéo_&_Cinéma_ #Associated_Press_AP_ #_Dan_Balilty #Gaza_ville #Bande_de_Gaza #Apartheid #ArtLab

  • Claude Guéant placé en garde à vue dans l’affaire Tapie
    http://www.boursier.com/actualites/reuters/claude-gueant-place-en-garde-a-vue-dans-l-affaire-tapie-157212.html

    Claude #Guéant a été placé en #garde_à_vue lundi dans le cadre de l’enquête sur l’arbitrage dont a bénéficié Bernard #Tapie en #2008 et qui a soldé son litige avec le #Crédit_lyonnais sur la revente d’#Adidas, a-t-on appris de source judiciaire.

    #26_mai_2014

  • #Là-bas - chapitre 1
    http://www.larevuedesressources.org/la-bas-chapitre-1,2246.html

    À l’occasion de la rediffusion de l’adaptation radiophonique de #2008 du #Roman de #Joris-Karl_Huysmans, Là-bas, en trois épisodes du 21 au janvier au 4 février #2012, dans le cadre de l’émission Drôles de drames, sur #France_Culture, voici le lien là pour se procurer l’ebook du livre original téléchargeable en plusieurs formats, et ici le premier chapitre dans le corps de l’article, pour présenter l’ensemble. [ Mise à jour en 2013 ] L’émission radiophonique (réalisation de #Jean_Couturier d’après une (...) (...)

    #Simon_Guibert #Satanisme #1891 #Radio
    http://www.larevuedesressources.org/IMG/pdf/La_-bas.pdf

  • La compagnie aérienne low cost #Ryanair a été condamnée mercredi 2 octobre 2013 à une amende de 200 000 euros et à près de dix millions d’euros de dommages et intérêts par le tribunal correctionnel d’Aix-en-Provence pour #travail dissimulé sur sa base de l’#aéroport de Marseille-Provence. L’#entreprise avait ouvert un centre d’activités à #Marseille en 2007, sans jamais avoir déclaré son activité ni au registre du commerce ni à l’Urssaf. En 2008, Yves Kengen analysait le talent de Ryanair pour détourner les aides publiques.

    Du « #low_cost » qui coûte cher
    Payer les passagers pour voyager, par Yves Kengen dans le numéro d’octobre 2008
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/10/KENGEN/16408

    Les turbulences, les avions connaissent. Mais celles qui agitent le low cost sont plutôt terre à terre, et l’entreprise irlandaise Ryanair se trouve régulièrement au cœur de la tourmente. Motif : les aides publiques qu’elle lève auprès des collectivités locales.

    #2008/10 #Loisirs #Tourisme #Transports #Capitalisme #Libéralisme

  • « Une guerre attisera les flammes au Proche-Orient »
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/04/OBAMA/15768 (#2008/04)

    Discours du sénateur de l’Etat de l’Illinois Barack Obama, le 2 octobre 2002, contre l’invasion de l’Irak.

    Quelques mois avant l’invasion de l’#Irak par les armées anglo-américaines, M. Barack Obama, alors élu de l’Etat de l’Illinois (il est devenu membre du Congrès des #Etats-Unis en janvier 2005), annonce et explique son opposition à la guerre lors d’un rassemblement pacifiste.

    Son discours intervient alors que la popularité du président Bush est au zénith et que nombre d’élus démocrates, dont Mme Hillary Clinton, appuient les orientations militaires de la Maison Blanche.

    #Conflit #Pacifisme #Politique #Terrorisme #Démocratie #Proche-Orient

  • Demander à un designer fasciné par la science de réfléchir au futur de l’humanité : le documentaire diffusé hier par Arte en dit long sur les fondements consuméristes et l’optimisme technicien de notre société. En 2008, « Le Monde diplomatique » avait ajouté sa pierre à l’hommage unanime que mérite #Philippe_Starck, « fermier du magma au repentir inconscient ».
    http://future.arte.tv/sites/default/files/styles/desktop-span12-940x529/public/atoms/videos/thumbs/video_050075-003.jpg http://future.arte.tv/fr/sujet/futur-par-starck http://futur-par-starck.arte.tv

    Philippe Starck ou l’art du déni, par Mona Chollet @mona (#2008/09)
    http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/09/CHOLLET/16328

    Bienheureux Starck. Il vit dans un monde merveilleux. Lui qui se définit comme un « vieux baba » n’a que le mot « amour » à la bouche. Lorsqu’il était directeur artistique de Thomson Multimédia, il inventa ce slogan : « Thomson, de la technologie à l’amour ».

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