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Related: About this forumAnti-capitalist alternatives sprouting in cracks of the Spanish crisis
Dan Hancox - The Observer, Sunday 20 October 2013
... In spring 2013 unemployment in Andalusia is a staggering 36%; for those aged 16 to 24, the figure is above 55% figures worse even than the egregious national average. The construction industry boom of the 2000s saw the coast cluttered with cranes and encouraged a generation to skip the end of school and take the 40,000-a-year jobs on offer on the building sites. That work is gone, and nothing is going to replace it. With the European Central Bank looming ominously over his shoulder, prime minister Mariano Rajoy has introduced labour reforms to make it much easier for businesses to sack their employees, quickly and with less compensation, and these new laws are now cutting swaths through the Spanish workforce, in private and public sectors alike.
Spain experienced a massive housing boom from 1996 to 2008. The price of property per square metre tripled in those 12 years: its scale is now tragically reflected in its crisis. Nationally, up to 400,000 families have been evicted since 2008. Again, it is especially acute in the south: 40 families a day in Andalusia have been turfed out of their homes by the banks. To make matters worse, under Spanish housing law, when you're evicted by your mortgage lender, that isn't the end of it: you have to keep paying the mortgage. In final acts of helplessness, suicides by homeowners on the brink of foreclosure have become horrifyingly common on more than one occasion, while the bailiffs have been coming up the stairs, evictees have hurled themselves out of upstairs windows.
When people refer to la crisis in Spain they mean the eurozone crisis, an economic crisis; but the term means more than that. It is a systemic crisis, a political ecology crack'd from side to side: a crisis of seemingly endemic corruption across the country's elites, including politicians, bankers, royals and bureaucrats, and a crisis of faith in the democratic settlement established after the death of Franco in 1975. A poll conducted by the (state-run) centre for sociological research in December 2012 found that 67.5% of Spaniards said they were unhappy with the way their democracy worked. It's this disdain for the Spanish state in general, rather than merely the effects of the economic crisis, that brought 8 million indignados on to the streets in the spring and summer of 2011, and informed their rallying cry "Democracia Real Ya" (real democracy now)...
... The indignado movement had informed not just Spain, but the world, that millions of Spaniards were unwilling to brook the crisis. They were desperately looking for an alternative to the current system and yet, in their midst, there was already one in operation. Faced with the massed ranks protesting in Puerta del Sol in Madrid, in Wall Street in New York, and outside St Paul's Cathedral in London, the damning questions rang out from conservatives and liberals: "What's your alternative? What's your programme? How would it work in practice?"
They may have ignored the village before, or dismissed it with a chuckle as a rural curiosity run by a bearded eccentric; but they can do so no longer. "What's your alternative?' bark the dogs of capitalist realism. Increasingly, the indignados are able to respond: 'Well, how about Marinaleda?'"
Dan Hancox is speaking at Bristol Festival of Ideas on 23 October; details at ideasfestival.co.uk
/... http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/20/marinaleda-spanish-communist-village-utopia
Fascinating read about the village of Marinaleda and more at the link.
idwiyo
(5,113 posts)Laelth
(32,017 posts)Absent strong liberalism in a capitalist society, Marinaleda is what we will get. Our leaders should pay heed.
-Laelth
fasttense
(17,301 posts)"Those 400 wasted hectares were about to be auctioned off privately by the government when the Andalusian Workers' Union turned up in March 2012; they occupied it, were evicted by 200 riot police, and in true Marinaleda style, returned the next day to start again. The auction never took place."
Wow quiet a feet. We Americans need to learn how to come together like this. Capitalism is in ruins at our feet. We need to find a better economic system. I think Spain has some really good examples of what cooperation and democracy in the work place looks like and how it works. They also have the hugely successful co-op MONDRAGON Corporation. http://www.mondragon-corporation.com/language/en-US/ENG/Who-we-are/Organisational-structure.aspx A coop that is totally owned and controlled by the workers NOT CEOs and share holders.
starroute
(12,977 posts)I've kept running across references to dirty money in that housing boom -- heroin traffickers, Russian mafiosi, you name it. Construction has been a recognized method of money-laundering ever since Meyer Lansky was investing Mob profits in the Florida construction boom in the 1950s, and Spain got more than its share in the 1990s and up until the crash.
As long as things were good, of course, nobody looked too closely at where the money came from. But now the money is gone -- and only the corruption remains. Not a happy situation.
99th_Monkey
(19,326 posts)and do massive worker buyouts to convert capitalist corporations into cooperatives, like Mondragon:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mondragon_Corporation.