<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the commune]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[internationalcommunist]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com/author/internationalcommunist/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[workers, intellectuals and the&nbsp;crisis]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>We publish below an<strong> </strong><em>Open Letter from Labour        Scholars on the Economic Crisis</em> from a number of left intellectuals        in Canada on the current crisis. It was published by the <a href="http://www.newsocialist.org">New        Socialist Group</a>.  This document is important in two respects:        firstly it provides useful ideas on how comrades in other countries think we can respond to this situation; secondly it also raises        the question of the relationship of intellectuals to workers.  These        intellectuals are posing their ideas directly to the labour movement and        do not see their mental labour as separate from our movement.  This        stands in stark contrast to events in the UK,  here we have seen no        such documents or statements from the many intellectuals around        such bodies as <em>Capital and Class</em> or <em>Historical        Materialism.  The Historical Materialism</em> conference and        Conference of Socialist Economists bring together many left        intellectuals. But there is little relationship to the labour        movement or belief that it has any bearing on its perspectives.         These comrades could do well to take a leaf out of the Canadian comrades&#8217; book.</p>
<p><strong>Chris Kane </strong><!--more--></p>
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<p><strong>Listen to the talk by David McNally of the New Socialist Group at a Toronto forum on Oct. 6 sponsored by Socialist Project online <a href="http://www.socialistproject.ca/inthenews/meltdown4_mcnally.mp3">here</a></strong></p>
<p><strong>The talks by Greg Albo and Jim Stanford are also online, <a href="http://www.socialistproject.ca/inthenews/financialcrisis.html">here</a></strong></div>
<p><strong>Open Letter from Labour Scholars on the Economic        Crisis:</strong></p>
<p>Brothers and sisters,</p>
<p>More than a year ago, an unprecedented housing boom in the US went        bust, triggering a financial crisis that has recently led to large-scale        bank failures and enormous government bailouts. This crisis affects not        just the financial markets and not just the US. Banks are failing in        Europe and in Latin America, as well. Stock markets are plummeting around        the world. Governments have bailed out banks in many European countries.        Central banks are pouring vast amounts of money into financial circuits        that have been deserted by private credit. Moreover, growth is slowing        dramatically. Economic activity has actually reached recession levels in a        number of countries, and unemployment rates are rising.</p>
<p>The first sector of the Canadian economy that was hit by this crisis        was manufacturing. A wave of speculation in resource prices, propelled by        money fleeing the plummeting housing and financial markets, pushed the        Canadian dollar up sharply and, in turn, drove exports and jobs in export        industries down. Though this short-lived boom in resources is already        over, the manufacturing jobs that have been lost there won’t be coming        back. Instead, we are seeing job losses spreading to other sectors. As is        the case in many other countries, Canada is on the brink of recession.        Moreover, falling stock prices and a severe tightening of credit indicate        that the financial crisis is spilling over from Wall Street to Bay        Street.</p>
<p>Given the firm grip that profits-first and balanced-budget dogmas have        over Parliament Hill and the Bank of Canada, our politicians’ reaction to        Bay Street calamities is easy to imagine: throw tax dollars and credit at        financial investors to cover their losses while gutting public services        and jobs to avoid budget deficits. Such misguided policies are a sure        recipe to push an economy that is already ailing into deep recession or        even depression. More lay-offs, wage cuts and the evaporation of private        and public sector pension plans will follow.</p>
<p>The large-scale interventions that we have already seen in the US and        Europe, and we can expect to see in Canada soon, are fundamentally at odds        with free market propaganda, which provided an ideological cover for an        unprecedented accumulation of profit and wealth in the hands of the few at        the expense of the many. Working people who created this wealth by the        sweat of their brows and the effort of their brains, and who are now        destined to carry the burden of the crisis, will see the fruits of their        labour benefit no one but the people on Bay Street. While the breadth and        depth of this crisis should not be minimized, it can also provide an        opening for very necessary economic and social change. And organized        labour can significantly contribute towards such change.</p>
<p>We, the signatories, urge that:</p>
<p>*Unions make a major effort to inform their members as well as        non-union workers about the economic situation. Undermining the legitimacy        of free market ideology is a precondition for a struggle for progressive        change that can benefit everyone. Discussion and understanding of economic        developments are others. Educationals on the current economic situation        are an important contribution to develop workers’ capacities to        successfully engage in union struggles.</p>
<p>*Unions prepare and lead actions against lay-offs, spending cuts and        concessions. Such actions are essential if we are to prevent Bay Street        from placing the burden of the crisis on the residents of Main Street.</p>
<p>*Unions help to build activist coalitions that can engage in economic        issues beyond the workplace and collective bargaining. Such coalitions        should plan and mobilize for demonstrations that claim public control over        the financial sector and a major remake of fiscal policies from bailing        out private banks towards policies for jobs, social justice and ecological        sustainability.</p>
<p>*Unions that are involved in the management of pension funds should        inform their members about the state of these funds and develop strategies        to their members’ pensions. Such strategies could play an important role        in a fundamental redirection of fiscal policies, away from balanced-budget        dogmas – which cause fiscal transfers that place the weight of financial        burdens on those at the bottom – towards taxing the rich in order to        expand public services and create universal social programs and        protections, including publicly-funded pensions, childcare and        post-secondary education.</p>
<p>Greg Albo, York University<br />
Bryan Evans, Ryerson University<br />
Ingo        Schmidt, Athabasca University<br />
David Camfield, University of        Manitoba<br />
Étienne Cantin, Université Laval<br />
Sam Gindin, York        University<br />
Cy Gonick, University of Manitoba<br />
Adam Hanieh, York        University<br />
Jerry Kachur, University of Alberta<br />
Dennis Pilon,        University of Victoria<br />
Chris Roberts, Professional Institute of the        Public Service of Canada<br />
Richard Roman, University of Toronto        (retired)<br />
Stephanie Ross, York University<br />
Edward H. Shaffer,        University of Alberta (retired)<br />
Sid Shniad, Research Director,        Telecommunications Workers  Union</p>
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