home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0647>
- <title>
- Nov. 22, 1993: Farewell To Welfare
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 22, 1993 Where is The Great American Job?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EUROPE, Page 51
- Farewell To Welfare
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Americans just begin to debate universal health care, long
- jobless rolls and empty coffers are forcing Europeans to question
- the welfare state
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Branegan/Brussels--With reporting by Bruce Crumley/Paris, William Mader/London
- and Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> You've fallen for Sally, but Linda's name is tattooed on your
- forearm. No problem if you live in Britain, where the overburdened
- National Health Service will obligingly pay to remove it--cost $53--as often as your shifting affections require. You
- want to take that package holiday to Mallorca, but you haven't
- got the cash. In Germany most unionized and salaried workers
- are given extra "vacation money," usually half their regular
- monthly pay. Such is the solicitous treatment Europeans have
- come to expect. But not for much longer.
- </p>
- <p> In a country just beginning to debate universal health care,
- Americans have long wondered how their allies across the Atlantic
- have managed to enjoy government benefits far beyond U.S. dreams.
- Now Western Europeans are discovering a brutal truth: they can
- not afford them either. Everywhere on the Continent, the public
- and private welfare system is under assault. Governments are
- seeking to cut back womb-to-tomb protection for workers and
- the jobless, for mothers and children, for pensioners, the sick
- and the disabled. Companies pressed by global competition are
- trimming benefits. The steadily expanding safety net that had
- been one of the Continent's proudest achievements is starting
- to shrink. As the Maastricht Treaty set the European Community
- on the road toward a single currency and harmonized social policies,
- citizens were worried that the new Europe might be a good deal
- less kind than the old.
- </p>
- <p> Business leaders and conservative politicians contend overhaul
- is overdue in a system that has made labor too costly and laborers
- too lazy. German Chancellor Helmut Kohl sharply criticized his
- countrymen for undermining the work ethic that forged the postwar
- economic miracle. "We cannot organize our country like one big
- recreation park," he said. Although Europeans still treasure
- their blanket of social protection, "they now see its tendency
- to crush the economy," says French economics professor Jacques
- Bichot.
- </p>
- <p> But they are not about to cast off these "rights" so easily.
- Attempts to cut back on benefits and job security have resulted
- in violent labor protests in Italy and massive demonstrations
- in Germany. A crippling walkout by Air France employees forced
- the government to back down on plans to cut 4,000 jobs. "We
- are on a dangerous road," warns Rudolf Dressler, the deputy
- party whip of Germany's opposition Social Democrats. Yet even
- welfare's staunchest defenders concede that fixes are needed.
- The system is going bankrupt. The huge sums Europeans pay to
- support it--taxes average more than 40% of gross domestic
- product, vs. only 30% in Japan and the U.S.--are not sufficient
- to prevent big budget deficits in many countries. Welfare expenses
- are soaring because the prolonged recession, the worst since
- the early 1970s, is pushing joblessness across Western Europe
- toward 12%, or 23 million people.
- </p>
- <p> These countries face far more chronic unemployment than the
- U.S., and double-digit jobless rates are common even in good
- years. Roughly half of those on the dole have been out of work
- for more than a year, as opposed to 6% in the U.S. The social-protection
- system designed to help people through the rough patches "suddenly
- is needed massively and for a long time by millions of jobless,"
- says Lothar Stock, who heads a social-welfare organization in
- Frankfurt. "The system cannot cope with these new conditions."
- </p>
- <p> Some Europeans argue that the safety net actually strangles
- job creation by sapping incentive and making it too expensive
- to hire and fire. The 12-nation European Community saw virtually
- no addition to private-sector work rolls during the 1980s, despite
- healthy economic growth, while millions of jobs were created
- in the U.S., where job security is less entrenched and benefit
- costs are roughly half the E.C.'s. Europe must "contain its
- costs and free up labor markets," argues Kenneth Clarke, Britain's
- Chancellor of the Exchequer.
- </p>
- <p> As the recession batters Germany, where the industrial labor
- force is the highest paid with the fewest working hours, debate
- over the future of the "social market economy" dominates the
- headlines. While the Federation of German Industry, the umbrella
- management association, is calling for a "fundamental reorientation"
- of the pay and benefits system, the metal and electrical industries
- have served notice that they will not renew expiring contracts
- on pay and holidays. The government spent a record 33.1% of
- GDP--$633 billion--for social programs in 1992 but hopes
- to squeeze $26 billion from households this year by raising
- retirement contributions and paring payments for social welfare.
- </p>
- <p> At troubled Daimler-Benz, which will carve 43,000 from its worldwide
- payroll over the next 14 months, 3,000 salaried employees agreed
- to mild concessions. They would accept Christmas bonuses at
- 60% of a month's wages, instead of 100%, and give up a cornucopia
- of fringe benefits such as reimbursement for a child's first
- Communion outfit. But getting real sacrifice is not so easy.
- To address the needs of an aging population, Kohl sought to
- finance long-term nursing care by dropping up to six days of
- the sick pay workers get. The idea provoked a minicrisis in
- his coalition, forcing him to back off; an alternate plan to
- slash holiday pay 20% was passed by the Bundestag over strike
- threats.
- </p>
- <p> France's government has enacted measures to lower monthly pension
- payments, and quietly eroded the institution of "retirement
- at 60" by raising to 40 the number of years that must be worked
- to receive a full pension. Now Prime Minister Edouard Balladur
- is faced with a medical system that will be $17.9 billion in
- debt by year's end--and an annual medical bill of $1,906 a
- person. To cover it, he has raised payroll taxes, reduced coverage
- for medications and told doctors to ease up on prescriptions
- and physical therapy.
- </p>
- <p> France's mighty unions are ranging themselves against any changes
- in the labor codes, while Balladur has broached modest alterations:
- allowing firms the flexibility to use extra employees at busy
- times and fewer off-peak and letting businesses hire young workers
- at less than the minimum wage if they funnel the savings into
- training. The government is also considering legislation to
- encourage companies to adopt a four-day week, which it hopes
- would put more people back on the payroll. Citizens are being
- urged to set up their own personal retirement accounts, easing
- the burden on employers who pay an extra 54% of a worker's salary
- in social-security contributions. "This is the first clear step
- away from the pension system we have ever made," says economist
- Bichot.
- </p>
- <p> In Madrid the minority Socialist government has presented a
- tough austerity budget calling for below-inflation wage increases
- for the next three years in the public sector. The British welfare
- system--with costs rising 3% annually--must be reformed
- to target the "truly needy," according to Britain's Tory government.
- Under scrutiny is $13 a week paid to all mothers for each child
- under 16, regardless of wealth. The government has already modified
- an income-support program that in one notorious case gave an
- unemployed insurance executive $2,750 a week for mortgage payments
- on a $1.5 million mansion.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Britain, with Europe's loosest labor laws and no minimum
- wage, shows that flexibility is no cure-all: its jobless rate
- of 10.3% is similar to Italy's, which has some of Europe's tightest
- worker protections. No one in Europe much admires the American
- model, which is equated with slums, homelessness, crime and
- drugs. As they see it, the U.S. job-creation machine of the
- 1980s produced millions of "working poor" in service jobs and
- cost low-skilled workers a 20% drop in the real wages. Europe,
- through its high minimum wages and other rules, saw a rise in
- real pay for those lucky enough to have jobs--at the price
- of chronic unemployment for the unskilled. It is beginning to
- look like a trade-off that is no longer affordable, or acceptable.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-