The Economist
France’s Socialists have yet
to come to terms with the modern world
BLISS is it in a financial
crisis to be a socialist. Or so it ought to be. In speculators and ratings
agencies, Europe’s left has a ready cast of villains and rogues. In simmering
social discontent, it has an energising force. A recent issue of
Paris-Matchinadvertently captured the mood: page after full-colour page on
Britain’s rioting underclass were followed by gory visual detail of the bling
yachts crowding into the bay near Saint-Tropez. Time, surely, to put social
inclusion before defiant decadence.
The oddity is that almost
everywhere the European left is in decline. Among the large countries,
Socialist parties rule only in Spain, where they look likely to lose November’s
election. The only big place where the left has a good chance of returning to
power is France, at next spring’s presidential election. Yet France’s Socialist
Party also stands out as Europe’s most unreconstructed. Hence the contorted spectacle
of a party preparing for power at a time when the markets are challenging its
every orthodoxy.
For a hint of French
Socialist thinking, consider recent comments from some of the candidates who
will contest a primary vote in October. Ségolène Royal, who lost the 2007
presidential election to Nicolas Sarkozy, argued this week that stock options
and speculation on sovereign debt should be banned. Denouncing “anarchic
globalisation”, she called for human values to be imposed on financial ones, as
a means of “carrying on the torch of a great country, France, which gave the
world revolutionary principles about the emancipation of the people.”
Ms Royal, believe it or not,
is considered a moderate. To her left, Arnaud Montebourg, a younger, outwardly
sensible sort, argues for “deglobalisation”. He wants to forbid banks from
“speculating with clients’ deposits”, and to abolish ratings agencies.
Financial markets want “to turn us into their poodle”, he lamented at a weekend
fete in a bucolic village, celebrating the joys of la France profonde with
copious bottles of burgundy. No one seems to have told him that there is a
simple way to avoid the wrath of bond markets: balance your books and don’t
borrow.
Next to such patent
nonsense, promises by the two front-running candidates, Martine Aubry and
François Hollande, seem merely frozen in time, circa 1981. They want to return
to retirement at the age of 60 (it has just been raised to 62), and to invent
300,000 public-sector youth jobs. Each supports Mr Sarkozy’s deficit-reduction
targets, but refuses to approve his plan to write a deficit rule into the
constitution. More taxes, not less spending, is their underlying creed.
The party is not out of tune
with public opinion. The French are almost uniquely hostile to the capitalist
system that has made them one of the world’s richest people. Fully 57% say
France should single-handedly erect higher customs barriers. The same share
judge that freer trade with India and China, whose consumers snap up French
silk scarves and finely stitched leather handbags, has been “bad” for France.
The right has held the presidency since 1995 partly by pandering to such
sentiments.
The causes of French
left-wingery are various, but a potent one is the lingering hold of Marxist
thinking. Post-war politics on the left was for decades dominated by the
Communist Party, which regularly scooped up a quarter of the votes. In the
1950s many intellectuals, including Jean-Paul Sartre, clung to pro-Soviet
idealism even after the evils of Stalinism emerged. Others toyed with
Trotskyism well into the 1970s. François Mitterrand, who mentored Ms Royal, Ms
Aubry and Mr Hollande, was swept to the presidency in 1981 by offering a
socialist Utopia as a third way between “the capitalist society which enslaves
people” and the “communist society which stifles them”.
Given such a tradition, it
is possible that today’s Socialist leaders believe what they say. At any rate,
there is a debate to be had about the right amount of market regulation and
fiscal consolidation. Yet the problem with their promises is this: for every
bit of conviction, there is a shameful share of pure posturing.
In truth, France’s
Socialists have often had to be pragmatic in power. As prime minister between
1997 and 2002 Lionel Jospin, himself an ex-Trotskyist, privatised more assets
than any of his right-wing predecessors. Even Mitterrand was forced to abandon
nationalisation and embrace austerity. Should the Socialists win in 2012, it
would take them “about a month, or maybe a week” to confess that they “have no
choice but to keep the deficit under control”, says one well-placed party
figure. Retirement at 60? Nice idea but, quel dommage, we can’t afford it.
Please allow us a moment of
madness
All this requires heroic
faith among centrists considering voting Socialist that reason will triumph
over fiscal folly. Moreover, experience suggests that the Socialists, if
elected, may feel compelled to introduce some signature policy as a sop to
their disappointed base. Under Mitterrand, it was the wealth tax. Under Mr
Jospin, it was Ms Aubry’s 35-hour working week. With France’s recovery fragile,
the prospect of more such lunacy is chilling.
A further danger touches
Europe, where France traditionally generates many ideas for integration. At a
time when leaders are inching towards more economic co-ordination, with
oversight of budgets and even tax harmonisation, a Socialist victory would put
the shaping of such a project into uncertain hands.
With Dominique Strauss-Kahn
out of the running there is just one French Socialist primary candidate who
understands all this. Manuel Valls, a deputy and mayor with a refreshingly
modern view of the left, says Socialists are not being straight by promising
retirement at 60. He dares utter such truths as “we need to tell the French
that the [budgetary] effort…will be as great as that achieved after
Liberation”. Alas, the 49-year-old Mr Valls is considered too young to be a
serious contender. The day the paleo-Socialists of the Mitterrand generation
allow such figures to emerge would be the dawn of a real revolution.
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