[Mb-civic] A French Lesson for the Ages - Jim Hoagland - Washington Post Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Apr 2 05:27:12 PDT 2006
A French Lesson for the Ages
<>
By Jim Hoagland
The Washington Post
Sunday, April 2, 2006; B07
The French and protests go together like horse and carriage, love and
marriage and other natural partners. But look again at the million and
more demonstrators who have taken to the streets in France in recent
days. In their marching and shouting, there is a hidden message for us
all about coming generational and cultural conflicts.
France has moved into one of its periodic dangerous seasons, in which a
conservative government acts as if its fate and economic future depend
on facing down or outlasting massive street protests. Both 1789 and 1968
remind us how such calculations can misfire in France.
Protesters have filled the streets this spring to define themselves and
their nation more clearly and aggressively than most of the world would
ever care or dare to attempt. The young rebels follow the Cartesian
rigor taught in the universities that they are boycotting: I protest,
therefore I am.
This struggle concerns, as so many things in France do, identity. The
French are a society of individualists who take pride in an ideology of
solidarity. Their idealized concept of social cohesion is under such
intense pressure from the forces of globalization that it must be
proclaimed in the streets if it is to survive at all.
For all its Francocentricity, this labor upheaval sounds echoes of the
recent demonstrations staged by Hispanic immigrant groups in the United
States and our own debate over alien workers. In most developed
countries, the forces of globalization are changing the rules and even
the nature of work -- just as demographic patterns are eroding the
Industrial Age's implicit social contract between the young and the old.
Politicians naturally respond to the challenges posed by the easy flow
of goods, people and ideas across frontiers by pretending they can
resolve these challenges with isolated exercises of political will and
legislation. The harsh anti-
immigrant laws proposed by the U.S. House of Representatives defy not
only common decency and humanity but the very way the global economy
works today. The House legislation proves that change is too important
to be left to politicians, as do France's attempts to tinker with the
social model that is in deep trouble.
These global connections need to be grasped and articulated to divide
more equitably the prosperity that globalization brings for some and the
burdens of unemployment or low wages that others experience.
Hidden in the French protests is a looming conflict between the economic
interests of the young, who are just starting careers, and of their
elders, who are in or moving into retirements that almost no
industrialized country has set aside the funds to finance.
The springtime confrontation in France also stems from narrow local
factors such as internal power struggles, missteps by President Jacques
Chirac's embattled government and wishful thinking that the country's
expensive and generous social welfare system can be maintained forever
without big sacrifices. This is, after all, a public that has been
educated by political leaders of both the right and left to distrust
free-market reforms.
Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin thought that he could do something
for France's young when he rushed labor law changes through Parliament.
His objective was to cut youth unemployment, which is double France's
overall joblessness rate of 10 percent, and to show that the government
had swung into action after rioting last autumn by unemployed immigrant
youths.
But the young concluded that Villepin was doing something to them, not
for them. By giving private employers the right to fire workers under 26
without cause within two years of their being hired, the government in
effect denied younger workers labor protections that are deeply
entrenched for their elders. Chirac offered Friday to soften the
legislation's harshest features, but his proposal was rejected as too
little too late by protest leaders.
Gray-bearded academics and other seniorish citizens have rushed to the
streets to join Villepin's political foes and union leaders in showing
support for the students. How could they, in good conscience, do otherwise?
A broad generational conflict over the allocation of resources is taking
shape in many industrial nations as their working populations age. In
the United States, the profligacy of galloping budget and trade deficits
has convinced many younger workers that they will never have the kind of
Social Security protection their parents enjoyed.
It is time to forge global and generational social contracts to
recognize and mitigate the inequities that a new world of change
fosters. By raising their voices, France's young and America's migrants
have called attention to that need.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/31/AR2006033101713.html
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