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Saturday 27 May 2017

Ernst’s Economy present at the ‘For the Turnaround’ event, together with Paul van Liempt, Kim Putters, Harald Benink and Arend Jan Boekestijn

I am very blessed with the contacts that my personal blogsite ‘Ernst’s Economy for You’ (the one that you are reading now) has brought me in the six years of its existence. The advantage of getting to know new people, is that these people can bring you at places and events where other people don’t go, as they are unaware of them happening.

The distinguished Paul van Liempt, interviewer par excellence, TV-presenter at the Dutch business channel RTLZ and radio presenter at BNR News Radio is one of those people that added a little extra to my life.

The Freedom Lab where For the Turnaround was organized
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Paul van Liempt, Interviewer par Excellence
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Paul is someone, who does not only do his job in the meadi, but looks at his place in society and at the positive influence that he can have on other people.

Together with philosopher Ad Verbrugge, he started the initiative “Voor de Ommekeer” (i.e. ‘For the Turnaround’ ) as a discussion platform, aimed at the time after the crisis has been fully solved.

Philosopher Ad Verbrugge, co-founder of For the Turnaround
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The people behind For the Turnaround [I use the English translation from now on – EL] are very aware of the fact that the world can’t just simply resume their ‘business as usual’ stance after the crisis and the depression coming out of it ended. 

Casual Discussions in and around The Freedom Lab
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Casual Discussions in and around The Freedom Lab
Picture copyright of  Ernst Labruyère
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Casual Discussions in and around The Freedom Lab
Picture copyright of  Ernst Labruyère
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The leading countries in the world can’t act as if nothing happened at all during the last decade and the world did not come in the worst economic/financial crisis since eighty years. And in the grasp of mounting, violent nationalism, rising international tensions, the emergence of more powerful and ruthless dictators and erratic presidents all over the world and last, but not least, crumbling supranational organizations, like the European Union and the United Nations.

For the Turnaround therefore brings several thought leaders together for open discussions about the economy, the current societies and the international political and religious situation, hoping to find a way to make the world a better and more stable place after this all has ended.

Paul van Liempt invited me for this event, as he probably appreciates my original thinking and the fact that I dare to ask questions and give my opinions in the ongoing discussions. And Paul understands the fact that I try to change things for the better on my level and within my reach.

Among the guests of this event on Sunday May 21st, which was not televised and not recorded at all, were:

Kim Putters, Director of the Social-Cultural Planning Bureau
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  • Kim Putters, the distinguished director of the official Dutch ‘Social-Cultural Planning Bureau', which researches and publishes about the softer, less tangible, but nevertheless important sides (i.e. the social and cultural sides) of the Dutch society, next to the Central Planning Bureau (economic and financial outlook) and the Central Bureau of Statistics;

Arend Jan Boekestijn, a prominent member of the liberal-conservative of the VVD party
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    • Arend Jan Boekestijn, an eloquent and intelligent historian and former national VVD-politician (Dutch liberal-conservative party), with a much broader and more intelligent view on The Netherlands and the European Union than most of his party members;

    Harald Benink, Professor in Banking and Finance in
    discussion with Arend Jan Boekestijn,
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    • Harald Benink, a professor in Banking and Finance at the Tilburg University and someone as well with bright views on the Dutch and international economy.
    Young rightwing, thought leader Sid Lukkassen, involved in the discussion at For the Turnaround
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    • Also another young thought leader was present: Sid Lukkassen, who replaced another guest who could not make it to the show. Sid Lukkassen is a right-wing thought leader and alderman for the VVD party in Duiven.
     


    Paul van Liempt in discussion with Kim Putters
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    • Paul van Liempt and Ad Verbrugge acted both as discussion leaders and participants, even though the latter had some trouble with listening to his speaking partners, as he too often wanted to express his own opinions towards the other participants and the present public.

    The original reason for this gathering of For the Turnaround was the strongly anticipated outcome of the French presidential elections. These elections were in advance considered as a touchstone for the real strength of the populist parties in Europe. 

    When Marine Le Pen of Front National (French populist party) would have won these presidential elections and she would indeed effectuate her simmering plans for a French departure (i.e. Frexit) from the European Union, this could have become the beginning of the end for the EU and the Euro as a unity currency. France is one of the early founders of the European Economic Community and still one of the most influential and important members of the EU, whose departure from it would spell a dark future for the union. 

    Fortunately, this did not happen as Emmanuel Macron of En Marche (a recently founded central-liberal movement), who is an avid supporter of the EU, won the elections and became the next president of France. Nevertheless, even though Macron won the second and decisive round with a landslide difference, it was a fact that Marine Le Pen was the runner up in these elections, making the Front National again a party to be reckoned with in France.

    Therefore the main message that the people behind For the Turnaround wanted to express – now that the imminent danger of a Front National presidency was out of the way – was that this new, liberal president would not change much about the difficult political situation in France and the alienation between the different population groups in one of the largest countries in Europe. The symptoms perhaps vanished optically, but the disease was still very much there, waiting for another defining moment to come to the surface again.

    France still has an issue with the often poor, poorly educated and unemployed people living in the banlieus in France – areas around the big cities with heavily populated blocks of flats, where many impoverished people from the former French colonies, like Algeria and Ivory Coast live. In these banlieus important factors like islamic radicalism, unemployment, poverty and hostile insurgence against the French government and the police cause many problems and turn the areas in ticking timebombs. 

    Paul van Liempt in his trusted role as discussion leader
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    Violent protests coming out of nowhere, chaotic uprisings and publicly displayed contempt for the police have already emerged at quite a few occasions and they can come to a new outburst over and over again.

    At the same time, there are the rural French areas which have their own battles with economic backwardedness, obsolescence and poverty. One of the factors, the outflow of youngsters to the large cities leaving only the elderly behind in their home towns and villages, leads to a smaller economic role in society for such towns and villages and towards an impoverishing area. It is probably caused by the absence of large employers, who can create sufficient jobs and a prosperous future for the people originally living in these areas. 

    The idyllic, rural landscape and the small, picturesk villages with their French wine, baguettes and ‘joy de vivre’ might still attract loads of tourists, but they cannot disguise that such small areas go through difficult times, with a difficult future ahead.
    Ad Verbrugge and the present crowd both listen to the discussions
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    Another complicating factor in France is the blatant allergy of the whole population for economic restructuring and societal changes and their ubiquitous proneness for protests and strikes against such changes. This makes it almost a political no go-area for politicians to endorse such radical, but probably necessary economic and social changes in the country, in order to prepare it for the 21st century. 

    Most politicians simply don’t want to burn their fingers on such ‘hot potato’ topics and rather go with the flow of slow, slow change and even societal and political stand-still. And even when they try to change things more radically, their attempts mostly smother in the protests emerging all over the country. 

    This is the reason that France has a undeniable history of shooting itself in the foot. The country wants the economic situation to change for the better, but seemingly doesn't understand that in order to change things, it must change society itself. Yet is seems that France must change economically and societally to stay in the race for future economic prosperity and not become a relic of backwardedness in Europe, totally dependent on agricultural produce and tourism, while Germany becomes the sole winner of the economic crisis and the undisputed export champion that keeps the whole EU afloat.

    All these factors together make the French economic and societal problems urgent, but nevertheless very hard to solve. And in the process, the French problems turn into European problems as well, for the simple reason that Europe needs France's leadership more than it has ever needed the British leadership for instance.

    One of the most visible problems after the deadly IS attacks in Nice and at the Bataclan concert hall, is the problem that the muslims in the banlieus become more and more radical and hostile in their vision on the islam, according to the people behind For the Turnaround. 

    These muslims increasingly alienate themselves from the Christian majority in France, while releasing themselves for the toxic views of the radical Salafist islam. They slowly become endorsers of IS and Al Qaida, in their hate-driven battle against the Western world and everything for which it stands. Especially in France with its large and strongly growing population of formerly Algerian and Morrocan citizens, this is a mounting problem, which is nearly impossible to solve.

    While the ‘moral majority’ of France now still chooses for French unity, ‘liberté, egalité et fraternité’( i.e. freedom, equality and brotherhood), it is a fact that this mounting alienation between the radical islamic minority and the Christian majority could lead to many more violent incidents and also for a greater popularity of the radical Front National, when another big terrorist attack occurs.

    And when France sneezes, the European Union catches a cold.

    The For the Turnaround group is watching the economic, societal and demographic situation in France closely and they are hoping that Emmanuel Macron, the bright and charismatic young president, can turn the tides for this country.

    The events in France cannot be seen loose from the situation in the other European countries, like Germany and The Netherlands, where societal tensions are also rising between groups within the population. Or for instance Italy and Spain, where the economic situation is still extremely difficult, with high unemployment and a grim economic outlooki in some impoverished areas of the country.

    Or Eastern Europe, where increasingly radical and dictatorial leaders set new and dangerous standards for societies within the EU. Everywhere the poisonous mixture of economic hardship, massive unemployment, a disappointed population losing trust in their own policital leaders and soaring religious and demographical tensions within the society, could act as a ticking timebomb within countries and in between countries.

    Arend Jan Boekestijn and Paul van Liempt both closely listening to the discussions
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    Arend Jan Boekestijn, a very prominent VVD member and definitely part of the intellectual thought leaders within this liberal-conservative party, blamed the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (also VVD) for his generally lackluster defence of the EU and for his sensitivity for populist statements by other parties, like Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom (PVV) and the Forum for Democracy of young gun Thierry Baudet. This vulnerability for the populist voice made the general tone of voice of his own party more and more populist itself, making it sometimes quite hard to distinguish, whether a point of view came from the populist PVV or the mostly more moderate VVD itself.

    Therefore it is so important, according to the For the Turnaround group that politicians speak out their confidence and trust into the European Union and make clear that they will go all the way to save this supranational institution that brought us all so many years of peace, friendship and prosperity between European countries. 

    It is time that the European leaders become openly proud and protective of what they have and not threaten to ditch it all in cheap attempts to listen to the loudest ‘vox populis’. 

    It was an interesting meeting in Amsterdam on May 21st and it is a good initiative to have such open discussions between  the thought leaders in Dutch society. Ernst's Economy for You will probably present again the next time of For the Turnaround.

    Thursday 25 May 2017

    “Forged in Fire” and the importance of finding meaning and purpose in your life: doing something that makes a difference for yourselves and for others

    One of my favorite TV shows of these days is the show “Forged in Fire” on the History channel:

    Strong, rugged-looking and often bearded professional and amateur bladesmiths –  almost always men I must confess – are hammering, bending, welding, polishing and grinding on red-hot steel, like the devil is on their tail. In the process they create hunting knifes, switch-blades, swords, sabres and other old-fashioned battle blades that put a greedy smile on the face of every would-be hunter and knight-in-shining-armour.

    In the end, these newly created and beautifully looking weapons are tested under the most gruesome circumstances, by hammering and stabbing them into big animal bones, pig bellies, gelatine dummies, metal sheets and unforgiving blocks of ice. And as a piece-de-resistance, sometimes even a bullet is fired at the edge of the sword blades to see if these survive this kind of torment and cleanly split the bullet in two or three pieces.

    The winner earns $10,000 in the end, while the losers get compliments and constructive criticism from the strict, but fair and very savvy jury members.

    This show is perhaps nostalgia, but with an important twist. It is very popular and appeals to a lot of people, as it brings back memories of times in which people were much more self-supporting and responsible for the things they created, than nowadays.

    As a matter of fact, it seems that almost all these “documentary channels”, like History, Discovery and National Geographic are currently built around rugged and seemingly unadapted men and women, standing with one foot in untamed nature and with the other foot in a workshop, where they perform old-fashioned handicrafts, which are normally done by robots, computers and fully automated and industrialized processes. 

    It is interesting for me to see it happen and I wonder why these shows like Forged in Fire, Alone, Dual Survival, Mythbusters, Mountain Men and many, many others are so extremely popular nowadays.  

    This is what I think: nowadays most working people are little more than tiny cogwheels in a much bigger manufacturing or administrative process and they often have nearly zero percent influence on the endresults of the company or government body, where they spend their daily working hours.

    On top of that, the executive management of many companies and government bodies have started in the past to treat their personnel as (to their eyes very unreliable and expandable) durable production devices: necessary tools to perform their daily business, but nevertheless something that they want to replace by automatized and robotized means of production as soon as possible. 

    Robots can work 24-7 and never complain or strike, never require more salary or wages and never find something too difficult. Until that moment of full replacement their personnel will do, but this personnel is not so appreciated anymore as a few decades ago: rather a drag than an asset.

    The people, on the other hand, in their current (slightly) undervalued and underused state get a yearning for doing and creating things that really matter for themselves and for others. And the more futile and unimportant their own work seems, the stronger this yearning becomes, as an outlet valve to mitigate the loss of control, meaning and purpose in their own lives. To these eyes this explains the enormous popularity of all these ‘rugged men and women in nature and workshop programs' on the documentary channels.

    But why is this phenomenon worth an article? The Dutch newspaper Trouw came yesterday with an interesting observation about current time jobs and how the circumstances at the job can cause mental illnesses like burn-out, depression and other job-related affections. Here are a few snippets of this very good article:

    On 18 December 2013, the Dutch ‘Philosopher of the Motherland', René Gude, talked with the Belgian phychoanalyst Paul Verhaeghe about burn out and depression as widespread societal diseases. Verhaeghe stated that stress is the main cause of mental problems. And work, he added, is the main cause for stress...

    Interesting is that Verhaeghe – wellknown from his bestseller ‘Identity’ (i.e. ‘Identiteit’ in Dutch) – stated that stress is not a psychological problem, from which individuals can be freed, but a societal problem. The question at hand is how we – collectively – created and set up our working environment and everything in it?

    That night Gude stated that the problem about which Verhaeghe talked, was a problem of (missing) meaning and purpose [in life and work - EL]. Gude:’When a society, even when people want the best for each other, does not find a destination automatically, then target, meaning and purpose need to be taken in their own hands by the collective’.  

    Based upon research and clinical experience the experts were all convinced that the problems, regarding people falling-out of the labour process, are structural and they are connected with the labour organization within a broader societal context. Paul Verhaeghe: ”It is necessary to kick in this open door, as on the workfloor the opinion persists that a burn-out is an individual problem. 

    People with a burn-out, so is the misguided common idea, are people with little inner strenght. Such a common idea quickly turns into an implicit accusation by their peers and managers: ‘You are the weakest link. Goodbye!’ ”.

    Also Verhaeghe thought that finding meaning and purpose on the job could be a solution for this problem. “But you must realize that finding meaning and purpose is a collective task and as such the opposite of individualization. This means that courses in meditation or mindfulness – which are aimed at the individual alone – are NOT the required solution to fight depression and burn-out”.

    Finding and giving meaning and purpose, is where people should find the solution, according to Verhaeghe. Why?  Verhaeghe: “People experience their job as not being meaningful anymore, as it gets more and more divided in tiny bits and pieces that don’t have a meaning and a purpose by themselves. And they also don’t bear the final responsibility for the endresult anymore. 

    Loss of responsibility over the big picture, in combination with the ongoing individualization, leads to loss of meaning and purpose”.

    This is a bold and meaningful statement in this article and it is important to keep it in mind when you look at your own job.

    Does your job make sense to you and do you produce something really meaningful in it?! Or are you just the producer of an endless flow of administrative / computer data or other utterly futile products, without a deeper meaning for the human race. 

    Products and data, that are not interesting anymore in the near future: for nothing and nobody. And that are only produced for the purpose of getting to know more about the habits and thoughts of other people, in order to sell them useless stuff. Or for the purpose of fulfilling the immediate needs of spoilt and impatient people with more money than time to spend.

    And are you the captain of your own ship, or just a simple cogwheel in an infinite jobflow, with no beginning and no end... no meaning and no purpose?! Will somebody miss you when you would immediately end your job? Or are a dozen people ready to replace you at the spot, without anybody noticing it?!

    Are you constantly chased and haunted by the fear for computers and robots, who can perhaps do your job better than you can eventually?! And does that keep you awake at night, asking yourself if “this is it and life does not have anything else for you to offer, except for your family and loved ones?!

    People should start to ask themselves such difficult and painful questions and they should perhaps act accordingly to the answers they give themselves.

    I think that this is one of the reasons that the aforementioned shows on the documentary channels are so immensely popular. Men and women there are busy with the creation of meaningful and very palpable things and they are involved in doing it themselves from start to finish, bearing the whole responsibility from the cradle to the grave. No excuses, no others to blame. 

    You either win or or lose, but the destination and the satisfaction in the end is always worth the travel and the hardship underway. 

    Of course it is impossible for everybody to do bold and difficult things like these guys and girls on the History Channel. Nevertheless, people should try to find more meaning and purpose in their own work and life, instead of simply reeling in the years and stowing away the time

    And please think sometimes about these heroes on the History channel. There is not a wonderful bladesmith in everybody… but there must be a job for everybody that brings back the meaning and purpose in one’s life. And also the feeling of utter satisfaction and happiness, when things go well. Everybody deserves such feelings.

    Bladesmiths! Start your forges and hammer on!!!

    Monday 15 May 2017

    How the free market as ‘panacea for everything’ can work as a poison for the lowest qualified jobs and the people who execute them.

    When there is one thing that the neo-liberal/conservative politicians of the last three decades have advocated, it is of course the free market. That has proven to be a genuine panacea for all economical and political diseases.

    There is not even the faintest doubt among most national governments in Europe, or among the European Union leadership, that ‘the free market’ is the solution to all problems:
    • When the free market indeed succeeds to improve things in certain economic or social situations or in certain industries, it was obvious, as the 'free market' is THE answer to every economic question.
    • And when the free market fails(!) in certain situations or in certain industries, it was always a question of bad luck, mismanagement or unforeseen circumstances. Or... simply because the market was not free enough and the competition did not play a fair, competitive game.

    Well, you know the drill! 

    The answer to a failing free market... is administering more free market. Then the symptoms of pending economic and social problems will disappear like snow in the hot sun. It is the 21st Century version of the medieval habit of 'leeching', in case of dangerous illnesses, and virtually everybody believes in its healing force.

    There is not the slighest clue among the ‘believers’ that the gospel of the free market could lead to undesirable, totally unfair or straight away absurd situations in the global economy. That’s simply impossible. There is nothing outside the free market and the euro and dollar are its prophets. Amen!

    The apostles of the free market believe and defend their gospel with an exasperated energy and an intolerance for contradiction that reminds of the socialist/communist revolutionaries in their finest hours during the early Twentieth Century. Everything that stops, hampers or questions the free market must burn on the holy stakes of the free market evangelists.

    The result is that most people ignore the negative side-effects of the free market by simply looking the other way, or consider them as ‘a small price to pay’ for the best economic system there has ever been in the world.

    On the electronic highway, a few companies – you definitely know which ones – call nearly all the shots by monopolizing their whole, global line of business and by dredging up nearly all the global advertisement sales with their ubiquitous dragnets, from which nothing and nobody can escape. 

    Or by milking their hundreds of millions of customers as ‘information cows’ and by infringing every privacy law in the book, through the application of never-ending and unreadable terms and conditions for usage that – understandably – nobody reads, because normal people don’t even bother to chew through those.

    And last, but not least, by hampering their new competitors with takeover threats, useless lawsuits for copyright and patent infringements “because they can”or by hindering their business with useless and complicated conditions for software usage, user certificates and services.

    But that’s not all... 

    Instead of companies paying the lion share of their taxes in the countries, where most of their customers live and where they earned the majority of their sales revenues, tax avoidance (or evasion) became a global sport for sanctimoneous multinationals with unctuously recorded commercials on TV and the internet. 

    Fair tax payment for all (multinational ) companies is replaced by lackluster philantropy and a few odd charity foundations, that seem more in the interest of the executives than in the interest of the people living in the countries were they earn their revenues.

    Perhaps the worst thing is that “the free market as we know it today” could turn lower-qualified or even (former) middle-class workers with dignity and a decent future before them, into vassals and serfs-out-of-choice, as there is really no choice for them.

    Most well-to-do people are clueless that fair jobs against fair payment could turn into a mirage for people without a fixed contract and with virtually no possibilities to organize themselves, when the free market does its demolishing work.

    This weekend I read on two different occasions about the negative side-effects of the free market, with respect to the labour situation.

    One ‘letter to the editor’, written by Tamara Ronteltap – an Organizational Purpose Coach – and published by Het Financieele Dagbladcomplained about the now quite common disdain for workers, by seeing them solely as a ‘sustainable means of production’, aka a profit machine:

    In the article about the Brexit, Simon Wolfson writes – triggered by the immigration conundrum – that the question at hand is: “Do we see people as an economic asset or as a liability?”

    In this vision, the worker is seen as nothing more than an asset for the profit and loss account, irrespective of his alleged positive or negative value.

    Also in the article ‘Still ill’, regarding research into continued payment during periods of sickness, the image pops up that the (sick) worker is solely seen as a financial entry in the company’s general ledger, who is – on top of that – incapable of taking his responsibilities in his own hands. The latter is emphasized by the sentence that the ‘ill worker must be actively spurred to resume his work asap’

    I definitely get Tamara’s point, as Theory X is having its finest hour in many companies these days, with the mounting distrust of employers in their workers and the resulting urge to control them 24-7. 

    Nevertheless, Tamara’s letter was a relatively innocent plea to take better care of companies’ and government workers and don’t treat them as a piece of machinery. Important, but not really shocking or mindboggling.

    However, the following must-read article was a shocking example of top-notch investigative journalism by Belgian journalist Michael Dilissen of De Redactie.be, in the best tradition of Günter Wallraf, the famous German writer of ‘Lowest of the Low’:

    Dilissen volunteered to work as a day labourer – with one day contracts alone – at what turned out to be international courier DHL, at the Belgian airport Zaventem. He describes how people are treated as vassals (or even serfs) through the usage of an imaginary carrot (i.e. 'a fixed contract) and a very real stick.

    I can’t print much more than a few of the most important snippets, but strongly advice you to read the whole article, as it will be worth your while:

    They have a lot in common, my new colleagues: an infectuous enthusiasm and an absolute belief in the promised fixed contract, as could be read in the vacancy add.

    Before we can walk to our working place, there is a word of the big boss. About the payment and the security rules for temporary workers of DHL.

    And then reality bites:

    “I want to let you know that what the consultants at the temp agency promised you, is not true. Not everybody will get a fixed contract; this is only for the best of the best. The happy few of the temp workers... So make sure that you get among them by never getting ill, working hard, never complaining, doing extra hours and never being too late!”.

    And as if that was not enough: “For the people who are late, we have an efficient method: when you are late once, we’ll keep you at home for one week. This means one week having no job and no income, but all the time in the world for thinking how to get here in time, next time. That is a way of learning a new attitude.”.

    [...]

    It is cold at night in the warehouse. The boxes become heavier by the day. My temporary co-workers don’t seem to care. They think about their fixed contract. Ahmed and Guido have worked with day contracts for several months, while Abdul and Najib received a week contract after four weeks only. Some have high hopes, while others get more frustrated by the day.

    [...]

    Friday is D-day. On Friday all interim workers receive an SMS with the planning for next week. It is a token of prove that you survived yet another week and are part of the game for one more week.

    Last week there was a lot of panic. There had been three tours with new loads of candidate-temp workers. New candidates mean undoubtedly that others must take a hike. The effect is unmistakenable. Everybody is working even quicker.

    [...]

    The payments of my interim job are impossible to check. Every time a different amount. Also the others complain of faulty payments. Abdul never received one hour of overtime. Every week Richard and Omar received up to €60 too little in payments. Complaining at the temporary labour agency is virtually impossible. Startpeople calls you with an undisclosed phone number, which makes it impossible to call back. 

    The writer Michael Dilissen stated that DHL was just a coincidental example of these opaque and intolerable practices and that probably many more companies use the same tactics of keeping their unorganized, temporary (day)workers on a tight leash, with empty promises and hardly disguised threats.

    The sick thing with these kinds of ‘near-slave’ labour is that nobody is really doing something about it, which leaves such a situation festering for years and years. This is the inevitable consequence of the ubiquitously growing disdain and distrust of employers for (fixed contract) workers and the diminishing influence of labour unions, as well as a result of the relentless cutbacks on labour inspection services throughout Europe during the last decades.

    One has to realize that in most cases an investigation is only started when one or more people file an official complaint against their temporary employer. However, filing a complaint is the surest way to lose one’s day job and source of income and also the (faint) outlook for a steady job at DHL  or other companies with the same attitude against temporary workers. 

    This is a Catch-22 situation, in which abuse of powerless workers by the employers is almost guaranteed.

    Things were so different when I was 25 years old and worked at the local ‘Melkunie’ milk factory as a temp worker: payment was great, the atmosphere at the job was great and foremen, bosses and managers were friendly and understanding towards their workers. Some of my fondest memories were created during my working hours at the milk factory.

    Workers even enjoyed one paid(!) break during working hours and good meals could be acquired at very reasonable prices. And last, but not least: there was always a warm welcome for temporary workers, who wanted to return to the job after some time away. 

    Even physically or mentally handicapped workers with sufficient working capabilities got the ‘Melkunie’ treatment, thus freeing them from a life living on subsidies and welfare payments.

    How different are things nowadays in situations, like the one described above. 

    Workers are treated like immediately replaceable resources, with virtually no rights and countless obligations, of which infringements are severely punished.
    I can only hope that the future government of The Netherlands and the current Belgian goverment – and as a matter of fact all governments and supranational governing bodies within the EU - take such excrescences in today’s labour markets finally serious.

    Companies and governments must understand that labour unions, as well as extremely brave individual workers and cautiously united worker groups gave their blood, sweat and tears for a fair treatment of lower and middle class workers by their employers. It would be a disaster when the clock was turned back to the appaling situation of the Middle Ages, in which workers were literally owned by somebody and had no rights at all.

    And so: when the free market blatantly fails, administering more market is amplifying the problem, instead of bringing the solution. 

    Strong governments must act on behalf of the people who don’t have the power to do so. Protecting the poor and powerless, instead of helping the ones who have it all. It is their one of their most important obligations and a large part of their raison d’etre.

    Yet, there are still few signs that the European national governments and the EU all understand that important message.

    Monday 8 May 2017

    How will the negotiation game between the United Kingdom and the European Union end? Here could be some answers!

    The negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union about the British “divorce” from the EU have officially started a month ago with the handover of the Article 50 letter from Theresa May.

    And although the prelude to the actual negotiations, featuring the chairman of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker and British Prime Minister Theresa May, was very rocky – when both had a dispute-laden official dinner at Downing Street 10 and sources around Juncker leaked some of these undisclosed discussion points to the German newspaper ‘Frankfurter Allgemeine’ – these negotiations will soon start for real.

    Head of Service Michel Barnier of the European Commission and his team, as official representatives of the EU, will negotiate with PM Theresa May and assistant-negotiator David Davis, who represent the United Kingdom.

    To the initial annoyance of the EU negotiators, PM Theresa May suddenly threw in the bombshell of organizing general British parliamentary elections in June, in order to get a stronger mandate for these tough negotiations with the EU. 

    However, when the mandate of Theresa May is reinforced indeed after the parliamentary elections, these Brexit negotiations can take off in full force. And all signals do point in the direction of a stronger mandate indeed for May, as the Labour Party of Jeremy Corbyn  is virtually blown to smithereens in the prelude to these elections and the liberals of Nick Clegg could never take over the role of 'classic' Labour for most left-wing Britons.

    Even though the stakes of the negotiations are extremely high for both parties involved, the starting point is relatively simple:

    The target of both parties is: 
    • (a.) to come to an orderly divorce regarding the partition of the mutual estate and a justified payment of the pending bills and financial obligations that the UK has with respect to the EU and
    • (b.) to reach a series of trade agreements between the UK and the EU countries for the time after the divorce. 
    The United Kingdom would like to start both negotiations at the same time, while the EU is adamantly in favour of finishing (a.) first, before starting with (b.).
    Both the EU and the UK will initially try to reach the most favourable results for themselves with these negotiations, while trying to give as little away as possible to their opponents. Therefore these upcoming negotiations between the United Kingdom and the European Union can –and perhaps must – be considered as a (very serious) game. 

    It is a game in which there can be clear winners and clear losers and in which both parties could lose dearly at the same time. But it is also a game in which both parties cannot both win clearly at the same time (i.e. at least in my humble opinion) and in which the “best result” for both parties is a compromise that probably all people tolerate, but none of the people really love.
    I’ve written this down in the following negotiations schedule:



    Chart 1 – wins and losses in the game

    The stakes and chances for the negotiations game
    Chart created by: Ernst's Economy for You
    Click to enlarge
    The reason that both parties can win the negotiations, but not both at the same time, is that the goals are simply too contradictory for a mutual win:
    • Extremely favourable separation and trade terms with various opt-ins for the UK (i.e. an EU ‘a la carte’ option) and on top of that an effective end to unhindered immigration of EU citizens into the UK would mean a clear victory for the UK, but a dear loss for the EU;
    • A divorce at such unfavourable terms for the UK that it would cause economic hardship and severe loss of prosperity for the country and would scare the other members of the EU away from only thinking of such a ‘~exit’ would be “great “ for the EU, but a terrible loss for the UK;
    So the best outcome would be an outcome in which both parties sacrifice some points from their initial tough stance and give some pork away to their opponents, in order to reach a mutually acceptable result. However, this will probably take quite a long time and there might be some very tough lumps to swallow for both parties.

    And last, but not least: the funny and at the same time very awkward thing is that both parties can totally lose this game – at least that is what I think. That would be when both parties get so alienated towards eachother in the negotiation process that they ‘punish’ eachother into a mutually terrible deal or perhaps worse: a huge political-economical (or even military) conflict.

    These circumstances make it extremely important to play this game “hard and smart”, but with a keen eye for the opponent’s needs, concepts and visions.

    I laid down a few assumptions for this game in the following three schedules, accompanied by my comments:

    Chart 2 – greatest gain and most feared loss

    The greatest gain and most feared loss in the game
    Chart created by: Ernst's Economy for You
    Click to enlarge
    As I mentioned before, the UK wants an ‘EU a la carte’ with all the opt-ins, like free trade and free traffic of goods and finances between the UK and the European continent, but with an opt-out for the now mandatory free traffic of people. All privileges and no obligations towards the EU. 

    The biggest fear of the UK in this game is that they get a very poor (or even no) trade deal with the EU members: a situation that brings the UK's citizens and companies economic hardship and massive loss of prosperity. 

    Or, perhaps just as important, that the UK has to swallow an enormous lump with regards to the unhampered immigration of European citizens: that they have to carry the burdens of the EU membership, without having the advantages of it anymore.

    Where the EU would like to have a trade deal with the UK that is as poor and hideous as possible, but without setting the whole situation on fire, the EU fears most a deal that feels like the dreaded ‘EU a la carte’ that the Britons want. 
    When this would happen indeed, this could lead to other countries abolishing their EU membership, under the right circumstances and peer pressure.

    The hardest thing is finding a viable and workable compromise here, that meets both parties’ requirements more or less, without both parties giving in too much.

    Chart 3 – possible compromises and important influences for both parties

    The possible compromises and important influences for both parties
    Chart created by: Ernst's Economy for You
    Click to enlarge
    A few of the most important industries for the United Kingdom as a whole are the financial and commercial services industries, mainly situated in the greater London area. These industries are for me the cork on which the UK floats and these must be protected at all costs. Although the heavy industry and the manufacturing industry are also very important for the country, the UK is not so competitive in these areas. 

    So perhaps the UK are willing to give in with regards to the latter industries, to the advantage of the commercial and financial services industries.

    This is the reason that I think that a workable trade and divorce agreement with the UK can be found through the EU ‘protection’ of the greater London area and the financial and commercial companies in this area. When a trade deal can be reached here, the UK might be willing to swallow a few lumps with respect to UK immigration of EU citizens and moderate trade levies on other British industries.

    A workable solution for the EU would probably be a trade deal that puts some moderate (but not extremely high) levies on British products and services. And such a deal should always incorporate a warrant for the current and future(?) EU immigrants in the United Kingdom, that they can live there and work there for as long as they want, without being hampered or forced out by the UK government or the British population as a whole.

    There is definitely some manoeuvering room there, although negotiations should be held very cautiously.

    However, what could negatively influence the circumstances for the negotiations is the British ‘once we were an extremely powerful and great empire’-complex, that makes that the UK feels much more powerful and strong than the country actually is at the moment. 

    This complex could force the country to play high stakes poker with the EU, which could lead to the dreaded ‘both lose’ outcome of the game.

    Other influences are the risk of a future ScoNIxit – an exit from the UK by Scotland and Northern Ireland as a consequence of an extremely unfavourable British trade deal – or an escalating conflict with Spain about the island of Gibraltar.

    What could negatively influence the strenght of the EU negotiators is when countries like f.i. The Netherlands and Ireland act as partypoopers / dealbreakers for the EU, when they start to fear for their formerly prosperous trade deals with the UK.

    The EU always had a history of acting like 28 (now 27) frogs in a wheelbarrow and henceforth there is a considerable chance that the UK tries to play the ‘divide and conquer’-card with its favorite trade partners, by covertly promising them slightly better trade deals and slightly lower import levies than the rest of the EU. 

    These ‘rogue’ trade partners, with their then hidden agendas, could put fierce pressure on the negotiation process and could act as a fission fungus within the EU itself.

    Nevertheless, at this moment the EU seems very much one block in the initial negotiations with the UK, as all countries seem to understand the importance of a tough deal for the UK.

     Chart 4 – The ‘first strike’ and the tipping point

    The first strike in the negotiations and
    the possible tipping point in the game
    Chart created by: Ernst's Economy for You
    Click to enlarge
    As far as I can see from a distance, the current British stance towards the EU negotiators seems to be: “We are the UK and who are you?!”

    The Britons seem overly confident in their aim towards their desired ‘EU a la carte’ condition, with plenty opt-ins and no EU immigrant issues for the distant future anymore. They currently try to get the best for free and don’t seem interested in what their negotiating partners think or want. They therefore utterly ignore the desires and demands of the European Union.

    This is not a viable option as it will undoubtedly lead  to anger and alienation among the European negotiators. 

    The Dutch journalist Joris Luyendijk, who is a steady columnist for the Guardian, already heaved a sigh, when he pleaded in an Op-Ed that the UK could not be considered a serious country anymore:

    And then there is Theresa May herself. Her claim this week that the EU is trying to influence the elections in Britain through a leak to the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung is the latest example of a long list of statements that simply make no sense. Britain is not the centre of the world, and the idea that EU leaders would sit together plotting a victory for Jeremy Corbyn is laughable.

    Far more likely is that EU leaders decided to leak the proceedings of their dinner on Sunday with May in order to warn their own public about how irrational Britain has become. How the country believes itself to have the upper hand in a negotiation with a group of nations seven times its own size. How it wants to be part of the single market while refusing to recognise the authority of the European court governing that market. And, most alarmingly, how badly informed May still is about the practical consequences both of Brexit and of a no-deal crash out of the EU.

    Joris Luyendijk is always quite critical and rocksteady in his approach towards the English and their habits, but what he says definitely makes sense here. 

    However, I believe in a tipping point in this game, when the emotions are finally out of the way and when both parties finally try to avoid getting the scenario that they absolutely not want. 

    Then is the time to do business, at last!

    The EU on the other hand is akin more to Clint Eastwood currently than Clint Eastwood himself: 

    “Do you feel lucky, British punkette?! Do you really think you can get away with a Brexit without being severely punished for it? Well, you’re dead wrong, woman! I’ll make you pay for it!”.

    But the EU is no Clint Eastwood (because there is only one Clint Eastwood) and they won't manage to stay this tough for two years in a row! 

    So in order to prevent from the divide-and-conquer scenario within the EU itself or from a full-blown trade war with the UK, the EU will leave this ultra-tough stance quite soon after the British elections in June. Nobody wants this British stew to simmer for too long and spoil it all. And that might be the tipping point for the EU.

    It is an interesting negotiating game and a tough one... And the stakes of it are very high.

    These are my ponderings about the outcome of this game. I am sure that some of these concepts might indeed play out, while others might deviate from reality in the coming months and years.

    I would put my money on both parties chosing in the end for the ‘no winners, no losers’ scenario, as they gives the best chance for a workable compromise for both parties for the near future.

    However, with emotions running very high during the negotiation process in the coming months and years, the ‘complete loss for both parties’- scenario could also play out.

    Then we could be in for a hot spring of 2019!  Place your bets! Rien ne va plus!

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