Post-Covid-19 and EU: Education For What Citizenship?
Post-Covid-19 and EU: Education For What Citizenship?
Post-Covid-19 and EU: Education For What Citizenship?
[The] Virus is a product of nature; the crisis is a product of neoliberalism. (Salas and
Silverman 2020)
Introduction
Neoliberalism, the current form of capitalism, has had a devastating effect on countries
around the world during the coronavirus pandemic. The imposition of neoliberal austerity
measures has crippled many basic functions of the states. Austerity measures means less
spending on the social side which translates to less money for health and education, and more
pressure to sell these off into the private sector. As Vijay Prashad says:
The problem with having health and education in the private sector is that these are
designed for profit and not for the social good. Hospitals are run like any rental
property. It is a waste of the asset if there is too much spare capacity, so that hospitals
— like renters — drive an agenda for maximum occupancy. When there is a
pandemic, there is simply no surge capacity in these lean and efficient (in terms of
profit maximization) medical institutions. (2020)
The EU’s focus on neoliberal structural reform, has been a constant feature of its
agenda since Maastricht. Education has been a part of that project. The Lisbon Agenda 2000
originally set out to make the EU “the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based
economy in the world” by 2010. It included an economic pillar, a social pillar and an
environmental pillar. In 2010 the Lisbon Agenda was relaunched as a new 10-year plan, the
Europe 2020 strategy – “an agenda for new skills and jobs: to modernise labour markets by
facilitating labour mobility and the development of skills throughout the lifecycle with a view
to increasing labour participation and better matching labour supply and demand”. (Clancy,
2020b).
In this paper, I examine the origins of the COVID19 crisis under the lenses of the EU
debt crisis and its neoliberal management. I consider the implications of austerity measures to
the health systems of hard-hit Italy and Spain. The EU Next Generation recovery funds are
put into scrutiny. At the end, I consider the challenges for education for EU citizenship under
these conditions.
Neoliberal management under Germany’s reign and the creation of the Eurozone has had its
severe impact on many nation/states of EU. As Emma Clancy, (2020b) policy advisor for
Irish Sinn Féin and the European United Left (GUE/NGL) in the European Parliament
explains: “It will come as little surprise that a system designed to promote the mercantilist
model of wage suppression, low inflation and export-led growth, propped up by a currency
modelled on the Deutschmark, has benefited one country more than all other members of the
eurozone.” In February 2019, the Centre for European Policy published an empirical study of
the “winners and losers” from the euro twenty years after its introduction. It found that
Germany was the big winner, having benefited by €1.9 trillion from the euro between 1999
and 2017, or around €23,000 per person. The Netherlands was the other state that gained
substantial benefits from the common currency. France had lost €3.6 trillion or €56,000 per
person; while Italy had lost more than any other state, at €4.3 trillion or €74,000 per person
(Gasparotti et al. 2019). One of the main reasons for the drop in prosperity was international
competitiveness due to the euro, according to the report. Before the introduction of the euro,
countries were able to devalue their currencies to make their exports cheaper on the world
market. "The problem of the divergent competitiveness of the Eurozone countries remains
unsolved," the researchers Alessandro Gasparotti und Matthias Kullas wrote. As German MP
for the European Parliament from De Lienke Martin Schirdewan, (2020) says: “The design of
the Eurozone contributes to debt crises, while the debt and deficit rules enshrined in the
Stability and Growth Pact enforce anti-worker and anti-growth policies.”
The transformation of private debt to public debt has devastated European economies.
“The level of public debt in the EU was not caused by reckless government spending, but
rather by the socialisation of private debt through the rescue of the financial sector, and
dramatic increases in the costs of borrowing due to “market discipline” linked to the ECB’s
failure to intervene. The pro-cyclical impact of the austerity programs imposed by the Troika
not only limited growth but devastated the public services, including healthcare.”
(Schirdewan, 2020). The decision to save the banks has also destroyed much of solidarity
between nations, since the blame is put between nations instead of the banking system. For
example, in 2009, the debt-crisis in Greece was blamed on Greek citizens who were
collectively depicted as being ‘lazy’ and ‘corrupt’(Skarpedas, 2015). Yet, the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) data show a picture of Greek workers
that is far from lazy – declaring, for example, that the Greeks work the longest hours in EU
(Coleman, 2015). German citizens can’t explain why they seem to be bailing out the Greek
debt while they fail to understand that it is the German and French banks that exploit all this
laundry system imposed on European states.
The Eurozone is creating debtor colonies. “The very concept of a debt colony is a
nation-state that is situated at the lowest level of the EU governance chain, which comes with
limited sovereignty and direct supervision by outsiders, rather than from its own domestic
decision-making system. Under such circumstances all internal political life/agendas are
constantly influenced and co-shaped by powerful actors such as bureaucracy, financial capital
and key member states through respective interventions” (Mikelis 2016:9). EU is leading to a
post-democracy. According to Crouch (2016), a post-democratic society is one that continues
to have and to use all the institutions of democracy, but in a way that they become
increasingly a formal shell and into small circles of a politico-economic elite. It is a society
marked by pernicious politics that have serious consequence for democracy. Post-
democracy’s authoritarianism ferments xenophobic movements claiming to represent those
suffering from excessive change are indicative of in most authoritarian forms. While he
argues that austerity itself is not evidence of post-democracy, it is the way that the crisis is
handled that gives evidence of a drift towards post-democracy. He adds that:
First, the Anglo-American financial model that produced the crisis in the first place
was designed by a politico-economic elite that corresponds to my concept, as bankers
moved in and out of the revolving doors in Washington, designing policies to suit
their firms. Then the management of the crisis itself was primarily a rescue operation
for banks at the expense of the rest of the population. The most explicit expression of
the post-democratic aspects of crisis management was the framing of the Greek
austerity package, designed by international authorities in close collaboration with
an association of leading bankers. But that was just the clearest case; less formal,
similar groupings will be found in most political centers.
Unless these issues are addressed the divide within EU will only grow bigger. Even if the EU
discourse is one based on democracy, it won’t take much more to figure how the
impoverishment of states is being created by the existing disparities within EU.
EU coronavirus response
Among the more interesting figures of the pandemic is the number of deaths per million
inhabitants per country. This number is probably more reliable than the case-fatality rate
because deaths are less likely to be missed (ignoring for now the difficulty of defining deaths
caused by SARS-CoV-2) and because the denominator, a country’s population, is known.
(Caduff, 2020). According to the numbers for countries in EU as of 1st July 2020 are:
Spain: 606
Italy: 575
France:457
Germany: 107.
“At the outset of the pandemic, Germany had 28,000 intensive care beds, more than most of
its neighboring countries. In recent days that has been raised to 40,000, as hospitals braced
themselves for a huge influx of patients with Covid-19.” (FT, 13/4/2020). Where medical
care is easily accessible, staff sufficient and well-trained, and capacities are flexible, patients
are more likely to receive better care and survive. The differences between deaths can be
correlated to medical infrastructure. The European Commission had used the Stability and
Growth Pact to “order member states to cut spending on, or privatise, healthcare services 63
times between 2011 and 2018. States were told to raise the pension age or cut funding to
pensions 105 times over the same period.” (Schirdewan, 2020).
The two EU countries most seriously hit by the Covid-19 are Italy and Spain. Both
were among the strongest economies in the world before joining the Eurozone. In these
countries, budgetary cuts for austerity reasons have led to substantial loss of life. In Italy, the
austerity induced by the fiscal recovery plans has led to cuts that were harmful to health and
survival. “The reform led to cuts in especially hospital capacity that reduced utilization which
in many cases must have been essential use of services, as indicated by the rise in premature
deaths of males and females.” (Arca et al. 2020).) “Soon after the Eurozone sovereign debt
crisis, Italian health spending relinquished its ten-year positive trend and began a gradual yet
consistent decline. In 2012 the Italian government passed a series of decree
laws reducing total public health financing by €900 million in 2012, €1.8 billion in 2013, and
a further €2 billion in 2014, decreasing resources for essential medicines and the National
Health Fund. Moreover, between 2009 and 2010, NSS (hospital) personnel were reduced”
(De Falco 2018).
In Spain, EU neoliberal institutions have either steered the government towards
policies that were incompatible with Spain’s obligations to fulfil the right to health, or not
done enough to mitigate potential human rights impact (Amnesty International, 2018). In the
wake of the global financial crisis of 2019, the Spanish government began to cut spending on
healthcare. Austerity measures included shifting the costs of certain products onto
individuals, limiting the healthcare available to irregular migrants, and cutting spending on
health workers, equipment and infrastructure. As UN document E/C.12/ESP/CO/6 (2018)
describes:
the Committee urges the State party to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the
impact that the application of Royal Decree-Law No. 16/2012 has had on the right to
the highest attainable standard of health, in order to make necessary adjustments to
ensure the availability, accessibility, affordability, acceptability and quality of health-
care services, including the repeal of provisions whose effect has been to weaken the
protection of the right to health. (United Nations Human Rights 2018)
“Economic and social cohesion has been identified as a fundamental condition for the
balanced development of the Community, and education and training have been
identified as a crucial factor in achieving balanced social and economic development
in all the Member States” (EC Commission, 1992:11-12).
McCann, G & P. Finn (2006) observe that: “Across the European Union the principle of
‘responsible citizenship’ has moved towards a consensus on not only the individual’s role in
society, but also the role that education has to play in establishing a value for citizen
participation.”
The injustices and the hardship put on several countries have consequences on the trust that
EU shares among EU citizens. According to the Eurobarometer (spring 2018) the trust in EU
is going through significant changes. Out of 28 countries, majority in trust in EU is in15 EU
Member States (down from 18 in autumn 2017), led by Lithuania (66%), Portugal and
Denmark (both 57%). Conversely, a majority of respondents tend not to trust the EU in 13
countries, most strikingly in Greece (69%), the United Kingdom (57%) and Czech Republic
(56%). Even though the trust in even the 15 countries is above the average, the mistrust is on
high levels. According to European Commission’s (2018) working paper: “Over the last
decade, political parties opposed to EU integration have almost doubled their votes. The
general opinion of the EU has also deteriorated, revealing a growing number of people who
distrust the Union.” Brexit can be understood under this prism.
The riddle of EU’s future lays within a balanced distribution of economic gains and
education. It is the elder and the wealthier who trust more EU. It is those with expectations
that distrust their future on the European Union. “Hence, anti-EU voting reflects long-term
economic trajectories; once this is controlled for, only education, density, and lack of
employment go along with expectations” (EC, 2018:35). The need for a renewed social
contract for through education in EU is an assignment of constructing the European identity.
Unless this is created on economic justice, the EU project remains undemocratic in essence.
As Thomas Fazi (2019) says: “EU’s undemocratic architecture; rather, has to do with the
very nature of democracy itself. As the term suggests, and as history illustrates, democracy
presupposes the existence of an underlying demos — a political community, usually (though
not exclusively) defined by a shared and relatively homogenous language, culture, history,
normative system, etc. — ‘the majority of [whose members] feel sufficiently connected to
each other to voluntarily commit to a democratic discourse and to a related decision-making
process,’ and therefore to accept the legitimacy of government and majority rule.”’ The
challenges lay ahead of us and the future lies in uncertainty.
Conclusions
Yet the future debt differences between EU countries over the coronavirus crisis will be big.
The International Monetary Fund sees Greek debt rocketing almost 22 points to 200 percent
of GDP this year, Italian almost 21 points to 156 percent and Spanish 18 points to more than
113 percent. France, Portugal and Belgium will also be badly hit. By contrast, Germany is
expected to increase its debt by only 9 points to 69 percent and the Netherlands by 10 points
to 58 percent. Austria, Finland, Slovakia and the Baltics will see similar or slightly bigger
increases, but to much lower levels than southern states (Strupczewski, 2020).
Germany shows it has the upper hand in the EU and gains the most. According to The
Economist “The single market is governed by strict rules limiting subsidies, but they have
been suspended as governments pour €2trn ($2.2trn) into saving businesses from collapse
from the Covid-19 crisis. Half of this money is spent in Germany: this is a problem if you are
a producer based in a country that cannot afford to be so generous, but which must accept
German-made goods” (The Economist 2020). Meanwhile, there is a conflict of interest
between EU states in general. EU’s economy is second strongest in the world, after USA.
Making the euro weaker helps Germany sell its products cheaper in the competitive markets.
Weakened EU economies make the euro softer and the German industrialists stronger
(Ivanovich, 2019).
While the working class in EU is being deprived the necessary means for its survival
despite country of origin, this is creating a North/South divide while it is strengthening the
power of German ruling class. Germany has been the country benefiting from the Eurozone
(which started with 1 DM=1euro). European countries surrendering their monetary policies to
ECB has been a huge failure leading to loss of sovereignty. Italy and Spain cannot print their
own money and will now be exposed to a debt-neocolonialism like Greece, if the Eurozone
and the ECB remain as is. It seems Greece, who has put all its public property on mortgage
and has its taxes collected by an institution directed by the Troika (AADE), was the
neocolonial experiment to which other countries will follow. “Neocolonialism differs from
standard globalisation and development aid in that it typically results in a relationship of
dependence, subservience, or financial obligation towards the neocolonialist nation. This may
result in an undue degree of political control or spiraling debt obligations, functionally
imitating the relationship of traditional colonialism” (Prashad, 2007).
If Education for European Identity is to succeed, it is essential for the EU to challenge
injustices created within its structure, starting with the Eurozone. The COVID-19 crisis has
put light to these, since it became a matter of life or death within different countries within
the EU. Otherwise it would be another lost opportunity for creating a common European
continent for peace. Can this be achieved under capitalism? Lenin (1918) was not very
optimistic when he said: ‘From the standpoint of the economic conditions of imperialism—
i.e., the export of capital arid the division of the world by the “advanced” and “civilized”
colonial powers—a United States of Europe, under capitalism, is either impossible or
reactionary.’
References
Amnesty International (2018). Spain: Cruel austerity measures leave patients suffering.
https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2018/04/spain-cruel-austerity-measures-
leave-patients-suffering/ accessed 18 May 2020.
Arcà, E., Principe, F., Van Doorslaer, E., (2020, January 30). Death by Austerity? The Impact
of Cost Containment on Avoidable Mortality in Italy, SSRN,
https://ssrn.com/abstract=3529892 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3529892 ,
accessed 18 May 2020.
Clancy, E. (2020) Discipline and Punish: End of the road for the EU’s Stability and Growth
Pact? Brussels. Martin Schirdewan.
Coleman, J. (2015) Greek Bailout talks: Are stereotypes of lazy Greek true? BBC
tps://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-31803814
Crouch, C. (2016). ‘The march towards post-democracy, ten years on’, The Political
Quarterly, vol. 87, no.1, 2016, pp. 71–5.Dalla Costa, M. & James, S. (1975). Women
and the subversion of the community, Falling Wall Press & individuals from the
Women's Movement in England and Italy, Bristol, UK.
DW (2/6/2020). Belgium's coronavirus (over)counting controversy.
https://www.dw.com/en/belgiums-coronavirus-overcounting-controversy/a-53660975
EC Commission (1992) ‘New Prospects for Community Cultural Action’, COM (92),
Brussels, 1992, pp.11-12, available: http://europa.eu.int/comm/education/index_en.html
EC Commission (2005) Citizenship Education at School in Europe, EC, Brussels.
EC Commission (2018). The Geography of EU Discontent. EC, Brussels
e Falco, R. (2018, August 22). Death by a million cuts: what future for the right to health in
Italy?, Center for Economic and Social Rights, https://www.cesr.org/death-million-
cuts-what-future-right-health-italy , accessed 18 May 2020.
Eurobarometer 89 – Spring 2018 “Public opinion in the European Union, First results”
http://ec.europa.eu/commfrontoffice/publicopinion/
Fazi, T.,(2019, May 23). The European Union Is an Antidemocratic Disgrace, Jacobin,
https://jacobinmag.com/2019/05/european-union-parliament-elections-antidemocratic,
accessed 18 May 2020.
Giannacopoulos, M., (2015). Sovereign Debts: Global Colonialism, Austerity and Neo-
Liberal Assimilation, Law Text Culture, 19, 2015, 166-193.
http://ro.uow.edu.au/ltc/vol19/iss1/9 , accessed 18 May 2020.
Gillet, K. (2020). COVID-19 and Romania's healthcare brain drain could be 'perfect storm'.
https://www.euronews.com/2020/03/30/covid-19-and-romania-s-healthcare-brain-drain-
could-be-perfect-storm
Guarascio, F., (2020, April 8). ECB urges measures worth 1.5 trillion euros this year to
tackle virus crisis – sources, Reuters, https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-health-
coronavirus-eurozone/ecb-urges-measures-worth-1-5-trillion-euros-this-year-to-
tackle-virus-crisis-sources-idUKKBN21Q0U9, accessed 18 May 2020.
Hale, Galina (14 January 2013). "Balance of Payments in the European Periphery". Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Retrieved 15 June 2020.
Lapavitsas, Costas (2018). 'Political Economy of the Greek Crisis.' Review of Radical
Political Economics, 51 (1). pp. 31-51.
Lenin, V. (1918). The proletarian revolution and the renegade Kautsky. Collected Works.
https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1918/prrk/index.htm
McCann, G & Finn, P (2006) 'Identifying the European dimension in citizenship education',
Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 3, Autumn, pp. 52-63.
Mikelis, K. (2016). Neocolonial Power Europe? Postcolonial Thought and the Eurozone
Crisis, French Journal For Media Research , 5/2016,
https://frenchjournalformediaresearch.com:443/lodel-1.0/main/index.php?id=753.,
accessed 18 May 2020.
Poggioli, S. (2020). For Help On Coronavirus, Italy Turns To China, Russia And Cuba. NPR.
https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/03/25/821345465/for-help-on-
coronavirus-italy-turns-to-china-russia-and-cuba
Prashad, V., (2020, April 6). The virus of austerity. Daily Hampshire Gazette,
https://www.gazettenet.com/Columnist-Vijay-Prashad-33733276, accessed 18 May
2020.
Prashad, V., (2007). The Darker Nations: A People's History of the Third World. New York:
The New Press. p. 233.
Salas, M. T. & Silverman, V., (2020, April 5). Virus, Product de la Naturaleza; Crisis,
Product del Neoliberalismo, La Jornada,
https://www.jornada.com.mx/2020/04/05/opinion/012a1pol., accessed 18 May 2020.
Schirdewan, M. (24/4/2020). Europe Fails Another Test of Solidarity. Tribune.
https://tribunemag.co.uk/2020/04/europe-fails-another-test-of-solidarity
Skaperdas, S. (2015). Myths and Self-Deceptions about the Greek Debt-crisis. Revue
d'économie politique, vol. 125(6), 755-785. doi:10.3917/redp.256.0755.
Strupczewski, J., (2010, April 22). Pandemic won’t cause euro debt crisis, but a North-South
divide, e-Kathimerini from Reuters,
https://www.ekathimerini.com/251902/gallery/ekathimerini/business/pandemic-wont-
cause-euro-debt-crisis-but-a-north-south-divide , accessed 18 May 2020.
The Economist, (2020, May 14). The European Union is having a bad crisis
https://www.economist.com/leaders/2020/05/14/the-european-union-is-having-a-bad-
crisis?cid1=cust/ednew/n/bl/n/2020/05/14n/owned/n/n/nwl/n/n/EU/473988/n,
accessed 18 May 2020.
NYT. (2020, March 7). E.U. Seeks Solidarity as Nations Restrict Medical Exports, The New
York Times, https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/07/business/eu-exports-medical-
equipment.html, accessed 18 May 2020.
United Nations Human Rights, (2018, April 25). E/C.12/ESP/CO/6: Concluding
observations on the sixth periodic report of Spain, Economic and Social Council,
Resource document,
https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/15/treatybodyexternal/Download.aspx?
symbolno=E%2fC.12%2fESP%2fCO%2f6&Lang=en, accessed 18 May 2020.