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All Things To All Men

It is the nature of capitalist politics that you must pander to your
audience. Thus in one week the late President Kennedy could declare to
a German audience "I am a Berlinner", to an Irish audience boast of his
Irish descent and finish off in the USA extolling his American
patriotism. Mitt Romney who is contesting the Republican primaries is
using a similar ploy. "Whereas he once took on the powerful gun lobby,
he more recently joined the National Rifle Association as a life
member. Elected in Massachusetts as a strong supporter of gay rights,
he now proclaims himself as a fierce opponent of same sex marriage."
(Times, 20 September) Obviously a man of principles. The main principle
being "do anything to get elected".
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A Living Wage?
"The adult rate for the statutory minimum
wage will go up from £5.35 to £5.52 and from £4.44 to
£4.60 for 18-21-year-olds. The rate for 16 and 17-year-olds will
increase from £3.30 to £3.40 an hour. Meanwhile, annual
leave entitlement will increase from 20 to 24 days a year for full-time
workers and will increase again to 28 days from April 2009. Employment
Relations Minister, Pat McFadden, said: "These changes will improve the
lives of millions of British workers, giving them more time with their
families and ensuring our lowest paid workers continue to be able to
earn a living wage." (Guardian, 1 October) McFaddens "living wage" must
seem laughable to politicians and big earners in the City. 17p an hour
increase? Let the good times roll!
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Now That’s Living
"The bonanza in boardroom pay has become
even more spectacular, according to the latest figures from the
accountancy firm KPMG. The typical chief executive of a FTSE 100
company has seen their total remuneration rise by 12 per cent in the
past year, to reach over £2.6m. That's four times the rate of
increase in average earnings, leaving the business elite on pay over100
times what most of their employees earn. In the case of those chief
executives still in post, their income went up by 16 per cent,
accelerating last year's 9 per cent rise. The chief executive of one of
the smaller FTSE 250 companies would expect to see a total package of
just over £1m, up from £878,000 in 2006. Britain's top
corporate earner is probably still Bob Diamond of Barclays Capital, who
took home £22.9m last year, including a performance-related bonus
of £10.4m." (Independent, 1 October)
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We Hope It Is True
It is sad but true that it is almost
impossible to lift up a newspaper without being informed about bad
news. War, poverty and world hunger - it is the media's daily ration of
social problems. How welcome to read of this ray of sunshine in an
otherwise gloomy press. "Outrage in cyberspace as the US Navy describes
the MySpace generation as "alien life forces". They spend their lives
in front of screens meeting foreigners and are therefore less willing
to sign up and kill them, a Navy study reports." (Times, 2 October)
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Not So Patriotic
At the Labour and Conservative Party
conferences the drum was banged for patriotism. "British jobs for
British people", "this great country of ours", "our proud British
heritage", and so on ad nauseam. In fact the British capitalists don't
care where they make their profits, if they can exploit workers abroad
more profitably then that is what they will do, despite the cant spoken
at political conferences. "Unite, the manufacturing trade union,
yesterday accused Cadbury Schweppes of behaving like an
"asset-stripping private equity firm" following the company's
announcement that it would shed 700 jobs by outsourcing chocolate
production to Poland. Cadbury said it planned to shut its factory in
Keynsham, near Bristol, by 2010, with the loss of 500 jobs, while 200
further posts would go in Bournville, in the Midlands, at the plant
where it has been producing chocolate for almost 130 years. Much of the
work done at the Keynsham and Bournville plants will be switched to the
Polish company Wedel, which it acquired in 1998, Cadbury said, because
labour and manufacturing costs would be much lower". (Independent, 4
October)
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The New Imperialists
It used to be that supporters of Chinese and
Russian state capitalism decried the imperialism of the British
Empire,. Today though it is a case of the kettle calling the pot black.
"Today, emerging-market giants are fighting for oil, gas and metal ore
in Africa as energetically as 19th-century European colonialists
grabbed land on the continent. Recently, the Chinese have been the most
aggressive, with more than 700 companies active in 50 countries,
according to Standard Bank of South Africa. China is now Africa's
second largest aid donor and trading partner, behind the United States,
with trade up fourfold to $40 billion since 2000. But Russia, the
second most active emerging-market power in the area, is gaining. While
trade with Africa is only $3 billion a year (up threefold since 2000),
Russian companies flush with cash have sunk over $5 billion into buying
up African assets since 2000— and that's not counting $3.5 billion of
oil exploration deals that will come online before the end of the
decade." (Newsweek, 15 October)
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