Saturday, 2 March 2013

Portugal on the street


Large crowds marched today in the key cities and towns of Portugal against the austerity measures the government is implementing. The key feature of these manifestations was their peaceful nature. People have shown, once more, that they can be on the streets and behave responsibly.

Many of the protesters could be defined as middle class families that are going through a process of impoverishment. For many of them and for many years their living standards were based on a fiction: that the country could afford a level of public expenditures that was well beyond the means of the economy. With the international financial crisis this fiction could no longer be sustained. The state could no longer borrow in the international markets at low rates of interest. To be able to finance the public sector and adjust spending to the real possibilities of the economy over a short period of time, the state had to look for funds coming from the IMF, the ECB and the European Commission. These monies came with strings attached, as expected. And that hurts. It hurts even further because the government has realised – but cannot explain it properly and clearly, for reasons that are beyond my understanding – that the long term sustainability of public expenditures calls for further cuts, particularly if one takes into account the fragility of the economy and the very low rate of productive investment that has been recorded so far.

In a country where the state was the true engine of the economy – unfortunately the private sector had not been able during the last two decades to take off and expand; it remained too dependent of state projects and orders and largely linked to political patronage – if public expenditure goes significantly down most of the economy tends to collapse.

The point is to get as many investments from outside as possible. My hope is that today’s popular civism be perceived by those potentially interested in investing in Portugal as an encouragement to do so. 

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