In connection with its EU presidency role in the first half of this
year, thus being responsible for the EU in regard of the preparation of the follow-up of
the Copenhagen summit the German Federal Government showed its special interest in the
question of social services. One moment had been the expert meeting in Frankfurt end of
last year .
Starting from there and linked with some other engagements in this area
a follow up expert meeting was held from the 9th to the 11th of
September 99. Besides the link to the UN activities there are other debates fuelling these
activities, not least the requirement and promises to set up an observatory on social
services in the European Union.
And indeed, the debate in Frankfurt again showed what had been outlined
on several occasions, not least in Aachen where there had been a special emphasis on the
role of the NGOs : There is a diversity of political and organisational patterns ruling
the public and namely social services in the member states of the EU. Various actors are
concerned with distinct tasks on different levels. Furthermore, despite the variety the
common issue of a policy of retrenchment is a challenge for all actors involved.
We all know that no easy solution can be found. This is especially true
as the clients (and their advocates) are more and more aware that the
traditional pattern of the Western welfare state is linked to a de-activation of the
concerned people. Nolens volens centralised structures result in a character of
benefits, services and any welfare performances as a gift, as expression of
mercy or the like. (Of course, this is an unintended effect of the system; moreover it
contradicts the initial intention of the system.) Thus, solutions have to be found in the
triangle of
- Increasing demand,
- Decreasing means and
- Growing awareness of a rights based approach by those who demand the
services.
Basically, what is needed is not simply a review of social services
rather than a review of citizenship and the social contract.
Seen on this background it is more than questionable if the recent
debate in Frankfurt largely was concerned with the question of re-marketisation and thus
re-commodification and re-privatisation as way out. It seems that we find meanwhile a kind
of long British tradition reaching from Thatcherite politics over Majors
approach via Citizens Charters to Blairs third way.
Anyway, the meeting showed
as well, that besides some support for this approach other participants did not agree by
any means. Even if the traditional welfare system cannot cope anymore with current
challenges the way cannot be one which leads back to previous patterns of private
solutions. Neither re-politics (re-commodification,
re-privatisation) nor
post-politics (post-modernism, post-traditional
liberalism) can provide any
sound and sustainable solution. Presupposed that sustainable means something different
than the OECD stated in connection with the early depate on [new] public
management:
Governments in Member Countries are still committed to promoting policies that
achieve the highest sustainable economic growth and employment and that contribute to
economic and social well-being. (OECD: Governance in Transition. Public
management Reforms in OECD Countries. Conclusions of the Public management Committee.
Paris: OECD: 1995: 5)
It can only be hoped that the observatory on social services takes the
social orientation more serious than the service orientation all depends on people:
people who depend on services, people who use services and people who observe
them,
using their power in support of the social or the services. Science is by no
means value free.
Even if clearly employed by a Irish perspective the titles are surely
of interest for readers from other countries alike.
Contact: Centre for Voluntary Action Studies. Univesity of
Uslster.
Coleraine. BT52 1SA. Northern Ireland. Ph: 01265324618. Telecopie: 01265324881.
E-mail: CVAS@ulst.ac.uk
It is somewhat amazing for those who are looking from outside on
integration matters because two contradictions reveal again and
again:
On the one hand it seems that a Social Europe is, if anything at all,
just a dream of many and a case for promoting an economically driven
project,
complementing the factual evils of economic deregulation, flexibilisation etc. by the
pretended good practices of a social model. On the other hand,
however, we find again and
again real approaches, real initiatives to bring the idea of a social Europe on the way
respectively to push it forwards finally the starting shot had been fired already a
long time ago and the field is crowded by many participants
competition, relay race, and marathon race are just different pictures we can see on the same
field.
Now, this is the one contradiction. The other is, and of course we all
know it, the contradiction between the economic and the social
competencies. Nevertheless,
I frequently stressed the fact that even the economic competencies are not as far reaching
as they are assumed in mainstream debates and, similarly, the social competencies are
developed further than in many cases acknowledged at least we have to be clear in
the differentiation between policies and politics. But even if we put the question of
competencies straight there is an annex to this picture: On the one hand the
"EU-jurisdiction" and the "EU-executive" alike are never tired to make
us believe that the economically driven social model is the best or even the only
cure. On
the other hand, it is well recognised that just this, that the current pathway of
integration is inevitably associated with burdens for the citizens of Europe.
One and probably the main explanation of this is the specific
institutional mechanism not so much between Council and Commission but lying behind
that between national and supranational politics. Images like the one of
subsidiarity, processes of global action, multidimensionality, sustainability and the
likes are more a chimera than leading principles of real
policy-making. Thus, social
analysis and social action alike are always caught in a kind of
dilemma: the
"knowledge" of or the hope for a "grand plan" and the necessity to
comply with the incremental steps of (political) every days life and its
(political)
shortcomings (and of course with every days life challenges, developments and problems in
general life is more than politics, indeed).
In fact, the Commissions ongoing efforts to pose "The
Social" at the centre stage of the agenda is not just an expression of the struggle
between different institutions and, as well, it is even more than the reasoning about
"strategies". Instead, it is the development of the supposedly already existing
European social model. Thus, the incremental character of the process is already part of
the "grand plan" and in my view a strong argument for functional
explanations.
Two more or less recent documents, namely the background document
Towards a Europe for All How should the Community support Member
States? (it was
the fundamental document for the conference in Brussels earlier this year see for
information on the conference: http://europa.eu.int/comm/dg05/soc-prot/soc-incl/news/socinclusion_en.htm)
and the Commissions Communication A Concerted Strategy for Modernising Social
Protection (COM 99/347; 14.7.99 http://europa.eu.int/comm/dg05/soc-prot/social/com99-347/com99-347_en.pdf)
mark the current state of the art.
Point of departure is the assumption that "modernising"
social protection means to make best use of its potential as a productive
factor. (Strategy:
7) The necessity and opportunity arises from especially three major changes in the
institutional system of the EU, i.e. the completion of the single Market, the ratification
of the Treaty of Amsterdam and finally the preparations of
enlargement.
But this marks only the framework, in which social policy
despite the question of its definition and the setting into practice goes a step
further in gaining some stronghold. The actual point is a substantial
argument, which
reads as follows: The climate of monetary stability which EMU has created has
established a good basis on which Member States can address the key challenge of making
social protection systems sustainable and reliable. It has done so primarily by boosting
the Unions capacity to generate the economic and jobs growth necessary for
sustainability. (8)
It follows the emphasis of the already reached level, nevertheless
still increasing process of structural change, re-allocation of resources and of
course, the benefits and the costs of economic restructuring are distributed unequally
between economic actors. (8) It is known too well that this is true in
regard of individual aspects, in regard of social groups and as well in regard of the
development of regional disparities. Hand in hand with this, however, goes the increase of
inter-dependence. And this is the focus and the nearly a turn of the current
argument.
Even coming from the economic flank the Commission assumes that meanwhile the development
has reached a stage where it is not possible to conceal anymore the real character of the
EU. If christened as federation, association of states or whatever does not change the
fundamental aspect that it is a complex structure. And as such we meanwhile have to
acknowledge the presence of all elements of a "state" and these elements exist
in their own right. In other words, the Commission leaves no doubt that social policy is
an area which cannot be cheated for two reasons: the unequal distribution of the results
and effects of the process of integration and, second, the economic
inter-dependence. In short: social responsibility has to be taken over as result of the process of integration
itself! Of course, on a different analytical level the various possible forms of
"state" matter. Here, however, it is sufficient to point on some success of the
Delorist project which is described as the transition from
market-building to state-building (Bornchschier, Volker/Ziltener, Patrick: The
revitalization of Western Europe and the politics of the "social dimension"; in:
European Societies. Fusion or Fission?; Boje, Thomas P./van Steenbergen, Bart/Walby,
Sylvia [Eds.]; London/New York: Routledge, 19999: 33 ff.; here: 41) The authors
describe the underlying assumption of Delors with the words In the course of the
integration process, elements of state-building would emerge, that
is, the transfer of
national sovereignty to the EC, whose weight would thereby become
greater. (ibid.)
My proposition, then, is that the question is not if the EU is a "state"
with "full competencies" rather than in which way the competencies are
interpreted and distributed. Which kind of "state" is it and is it structured in
a "appropriate" way? Putting the question in this way, thus changing the
perspective of many strands in the debate is not just of theoretical interest but makes it
possible to get clearer hold of the stage and the actors.
Thus far I tried to provide a sketch of a complex picture employed with
the broad framework of politics and the respective processes of societal structuration. It
is interesting how frankly the Commission meanwhile claims the responsibility for a wider
and even more or less integrated approach to politics on the EU level while on the
analytical level there is still only a very vague assessment of the already currently
reached level of integration.
Even if several shortcoming of the current level of integration
remain, indeed, at least the Commission proceeds from a high level of integration (a recent test
case might be the First European Community Framework Programme in Support of Culture (2000
2004). Proposal for a European Parliament and Council Decision Establishing a
Single Financing and Programming Instrument for Cultural Cooperation
(Culture 2000
Programme) (COM 98-266 final. 98/0169 COD. Brussels: 6.5.1998: http://europa.eu.int/comm/dg10/culture/program-2000_en.html,
not yet adopted by the Council this is to be expected early the next
year). In particular, the Amsterdam Treaty is seen as a cornerstone for the new
setting. As far as
it can be seen yet the new Commission will not be anxious to change this view in any
substantial way nor even will it scratch at the surface of the given
pattern.
Anyway, in general the main actor is still defined in a rather strict,
yet still not legally defined accordance with the principle of subsidiarity. And, looking
at the actors now we are confronted with a somewhat tricky constellation, which is
characterised by three features:
- Firstly as mentioned: the principle of subsidiarity as basic mechanism,
- Secondly the supposed far-reaching range of integration, and
- Thirdly the confession that for all the EU efforts there remains a
serious step to be taken in developing citizenship, here meant as consciousness of being a
European citizen.
The first two points have to be taken as complimentary as the
underlined ever increasing interdependence factually means that in tendency the role of
the member states is being reduced on taking responsibility as executive, leaving the
actual policy making at the EU level.
As Richard Münch pointed at the recent gathering of European
Sociologists (http://www.qub.ac.uk/esa/index.html)
out in Amsterdam the situation in regard of the third point is actually not as bleak
as it sometimes seems to be even if the price to be paid is high. As he states the meaning
of the traditional model of social integration and solidarity diminishes but the
identification with the EU is fairly high not measured just by answering the question if
one feels as being whatever national citizen or European citizen. Besides this
identification can be seen in the orientation on European issues and the support for EU
and EU wide activities. In the abstract of his presentation we read: The active society
of citizens could become a vision of global modernity. Thus we are confronted with an
increasing liberalisation, a general loosening of solidarity and social integration and at
the same time a shift to new patterns of social integration on a level beyond national
borders (see in this connection as well Richard Münch: Globale Dynamik, lokale
Lebenswelten. Der schwierige Weg in die Weltgesellschaft. Frankfurt/M.: Suhrkamp, 1998).
Nevertheless this is a more or less general picture, which does not
include the view on those being excluded or, to put it milder, not being
included. And it
is just this section of the population, which is issued in the presentation of the
background document Towards a Europe for All How should the Community support
Member States. Not least the new emphasis on solidarity in the Amsterdam Treaty is taken
as point of departure. Interestingly, the economic exclusion is not just seen as a social
problem in a limited socio-economic sense, even if this factor is not faded out.
Furthermore, economic exclusion, even if actually taking place on the national
level, is
seen as European matter and interpreted in conjunction with social and societal
integration in general; there is rarely another explanation for the
statement: The
way to overcome exclusion is through participation, through engaging and involving people.
It is essential to involve every part of society in tackling this growing alienation
within the Union. (2) This goes hand in hand with underlining the
responsibility of the EU. The Member States of the European union all have their own
means of ensuring that solidarity. But as more and more progress has been made in European
economic integration, more stress has been put on accompanying this economic progress with
social progress at European level. (1 f.)
First of all, we then get an overview of the existing activities in
regard of inclusion, namely
- the completion of the single market and the EMU as securing a sound
economic basis for further development in economic and social term. The Commission
understands social development in part as immediate complement of the economic
progress;
in part it is, however, depending on the economic development insofar there the means for
social measures are produced;
- the European Employment Strategy;
- the Structural Funds;
- after these supposed major mechanisms we find further indicators as
research programmes, orientation on action for sustainability, youth and education
initiatives and others.
It is not necessary to go into detail in regard of these issues,
neither will I here again debate in particular the Commissions
tightrope walk between employment policy and social policy. In question in regard of the
document here in review is the question of EUropean responsibility for
action. The paper
mentions in particular:
- Stimulating integrated policy approaches and action (5
f.)
- Promotion of partnership and solidarity across society
(6)
- Involvement of all relevant actors and the participation of
excluded people as real stakeholders (7)
Even if mainly concerned with labour market integration/participation
the interesting aspect is the confirmation of the strategy, which I still would like to
call politics passing the nation state others prefer to term it a multi-level
process strongly connected with the partnership approach. A further element is the
planned better co-ordination of social exclusion issues at European level
[which]
would benefit from bringing together all the relevant Commission services to look at what
contribution is made to combating social exclusion by the full range of Community
policies. (9)
Thus, even if a multi-level process, even if concerned with the
inclusion of NGOs and local respectively regional agencies as actors it is a deep concern
that at the end of the day the approach is shaped as lead by a top-down strategy.
It is what can be brought in parallel with the traditional leftist
critique of social policy even if bringing about real improvements for social
security and the whole life situation the fundamental structuration is oriented along the
lines of legitimising the pattern of male breadwinner welfare states. Changes are only
thus far brought on the way as they serve the interest of fostering employment and
economic wealth in the society instead of the society. With reservation and in this sense
we can quote Walter Lorenz (Social Work and Cultural Politics. The paradox of German
Social Pedagogy in: Welfare and Culture in Europe. Towards a New Paradigm in Social
Policy. Eds.: Prue Chamberlayne/Andrew Cooper/Richard Freeman/Michael Rustin; Jessica
Publishers, Ldn.; 1999), who states referring to Flora: "The welfare
state may be seen as completion of the nation state, to the extent that
individual social rights become an essential element of citizenship as the main basis of
political legitimacy" (Flora, 1986: p.xv). It substantiated the idea of belonging to
a nation decisively by giving individuals a material stake in the
state.
While the
welfare state secured a high degree of integration (at the price of conformity and
uniformity with assumed national standards,
), it depended also on a high degree of
differentiation between nation states externally. (27)
And it is this pattern of engaging in constructing European Citizenship
which is currently shaping the debate. Strategies on governance are questions of
construing rather than simply questions of formalisation and institutionalisation given
rights. And the underlying policy approach even in regard of new public management in the
social area is blatant. In the words ofd the OECD it reads as
following: Governments
in Member countries are still committed to promoting policies that achieve the highest
sustainable economic growth and employment and that contribiute to economic and social
well-being. (Governance in Transition. Public Management Reforms in OECD
Countries. Conclusions of the Public Management Committee. Paris: OECD, 1995: 5) the
unbroken belief or even faith in the invisible hand of the free market in which some of
todays disciples go even further than Adam Smith.
In one of the next issues we will take the opportunity to look more in
detail on the substance of the current debate of the Commissions proposal for a way
Towards a Europe for all.