29 Apr 2022

Master’s Degree Scholarships in Germany 2023/2024

Application Deadline?

30th June 2022

Tell Me About Award:

The scholarship programme “Leadership for Africa” (LfA) aims to support the academic qualification and advancement of young refugees and national scholars from Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, and Senegal at higher education institutions in Germany. In times of conflicts and displacement in various African countries, this programme intends to contribute to the education of future leaders, who will be essential for the further development of their home countries. “Leadership for Africa” offers scholarships for Master studies in Germany to qualified applicants in all fields of study except for medicine, veterinary medicine, dentistry, law, the arts and architecture.

All “Leadership for Africa” scholarship holders benefit from a complementary training programme in good governance, civil society, and career development. The mandatory programme must be completed in addition to the regular studies.

What Type of Scholarship is this?

Master’s

Who can apply?

All “Leadership for Africa” scholarship holders benefit from a complementary training programme in good governance, civil society, and career development. The mandatory programme must be completed in addition to the regular studies.

The programme targets two groups:

1) Highly qualified refugees who hold refugee status and fulfil the necessary qualifications for Master studies in Germany. Applicants must fulfil the following conditions:

  • Holding refugee status in their host countries, being granted before 18th of April 2022
  • Country of asylum must be either Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, or Senegal. 
  • Completed Bachelor’s degree at the time of application.

2) Highly qualified graduates from Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, or Senegal who fulfil the necessary qualifications for Master studies in Germany. Applicants must fulfil the following conditions:

  • Citizenship of either Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, or Senegal.
  • Country of residence is Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, or Senegal. 
  • Completed Bachelor’s degree at the time of application.

Which Countries are Eligible?

Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Niger, Senegal

Where will Award be Taken?

Germany

How Many Scholarships will be Given?

25

What is the Benefit of Scholarship?

  • Language training
  • Monthly stipend (e.g. food allowance)
  • Health insurance
  • Travel costs to the third country

How Long will Program Last?

For the duration of studies

How to Apply for Scholarship?

  • The application is to be sent EXCLUSIVELY through the DAAD portal through the section “submitting an application” highlighted in green.

Visit Award Webpage for Details

The Imperial Logics of the Pakistani Left

Azhar Imran


Pakistan has been rocked by demonstrations throughout the country since the ouster of former Prime Minister Imran Khan from power. This development has been a surprise not only to Khan’s detractors, but to Khan’s supporters as well. The size of these rallies has been astonishing. What they have also demonstrated is that the Pakistanis who have been outraged by recent political developments in the country cut across class lines as well as provincial ones. Khan’s party, PTI, has proven itself to be a real national political party that – to its credit – is fairly representative of all regions of the country. This is no small feat.

In the middle of these displays of support for Khan (or just revulsion of the political lot that got rid of him), there have been some among the Pakistani Left at pains to demonstrate that Khan is no “anti-imperialist hero.” This would not be such a major issue if this canard were not repeated almost like clockwork on a weekly basis, with some Pakistani leftist rehashing the same tired arguments. The neurotic obsession to prove to a ‘Western Left’ that Khan is not an anti-imperialist is beginning to seem utterly bizarre.

To my knowledge, Khan nor any prominent member of his party has ever even used the word ‘imperialism.’ It’s possible that he doesn’t even know the meaning, and certainly not the Marxist-Leninist understanding of the word.

What Khan can legitimately take credit for is being virtually alone within the political class to have consistently opposed the ‘War on Terror’ in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the invasions, occupations, drone attacks, military operations in the tribal areas, etc. He can take credit for speaking about Palestine in a context where the Gulf countries – egged on by Washington and Tel Aviv of course – put immense pressure on Islamabad to ‘normalize’ relations with Israel. As even the well-known progressive intellectual Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa noted, the dominant view in the military top brass was to go along with ‘normalization,’ assuming the perks for Pakistani elites would be lucrative. To his credit, Khan resisted this.

Khan can be credited with speaking about the plight of Kashmiris in an incredibly powerful way. Kashmir solidarity activists throughout the world will readily admit how much Khan’s speech at the UN in 2019 assisted the work of getting this issue onto the global radar screen. He can also be credited with being the first Pakistani leader who in no uncertain terms stated that the future of Kashmir will be determined according to Kashmiri wishes, not according to “Pakistani sentiments.” If Kashmiris want to opt for independence (an option not included in the UN resolution which only gives them the option of joining India or Pakistan), it is their right to do so, according to Khan.

Khan has also spoken about collusion between elites of the Global North and the Global South, enabling the latter to pillage their countries and launder the money to the banks of the former.

Beyond that, Khan’s diplomatic maneuvering with regards to Iran, China, and Russia – is straightforward geopolitics. Pakistan is in Asia. These are significant countries in the region, two of which (Iran and Russia) have been historical adversaries. Improving relations with them is common sense, especially if something was to be gained, particularly in the area of energy, to help ameliorate the poor economic conditions of Pakistan.

In the latest crisis, Khan has insisted that Washington has been meddling into Pakistani affairs to achieve its desired political outcomes, i.e. the removal of Khan. This would not really be so shocking if it were true. The American national security state has not really forgiven Khan for effectively being proven right about both the immorality and counter-productiveness of a military solution in Afghanistan. More than any other factor, it has been the American military-intelligence apparatus which ensured that President Biden not develop any meaningful relationship with Khan. This general antagonism towards Khan had soured even more when Khan, as opposed to some generals who thought they could make some easy money, made it absolutely clear that no American base would be on Pakistani soil. And then, of course, came the visit to Russia.

Much of Khan’s rhetoric and actions have simply to do with what Khan perceived as sensible geopolitics from his vantage point. Of course, he could be wrong in some of these domains. But these have been his positions.

Regardless whether there was American interference in Pakistan this time around, a strong message against Western hegemonic designs in the Global South is constantly needed. Whether that makes you an anti-imperialist is another question.

And if anti-imperialism is seen as something which only anti-capitalist forces can engage in, then of course Khan is no anti-imperialist.

However, by holding this criterion for being an anti-imperialist, the Pakistani Left should then realize that it is dismissing the anti-imperialist credentials of many individuals and movements which were not necessarily anti-capitalist, yet still considered – in their own modest ways – as anti-imperialist.

Individuals like Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh of Iran or Juan Peron of Argentina were not anti-capitalists, yet certainly have been assumed to be anti-imperialists. Leftist forces in both the Palestinian occupied territories as well in Lebanon open ally with Islamist resistance forces (such as Hezbullah) because, despite not being anti-capitalist, they do deem the latter as anti-imperialist forces.

Indeed, there is nothing complicated about Khan’s positions on these matters. They are the same ones he’s held for the past twenty years. It boils down to asserting Pakistani sovereignty against a dominant world power which has adversely interfered in Pakistan since the days of the Cold War.

The far more important problem is not that of semantics, i.e. is anti-imperialism the proper word or not to describe Khan’s political posturing towards the US? It is the curious and obsessive endeavor of the Pakistani Left to ensure no one in the Global Left dare think anything potentially positive about Khan. This is why the otherwise incredibly intelligent and gifted Pakistani Left is engaged in very childish straw man arguments against this ostensible “anti-imperialist hero” – a term I’ve only seen for the first time in the latest musings of the Pakistani Left.

The real question is: with massive numbers of Pakistanis out on the street, would it not be more useful at this point for the Pakistani Left to engage with these people who have real grievances, to assist in the development of a more radical understanding of the politics of resistance? Would that not be a far more useful exercise than the Pakistani Left outdoing each other on twitter in generating hip one-liners about the stupidity of these Pakistanis?

In addition, the fanatical focus on what the Western Left thinks is particularly odd. The Western Left, with no disrespect intended, can barely make a dent in their own societies. Does the Pakistani Left seriously believe that the Western Left is that important to what is going in our country? Or is this sadly a case of a bruised ego of the former because the latter is hearing about vast mobilizations in which the Pakistani Left is conspicuously absent?

Is the fact that a few Western leftists tweeted something positive about Khan really such an important issue for the Pakistani Left, considering what’s going on in the country? And shouldn’t the message to the Western Left be the simple, old-fashioned one: their task is to oppose any meddling by their powerful countries into the affairs of the Global South. Period.

The Pakistani Left, strangely enough, is behaving like an imperial Godfather itself. It is policing what any self-proclaimed leftist in any attic in Kansas is saying about Khan, throwing tantrums when someone exercises their free speech in the wrong way. And sadly, the Pakistani diaspora Left, especially in the US, behaves like a regiment of the Pakistani Left, taking their marching orders and adhering strictly to them. They recycle the same tweets of no more than 5-10 Pakistani leftists in the ‘Green Zone.’

Tragically, it seems like we’re dealing with multiple cults and narratives with Stalinist discipline these days. Khan seems to have good company in this regard.

And then we are supposed to believe that these diaspora Pakistani leftists actually care about people’s voices of resistance, of mass movements in Pakistan and the Global South. These diaspora leftists have failed miserably this time around. The demonstrations did not obtain the stamp of approval from the Pakistani Left, so our comrades in the US could then shut their eyes to some of the biggest mobilizations in the history of Pakistan.

Pakistanis seem to have demonstrated the ‘wrong agency’ and would only be heard by the Pakistani (diaspora) Left if their ‘agency’ happened under the banner of the Communist International and its gazillion local sectarian variants.

Hence, everything works out conveniently for everyone. Diaspora leftists remain in a comfort zone of speaking to leftists in Pakistan, the two communicating in their own privileged specialized lingo, and none of them having to get their hands dirty by actually engaging and understanding (with, God forbid, empathy!) the massive mobilizations taking place.

So far, the extent of the ‘engagement’ (if we can call it that) of the Pakistani Left in the country and in the diaspora has been the following: all of these protestors are all hyper-nationalist, urban, middle class, buffoonish youth, etc. Can you imagine if this was the way any Left worth its salt engaged and behaved in any other country?

How fascinating it is that the Pakistani Left is obsessed with what a few irrelevant Western leftists think of Khan, but is completely indifferent and oblivious to what Kashmiris or Palestinians – some of the most oppressed peoples on the planet – think of him? Or how about all of those Pashtuns that the Pakistani Left told us despised Khan? It turns out that if there is one province where Khan has overwhelming support, it is that of the Pashtuns. Go figure.

It seems like Pakistanis, Kashmiris, Palestinians, Pashtuns, etc. only matter if they are willing to submit to the Party Line of the Pakistani Left. If not, to hell with them. They are seen as hopelessly brainwashed with a ‘false consciousness’ from which only the Pakistani Left can liberate them, sometimes with the assistance of NATO or the Pakistani military.

The Population Implosion

Graham Peebles


By any calculation there are too many people in the world, far too many in fact (7.9 billion at the time of writing), probably double what the planet can comfortably support; over the last sixty years the population has increased dramatically (in 1950 it was just 2.5 billion), particularly in China and India, where over a billion have been added in both countries.

There are too many people huddled in polluted, noisy urban centers, many in developing nations often living in poor or degrading housing; too many people living on the fringes of society and there are too many people for the finite resources, the land, water, food, etc. The problem of food insecurity, however, has more to do with poverty, which is the result of social injustice and a dysfunctional socio-economic system, than with the number of mouths to feed or lack of foodstuff.

Overpopulation is often (mistakenly) cited as a cause of the environmental emergency, but the large numbers are not the source or driver of the crisis. Historically caused by industrialized nations, climate change and the ecological disaster is being fueled by the rabid consumption and irresponsible lifestyles (including animal-based diets) of the comfortable and the very rich in western countries. China, which leads the world on renewable investment, is responsible for the highest number of Greenhouse Gas Emissions (although not per capita), and is routinely shamed as a result, but much of the manufacturing, which churns out the poisons, is in response to demand from Europe, the US and elsewhere.

Changing populations

The issue is not simply about overpopulation, but as the UN puts it, “An unprecedented and sustained change in the age structure of the global population [is taking place], driven by increasing levels of life expectancy and decreasing levels of fertility.” The subject is complex and presents a range of economic and health/social care challenges, plus fundamental questions about values and approach overall to life and our understanding of and relationship with death. Living longer is something many people long for, a desire which results partly from fear of death. This is particularly prevalent in The West, in Africa, South America and the Middle East. In fact, the only countries where a more balanced, and perhaps more enlightened view of death is found appear to be India, Nepal and especially Tibet, as well as some tribal groups.

As a result of advances in medicine and lifestyle changes people are living longer, and the percentage of elderly people is growing rapidly. “Globally there were 727 million ….aged 65 years or over [mostly women, as they live longer] in 2020.” This number is expected to double by 2050 to 1.5 billion, or between 16%-22% of the total, with 80% living in poor or middle income countries (India and China e.g.); in Japan 30% of the population is already over 60.

Not only is the population changing, but a shift from rural living (where there is commonly a lack of work opportunities) to cities, which has been underway for some decades is intensifying (over 50% of people globally now live in a city), particularly among young people (under 30). This movement is having a devastating impact on rural communities and on families; villages/small towns are dying and multi-generation households are being eroded. The absence of younger generations means that most elderly people in the US, Europe, Japan, either live alone, or with a similarly aged partner, often with little or no family support. Divorce, cohabitation, declines in fertility (in some countries), increased levels of education and changes in employment/industry are all contributing to the changing demographic, and to the impact on families/households and small communities.

The fracturing of traditional family structures, in which grandparents/ageing parents would look after their children/grandchildren and with extended family to care for them is also taking place in developing countries, albeit at a slower pace. Here no welfare system or state pension scheme exists as in most developed nations, and a form of economic security has historically been provided to ageing parents by their children. This lack of government support is one reason for the predominance of large families in African and South-Asian countries, in addition to the fact that due to poor health care and limited access, child mortality is high. Sub-Saharan Africa, where the median age is just 19 (it’s 44 in Europe, 39 in US and China and 48 in Japan), has the highest rates of child mortality in the world: 1 in 9 children dies before age five, which is more than 16 times the average for developed regions. This is one of the (many) consequences of poverty, which is primarily the result of colonialism/neo-colonialism and sustained exploitation by western powers.

Not only are populations ageing (with the exception of Africa) throughout the world, but birthrates are falling, in some cases dramatically, meaning that in many areas communities will increasingly become grey and elderly: in China last year there were 11 births per 1000 people, compared with 22/1000 in 1980; Europe 2020, 10 births/1000 people, in 1980 it was 15 The US is also seeing a declining trend in births: in 2021 the rate was 12 per 1000 people, down from 15 in 1980 and 24 in 1950. Birth rates are also falling across Africa, albeit slowly and from an historically high bar of around 45/1000 in 1980 to 32/1000 in 2021. This is a positive point in an otherwise chaotically crowded landscape, and means that once the global population peaks in 2070 (when it is projected to reach a colossal nine billion), it will gradually begin falling.

The choice is clear

The societal implications of large concentrations of old people are many, the issues for governments varied and pressing. Most important is health and social care, both of which are widely either underfunded (the UK e.g.), prohibitively expensive (US), non-existent or inadequate (rural Sub-Saharan Africa and rural South East Asia).

Such essential public services, and health/social care is and should always be regarded as a public service, and not a ‘mouthwatering profit’ business, and needs to be properly funded; the glowing model of public investment is Scandinavia. In 2017 Denmark, Norway, Sweden, spent on average $5400 per person on healthcare, by comparison the UK, which prides itself on its National Health Service (NHS), spent a mere $3760 per person. The difference is stark; so too, one suspects, are the waiting times for treatment, as well as access to GPs and specialists, if not necessarily the quality of care, when eventually seen.

Scandinavian countries are able to spend at this level, because the population and governments recognize the importance of the collective — of society, and is willing to pay taxes at a rate that enables public services, including health care to be properly funded. In Denmark (2019) e.g., the tax to GDP ratio was 46.3percent, in the US, where health care is unaffordable to millions of Americans, it was 24 per cent (similar to the Caribbean and Latin America), almost half; Sub-Saharan African countries, with low GDP, average 16 per cent.

Creating a public health/social care system and adequately funding it rests upon the nature of the society people want to live in, the type of world we want to create. Do we want to build truly democratic societies based on social justice and freedom, equality and participation; societies in which health/social care is recognized to be of greater importance that military spending; societies where responsibility for others and the natural world are central, or do we continue as we are, living in broadly undemocratic, unjust unhealthy societies in which a few benefit and exert control over the majority?

When spelt out in such stark, almost crude terms, it is obvious, is to not? What government in their right mind would prioritize buying weapons over building hospitals or care homes, and what society would allow such madness to take place?

As the demand for support among elderly populations grows and health/social care systems come under increasing pressure, such choices, which sit beyond the inhibiting limitations of ideologies, will become starker and starker; but when common sense and compassion are guiding actions and infusing decisions, it will be found that there is no choice at all.

The Dollar and Delusional Assumptions about Sanctions against Russia

Jon V. Kofas


DOLLARDOLLAR

Sanctions are a form of warfare, and few would deny that we have moved into a new era of economic warfare with sanctions, led by the US, have become the norm, rather than the exception. This was the conclusion recently of the pro-Western World Economic Forum. If there is general agreement that sanctions are a form of warfare, and not selectively, but regardless of who imposes them and for whatever reason, the next question is the cost-benefit ratio on the country or countries imposing them.

Clearly, the desired goal is to use economic sanction as leverage, although there is an appreciation of their impact on the general population, rather the elite of the targeted nation. From the Cuban Revolution, to the Iranian Revolution, and to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, history has shown that sanction do not yield the desired goal. When imposed on countries like China, economic sanctions have shown to cause far greater damage to those imposing them than on the targeted country. Assuming that heads of state are well aware of this reality, why go the route of economic sanctions, only to suffer the detrimental consequences?

The combination of ideology, power status, the mythology/pathology of “greatness”, even when time has diluted such “greatness”, revenge at any cost, desperation owing to lack of alternative paths, and, of course, delusional thinking of which it is always in abundance on the part of the political and business elite, merely because they embrace the fallacy of the eternal sameness against the harsh reality of constant change combined with the other reality of the unpredictability on the part of the sanctioned party. Just as Russian is not what it was in 1949 when it successfully tested the first atomic bomb, and simultaneously Mao’s revolution succeeded in China, neither is the US the same as the world’s hegemonic superpower with the dollar as the world’s preeminent currency.

When Biden announced the massive US-led sanctions against Russia, US and European officials as well as Western analysts were predicting the complete collapse of the Russian currency now linked to gold; the quick bankruptcy of the Russian state agencies owing to defaults, followed by an economic depression and presumably the Kremlin’s decision to leave Ukraine in humiliation. At the same time, US-Western analysts expected an international rush to buy dollars, thereby strengthening the US reserve currency.

The above scenario was around the end of February when the euro-dollar exchange rate just $1.13-1.14 to one euro. On 28 April the dollar-euro rate stands at $1.05, representing a significant drop against a currency itself in trouble because of the Russian sanctions. More significant, a number of private financial institutions as well as the IMF which monitors currencies globally, have concluded that the dollar is headed for continued decline. Saudi Arabia among other countries have already announced that they are transitioning out of the dollar as the most reliable reserve currency. The US-NATO sanctions regime which is in essence a reaffirmation of economic bloc trading in the absence of their ability to compete with China, regardless of what has taken place with Russia, demonstrates that the West is undermining the Western neoliberal model from within, using the Russian war as a pretext in a desperate attempt to retain core status in the world economy.

The US-NATO plan to weaken Russia militarily, thereby sending a message to China about Taiwan, rather than to pursue a diplomatic solution will hasten and deepen global economic recession, and by default strengthen China despite its own supply chain problems because of an austere COVID-19 lock down policy. Rhetoric aside, the Russian currency has stabilized. GAZPROM has already compelled a number of European countries and companies to pay in rubles for natural gas. And the idea that a war of attrition will only hurt Russia has proved delusional so far, and we are still early in a conflict that the US wants to be drawn out.

The idea that a military solution will favor the US-NATO bloc and result in the demise of Russia is another leap into the murky realm of delusional thinking, considering that autocratic Putin is more determined and far more capable of doing damage to Europe than NATO can inflict on Russia, unless the West has resolve to put an end to the continent. This is not to suggest that the Kremlin’s delusions are less imperialistic, less militaristic and more ethical than those of the US-NATO coalition. If China never existed, and if more than two dozen countries of the 195 in the world were taking part in US-led sanctions, US-NATO sanctions would not be as delusional, though they would still not be nearly as effective as policy makers assume.

UK: Fire-and-rehire threat to hundreds of jobs at Wabtec rail engineering in Doncaster and Birkenhead

Joe Mount


Wabtec, a rail engineering firm, plans 80 job losses at its two UK sites in Doncaster and Birkenhead. All 150 staff are threatened with fire and rehire, where they will be sacked if they don’t re-apply for their own jobs on inferior terms and conditions.

Wabtec Rail Ltd has used the pandemic as a pretext for attacks on its workforce it had attempted to implement for years. In July 2020, during the first wave of COVID-19, their rail refurbishment factory announced plans for up to 450 redundancies, following a 45-day consultation period. The remainder of the workforce was to be fired and forced to take new, inferior contracts.

Wabtec Rail's 08853 shunts London North Eastern Railway Mark 4 coaches outside the workshops in Doncaster. August 27, 2019. (Credit: Creative Commons/Geof Sheppard)

The firm is part of Wabtec Corporation, a major US conglomerate, based in Pittsburgh, that employs 27,000 people in 50 countries and has an annual turnover of £6 billion, supplying components and services to the rail industry. It is listed on the Standard and Poor’s 500 index of large companies on the New York Stock Exchange.

The transnational expanded into the UK in 2011, running a rail refurbishment works in Doncaster and another plant in Birkenhead, Merseyside. Doncaster has an industrial heritage spanning generations, with the famous Flying Scotsman and Mallard locomotives being built there in the 1920s and 1930s. The skilled jobs threatened include factory operatives, assembly fitters, engineers, and supervisors.

Negotiations between Wabtec Corporation and the Rail, Maritime and Transport workers union (RMT) have been ongoing since March 2021 over redundancies, “flexible” contracts, and increased exploitation. The company claims the stepped up productivity measures are to create “modern working practices”, motivated by the “challenging economic climate.”

There is mounting opposition to these attacks, rolled out in the context of a pandemic that was routinely used by employers as a pretext for the imposition of wholesale attacks on wages and working conditions. Workers in heavy industry and engineering were forced, as “key workers”, to continue to labour in unsafe, overcrowded factories while the super-rich increased their wealth.

RMT members at Wabtec voted by a large majority to reject a company offer in March, the second time the new flexible working conditions have been refused. The company’s response was to insist on job losses and threaten to fire and rehire the workforce.

RMT General Secretary Mick Lynch said that Wabtec “has behaved disgracefully”, meekly stressing that the union “is open to talks” but “will not rule out an industrial response.”

The RMT has engaged in protracted negotiations with a company acting “disgracefully” and even now only warns of possible industrial action. They did not mobilise their members or raise a call for solidarity across the sector, and among other workers facing similar threats. The attack at Wabtec comes amid ongoing strikes and planned action on the railways, with hundreds of conductors engaged in weekend strikes on TransPennine Express trains over pay. The RMT is currently balloting its 40,000 members over national strike action.

The outcome of the union’s prolonged talks with Wabtec is the imposition of fire-and-rehire. This is part of an international process of restructuring required by the corporate elite to extract from the working class the huge sums of bailout money doled out to corporations and financial institutions throughout the pandemic. The trade unions are an integral part of this process.

While the RMT has declared this an official dispute, with the lack of publicity given, and the union’s refusal to respond to this reporter’s queries, one must assume they are attempting to return to the negotiating table and assist the company in implementing its plans without calling for strike action.

In 2014, rail workers organised in the RMT balloted for the first time in the history of the firm’s British operations, achieving a 90 percent vote to strike. The action was called off at the last minute by the union, who work hand-in-glove with management to keep a lid on potential industrial action. The RMT’s political allies in the Labour Party made the token gesture of submitting an Early Date Motion in parliament, which was signed by just 11 members of parliament (MPs) and commits the party to nothing.

Wabtec is making similar attacks at Birkenhead, Merseyside, threatening to fire-and-rehire its 130 staff to impose productivity increases. The Unite union has threatened to organise a strike ballot if the company maintains its threats. The company denies that it plans to make mass redundancies.

This dispute is being artificially separated from that at Doncaster by Unite and the RMT. Unite General Secretary Sharon Graham stated, “Wabtec’s management must understand that Unite has always fought back against ‘fire and rehire’ and we are fully prepared to do so again here.” But the union has previously agreed to productivity increases at the site. Across the UK, it has allowed the imposition of fire and rehire by betraying several recent struggles, such as those at Go North West and Jacobs Douwe Egberts.

In March, P&O ferries carried out the mass sacking of 800 seafarers, represented by the RMT. Although such practices are legal, companies are only able to implement them with the complicity of the union bureaucracy.

The latest fire and rehire was carried out by a firm based in Hull, CDS Energy Services, who sacked 60 workers earlier this month. The company, located at the city’s Saltend oil and gas terminal, immediately sought to rehire 30 of the sacked workers.

Biden massively expands US war with Russia

Andre Damon


On Thursday, US President Joe Biden called on Congress to approve $20 billion in weapons shipments for the US war with Russia as part of a $33 billion spending package.

To date, the United States has sent $3.7 billion worth of weapons to Ukraine, meaning that Biden is proposing to expand US involvement in the conflict by a factor of six. This would mark a quantitative turning point of the war, massively expanding the US intervention just as the war is rapidly spiraling out of control and metastasizing into a continent-wide conflict. 

President Joe Biden walks to speak to reporters before boarding Air Force One at Des Moines International Airport, in Des Moines Iowa, Tuesday, April 12, 2022, en route to Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

The announcement is part of a major escalation of US involvement in the war, in which US officials are more and more openly admitting that the United States is effectively at war with Russia. Earlier this week, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin described the meeting of US officials with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky by saying, “our focus in the meeting was to talk about those things that would enable us to win the current fight.” Austin then said, “We want to see Russia weakened.”

On Sunday, in an interview with CBS, former US Army Europe Commander Ben Hodges declared, “You know, we’re not just observers cheering for Ukraine here.” The United States, Hodges said, should declare, “We want to win.” He concluded, “that means… finally breaking the back of Russia’s ability to project power outside of Russia.”

Biden’s address, which was intended for a far broader audience than the remarks of Austin or Hodges, was characterized by shameless, bare-faced lies, flagrantly contradicting the statements of his own defense secretary.

“We need this bill to support Ukraine in its fight for freedom,” Biden said. “So, we need to contribute arms, funding, ammunition, and the economic support… We either back the Ukrainian people as they defend their country or we stand by as the Russians continue their atrocities and aggression in Ukraine.”

President Joe Biden speaks about the war in Ukraine in the Roosevelt Room at the White House, Thursday, April 28, 2022, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik) [AP Photo/Andrew Harnik]

Let’s be blunt. Biden’s war with Russia has nothing to do with the Ukrainian people, who are being used as cannon fodder by the kleptocratic regime in Kiev at the behest of its Washington paymasters.

The United Sates instigated the war by encircling Russia with troops, tanks, and nuclear weapons, expanding NATO’s borders 400 miles to the East over the course of decades, and backing Ukrainian plans to retake Crimea, which Russia claims as its territory. Washington’s aims are nothing less than the overthrow of the Russian government and the total subordination of Russia to imperialism, which Biden admitted when he declared last month that Putin “cannot remain in power.”

Following Biden’s remarks, the president was asked by a journalist, “How worried are you by a growing number of Russian comments in the media and amongst some of their officials painting this conflict as actually already a conflict between NATO, the US, and Russia?  And they’re painting in very alarmist terms, talking of nuclear weapons, saying it’s a life-or-death struggle, et cetera. 

“And just separately—well, connected to that: Lavrov himself says it’s already a proxy war—not a direct war but a proxy war.  So are either of those two things true?”

To this, Biden replied, “They’re not true,” adding, “I think it’s more of a reflection not of the truth but of [Russia’s] failure.”

It is the policy of the US media to insist that claims the administration chooses to deny at a given moment are “Russian.” In this case, however, these were not merely “Russian” comments, but statements by Biden’s own defense secretary, as well as the undeniable reality visible to anyone who is not willfully deluding themselves.

Biden’s dishonesty is a reflection of the fact that the US population does not support war with Russia, and that the administration’s strategy is to create a set of facts on the ground that make war inevitable, then leave the American population with a bill of goods.

The brazen lying by the Biden administration relies on the fact that the American press as tightly controlled as in any totalitarian state. No one dares call the emperor naked. The US media, for its part, knows that its lies will be supported by a war-crazed and bloodthirsty affluent upper middle class, which has fully embraced Biden’s plans for war with Russia.

Not one journalist got up to ask the obvious question: “Your own defense secretary just said ‘we’ are in a ‘fight’ with Russia, while you just said you are not. Which of the two of you is lying?”

Nor did anyone ask:

“According to Politico, the White House has set up a ‘tiger team’ to plan the eruption of a full-scale war with Russia. According to this team’s estimates, what percent of the American population will die in a full-scale nuclear war with Russia?”

On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin made his most open threat to date to retaliate against the US and other NATO members for their involvement in the war.

“If someone decides to intervene into the ongoing events from the outside and create unacceptable strategic threats for us, they should know that our response to those oncoming blows will be swift, lightning-fast,” Putin told Russian lawmakers on Wednesday. “We have all the tools for this... We will use them if needed. And I want everyone to know this. We have already taken all the decisions on this.”

If this is the response of Russia to $3.7 billion in US weapons flowing to its borders, what will be its response to $20 billion?

US military strategists, for their part, are not only planning for nuclear war, but openly talking about it.  On Wednesday, Seth Cropsey, a former deputy undersecretary of the Navy, authored an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal titled, “The U.S. Should Show It Can Win a Nuclear War.”

He wrote, “The reality is that unless the U.S. prepares to win a nuclear war, it risks losing one,” He added that Putin “would need to reckon with the possibility that NATO could decapitate the Kremlin—yes, suffering casualties in the process, but still decapitate it.”

In the midst of such rhetoric, Edward Luce of the Financial Times warned, “Without most people being aware of it, the world is entering its most dangerous period since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. The majority under the age of 50 have grown up thinking the nuclear spectre is a relic of the last century. In the past few weeks, the prospect of a nuclear exchange has become the most live threat to this century’s peace.”

US interest rate policies leading to major shifts in global currency markets

Nick Beams


The rapid rise in inflation, which is pushing the US Federal Reserve to lift interest rates, is causing shifts within the global financial system reflected in the sharp rise of the dollar against other major currencies.

With inflation in the US running at more than 8 percent, the Fed is expected to lift its base interest rate by 0.5 percentage points at its meeting next month with further rises to come later in the year.

Acting US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell announces interest rates increase on March 16, 2022 (Source: CSPAN)

When the COVID-19 pandemic began in 2020, the major central banks cut interest rates in unison to historic lows to support financial markets, sending stock prices to record highs. But now divergences have opened because not all of them want to proceed as rapidly as the Fed with interest rate increases.

This has led to a rapid rise in the US dollar which, according to the Financial Times (FT)“is ripping through markets as investors bet most central banks will lag behind the pace of rises” by the Fed.

Consequently, the dollar index, which measures its strength against a basket of other currencies including the euro, the yen and the pound, hit a 20-year high yesterday.

The euro is down to a five-year low against the dollar and could fall even further. In trading this week, it fell even further than in March 2020 when markets were in turmoil at the start of the pandemic.

While the European Central Bank (ECB) has indicated it is moving to tighten monetary policy, it is not expected to shift as rapidly as the Fed. This is because of the impact of the Ukraine war on the euro zone economy with fears that moves to impose a complete embargo on Russian energy supplies will have a recessionary impact.

The ECB must also tread very carefully lest a too rapid tightening of monetary policy causes major problems for the highly indebted southern European economies, especially Italy, and leads to a return of the sovereign debt crisis of 2012.

Last week, the British pound fell to its lowest level against the dollar since late 2020. While the Bank of England (BoE) has begun to raise interest rates, the developing contraction of the British economy is giving rise to expectations the rises will not be as large as the Fed.

Retail spending is down, with sales falling 7.9 percent in March compared to the previous month, consumer confidence is plunging, reaching a near all-time low and there are indications of a decline in business activity.

According to Chris Williamson, the chief business economist at S&P Global: “Orders received by manufacturers have almost stalled, driven by an increasing loss of exports, and growth of services has slumped to among the weakest since the lockdowns of early 2021.”

This has given rise to the expectation that the BoE will not raise its bank rate by 0.5 percent points when it meets next month, leading to a fall in the value of the pound.

The widest divergence in currency values is between the dollar and the Japanese yen. The Japanese currency has dropped to a 20-year low against the dollar with further falls likely. Yesterday the Bank of Japan made clear it is not moving away from its low interest rate regime and will continue to intervene to keep bond yields close to zero.

The yen, normally regarded as a safe haven in times of economic turmoil, has fallen 12 percent so far this year and is ranked the worst performer out of 41 currencies tracked by the Wall Street Journal (WSJ)worse than even the Russian ruble and the Turkish lira.

Reporting on the yen’s slide earlier this week, the WSJ noted that “if the yen were a smaller currency, its slide might have less importance to financial markets. But the yen is key to global finance, ranking as the third-most-traded currency in the world.”

The slide will have a significant effect on the $22 trillion US Treasury market where Japanese financial institutions are the largest foreign purchasers of US government debt.

But the capacity of Japanese finance capital to buy US debt, under conditions where the US is moving to sell off some of the financial assets it has purchased as part of its monetary tightening policy, is under strain.

When buying debt, purchasers take out hedges against currency movements to protect the value of their trades. But the currency movements have become so large that the cost of hedging means the additional return an investor would obtain from holding US rather than Japanese bonds has almost disappeared.

Earlier this month, Japanese finance minister Shunichi Suzuki warned of damage to the economy because of the falling yen. “Stability is important and sharp currency moves are undesirable,” he said.

While a weak yen had its merits, the demerits were “greater under the current situation where crude oil and raw material costs are surging globally” making these items more expensive.

China is also being adversely affected, amid a battle within the government, reported on by the FT, over how to deal with the effects of the crisis in the property market on the economy and the financial system.

A group led by Vice Premier Liu He is pushing for a loosening of the credit restrictions that have hit Evergrande and other large property developers. One government adviser, who shares Liu’s views, has warned that continuing problems “may cause bad debts to spike and the entire financial sector to go under.”

But this is being opposed by another faction in the cabinet which says that claims of a financial collapse are overblown, and the clamp down must continue.

These problems are being exacerbated by the US interest rate rises which have seen the renminbi depreciate. If China does loosen credit and monetary policy this fall, this could accelerate and lead to a movement of capital out of the country.

So-called emerging and developing countries are also being hit. The International Monetary Fund’s latest Global Financial Stability Report noted that a quarter of the countries that had issued hard currency debt had liabilities trading at distressed levels.

The higher interest rate regime being enacted by the Fed is leading to significant movements on Wall Street. Earlier this week, the Dow fell by 800 points with the S&P 500 index dropping by 2.8 percent to bring its fall for the year to 12 percent.

The decline in the tech-heavy NASDAQ index has been even sharper. It has lost 20 percent for the year and is now down to its lowest level since the end of 2020, wiping out all the gains for 2021.

Rising interest rates and the expectation of further increases is the main factor. This is because in the orgy of speculation that has been fuelled by the Fed’s financial support, the “valuation” of high-tech companies is not based on their actual profitsmany of them are making a lossbut on the “expectation” of future earnings.

The “expected” flow of future earningsin effect a gamble that the company will take offare discounted at the prevailing rate of interest with a higher rate leading to a decline in the expected value of the company.

And in a warning of the developments in the real economy, yesterday it was announced that the US economy had unexpectedly contracted at an annualised rate of 1.4 percent in the first quarter of this year. That trend is set to continue if interest rate rises start to hit the housing market.

So far, the Fed’s rises have been small and even the planned rises are not great by historical standards. But the fact that even these small rises are leading to major problems is a further indication of the inherent instability in the US and global financial system.

US GDP drops 1.4 percent in first quarter amidst Omicron surge and war in Ukraine

Shannon Jones


The US economy shrank at a 1.4 percent annual rate in the first quarter of 2022, surprising economists who had expected a 1 percent rise in GDP, which measures the output of goods and services. The fall reflected the myriad problems facing US and world capitalism including the explosion of the highly contagious Omicron variant of COVID-19, the expanding impact of the war in Ukraine and as well as ongoing supply chain issues.

The decline in first-quarter GDP was mostly due to declining inventories and an expanding US trade deficit. Lower government spending on pandemic relief also contributed.

In the face of this reversal, the White House attempted to downplay the significance of the GDP fall, blaming the Russian invasion of Ukraine and a statistical quirk relating to inventories. “While last quarter’s growth estimate was affected by technical factors, the United States confronts the challenges of COVID-19 around the world, Putin’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and global inflation from a position of strength,” Biden stated. He added, “consumer spending, business investment and residential investment increased at strong rates.”

Biden’s bravado can’t paper over the accumulating economic problems plaguing global capitalism. The International Monetary Fund was recently forced to sharply revise downward its growth predictions for 2022 to 3.6 percent while projecting no return to pre-pandemic levels of growth until at least 2026.

While US exports hit a record in March of $169.3 billion, they were far outpaced by imports, which reached $294.6 billion. As a result, the trade deficit in goods widened nearly 18 percent to $125.3 billion last month, a record figure.

Despite these figures the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 1.85 percent Thursday as the poor GDP numbers lessen the pressure on the US Federal Reserve, which meets next week, to mount an aggressive campaign of raising interest rates. A rise of 0.5 percent by the US central bank is widely expected, but further increases may be scaled back.

Wall Street is awaiting with some trepidation the rise in interest rates and the winding down of the Fed’s cheap credit policies that have massively enriched the financial aristocracy while fueling inflation and expanding the stock market bubble.

Containers stacked up at the port of Los Angeles and Long Beach, California

Adding to uncertainty is the widening war in Ukraine and its impact on the world economy. Russia’s announcement that it is suspending oil and gas shipments to Poland and Bulgaria threatens to further drive up energy prices. Moscow had demanded that the two countries pay in rubles, something that the two countries have refused. The action reflected a further ratcheting up of tensions as the war threatens to spread beyond the borders of Ukraine, with incalculable consequences.

The broader effects of the war have led to economic shocks, especially on workers and the oppressed in less developed countries, sparking mass protests against rising food and energy prices. This includes Sri Lanka, where workers took part in a one-day general strike against the Gotabhaya Rajapakse government. Strikes and social protests are mounting as well in the US and Europe, witnessed by the walkout by 5,000 Stanford nurses this week over abysmal pay levels and unbearable working conditions.

American workers continue to see their living standards hammered by inflation as they spent more in the first quarter but received proportionally fewer goods and services in return.

In an indication of the devastating impact of inflation on workers’ living standards, US prices rose at an annual rate of 8.5 percent in March while wages are up only 5.6 percent on the year. Rising food prices will continue to play havoc with family budgets, as indicated by soaring commodity prices for basic foodstuffs. Soybean prices are up 26 percent this year while corn futures are up 37 percent. US food prices were up 8.8 percent year over year in March and the World Bank projects that food prices will rise by 23 percent this year, after surging 31 percent in 2021, creating untold hardship.

The decline in US GDP came after a 6.9 percent annualized rise in the fourth quarter of 2021. It was the first fall in GDP since the early months of the pandemic when large sections of the economy were shut down due to the spread of COVID-19. The fall of GDP in the first quarter came despite the abandonment by local, state and federal government agencies of virtually all remaining pandemic restrictions, with both air travel and hotel occupancy showing substantial increases.

New jobless claims stood at 180,000 last week, near an historic low, as businesses continue to hold on to workers due to a tight labor market. Employers have added an average of 600,000 jobs each month and the official unemployment rate is at 3.6 percent, low by historical standards, although this number is deceptive since many workers have dropped out of the workforce due to pandemic-related concerns.

Even though real wages are falling due to inflation, there are increasing pressures on the US Federal Reserve to undermine workers’ bargaining power by driving up the unemployment rate through monetary tightening. The Fed raised interest rates by 0.25 percent in March, the first increase since 2018, and is planning six more rate rises this year.

In advancing the need for rate increases, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell last month cited a “very tight labor market—tight to an unhealthy level…” By tightening credit the US central bank aims to dampen demand and push up unemployment in order to undermine workers’ ability to press for higher wages. A poll of economists conducted by the Reuters news agency gave a 25 percent probability of a US recession in the next 12 months and 40 percent within two years. Growth would slow to 3.3 percent this year and just 2.2 percent in 2023.

There are already signs of slowing in certain sectors. Reacting to the rise in interest rates, Detroit-based Rocket Mortgage announced plans to cut hundreds of jobs and is offering buyouts to 8 percent of its 26,000 employees. Other mortgage lenders have announced recent job cuts in reaction to the rate rises, including Wells Fargo and Flagstar Bank.

In March automaker Stellantis announced the elimination of hundreds of jobs, including one-half of its remaining workforce at its Belvidere, Illinois, assembly plant, as well as job cuts at some Detroit area assembly and stamping plants. On Wednesday Ford announced that it is cutting 580 engineering jobs.

The impact of any slowdown in the economy on top of the stress produced by soaring inflation and two years of a deadly pandemic will inflame social anger in the working class in the US and globally.