Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-10-04-Speech-4-101"

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"en.20011004.3.4-101"2
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". The Berès report is interesting because it acknowledges the failure of a social liberalism that thought it could combine acceptance of the Treaty of Amsterdam with genuine social policies in Europe. The report advocates the coordination of economic policies, but realises that the institutions that could perform this do not exist. The ECB is obsessed with one single issue, Parliament is powerless, and the Eurogroup is semi-clandestine. The report simply begs it to please keep Parliament informed. The report does however contain a large amount of truth, as throughout there is concern about the institutional void and regressive policies that risk being implemented under the influence of neo-liberal dogma. But instead of saying out loud what is being discussed increasingly widely, that it would be reasonable not to apply the Stability Pact, the report is content to advocate coordination of ‘their respective stability programmes’. This quite pitiful desire to limit damage cannot make us forget that the shackles were put in place with the active support of liberal socialists, particularly in Italy and France. This is why we did not lend our support to vague and ill-conceived orders that, more than anything, serve to make us forget that we have in fact made a huge mistake."@en1

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2http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/rdf/Events_and_structure.ttl.gz

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