France may be reaching the end of democratic socialism, which generally leads to repressive, undemocratic socialism. From Eric Margolis at lewrockwell.com:
PARIS – Ah, the joys of Paris in the springtime. Riots every day and night; vandals smashing store windows and looting; traffic jams horrendous even by this city’s standards; air, train, and metro disruptions. Tear gas wafts in the air.
Add to this toxic mess the ongoing guerilla war between Uber cars and Paris’ notoriously nasty taxi drivers; a virtual civil war within the fragmented Socialist government of President Francois Hollande; a little war in the Sahara; and an economy that has all the get up and go to a flat Michelin tire.
Even with all this craziness going on, the City of Light is still exquisite though too often painful and frustrating. I have always compared Paris to being deeply in love with a totally difficult, beautiful, self-centered woman who does not give a damn about you.
Strikes have raged in France’s major cities for the past three weeks as the bully boys of the left and anarchists protest some laughably feeble labor law reforms that the government just rammed through parliament. To the hysterical left, efforts to pare back the notorious 35-hour work week and make it slightly easier to hire and fire marked a return to brutal 19th-century capitalism.
France’s biggest problem is that the public brought up in the philosophy of statism and die-hard socialism, looks on the national government as a father figure. Papa will provide everyone with everything – provided they pour into the streets and riot.
In short, the entire nation is on an allowance. This is no exaggeration. Half of all French work directly or indirectly for the government. The government has been gobbling up the economy for decades. But French really cherish their over-staffed state that runs very well indeed. Civil services in France are lavish. The government even has inspectors patrolling the seashore to protect its beauty and wildlife. France’s high-speed TGV trains are the best in the world. France’s cities are clean and resplendent.
However, keeping France beautiful costs a fortune. So does massive feather-bedding in industry, transport, and education. So taxes must remain high to protect special interests and sacred cows. Every French regime since Louis XIV has faced this problem.
Only about 8% of France’s workers are unionized. But hard leftwing unionists, led by the big bully CGT union, dominate key economic sectors and, as they show each year, can paralyze France with strikes. Inevitably, the government must capitulate and buy them off. No Ronald Reagan in France to fire anti-social workers. French farmers are among the most belligerent anywhere and experts at terrorizing government officials.
In France, it’s hellishly difficult to dismiss any workers and, consequently risky to hire. In fact, I have never understood why anyone in his or her right mind would open a business in France. The two commercial operations with which I’ve been involved were a nightmare of labor problems, government red tape, tax audits and wildcat strikes – and made no profit.
To continue reading: Paging Monsieur Napoleon