British director Ken Loach rages against austerity economics after winning Palme d’Or at Cannes
British director Ken Loach launched a withering attack on austerity economics which he said had led the European Union to “near catastrophe”, after winning the Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival Sunday.
I, Daniel Blake, the veteran left-wing filmmaker’s damning indictment of the poverty and humiliation inflicted on the most vulnerable by welfare cuts in Britain, moved many critics to tears.
The story taps into the despair over rising unemployment and austerity across Europe after the financial crisis.
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“The world we live in is at a dangerous point just now,” said Loach as he picked up the award. “We are in the grip of a project of austerity driven by ideas that we call neo-liberalism that brought us to near catastrophe.
The most vulnerable people are told their poverty is their own fault
“It has led to billions of people in serious hardship and many millions struggling from Greece in the east to Spain in the west... while this has brought a tiny few immense wealth.”