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Economy
World Economic Forum summit discussions: an expression of
deep-going political shifts
By Nick Beams
16 September 2000
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In his famous preface to The Critique of Political Economy,
Marx explained the law-governed character of social revolutions
as follows:
At a certain stage of development, he wrote, the
material productive forces of society come into conflict with
the existing relations of production... From forms of development
of the productive forces these relations turn into their fetters.
Then begins an era of social revolution.
In setting out the objective foundations of this process, Marx
by no means implied that the overthrow of the old order was carried
out spontaneously or automatically.
On the contrary, as he went on to explain, it was necessary
to distinguish between the material transformation of the
economic conditions of production, which can be determined with
the precision of natural science, and the legal, political, religious,
artistic or philosophicalin short, ideological forms in
which men become conscious of this conflict and fight it out.
In other words, a revolutionary epoch does not announce its
arrival with the eruption of great political battlesthat
takes place at a later stage in the process.
Rather, the onset of a new era of social revolution is marked
initially by vast changes in production processes and forms of
economic organisation, which then begin to raise new and complex
questions about the development of society as a whole.
Large sections of the population become alienated from and
even hostile to the turmoil which the economic transformations
are bringing to their lives, while the ruling elites are confounded
by the fact that the social and political foundations upon which
they have rested are shifting beneath their feet.
These processes were very much in evidence, both inside and
outside the conference hall, at the Asia-Pacific summit of the
World Economic Forum (WEF) held at Melbourne's Crown Casino from
September 11-13.
The protests outside the building were not particularly large,
numbering about 15,000 at the most. But they reflected the concerns
of much wider sections of the population about the increasing
dominance of vast transnational corporations over all aspects
of society, the impoverishment of billions of people around the
world and the sweeping changes in economic and social conditions
being wrought by global capitalism.
And inside the forum, the conference participants, drawn from
major transnational corporations, economic think tanks and governments,
voiced their fears that the transformation of the global economy
was throwing up economic and political problems for which they
had no real answers.
The remarks of Goldman Sachs Asia vice president, Kenneth Courtis,
one of the more astute observers of the international economy,
on the first day, set the tone for much of what was to follow.
Globalisation, Courtis told the meeting, was an irresistible
force being led by fast moving technological change.
This revolution is as big as the revolution which shook
the world in 1890 to 1920.
Courtis did not develop his remarks on this earlier periodsometimes
referred to as the first phase of economic globalisationand
the vast upheavals it produced, including the growth of a socialist
movement of the working class, World War I, the Russian Revolution
of 1917 and the revolutionary struggles in Europe in the early
1920s. But he did make clear that the processes now underway had
far-reaching social and political consequences.
The implosion of the ideologies of industrialism over
the last 10 or 12 years, the breaking up, the fracturing of social
identities with this great change that's afoot, leads many to
feel anxiety, insecurity, confusion, and that concern is genuine,
and that's the centre of the debate inside and around this building
...
It's been too simple in the 1990s to say It's the
market stupid'; that's not enough. There's more than the market.
There are broader questions also that have to be brought into
this debate.
Interviewed on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation television
program Lateline, Courtis said there was a lot of anxiety
about technological change, the global integration of economies
and about the great revolution that we're into now.
The task of leadership was to actually represent the future
to the present and help people who feel that anxiety understand
how they can move ahead and have a better future.
Courtis also elaborated on the mounting problems of the world's
second largest economy, Japan, and the political consequences
they could produce.
Japan, he said, was being crushed under a Himalaya of
debt. A decade ago government debt was about 50 percent
of Gross National Product.
Two years out it will be about 150 percent of GNP and
that's only what's on the balance sheet. There are other commitments
the government has made which are probably double that. So you're
looking at a government debt load broadly defined as 280-290-300
percent of GNP. Plus Japanese companies and banks also have a
very weak financial position...
He pointed out that over the past two years the Japanese government
had spent $1.4 trillionequivalent to five times the Australian
economyin an attempt to revive the economy but had produced
a growth rate of only 2 percent.
Asked about the impact of the debt mountain on the average
Japanese family, Mr and Mrs Suzuki, Courtis said the
future was something quite sombre.
I think Mr and Mrs Suzuki are going to see their pension
dramatically reduced, they're going to see their life insurance
entitlements neutered, health care cut back dramatically, house
values, which have fallen by 60-70 percent over the last decade,
probably not going to go up any time soon and the children, who
they've worked hard to get into universities and get a good education
for, they are not going to get the jobs they thought they would
coming out of university.
Mr and Mrs Suzuki are going to start saying we've sacrificed
three to four decades for what? For this? In a sense, never has
so much been lost of so many people's money by so few through
the mismanagement of this economy in the last decade.
The former vice-president of the World Bank Joseph Stiglitz,
who resigned earlier this year and then issued a stinging indictment
of International Monetary Fund policies during the Asian financial
crisis, solidarised himself with some of the concerns expressed
by the protestors outside the forum.
We need to remember that markets, liberalisation, privatisation,
all these key words, are not ends in themselves, they're means
to an end; the ends are improving living standards, not only of
the few, but of the many, he told the meeting.
And that unless there is a widespread view that the benefits
of globalisation are extended broadly, that there is concern about
the environment and democratic processes, there is a danger of
a backlash.
Australian Prime Minister John Howard said the greatest
challenge for governments at this pivotal point in
the development of the world economy was to communicate
the benefits of globalisation to their citizens.
It was not enough for anyone in government or business, he
said, to simply explain that present difficulties are for the
long-term good of the community.
The goal of economic reform is human contentment and
human achievement and human happiness. And if economic reform
does not deliver the benefits for people, then it's not worth
embracing.
Governments as well as business had to recognise that measures
had to be put in place to ensure that the difficulties of
adjustment are eased and that without such measures the
future of globalisation, as we know it, as we desire it, could
well be cast in doubt.
But even as Howard was speaking, global financial markets were
delivering their response to government intervention, sending
the Australian dollar down the record lowsa plunge widely
attributed to government regulation of the Australian telecommunications
industry to protect local media monopolies which has inhibited
the inflow of international investment capital.
Peter Costello, the Treasurer in Howard's government, delivered
a warning about upbeat comments on the economic recovery in Asia.
Let's not get too euphoric. Let's ask ourselves the questions:
How much has changed since 1997? Is there any difference in the
international financial architecture from what prevailed in 1997?
Programs to improve financial transparency, corporate governance
and debt reduction were hard to find.
Costello said that if international policy makers thought they
could ignore public opinion on the impact of globalisation they
are making a large mistake and reminded the conference that
while there was talk of the benefits of an open trading
system, we must remember that the last opportunity to put across
some detail of that was in Seattle [at the meeting of the World
Trade Organisation last November] and it was a failure.
The relationship between the deliberations inside the conference
and the protests outside was taken up in the editorial published
in the Sydney Morning Herald on September 12. The view
of the protestors, it began, could not be glibly dismissed.
One of the points at issue in the Melbourne confrontationpossibly
the most important pointis the supranational dimension.
It is one of the themes repeatedly taken up by those organising
the demonstrations outside the casino. And for good reasonit
strikes a chord with a very wide audience.
Citing statistics which show that the world's three richest
men own assets equivalent to the incomes of 600 million people
in 48 countries and that 500 corporations control 70 per cent
of the world's trade and 80 percent of its foreign investment,
the editorial continued:
This picture of power centralised can be criticised as
simplistic and misleading. But it strikes a chord with people,
especially people in strong and well-ordered democracies, where
there appears to be powers beyond the reach of people, through
governments, to control or curb if necessary. This is possibly
the single most important factor driving protests in Europe, North
America and now Australia.
The obvious question as to how a society could be considered
to have a strong democracy if masses of people felt
themselves to be, and were in fact, dominated by forces over which
they have no control did not seem to have occurred to the editorial
writers.
One of the sharpest warnings about possible political developments
came from Andersen Consulting's international chairman, Vernon
Ellis, who led summit discussions on the digital divide.
Deep problems, including wars, could erupt from a backlash against
globalisation, he said.
And there will be a huge backlash if some corrections
are not applied because the forces of the liberal
market economy, based on free trade and shareholder value,
are having unintended consequences of widening income inequalities
in heath and education.
There are increasing divides between countries that are
probably going to lead to wars and deep problems.
I think there is a true and genuine awareness that unless
social impact issues are addressed satisfactorily and attention
is given to safety nets and the undesirable side-effects of globalisation
we'll be storing up problems for the future.
Ellis said that at the most recent meeting of the WEF council,
of which he is a member, there was a very widespread feeling
that the agenda of entrepreneurship within a social context is
the right approach.
These remarks, however, rather than providing a solution, point
to the irreconcilable contradictions confronting the corporate
and political leaders of global capitalism.
The reconciliation of a global economic system based on free
trade and shareholder value with social needs is equivalent
to squaring the circle.
The increase in shareholder valuethe accumulation of
capital driven on by the competitive struggle in international
marketsis based on the extraction of surplus value from
the labour of the international working class and its appropriation
in the form of private profit. The provision of so-called safety
nets, however, requires, in the final analysis, a deduction
from the surplus value available to capital.
This means that whatever lipservice they pay to social concerns,
governments are forced by the pressure of international markets,
reflecting the struggle of global capital for profit, to provide
competitive conditions for capital accumulation or risk their
nations being isolated from international capital flows.
This is why none of the participants in the WEF summit, while
being well aware of the increasingly inflammable political situation
arising from economic globalisation was able to provide any means
for reconciling the dictates of the market with social needs.
And the fact that they arrived at this impasse is a sure sign,
as Marx explained, that the global productive forces, driven forward
by vast technological changes, have come into conflict with a
system of social relations based on the accumulation of profit.
See Also:
WSWS speaks with demonstrators
outside the World Economic Forum in Melbourne
[16 September 2000]
Thousands set to turn out for protest
against World Economic Forum summit in Melbourne
The key political issues in the struggle against global capitalism
[8 September 2000]
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