By now, even the most obtuse in many of our networks of friends,
acquaintances & colleagues are realizing that the globalization of
capitalism is economic warfare (sometimes carried out with soldiers,
bombers, and tanks) organized by and for the growth, protection and profit
of the soul-less "legal entities" known as corporations, which have acted
over the past 150 years+ to compromise and completely dominate world
governments, abridging "human rights" in favor of "free" (depraved, amoral,
unethical, and outright criminal) "enterprise."

In the window of time where the science of controlling dissent is not-quite
perfected and absolute, there is opportunity for a critical mass of aware
individuals to effect some changes in the order of "business as usual."

In the U.S., home to many of the most virulent examples of the plague of the
Corporation, the letter and the intent of U.S. Constitutional Law has been
ignored, subverted (subversion: criminal & treasonous acts), and hacked at
by corporate owners, lawyers, and judges bribed in various fashions.

Simply enforcing the Law of the Land, the U.S. Constitution, would make an
end of the monster that eats it's young: the corporation; the killer of
species, the pillager of forests, the horizon of doomsday: the corporation;
that which must die; the legal fiction with the knife to the throat of the
world; the MegaCorporation.


Dave Hartley, Pres
Asheville Computer          Tri-Cities Computer
86 N. Lexington Ave.            200 W. Oakland Ave.
Asheville, NC 28801         Johnson City, TN 37604
(828) 285-0240              (423) 952-0983
http://www.asheville-computer.com/
Senior VP
http://www.earthcomp.com
===============================================


FROM MELBOURNE TO PRAGUE: THE STRUGGLE FOR A DEGLOBALIZED WORLD
Walden Bello

TNI Fellow

Talk delivered at a series of engagements on the occasion of
demonstrations against the World Economic Forum (Davos) in Melbourne,
Australia, 6-10 September 2000

_________________________________________________________________


We are, here in Melbourne in the next few days and in Prague in two weeks'
time, participating in an historic enterprise: that of creating a critical
mass to turn the tide against corporate-driven globalization.

For years, we were told that globalization was benign, that it was a
process that brought about the greatest good for the greatest number, that
good citizenship lay in accepting the impersonal rule of the market and
good governance meant governments getting out of the way of market forces
and letting the most effective incarnation of market freedom, the
transnational corporation, go about its task of bringing about the most
efficient mix of capital, land, technology and labor.

The unrestricted flow of goods and capital in a world without borders was
said to be the best of all possible worlds, though when some observers
pointed out that to be consistent with the precepts of their 18th century
prophet, Adam Smith, proponents of the neoliberal doctrine would also have
to allow the unrestricted flow of labor to create this best of all
possible worlds, they were, quite simply, ignored.

Such inconsistencies could be overlooked since for over two decades,
neoliberalism or, as it was grandiosely styled, the 'Washington Consensus'
had carried all before it. As one of its key partisans has nostalgically
remarked recently, 'the Washington Consensus seemed to gain near-universal
approval and provided a guiding ideology and underlying intellectual
consensus for the world economy, which was quite new in modern history.'
(1)

GLOBALIZATION UNRAVELS I: The Asian Financial Collapse

The unrestricted flow of speculative capital in accordance with Washington
Consensus doctrine was what our governments in East Asia institutionalized
in the early 1990s, under the strong urging of the International Monetary
Fund and the US Treasury Department. The result: the $100 billion that
flowed in between 1993 and 1997 flowed out in the bat of an eyelash during
the Great Panic of the summer of 1997, bringing about the collapse of our
economies and spinning them into a mire of recession and massive
unemployment from which most still have to recover. Since 1997, financial
instability or the constant erosion of our currencies has become a way of
life under IMF- imposed monetary regimes that leave the value of our money
to be determined day-to-day by the changing whims, moods, and preferences
of foreign investors and currency speculators.

GLOBALIZATION UNRAVELS II: The Failure of Structural Adjustment

The Asian financial crisis put the International Monetary Fund on the
hotseat, leading to a widespread popular reappraisal of its role in the
Third World in the 1980s and early 1990s, when structural adjustment
programs were imposed on over 70 developing countries. After over 15
years, there were hardly any cases of successful adjustment programs. What
structural adjustment had done, instead, was to institutionalize
stagnation in Africa and Latin America, alongside rises in the levels of
absolute poverty and income inequality.

Structural adjustment and related free-market policies that were imposed
beginning in the early 1980s were the central factor that triggered a
sharp rise in inequality globally, with one authoritative UNCTAD study
covering 124 countries showing that the income share of the richest 20 per
cent of the worlds population rose from 69 to 83 per cent between 1965 and
1990. (2) Adjustment policies were a central factor behind the rapid
concentration of global income in recent years - a process which, in 1998,
saw Bill Gates, with a net worth of $90 billion, Warren Buffet, with $36
billion, and Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, with $30 billion, achieve a
combined income that was greater than the total combined income of the 600
million that live in the worlds 48 least developed countries, a great
number of which had been subjected to adjustment programs.

Structural adjustment has also been a central cause of the lack of any
progress in the campaign against poverty. The number of people globally
living in povertythat is, on less than a dollar a day - increased from 1.1
billion in 1985 to 1.2 billion in 1998, and is expected to reach 1.3
billion this year. (3) According to a recent World Bank study, the
absolute number of people living in poverty rose in the 1990s in Eastern
Europe, South Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and sub-Saharan
Africa all areas that came under the sway of adjustment programs. (4)

Confronted with this dismal record, James Wolfensohn of the World Bank had
the sense to move the institution away from its identification with
structural adjustment with public relations initiatives like the SAPRI, or
the Structural Adjustment Program Review Initiative, that it said would be
jointly conducted with NGOs. But the IMF under the doctrinaire Michel
Camdessus refused to see the handwriting on the wall; it sought, instead,
to embed adjustment policies permanently in the economic structure through
the establishment of the Extended Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF).

Yet as a consequence of greater public scrutiny following its disastrous
policies in East Asia, the Fund could no longer pretend that adjustment
had not been a massive failure in Africa, Latin America and South Asia.
During the World Bank-IMF meetings in September 1999, the Fund conceded
failure by renaming the ESAF the 'Poverty Reduction and Growth' Facility.
There was no way, however, that the Fund could successfully whitewash the
results of its policies. When the G-7 proposed to make IMF certification a
condition for eligibility in the now defunct HIPC Initiative, Rep. Maxine
Walters of the US House of Representatives spoke for many liberal American
lawmakers when she commented, 'Do we have to involve the IMF at all?
Because, as we have painfully discovered, the way the IMF works causes
children to starve.' (5)

So starved of legitimacy was the Fund that US Treasury Secretary Larry
Summers, who in an earlier incarnation as chief economist of the World
Bank was one of the chief backers of structural adjustment, told the US
Congress that the 'IMF-centered process' of macroeconomic policymaking
would be replaced by 'a new, more open and inclusive process that would
involve multiple international organizations and give national
policymakers and civil society groups a more central role.' (6)

GLOBALIZATION UNRAVELS III:  The Debacle in Seattle

Freedom, said Hegel, is the recognition of necessity. Freedom, the
proponents of neoliberalism like Hegels disciple, Francis Fukuyama, tell
us, lies in the recognition of the inexorable irreversibility of free
market globalization. Thank god, the 50,000 people who descended on
Seattle in late November 1999 did not buy this Hegelian - Fukuyaman notion
of freedom as submission and surrender to what seemed to be the
ineluctable necessity of the World Trade Organization (WTO). In the
mid-nineties, the WTO had been sold to the global public as the lynchpin
of a multilateral system of economic governance that would provide the
necessary rules to facilitate the growth of global trade and the spread of
its beneficial effects. Nearly five years later, the implications and
consequences of the founding of the WTO had become as clear to large
numbers of people as a robbery carried out in broad daylight. What were
some of these realizations?
 * By signing on to the Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures
(TRIMs), developing countries discovered that they had signed away their
right to use trade policy as a means of industrialization.
 * By signing on to the Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPs), countries realized that they had given high tech
transnationals like Microsoft and Intel the right to monopolize innovation
in the knowledge-intensive industries and provided biotechnology firms
like Novartis and Monsanto the go-signal to privatize the fruits of aeons
of creative interaction between human communities and nature such as
seeds, plants, and animal life.
 * By signing on to the Agreement on Agriculture (AOA), developing
countries discovered that they had agreed to open up their markets while
allowing the big agricultural superpowers to consolidate their system of
subsidized agricultural production that was leading to the massive dumping
of surpluses on those very markets, a process that was, in turn,
destroying smallholder-based agriculture.
 * By setting up the WTO, countries and governments discovered that they
had set up a legal system that enshrined the priority of free trade above
every other good - above the environment, justice, equity, and community.
They finally got the significance of consumer advocate Ralph Naders
warning a few years earlier that the WTO, was a system of 'trade uber
alles.'
 * In joining the WTO, developing countries realized that they were not,
in fact, joining a democratic organization but one where decisions were
made, not in formal plenaries but in non-transparent backroom sessions,
and where majority voting was dispensed with in favor of a process called
'consensus' which was really a process in which a few big trading powers
imposed their consensus on the majority of the member countries.

The Seattle Ministerial brought together a wide variety of protesters from
all over the world focusing on a wide variety of issues. Some of their
stands on key issues, such as the incorporation of labor standards into
the WTO, were sometimes contradictory, it is true. But most of them,
whether they were in the streets or they were in meeting halls, were
united by one thing: their opposition to the expansion of a system that
promoted corporate-led globalization at the expense of justice, community,
national sovereignty, cultural diversity, and ecological sustainablity.

Seattle was a debacle created by corporate overreach, which is quite
similar to Paul Kennedys concept of 'imperial overstretch' that is said to
be the central factor in the unraveling of empires. (7) The Ministerials
collapse from pressure from these multiple sources of opposition
underlined the truth in Ralph Naders prescient remark, made four years
earlier, that the creation of global trade pacts like the WTO was likely
to be 'the greatest blunder in the history of the modern global
corporation.' Whereas previously, the corporations operating within a more
or less 'private penumbra' made it difficult to effectively crystallize
opposition, he argued that 'now that the global corporate strategic plan
is out in print... gives us an opportunity.' (8)

Truth is eternal, but it only makes a difference in human lives when it
becomes power. In Seattle, truth was joined to the power of the people and
became fact. Suddenly, facts that had previously been ignored or belittled
were acknowledged even by the powers-that-be whose brazen confidence had
been shaken. For instance, that the supreme institution of globalization
was, in fact, fundamentally undemocratic was recognized even by
representatives of its stoutest defenders: the United States and the
United Kingdom.

Listen to US Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky after the revolt of
the representatives of developing countries that helped bring down the
Ministerial: 'The processwas a rather exclusionary one,' she admitted.
'All meetings were held between 20 and 30 key countries... And that meant
100 countries, 100, were never in the room... [T]his led to an
extraordinarily bad feeling that they were left out of the process and
that the results... had been dictated to them by the 25 or 30 privileged
countries who were in the room.' (9)

Listen to Stephen Byers, the UK Secretary for Trade and Industry, after
the Seattle shock: 'WTO will not be able to continue in its present form.
There has to be fundamental and radical change in order for it to meet the
needs and aspirations of all 134 of its members.' (10)

GLOBALIZATION UNRAVELS IV: Meltzer Torpedoes the Bank

The Asian financial crisis triggered the IMFs crisis of legitimacy. The
Seattle Ministerial collapse brought the WTO to a standstill. However,
under Australian-turned-American Jim Wolfensohns command, the World Bank
seemed likely to escape the massive damage sustained by its sister
institutions. But the torpedo in the form of the famous Meltzer Commission
found its mark in February of this year.

Formed as one of the conditions for the US Congress voting for an increase
of its quota in the IMF in 1998, the Commission was a bipartisan body that
was tasked to probe the record of the Bank and Fund with the end in view
of coming up with recommendations for the reform of the two institutions.
Exhaustively examining documents and interviewing all kinds of experts,
the Commission came up with the devastating conclusion that with most of
its resources going to the better off countries of the developing world
and with the astounding 65-70 per cent failure rate of its projects in the
poorest countries, the World Bank was irrelevant to the achievement of its
avowed mission of global poverty alleviation. And what to do with the
Bank? The Commission urged that most of the Banks lending activities be
devolved to the regional developing banks. It does not take much, however,
for readers of the report to realize that, as one of the Commissions
members revealed, it 'essentially wants to abolish the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank,' a goal that had 'significant pockets of
support... in our Congress.' (12)

Much to the chagrin of Wolfensohn, few people came to the defense of the
Bank, and it was in a state of shock that the agency held its joint spring
meeting with the IMF in a Washington, DC, that was shut down by some
40,000 protestors. The spirit of demoralization that gripped the Bank was
conveyed in Wolfensohns missive to Bank staffers before the meeting that
'the next week will be a trying time for most of us.' (13) That the April
2000 meeting of the Bretton Woods twins could take place only under heavy
police protection, with the use of a system of decoys to breach protesters
lines in order to bring apprehensive delegates to the fortified bunkers at
Pennsylvania and 19th NW in central DC spoke volumes about the tattered
legitimacy of the two institutions.

THE DAVOS PROCESS I: Relegitimizing Globalization

Why do I keep coming back to the question of legitimacy? Because, as the
great Italian thinker Antonio Gramsci pointed out, when legitimacy has
vanished and is not regained, it is only a matter of time before the
structure collapses, no matter how seemingly solid it is. Many of the key
advocates of globalization realized this in the wake of the joint crisis
of the WTO and the Bretton Woods twins. They knew that the strategy of
denial that these three institutions deployed in the past would no longer
work and that the aggressive approach of pro- globalization firebrands
like Martin Wolf of the Financial Times, who accused NGOs of ignorance and
of being an 'uncivil society,' was likely to be counterproductive.

To the more soberminded among the pro-globalization forces, the first
thing to do was to recognize the facts.

Fact No. 1, according to the influential free trader C. Fred Bergsten,
head of Washingtons Institute of International Economics, was that 'the
anti-globalization forces are now in the ascendancy.' (14) And Fact No. 2
was that central to the response to these forces 'has to be an honest
recognition and admission that there are costs and losers,' that
'globalization does increase income and social disparities within
countries' and 'does leave some countries and some groups behind.' (15)

Here is where the Davos process - of which the current exercise of the
World Economic Forum (WEF) is a part - has proven to be central to the
project of relegitimizing globalization. Davos, high up in the Swiss Alps,
is not the center of a global capitalist conspiracy to divide up the
world. Davos is where the global elite meets under the umbrella of the WEF
to iron out a rough consensus on how to ideologically confront and defuse
the challenges to the system. Meeting shortly after what many regarded as
the cataclysm in Seattle, the Davos crew in late January composed the
politically correct line. Repeated like a mantra by personalities like
Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Bill Gates, Nike CEO Phil Knight, and WEF guru
Klaus Schwab, the chorus went this way: 'Globalization is the wave of the
future. But globalization is leaving the majority behind. Those voices
spoke out in Seattle. Its time to bring the fruits of globalization and
free trade to the many.'

It was British Prime Minister Tony Blair who best articulated the vision
and rhetoric of 'compassionate globalization.' Blair said: 'Alongside the
advance of global markets and technologies, we are seeing a new search for
community, locally, nationally, and globally that is a response to change
and insecurity, but also reflects the best of our nature and enduring
values. With it is coming a new political agendaone that is founded on
mutual responsibilityboth within nations and across the world.' (16) He
continued: 'We have the chance in this century to achieve an open world,
an open economy, and an open economy with unprecedented opportunities for
people and business. But we will succeed only if that open society and
economy is underpinned by a strong ethos of mutual responsibilityby social
inclusion within nations, and by a common commitment internationally to
help those affected by genocide, debt, and environment.' (17)

'I call it a Third Way,' Blair declared with passion. 'It provides a new
alternative in politics on the centre and centre-left, but on new terms.
Supporting wealth creation. Tackling vested interests. Using market
mechanisms. But always staying true to clear valuessocial justice,
democracy, cooperation... From Europe to North America, Brazil to New
Zealand, two great strands of progressive thought are coming together. The
liberal commitment to individual free in the market economy, and the
social democratic commitment to social justice through the action of
government, are being combined.' (18)

Now, one thing that the British public has finally realized about Mr.
Blair is that with him, there is a huge gap between rhetoric and
substance. What actually does 'globalization with a conscience' or the
'Third Way' or 'globalization with compassion' have to offer? To find out,
one must turn from Blair to Bergsten, who, to his credit, dispenses with
the soaring rhetoric and admits that the program is actually a system of
'transitional safety nets... to help the adjustment to dislocation' and
'enable people to take advantage of the phenomenon [of globalization] and
roll with it rather than oppose it.' (19) In short, instead of being run
over by the globalization express, people will be asked to quietly and
peacefully roll over and adjust to the constant and unpredictable change
wrought by the TNCs search for profitability.

THE DAVOS PROCESS II: Coopting the United Nations

As important as the rhetoric in the Davos response is the process of
bringing people onto the bandwagon. This would be achieved through
dialogue, consultation, and the formation of 'partnerships' between TNCs,
governments, the United Nations, and civil society organizations.

The UN was a piece of cake. Discussions with Secretary General Kofi Annan
produced the 'Global Compact' that has become the centerpiece of the
United Nations Millennial Celebrations. Signed by 44 TNCs, the Compact has
been promoted by Annan as a major step forward for it supposedly commits
its signatories to respect human, labor, and environmental rights and
provide positive examples of such behavior. To many NGOs, on the other
hand, the Global Compact is turning out to be one of the UNs biggest
blunders for the following reasons:
 * Despite a Compact provision that membership in the Compact will not be
given to business entities complicit in human rights violations, the
founding membership includes the worst corporate transgressors of human
rights, environmental rights, and labor rights: Nike, Rio Tinto, Shell,
Novartis, and BP Amoco.
 * The Compact will provide a great public relations venue for these
corporations to promote a clean image very different from the reality
since compliance with the Compact will be self-monitored and no sanctions
exist for violating the Compacts principles.
 * The Corporations will be able to use the UN logo as a seal of corporate
responsibility, thus appropriating the UNs image of international civil
service 'not only for short-term profit but also for the long-term
business goal of positive brand image.' (20)

THE DAVOS PROCESS III: Managing Civil Society

As for civil society organizations, they were not as naive as Annan and
the UN and thus neutralizing them demanded more sophisticated measures. As
a first step, one had to divide their ranks by publicly defining some as
'reasonable NGOs' that were interested in a 'serious debate' about the
problems of globalization and others as 'unreasonable NGOs' whose agenda
was to 'close down discussion.' (21) Then towards those identified as
'reasonable,' one put into motion what one might call a strategy of
'disarmament by dialogue' designed to integrate them into a 'working
partnership' for reform.

Here the model was the 'NGO Committee on the World Bank' and other joint
World Bank-NGO bodies set up by Wolfensohn and his lieutenants in the
mid-nineties. While the NGOs that joined these bodies may have done so
with the best of intentions, Wolfensohn knew that their membership in
itself already helped to legitimize the Bank and that over time these NGOs
would develop a stake in maintaining the formal relationship with the
Bank. Not only was Wolfensohn able to split the Washington, DC, NGO
community, but he was able to harness the energies of a number of NGOs
many of them unwittingly - to project the image of a Bank that was serious
about reforming itself and reorienting its approach to eliminating poverty
before Meltzer Commission was able to expose the hollowness of the Banks
claims.

Wolfensohn's neutralization of a significant section of the Washington,
DC, NGO community in the mid-1990s should serve as a warning to civil
society of the mettle of the forces it is up against. The stakes are
great, and how civil society responds at this historical moment to the
aggressive courtship being mounted for its hand will make the difference
in the future of the globalization project. Developments are so fluid in
the correlation of forces in the struggle between the pro-globalization
and anti-globalization camps that strategies that might have been
realistic and appropriate pre-Seattle, when the multilateral institutions
had more solidity and legitimacy, may be timid and inappropriate, if not
counterproductive, now that the multilateral agencies are in a profound
crisis of legitimacy.

Let me be specific:
 * Will NGOs breathe life into a WTO process that is at standstill by
pushing for the incorporation of labor and environmental clauses into the
WTO agreements instead of reducing the power and authority of this
instrument of corporate rule by doing all in their power, for instance, to
prevent another trade round from ever taking place?
 * Will they throw a life saver to the Bretton Woods institutions by
participating in the civil society-World Bank-IMF consultations that are
to be the central element of the 'Comprehensive Development Framework'
that Wolfensohn and the IMF leadership sees as the key to the
relegitimization of the Bretton Woods twins?
 * Will they allow themselves to be sucked into the Davos process of
'reasonable dialogue' and 'frank consultation' when the other side sees
dialogue and consultation mainly as the first step to the disarmament of
the other side?

REFORM OR DISEMPOWERMENT?

Our tactics will depend not only on the balance of forces but will turn
even more fundamentally on our answer to the question: Should we seek to
transform or to disable the main institutions of corporate-led
globalization?

Institutions should be saved and reformed if they're functioning, while
defective, nevertheless can be reoriented to promote the interests of
society and the environment. They should be abolished if they have become
fundamentally dysfunctional. Can we really say that the IMF can be
reformed to bring about global financial stability, the World Bank to
reduce poverty, and the WTO to bring about fair trade? Are they not, in
fact, imprisoned within paradigms and structures that create outcomes that
contradict these objectives? Can we truly say that these institutions can
be reengineered to handle the multiple problems that have been thrown up
by the process of corporate-led globalization?

Perhaps we can best appreciate the current situation by borrowing from
Thomas Kuhns classic Structure of Scientific Revolutions. (21) Scientific
paradigms, says Kuhn, enter into crisis when they can no longer explain or
handle dissonant data after dissonant data thrown up by observation. At
this point, the community of science diverges in its responses. Some try
to salvage the dominant paradigm with endless minute adjustments that
merely prolong its inevitable demise. A brave few try to cut cleanly from
it in favor of a simpler, more elegant, and more useful paradigmin a
manner similar to the way the founders of early modern science simply
junked the old, hopelessly complex Ptolemaic paradigm for explaining the
cosmos (the sun and other celestial bodies moving around the earth) in
favor of the simpler Copernican paradigm (the earth moving around the
sun).

Like scientific paradigms in crisis, the dominant institutions of
globalization can no longer handle the multiple problems thrown up by the
process of corporate-led globalization. Instead of trying to reform the
multilateral institutions, would it in fact be more realistic and 'cost-
effective,' to use a horrid neo-liberal term, to move to disempower, if
not abolish them, and create totally new institutions that do not have the
baggage of illegitimacy, institutional failure, and Jurassic mindsets that
attach to the IMF, World Bank, and WTO?

DISABLING THE CORPORATION

Indeed, I would contend that the focus of our efforts these days is not to
try to reform the multilateral agencies but to deepen the crisis of
legitimacy of the whole system. Gramsci once described the bureaucracy as
but an 'outer trench behind which lay a powerful system of fortresses and
earthworks.' We must no longer think simply in terms of neutralizing the
multilateral agencies that form the outer trenches of the system but of
disabling the transnational corporations that are fortresses and the
earthworks that constitute the core of the global economic system. I am
talking about disabling not just the WTO, the IMF, and the World Bank but
the transnational corporation itself. And I am not talking about a process
of 'reregulating' the TNCs but of eventually disabling or dismantling them
as fundamental hazards to people, society, the environment, to everything
we hold dear.

Is this off the wall? Only if we think that the shocking irresponsibility
and secrecy with which the Monsantos and Novartises have foisted
biotechnology on us is a departure from the corporate norm. Only if we
also see as deviations from the normal Shells systematic devastation of
Ogoniland in Nigeria, the Seven Sisters conspiracy to prevent the
development of renewable energy sources in order to keep us slaves to a
petroleum civilization, Rio Tinto and the mining giants practice of
poisoning rivers and communities, and Mitsubishis recently exposed
20-year-cover up of a myriad of product-safety violations to prevent a
recall that would cut into profitability. Only if we think that it is
acceptable business practice and ethics to pull up stakes, lay off people,
and destroy long-established communities in order to pursue ever-cheaper
labor around the globe a process that most TNCs now engage in.

No, these are not departures from normal corporate behavior. They are
normal corporate behavior. And corporate crime against people and the
environment has, like the Mafia, become a way of life because, as the
British philosopher John Gray tells us, 'Global market competition and
technological innovation have interacted to give us an anarchic world
economy.' To such a world of anarchy, scarcity, and conflict created by
global laissez-faire, Gray continues, 'Thomas Hobbes and Thomas Malthus
are better guides than Adam Smith or Friedrich von Hayek, with their
Utopian vision of a humanity united by 'the benevolent harmonies of
competition.' (22) Smiths world of peacefully competing enterprises has,
in the age of the TNC, degenerated into Hobbes 'war of all against all.'

Gray goes on to say that 'as it is presently organized, global capitalism
is supremely ill-suited to cope with the risks of geo-political conflict
that are endemic in a world of worsening scarcities. Yet a regulatory
framework for coexistence and cooperation among the worlds diverse
economies figures on no historical or political agenda.' (23) Recent
events underline his point. When the ice cap on the North Pole is melting
at an unprecedented rate and the ozone layer above the South Pole has
declined by 30 per cent, owing precisely to the dynamics of this corporate
civilizations insatiable desire for growth and profits, the need for
cooperation among peoples and societies is more stark than ever. We must
do better than entrust production and exchange to entities that
systematically and fundamentally work to erode solidarity, discourage
cooperation, oppose regulation except profit-enhancing and
monopoly-creating regulation, all in the name of the Market and
Efficiency.

It is said that in the age of globalization, nation-states have become
obsolete forms of social organization. I disagree. It is the corporation
that has become obsolete. It is the corporation that serves as a fetter to
humanitys movement to new and necessary social arrangements to achieve the
most quintessentially human values of justice, equity, democracy, and to
achieve a new equilibrium between our species and the rest of the planet.
Disabling, disempowering, or dismantling the transnational corporation
should be high on our agenda as a strategic end. And when we say this, we
do not equate the TNC with private enterprise, for there are benevolent
and malevolent expressions of private enterprise. We must seek to disable
or eliminate the malevolent ones, like the Mafia and the TNC. (24)

THE STRUGGLE FOR THE FUTURE I: Deglobalization

It is often said that we must not only know what we are against but what
we are for. I agree though it is very important to know very clearly what
we want to terminate so that we do not end up unwittingly fortifying it so
that, like a WTO fortified with social and environmental clauses, it is
given a new leash on life.

Let me end, therefore, by giving you my idea of an alternative. It is,
however, one that has been formulated for a Third World, and specifically
Southeast Asian, context. Let me call this alternative route to the future
'deglobalization.'

WHAT IS DEGLOBALIZATION?

I am not talking about withdrawing from the international economy. I am
speaking about reorienting our economies from production for export to
production for the local market; about drawing most of our financial
resources for development from within rather than becoming dependent on
foreign investment and foreign financial markets; about carrying out the
long-postponed measures of income redistribution and land redistribution
to create a vibrant internal market that would be the anchor of the
economy; about deemphasizing growth and maximizing equity in order to
radically reduce environmental disequilibrium; about not leaving strategic
economic decisions to the market but making them subject to democratic
choice; about subjecting the private sector and the state to constant
monitoring by civil society; about creating a new production and exchange
complex that includes community cooperatives, private enterprises, and
state enterprises, and excludes TNCs; about enshrining the principle of
subsidiarity in economic life by encouraging production of goods to take
place at the community and national level if it can be done so at
reasonable cost in order to preserve community.

We are talking, moreover, about a strategy that consciously subordinates
the logic of the market, the pursuit of cost efficiency to the values of
security, equity, and social solidarity. We are speaking, in short, about
reembedding the economy in society, rather than having society driven by
the economy.

THE STRUGGLE FOR THE FUTURE II: A Plural World

Deglobalization or the reempowerment of the local and national, however,
can only succeed if it takes place within an alternative system of global
economic governance. What are the contours of such a world economic order?
The answer to this is contained in our critique of the Bretton Woods cum
WTO system as a monolithic system of universal rules imposed by highly
centralized institutions to further the interests of corporations and, in
particular, US corporations. To try to supplant this with another
centralized global system of rules and institutions, though these may be
premised on different principles, is likely to reproduce the same Jurassic
trap that ensnared organizations as different as IBM, the IMF, and the
Soviet state, and this is the inability to tolerate and profit from
diversity.

Today's need is not another centralized global institution but the
deconcentration and decentralization of institutional power and the
creation of a pluralistic system of institutions and organizations
interacting with one another, guided by broad and flexible agreements and
understandings.

We are not talking about something completely new. For it was under such a
more pluralistic system of global economic governance, where hegemonic
power was still far from institutionalized in a set of all-encompassing
and powerful multilateral organizations and institutions that a number of
Latin American and Asian countries were able to achieve a modicum of
industrial development in the period from 1950 to 1970. It was under such
a pluralistic system, under a General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) that was limited in its power, flexible, and more sympathetic to
the special status of developing countries, that the East and Southeast
Asian countries were able to become newly industrializing countries
through activist state trade and industrial policies that departed
significantly from the free-market biases enshrined in the WTO.

Of course, economic relations among countries prior to the attempt to
institutionalize one global free market system beginning in the early
1980's were not ideal, nor were the Third World economies that resulted
ideal. But these conditions and structures underline the fact that the
alternative to an economic Pax Romana built around the World Bank-IMF-WTO
system is not a Hobbesian state of nature. The reality of international
relations in a world marked by a multiplicity of international and
regional institutions that check one another is a far cry from the
propaganda image of a 'nasty' and "brutish" world. Of course, the threat
of unilateral action by the powerful is ever present in such a system, but
it is one that even the most powerful hesitate to take for fear of its
consequences on their legitimacy as well as the reaction it would provoke
in the form of opposing coalitions.

In other words, what developing countries and international civil society
should aim at is not to reform the TNC-driven WTO and BrettonWoods
institutions, but, through a combination of passive and active measures,
to radically reduce their powers and to turn them into just another set of
actors coexisting with and being checked by other international
organizations, agreements, and regional groupings. These would include
such diverse actors and institutions as UNCTAD, multilateral environmental
agreements, the International Labor Organization, the European Union, and
evolving trade blocs such as Mercosur in Latin America, SAARC in South
Asia, SADCC in Southern Africa, and a revitalized ASEAN in Southeast Asia.

More space, more flexibility, more compromise - these should be the goals
of the Southern agenda and the civil society effort to build a new system
of global economic governance. It is in such a more fluid, less
structured, more pluralistic world, with multiple checks and balances,
that the nations and communities of the South and the North - will be able
to carve out the space to develop based on their values, their rhythms,
and the strategies of their choice.

Let me quote John Gray one last time. 'It is legitimate and indeed
imperative,' he says, 'that we seek a form of rootedness which is
sheltered from overthrow by technologies and market processes which in
achieving a global reach that is disembedded from any community or
culture, cannot avoid desolating the earths human settlements and its
non-human environments.' The role of international arrangements in a world
where toleration of diversity is a central principle of economic
organization would be 'to express and protect local and national cultures
by embodying and sheltering their distinctive practices.' (25)

Let us put an end to this arrogant globalist project of making the world a
synthetic unity of individual atoms shorn of culture and community. Let us
herald, instead, an internationalism that is built on, tolerates,
respects, and enhances the diversity of human communities and the
diversity of life.

NOTES

 1. C. Fred Bergsten, 'The Backlash against Globalization,' Speech
delivered at the 2000 Meeting of the Trilateral Commission, Tokyo, April
2000. Downloaded from Internet.
 2. Cited in Giovanni Andrea Cornia, 'Inequality and Poverty Trends in the
Era of Liberalization and Globalization,' Paper delivered at the 'United
Nations Millenium Conference,' Tokyo, January 19-20, 2000.
 3. Ibid.; see also, 'Number of Worlds Poor Unchanged in the 1990s,'
Reuters, August 3, 2000.
 4. Cornia.
 5. Quoted in Associated Press, reproduced in Business World, Nov. 15,
1999.
 6. Op-ed column, Washington Post, reproduced in Today (Manila), Nov. 15,
1999.
 7. Paul Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (New York: Vintage
Books, 1989).
 8. Ralph Nader, speech at International Forum on Globalization Teach-in
on 'The Social, Ecological, Cultural, and Political Costs of Economic
Globalization,' Riverside Church, New York, Nov. 10, 1995; quoted in
Joshua Karliner, The Corporate Planet (San Francisco: Sierra Club, 1997),
p. 207.
 9. Press briefing, Seattle, Washington, Dec. 2, 1999.
 10. Quoted in 'Deadline Set for WTO Reforms,' Guardian News Service, Jan.
10, 2000.
 11. Bergsten.
 12. James Wolfensohn, Memo on 'Disruptions at Spring Meetings,' World
Bank, Washington, DC, April 13, 2000.
 13. Bergsten.
 14. Ibid.
 15. Prime Minister Anthony Blair, Speech at the World Economic Forum,
Davos, Switzerland, January 28, 2000.
 16. Ibid.
 17. Ibid.
 18. Bergsten.
 19. Letter of International Coalition against Global Compact, July 26,
2000.
 20. The Wolfensohn memo, above, is an interesting exercise in this
branding or categorization of NGOs.
 21. Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1971).
 22. John Gray, False Dawn (New York: New Press, 1998), p. 207.
 23. Ibid.
 24. For excellent recent critiques of the corporation, see David Korten,
When Corporations Rule the World (San Francisco: Kumarian
Press/Beret-Koehler, 1995), Joshua Karliner, The Corporate Planet (San
Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1997), and Richard Barnet and John Cavanagh,
Global Dreams: Imperial Corporations and the New World Order (New York:
Simon and Shuster, 1994).
 25. John Gray, Enlightenments Wake (London: Routledge, 1995), p. 181.

_________________________________________________________________ WALDEN
BELLO

Co-director of Focus on the Global South, Bangkok, Thailand and Professor
of Public Administration and Sociology at the University of the
Philippines
     _________________________________________________________________

   Contact:

     Focus on the Global South
     Co/CUSRI, Wisit Prachuabmoh Building
     Chulalongkorn University, Phyathai Road
     Bangkok 10330, Thailand
     tel: + 66 2 218 73 63
     fax: + 66 2 255 99 76
     email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
     web site: http://focusweb.org/
     _________________________________________________________________

 Role in TNI: Bello serves as a Trustee of TNI and is active in TNI's
Democratisation Programme, co-ordinating the 'Asian Audit of
Authoritarianism' aspect of the Democratisation and Regional Integration
project

Current research: the WTO and food security; Asian authoritarianism and
democratisation movements; environmental politics; alternative security
concepts; APEC and other Asian regionalisms; Asian financial crisis

Background: During the 1970s, Walden Bello earned a doctorate in political
sociology from Princeton University (USA), taught at the University of
California and worked as a lobbyist in Washington DC for democratic rights
in the Philippines. He later served as Director of the Institute for Food
and Development Policy (Food First), a research and educational centre
based in the USA and the Philippines. Bello is currently co-director of
Focus on the Global South, a project of Chulalongkorn University's Social
Research Institute in Bangkok. He is also Professor of Public
Administration and Sociology at the University of the Philippines,
dividing his time between Thailand and the Philippines. Until early 1998,
Bello served on the International Board of Greenpeace and currently serves
on the Board of Oxfam (Hong Kong), and on the Programme Board of the
International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD) in
Geneva, which supplies information to NGOs on the operations of the World
Trade Organisation. In 1998, he was elected chairperson of a new political
party in the Philippines - Aksyon. Bello is currently involved in a
collaborative TNI project on Asian Regionalisms and Democratisation.




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