-Caveat Lector-

Subject: ZNet Commentary / Jeremy Brecher / Global Econ Program / Dec 18
Date:Sun, 17 Dec 2000 18:00:48 -0800
From:"Michael Albert" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>




For December the ZNet (http://www.zmag.org) Daily Commentaries, ordinarily
available only to ZNet Sustainers, are also being sent to all 44,000 ZNet
Free Update recipients.

____________


Draft of an Alternative Program for the Global Economy
By Jeremy Brecher, Tim Costello, and Brendan Smith

[Note: This is based on the authors’ new book GLOBALIZATION FROM BELOW: THE
POWER OF SOLIDARITY (Cambridge: South End Press, 2000.
http://www.southendpress.org/books/global.shtml. 800/533-8478. Visit the
authors’ web site at www.villageorpillage.org]

Commenting on the Battle of Seattle, Newsweek wrote, "One of the most
important lessons of Seattle is that there are now two visions of
globalization on offer, one led by commerce, one by social activism."
Globalization from below's vision has been articulated in scores of
international statements and above all in the movement's own actions. The
following summary is designed to provide a win-win framework for the many
constituencies converging into globalization from below, providing ways that
their needs, concerns, and interests can be complementary rather than
contradictory.

1. Level labor, environmental, social, and human rights conditions upward.
Globalization from above is creating a race to the bottom, an economic war
of all against all in which each workforce, community, and country is forced
to compete by offering lower labor, social, environmental, and human rights
conditions. The result is impoverishment, inequality, volatility,
degradation of democracy, and environmental destruction. Halting the race to
the bottom requires raising labor, environmental, social, and human rights
conditions for those at the bottom. Such upward leveling can start with
specific struggles to raise conditions for those who are being driven
downward. Ultimately, minimum environmental, labor, social, and human rights
standards must be incorporated in national and international law. Such
standards protect communities and countries from the pressure to compete by
sacrificing their rights and environment. Rising conditions for those at the
bottom can also expand employment and markets and generate a virtuous circle
of economic growth.

2. Democratize institutions at every level from local to global.
Globalization from above has restricted the power of self-government for
people all over the world. At the heart of globalization from below lies
democratization—making institutions accountable to those they affect.

3. Make decisions as close as possible to those they affect. The movement
for globalization from below should aim to construct a multilevel global
economy. In accordance with the subsidiarity principle, power and initiative
should be concentrated at as low a level as possible, with higher-level
regulation established where and only where necessary. This approach
envisions relatively self-reliant, self-governing communities, states,
provinces, countries, and regions, with global regulation only sufficient to
protect the environment, redistribute resources, block the race to the
bottom, and perform other essential functions.

4. Equalize global wealth and power. The current gap between the global rich
and poor is unacceptable; it is unconscionable to act as if it can be a
permanent feature of the global economy. It is equally unacceptable to
assume that the rich countries of the world can call all the shots regarding
the global economy’s future. Policy at every level should prioritize
economic advancement of the most oppressed and exploited people, including
women, immigrants, racial and ethnic minorities, and indigenous peoples. It
should increase power, capability, resources, and income for those at the
bottom.

5. Convert the global economy to environmental sustainability. The world is
in the midst of a global environmental catastrophe. Ill-conceived economic
activity is disrupting the basic balances of climate and ecology on which
human life depends. Globalization is rapidly accelerating that ongoing
catastrophe. The sources of environmental destruction lie primarily in the
wrongly developed countries of the North and in the activities of global
corporations in the South. The only way to reverse this catastrophe is to
halt the present dynamic of globalization and meet human needs by
technologies and social practices that progressively reduce the negative
impact of the economy on the environment.

6. Create prosperity by meeting human and environmental needs. Today, an
estimated 1 billion people are unemployed. Millions are forced to leave
rural areas and migrate to cities or around the world seeking work.
Meanwhile, the world’s vast need for goods and services to alleviate poverty
and to reconstruct society on an environmentally sustainable basis goes
unmet. A goal of economic policy at every level must be to create a new kind
of full employment based on meeting those needs.

7. Protect against global boom and bust. The era of globalization has been
an era of volatility. Its repeated crises have destroyed local and national
economies overnight and driven hundreds of millions of people into poverty.
An unregulated global economy has led to huge flows of speculative funds
that can swamp national economies. No one country can control these forces
on its own. Yet neoliberal economics and the major economic powers have
resisted any changes that might restrict the freedom of capital. Economic
security for ordinary people requires just such restrictions.

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