[Bello is the consummate trade "deadhead", a master of jet lag. Full article
at http://www.tni.org/ under "What's New"


Globalization Unravels III: The Debacle in Seattle Freedom, said Hegel, is
the recognition of necessity. Freedom, the proponents of neoliberalism like
Hegel’s 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 Nader’s 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 Kennedy’s concept of 'imperial overstretch' that is said to be the
central factor in the unraveling of empires. (7) The Ministerial’s collapse
from pressure from these multiple sources of opposition underlined the truth
in Ralph Nader’s 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 corporation’s 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)

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