Corporate Globalization and the Poor
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

George Bush has thrown down the gauntlet, issuing
a public challenge to
the anti-corporate globalization movement. When
hundreds of thousands last
month demonstrated against the G-8 meeting of rich
country leaders in
Genoa, Italy, George Bush decried the activists,
saying it was the
advocates of corporate globalization who genuinely
are seeking to advance
the interests of the world's poor.

It's not enough to mock Bush's pretension of being
a defender of the poor
by pointing out that, through his giant tax cut,
the president has
overseen one of the history's great transfers of
wealth to the rich in
U.S. history. Critics must respond to his claims.

Unfortunately, that turns out to be a remarkably
easy challenge to meet.
The last 20 years of corporate globalization, even
measured by the
preferred indicators of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) and World
Bank, have been a disaster for the world's poor.

Over the last two decades, Latin America has
experienced stagnant growth,
and African countries have seen incomes plummet.
The only developing
countries that have done well in the last two
decades are those Asian
countries that ignored the standard prescriptions
of the IMF and World
Bank.

The Washington, D.C.-based Center for Economic and
Policy Research (CEPR)
has published compelling data comparing growth
rates from 1980 to 2000
(during the period of ascending IMF/World Bank
power, when countries
throughout the developing world adhered to the
IMF/Bank structural
adjustment policy package of slashing government
spending, privatizating
government-owned enterprises, liberalizing trade,
orienting economies to
exports and opening up countries to exploitative
foreign investment) with
the previous 20 year period (when many poor
countries focused more on
developing their own productive capacity and
meeting local needs).

The results: "89 countries -- 77 percent, or more
than three-fourths --
saw their per capita rate of growth fall by at
least five percentage
points from the period (1960-1980) to the period
(1980-2000). Only 14
countries -- 13 percent -- saw their per capita
rate of growth rise by
that much from (1960-1980) to (1980-2000)."

CEPR found that the growth slowdown has been so
severe that "18 countries
-- including several in Africa -- would have more
than twice as much
income per person as they have today, if they had
maintained the rate of
growth in the last two decades that they had in
the previous two decades.
The average Mexican would have nearly twice as
much income today, and the
average Brazilian much more than twice as much, if
not for the slowdown of
economic growth over the last two decades."

A follow-up CEPR study used a similar methodology
to look at social
indicators. CEPR found that progress in reducing
infant mortality,
reducing child mortality, increasing literacy and
increasing access to
education has all slowed during the period of
corporate globalization,
especially in developing countries.

The CEPR global comparisons across time show the
bottomline, combined
effect of the specific policy components of
corporate-friendly policies
imposed by the IMF and World Bank and enforced by
free trade agreements.
These include the following:

* Trade Liberalization -- The elimination of
tariff protections for
agriculture and industries in developing countries
often leads to mass
layoffs and displacement of the rural poor. In
Mexico, for example,
opening to U.S. agriculture imports has forced
millions of poor farmers,
who find themselves unable to compete with Cargill
and Archer Daniels
Midland, off the land.

* Privatization -- IMF and World Bank structural
adjustment policies
typically call for the sell off of
government-owned enterprises to private
owners, often foreign investors. Privatization is
regularly associated
with layoffs and pay cuts for workers in the
privatized enterprises.

* Cuts in government spending -- Reductions in
government spending
frequently reduce the ability of the government to
provide services to the
poor, exacerbating the social pain from rural
displacement and industrial
layoffs.

* Imposition of user fees -- Many IMF and World
Bank loans and programs
call for the imposition of "user fees" -- charges
for the use of
government-provided services like schools, health
clinics and clean
drinking water. For very poor people, even modest
charges may result in
the denial of access to services.

* Export promotion -- Under structural adjustment
programs,
countries undertake a variety of measures to
promote exports, at the
expense of production for domestic needs. In the
rural sector, the export
orientation is often associated with the
displacement of poor people who
grow food for their own consumption, as their land
is taken over by large
plantations growing crops for foreign markets.

* Higher interest rates -- Attractive to foreign
investors, higher
interest rates exert a recessionary effect on
national economies, leading
to higher rates of joblessness. Small businesses,
often operated by women,
find it more difficult to gain access to
affordable credit, and often are
unable to survive.

Advancing the interests of the poor has nothing to
do with the corporate
globalization agenda. This agenda is driven first
by profit-seeking, and
second by ideology.

But the corporate globalizers are nothing if not
ambitious. They are
seeking now to push fast-track negotiating
authority through the U.S.
Congress, to force all of Latin America into a
NAFTA-style trade and
investment agreement, launch a new World Trade
Organization negotiating
round, and intensify the IMF and World Bank's
ability to impose structural
adjustment through a sham debt relief process.

To lessen preventable human suffering, it is
imperative that the
protesters continue to build the movement against
corporate globalization,
with everything from street protests to citizen
lobbying of Congress.

Another world is indeed possible, as the
protesters are asserting. But for
now the immediate challenge is to stop the
corporate globalizers from
making the existing one worse.


Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington,
D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the
Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of
Corporate Predators: The
Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy
(Monroe, Maine: Common
Courage Press, 1999).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

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