A vision of dystopia

This is for real, not the sequel to a sci-fi thriller. The World Bank paints a picture 
of a
catastrophic global future if we do not change the way we live

Larry Elliott, economics editor
Thursday August 22, 2002
The Guardian

New York City in 2022. Half the 40 million people in the swarming metropolis are 
unemployed, the air
is thick with pollution, food and water are as precious as jewels. This was the world 
of the future
as envisaged in the sci-fi thriller, Soylent Green, in 1973. Now, according to the 
World Bank, it
could come true unless there are dramatic and immediate changes to the way we live.

Unlike the Charlton Heston movie, the Bank does not suggest that we will be making 
food from dead
bodies in 20 years' time. But its warning of an increasingly dysfunctional global 
society, with
enormous pressure on basic resources such as water, energy and health, is remarkably 
similar.

Looking into its crystal ball, the Bank sees a world of nine billion people by 
mid-century
generating a global GDP of $140 trillion a year. This staggering fourfold increase in 
the size of
the world economy would be enough to guarantee a large-scale reduction in the 1.2 
billion people
living on less than a dollar a day, but the Bank argues that the price will be 
environmental
catastrophe, social breakdown and lower living standards for everyone if policies 
remain unchanged.

Released to coincide with next week's summit on sustainable development in 
Johannesburg, the
Washington-based institution's annual world development report sounds the alarm bell 
for global
leaders as they prepare for 10 days of talks, providing a nightmarish prophecy of what 
could happen
if they fail to turn rhetoric into action.

It's not all bad news. The Bank says that economic growth is vital for tackling 
poverty, with a 3.6%
a year increase in per capita incomes needed in developing countries if the world is 
to achieve the
2015 targets set by the United Nations of halving the number of people living on less 
than a dollar
a day, reducing infant mortality by two thirds and giving every child a primary school 
education. It
adds, however, that coordinating globally and acting locally will be critical to 
ensuring that gains
in social indicators - such as incomes, literacy rates, or access to sanitation - of 
the past 20
years are not reversed by population growth pressures and unsustainable economic 
expansion.

"This growth must be achieved in a manner that preserves our future," said Ian Johnson,
vice-president of the Bank's environmentally and socially sustainable development 
network. "It would
be reckless of us to reach successfully the millennium development goals in 2015, only 
to be
confronted by dysfunctional cities, dwindling water supplies, more inequality and 
conflict and even
less crop land to sustain us than we have now."

The report contains a litany of potential ecological and social problems, from 
slum-ridden urban
dystopias to an increase to the 1.3 billion people who already live on fragile lands 
which cannot
sustain them. Already, it says, the "biosphere's capacity to absorb carbon dioxide 
without altering
temperatures has been compromised because of heavy reliance on fossil fuels for 
energy. Greenhouse
gas emissions will continue to grow unless a concerted effort is made to increase 
energy efficiency
and reduce dependency on fossil fuels."

Nearly two million hectares of land worldwide (23% of all crop land, pasture, forest 
and woodland)
have been degraded since the 1950s, a fifth of all tropical forests have been cleared 
since 1960 and
one third of terrestial biodiversity is squeezed into vulnerable habitats making up 
just 1.4% of the
earth's surface.

Unsurprisingly, the Bank concludes that these trends cannot continue. "The $140 
trillion world of
five decades' time simply cannot be sustained on current production and consumption 
patterns," said
Nick Stern, the Bank's chief economist. "A major transformation, beginning in the rich 
countries,
will be needed to ensure that poor people have an opportunity to participate, and that 
the
environment is not damaged in a way that undermines their opportunities for the 
future."

So what is the Bank's blueprint for sustainable development? It says:

· developing countries should act to clean up their governments, promoting 
participation and
democracy, inclusiveness and transparency as they build the institutions needed to 
manage their
resources;

· rich countries need to be less selfish by increasing aid, offering more generous 
debt relief,
opening their markets to developing country exporters and helping transfer 
technologies needed to
prevent diseases, increase energy efficiency and bolster agricultural productivity;

· civil society organisations should be encouraged to serve as a voice for the weak 
and powerless,
and to provide independent verification of public, private and non-governmental 
performance;

· private firms should be more focused on sustainability in their day to day 
activities, and have
incentives to pursue profit while advancing environmental and social objectives.

"The world must act to help its poorest people manage their own resources and build 
their
productivity and incomes now, to empower these communities and help them prepare for 
the demands of
the decades ahead," said Mr Stern. "Rich countries can take such a step by opening 
their markets to
developing world exports and by abandoning agricultural subsidies and other barriers 
to trade that
depress prices and limit market opportunities for the very goods that poor people 
produce most
competitively."

Given that the average income in the richest 20 countries in the world is 37 times 
that in the
poorest 20, the Bank feels that the rich west is in a position to make concessions. 
"It seems to me
there is a certain hypocrisy about rich countries telling poor countries to undertake 
radical
reform. The kind of changes we have got to make in the west are much smaller than the 
kinds of
reforms rich countries are asking poor countries to make all the time," Mr Stern told 
the Guardian.

So far, the willingness of the developed west to abandon protectonist policies has not 
been much in
evidence and, as the Bank recognises in four open questions posed in the conclusion to 
the report,
there are potential pitfalls ahead.

The first is the issue of when consumption is overconsumption. Telling consumers in 
the west that
they have to cut back is not relished by politicians. But the Bank wonders whether 
consumption will
become the modern equivalent of the Cold War arms race; will people in the developing 
world see the
norm as patterns of consumption in the west?

The second vexed issue highlighted by the report is the future of agriculture and of 
genetically
modified organisms. The United States is eager to export GM foods to developing 
countries, often in
the teeth of ferocious local opposition. Should this be encouraged? The Bank is not 
sure. "Applying
the precautionary principle - balancing risks to food safety and the environment 
against prospects
for development and poverty alleviation - will be a difficult task, requiring a 
broader debate on
credible information."

Third, the Bank is concerned about the system of intellectual property rights presided 
over by the
World Trade Organisation. How can the interests of patent holders be balanced against 
those of the
users of products? The system in place has strengthened the hand of western 
corporations at the
expense of poor countries. The potential for unequal outcomes is "worrisome", the Bank 
says.

Finally, what are the prospects for global migration? The report says that global 
inequality,
combined with demographic trends, will create ever more pressure for migration. 
"Dealing with this
pressure is a challenge worldwide."

The report concludes that the planet will face predictable challenges which will 
increase in
intensity over the coming decades. But the fact that the Bank has no pat answers to 
its four
questions suggests that they will take years, if not decades, to resolve. If the Bank 
is right, the
most precious resource of all over the next half century could be time.

Sustainable Development in a Dynamic World. This report is available on 
http://www.worldbank.org/wdr




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