A bit old, but still a very useful overview of the Middle East. -- Yoshie

<blockquote>The Working Class and Peasantry in the Middle East: From
Economic Nationalism to Neoliberalism

Joel Beinin

From Middle East Report, Spring, 1999

Introduction

Since the early 1970s the working class and peasantry of the Middle
East have been socially reorganized while their political salience has
been reconfigured. These processes are associated with a transition
from economic nationalism, industrially biased statist development and
populist politics towards integration into the world economy,
encouragement of private enterprise and upward redistribution of the
national income. The timing, motivation, extent and economic and
political consequences of this transition have been uneven, but the
general trend across the region is apparent.

Turkey and Egypt were pioneers in adopting import-substitution
industrialization strategies during the global capitalist depression
of the 1930s. After World War II, more comprehensive versions of
state-led development, often allied with populist nationalism and
anti-imperialism, were adopted in Iran, Turkey, Egypt, Syria, Iraq,
Tunisia and Algeria. Even countries that rejected this orientation,
such as Jordan and Morocco, developed large public sectors. The
emblematic expressions of post-World War II radical economic
nationalism were Muhammad Mossadegh's nationalization of the
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in 1951 and Egypt's nationalization of the
Suez Canal Company in 1956.

State-led development and import-substitution industrialization were
key components of the social policies advanced by Gamal `Abd al-Nasir
in Egypt, the Ba`th in Syria and Iraq and the Algerian National
Liberation Front (FLN) from the 1950s to the 1970s. The political and
economic programs of these authoritarian populist regimes were
designated "Arab nationalism" and "Arab socialism" respectively. Even
Habib Bourguiba, distinguished by his pragmatic pro-Western views,
authorized a "socialist experiment" in Tunisia during the 1960s,
albeit with a rather anti-labor and pro-business, pro-landowner
orientation. In Lebanon and Jordan--regimes that were aligned with the
United States in the Cold War and rejected populist, state-led
development--Nasirism and Ba`thism became the primary forms of
opposition politics in the 1950s and 1960s.

Political currents in Turkey are distinct from those in the Arab
countries, but it has followed a comparable course of economic
development, especially since 1960. The Democrat Party, in power from
1950 to 1960, was committed to its rural base, free markets, and NATO.
It promised to turn Turkey into a "little America." These policies
were successful in the early 1950s, when the Korean War boom and
subsidized export of agricultural products buttressed the economy. In
the second half of the decade, foreign exchange dried up and the
economy suffered. A coup by junior officers in 1960 reinstated
industrially oriented statist development and economic planning.

The 1961 constitution guaranteed workers the right to strike and
engage in collective bargaining for the first time. The new regime
encouraged labor and capital to coexist.

The authoritarian populist Arab regimes, as well as the post-1960 coup
Turkish government, acknowledged workers and peasants as central
components of the nation. Gamal 'Abd al-Nasir often spoke of an
alliance composed of the army, workers, peasants and "national"
capitalists. Variations on this formula were common during this era. 1
These regimes proclaimed that the goal of national economic
construction was improving the standard of living of the laboring
masses, especially peasants and rural communities, who constituted
some 75 percent of the population of Egypt and 80 percent of the
population of Turkey in the 1960s. Thus, the Free Officers' coup of
July 23, 1952 in Egypt was popularly legitimated by land reforms
enacted less than two months after the abolition of the monarchy,
targeting "feudal" large landowners as an obstacle to economic
development and political allies of imperialism. Similar land reforms
were enacted in Syria, Iraq, and Algeria.

Industrial, clerical and service workers in the greatly expanded
public sector typically benefited from state-led development even more
than peasants, because of the urban bias of import- substitution
industrialization. Workers were encouraged to join trade unions and
national labor federations linked to the ruling party and the state.
In exchange for corporatist integration of the trade union
confederations into the state apparatus, their members received job
security, higher wages, shorter hours, health care, unemployment
insurance, pensions and access to consumer cooperatives.

Official acknowledgment of the national importance of "the people,"
"the toilers," or the "popular classes" infused public political
discourse with the vocabulary of class, exploitation and imperialism
drawn from the Marxist lexicon. Communist parties intermittently
allied with authoritarian populist regimes because of their
anti-imperialist nationalism and their neutralist or pro-Soviet
policies during the Cold War. Marxists and other left-leaning
intellectuals were encouraged to investigate the history and sociology
of workers and peasants.2 Novels and films representing workers and
peasants as the most worthy citizens of the nation won official
approval and popular acclaim.3 But Communists were also brutally
suppressed at the whim of ruling regimes.

Like similar ideologies in Africa and Latin America, Nasirism,
Ba`thism and other varieties of Middle Eastern populist
authoritarianism rejected the notion of class struggle. When
collective actions of workers and peasants exceeded authorized
boundaries and challenged the regime, they were quashed. In Egypt, the
first act of the Free Officers in the realm of economic and social
policy was to suppress the textile workers' strike at Kafr al-Dawwar
in August 1952 and hang two of its leaders. In Algeria, the Union
Générale des Travailleurs Algériens (UGTA) encouraged workers to seize
the farms and businesses of departed colons and manage them as
cooperatives. The FLN originally embraced this initiative but soon
disbanded the experiment in self-management (autogestion) in favor of
centralized state-owned enterprises.

Despite regimes' rhetoric, poor peasants and unorganized workers in
small-scale enterprises were not the primary beneficiaries of Arab
socialist policies. Middle peasants were often the main beneficiaries
of the land reforms enacted in Egypt, Syria, Iraq and Algeria in the
1960s and early 1970s, and land reform bureaucracies deepened state
intervention in rural life rather than empowering poor peasants.
Although significant redistribution occurred, and the political
dominance of the landed elite was decisively broken, many large
landholding families managed to preserve at least some of their wealth
and influence.4

Urban middle strata and an elite segment of the working class
benefited disproportionately from the expansion of the public and
governmental sectors and increased social spending on education and
other social services.5 Subaltern segments of the population did
benefit from social spending, and nationalist regimes' legitimacy
depended on improving their standard of living. In exchange, they
tolerated substantial violations of human rights and undemocratic
rule. Even when the limits of import-substitution industrialization
were manifested in stagnation or decline in the standard of living of
workers and peasants, the prevailing political discourse required that
their existence and interests be acknowledged.

Tunisia was the first country to turn away from statist development,
symbolized by the ouster of Ahmad Ben Salah, a socialist and former
Secretary General of the Union Générale Tunisienne de Travail (UGTT),
as minister of national economy in 1969. Egypt began to retreat from
Arab socialism in 1968, even before Gamal `Abd al-Nasir's death. But
the ideological elaboration of the new orientation did not occur until
1974.6

The 1980 military coup in Turkey brought to power a regime committed
to neoliberal economic policies. Oil wealth enabled Algeria to avoid
facing the contradictions of statist development in the 1970s and to
attempt to address them on its own terms at the end of the decade.

The specificities of these cases suggest that monocausal or globalist
explanations for the demise of statist development policies in the
Middle East, such as Guillermo O'Donnell's theory of the economic
changes associated with a transition from populist to bureaucratic
authoritarianism,7 or interpretations stressing pressures from the
United States and Great Britain during the ascendancy of
Reagan-Thatcher efforts to roll back economic nationalism,8 or the
all-pervasive power of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the
World Bank,9 must be modified according to the particularities of each
case. Although these general explanations have some validity,
rivalries within ruling parties, the social balance of forces, and
collective actions of workers and others have influenced the timing
and character of these transitions.

Moreover, the impact of global economic changes and shifts in local
social and political power was mediated by Middle East regional
developments. The political appeal of state-led development and
import-substitution industrialization was dramatically undermined by
the massive Arab defeat of June 1967. That debacle demonstrated that
Arab nationalism and Arab socialism had failed to effect a
revolutionary transformation of Arab societies; they were even weaker
relative to Israel than they had been in 1948. The 1967 defeat
affected Egypt most immediately and strengthened the hand of those
advocating a reconsideration of economic and social policy.

The defeat of Nasirism and Ba`thism, the suppression of the Communists
and the new left, official encouragement of political Islam,
frequently supported by private mercantile and financial interests
linked to Saudi Arabia or other Gulf oil states (for example, the
Faysal Islamic Bank) redrew the political, cultural and economic
contours of the Middle East.

The demise of state-led development in the Middle East was
consolidated by the effects of the brief and very permeable Arab oil
boycott following the 1973 war and the end of the long wave of
post-World War II capitalist expansion regulated by the institutions
established at the 1944 Bretton Woods conference: the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (now the World Bank), and the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT). The Bretton Woods system was an international
expression of Fordism-Keynesianism: a regime of mass production, mass
consumption, and parliamentary democracy in the metropolitan
capitalist (OECD) countries.10 Its success was based on the
preeminence of the US economy, the US dollar and US military power.

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Bretton Woods system began to
break down. Japan and Europe re-emerged as economic powers. The US
attempt to fund "Great Society" social programs while fighting the war
in Vietnam diminished the relative strength of the US economy,
symbolized by the delinking of the dollar from gold in 1971. The
recessions in 1974-75 and 1980-82 were caused primarily by domestic
factors in the OECD countries: insufficient capital investment
exacerbated by Reagan-Thatcher monetarist policies designed to
eliminate inflation and break the bargaining power of organized labor.
A decade of stagflation (stagnation and inflation)--the longest and
deepest recessionary period since the end of World War II--ended the
era of Fordism-Keynesianism.

The rise of OPEC in the 1960s also helped to undermine the position of
US capital by shifting the balance of power and revenue flows from
multinational oil corporations to oil exporting states. The 1973 Arab
oil boycott and the Iranian revolution of 1979 were associated with,
though not the direct cause of, the severe recessions that marked the
collapse of Fordism-Keynesianism. But the twenty-fold increase in the
international market price of oil, from $2.00/barrel in 1973 to
$40.50/barrel in 1981, contributed to the inflationary element of the
stagflation syndrome.

During the oil boom of the 1970s, a deluge of petro-dollars washed
over the Middle East, lubricating the transition to a new economic
order. Governments of oil exporting states (especially Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates, who had large oil reserves and
relatively small populations to absorb them) came to control enormous
concentrations of petroleum revenues. International lending to Middle
Eastern countries increased dramatically in the 1970s, partly
motivated by the desire to recirculate petro-dollars. Massive numbers
of workers from countries with little or no oil (Egypt, Jordan,
Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen) migrated to oil exporting states
that undertook major programs of construction and development (Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Libya). Remittances of migrant workers effected a
limited redistribution of petroleum revenues, as did Arab development
aid to Egypt (until the peace treaty with Israel in 1979) and to the
occupied Palestinian territories (much of it funneled through the PLO
until the 1991 Gulf War), and the export of goods and services to Iraq
by Turkey and Jordan.

Multinational oil companies enhanced their profits dramatically during
the oil boom and regained much of the power they had lost to OPEC and
the exporting states when prices collapsed in 1985-86. Declining oil
prices curtailed the development plans of oil exporting countries and
diminished their demand for labor, although Iraq's need to replace
soldiers occupied by the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War partially compensated
for the declining demand for labor in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Libya.
The Gulf oil countries, and even more so Algeria, were under pressure
to repay international debts contracted with the expectation of high
oil revenues.

The herald of the end of state-led development in the Middle East and
the policy shift most closely connected to the outcome of the 1973 war
was Egypt's open door (infitah) economic policy announced in Anwar
al-Sadat's April 1974 "October Working Paper." Despite this and
similar grand pronouncements, the Egyptian economy witnessed little
structural change in the 1970s and early 1980s.11 Nonetheless, a new
class of munfatihun--importers, financiers, middlemen, and
profiteers--began to form. US aid linked to peace with Israel, oil
exports, tolls from the reopened Suez Canal, renewed international
tourism and remittances from migrant workers masked the depth of the
crisis of import- substitution industrialization. These service and
rent activities generated sufficient hard currency to avert a foreign
currency crisis. Therefore, the government could avoid policy choices
that would endanger its support from the legions of managers, clerical
and blue-collar workers employed in public enterprises and the state
apparatus.

The end of the oil boom in 1985-86 and the explosion of Third World
debt, signaled regionally by the 1978 Turkish foreign exchange crisis
and globally by the 1982 Mexican default, made the Egyptian state more
vulnerable to pressure from the munfatihun, their allies and the
Bretton Woods institutions, resulting in more intense social conflict
and a more decisive transition to the new economic order following the
Gulf War. The pressures of international debt contributed to similar
processes, with differences in timing due to local circumstances in
Turkey, Jordan, Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, and, to a limited extent,
in Syria and Iraq.

FULL TEXT:
<http://arabworld.nitle.org/texts.php?module_id=4&reading_id=19&print=1></blockquote>


--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
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