We have become rich countries of poor people

By Joseph Stiglitz

Financial Times
September 8, 2006

There were once hopes thatglobalisation would benefit
all, both in advanced industrial countries and the
developing world. Today, the downside of globalisation
is increasingly apparent. Not only do good things go 
more easily across borders, so do bad - including
terrorism. We see an unfair global trade regime that
impedes development and an unstable global financial
system in which poor countries repeatedly find
themselves with unmanageable debt burdens. Money
should 
flow from the rich to the poor countries, but
increasingly, it goes in the opposite direction.

What is remarkable about globalisation is the
disparity
between the promise and the reality. Globalisation
seems to have unified so much of the world against it,
perhaps because there appear to be so many losers and
so few winners. The Panglossian view of globalisation,
that it would automatically benefit all, has impeded 
the ability to address its failures. Young French
workers ask how globalisation is going to make them
better off - if, as they are told, they must accept
the
resulting lower wages and weakened job protection. 
Growing inequality in the advanced industrial
countries
was a long predicted but seldom advertised
consequence:
full economic integration implies the equalisation of
unskilled wages throughout the world. Although this
has 
not (yet) happened, the downward pressure on those at
the bottom is evident. Unfettered globalisation
actually has the potential to make many people in
advanced industrial countries worse off, even if
economic growth increases. 

While economic theory predicted there would be losers
from globalisation, it also said that the winners
could
compensate the losers. Well-managed globalisation can
make everyone, or at least most, better off. This has 
not happened. Instead, conservatives have argued that
globalisation requires countries to become more
competitive by cutting taxes and rolling back the
welfare state. In the US, tax policies have become
less
progressive; the bulk of recent tax cuts went to the
winners, those who had already benefited both from
globalisation and changes in technology. Increasingly,
we are becoming rich countries with poor people.

The Scandinavian countries have shown there is another
way. Investment in education and research and a strong
safety net can lead to a more productive and
competitive economy.

At the core of many of globalisation' s failures is a 
simple fact: economic globalisation has outpaced the
globalisation of politics and mindsets. We have become
more interdependent; greater interdependence increases
the need for co-ordinated action. But we still lack
the 
institutional frameworks to do this effectively and
democratically.

Perhaps not surprisingly, more attention is often
placed on the concerns of developed countries and
their
special interests than those in the developing world. 
It is good news that we are finally doing something
about the crushing debt burdens of the poorest
countries but we have done little to ensure the debt
problem does not arise again, and nothing to create a
systematic mechanism for debt restructuring. The fact
that so many countries end up with unmanageable debt
burdens suggests that the problem is systemic. Global
markets are highly volatile and too often the poor
bear 
the brunt of exchange rate and interest rate changes.
Yet nothing has been done about these underlying
problems.

There are already numerous solutions on the table:
some
that could be adopted overnight, some that would take 
years but would at least make globalisation work
better. If developing countries could borrow in their
own currencies (or in baskets of correlated
currencies), fewer countries would find themselves
with
massive debt burdens. Other reforms in debt management

strategies could help further stabilise the global
financial system. Consider, as another example of
globalisation' s failure, the diseases that plague so
many of the poor countries. The global intellectual
property regime denies access to affordable
life-saving
drugs, even as the Aids epidemic ravishes so much of
the developing world. Advocates of the current system
say this is the price for providing incentives for 
research. But for those concerned about health in
developing countries, the intellectual property regime
has not worked. There is an alternative: a medical
prize fund, financed by industrialised countries,
could 
reward those who discover cures for diseases of the
poor, provide incentives for research and award bigger
prizes for key drugs. The medicines could then be
provided to the poor at cost. Such a system would be 
both far more efficient and equitable than the current
system.

Globalisation can be changed; indeed, it is clear it
will be changed. The question is: will change be
forced
on us as the result of a crisis, or will we take 
control of the globalisation process? The former risks
a backlash against globalisation or a haphazard
reshaping in a way that only sets the stage for more
problems. The latter holds out the possibility of
remaking globalisation so that it can live up to its
potential to improve living standards throughout the
world.

The writer was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in
2001; his latest book, Making Globalization Work (
W.W.
Norton/Penguin) is published this month

(c) Copyright The Financial Times Ltd 2006.

http://www.ft. com/cms/s/ 7aba84d6- 3ed6-11db-
b4de-0000779e234 0.htmlf 

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