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Globalization And Democracy:
Some Basics
By Michael Parenti
05/27/07 "ICH"
--- -- The goal of the transnational corporation is to
become truly transnational, poised above the sovereign power of
any particular nation, while being served by the sovereign
powers of all nations. Cyril Siewert, chief financial officer of
Colgate Palmolive Company, could have been speaking for all
transnationals when he remarked, “The United States doesn’t have
an automatic call on our [corporation’s] resources. There is no
mindset that puts this country first.”[i]
With international “free trade” agreements such as NAFTA, GATT,
and FTAA, the giant transnationals have been elevated above the
sovereign powers of nation states. These agreements endow
anonymous international trade committees with the authority to
prevent, overrule, or dilute any laws of any nation deemed to
burden the investment and market prerogatives of transnational
corporations. These trade committees–of which the World Trade
Organization (WTO) is a prime example—set up panels composed of
“trade specialists” who act as judges over economic issues,
placing themselves above the rule and popular control of any
nation, thereby insuring the supremacy of international finance
capital. This process, called globalization, is treated as an
inevitable natural “growth” development beneficial to all. It is
in fact a global coup d’état by the giant business interests of
the world.
Elected by no one and drawn from the corporate world, these
panelists meet in secret and often have investment stakes in the
very issues they adjudicate, being bound by no
conflict-of-interest provisions. Not one of GATT’s five hundred
pages of rules and restrictions are directed against private
corporations; all are against governments. Signatory
governments must lower tariffs, end farm subsidies, treat
foreign companies the same as domestic ones, honor all corporate
patent claims, and obey the rulings of a permanent elite
bureaucracy, the WTO. Should a country refuse to change its laws
when a WTO panel so dictates, the WTO can impose fines or
international trade sanctions, depriving the resistant country
of needed markets and materials.[ii]
Acting as the supreme global adjudicator, the WTO has ruled
against laws deemed “barriers to free trade.” It has forced
Japan to accept greater pesticide residues in imported food. It
has kept Guatemala from outlawing deceptive advertising of baby
food. It has eliminated the ban in various countries on
asbestos, and on fuel-economy and emission standards for motor
vehicles. And it has ruled against marine-life protection laws
and the ban on endangered-species products. The European Union’s
prohibition on the importation of hormone-ridden U.S. beef had
overwhelming popular support throughout Europe, but a
three-member WTO panel decided the ban was an illegal restraint
on trade. The decision on beef put in jeopardy a host of other
food import regulations based on health concerns. The WTO
overturned a portion of the U.S. Clean Air Act banning certain
additives in gasoline because it interfered with imports from
foreign refineries. And the WTO overturned that portion of the
U.S. Endangered Species Act forbidding the import of shrimp
caught with nets that failed to protect sea turtles.[iii]
Free trade is not fair trade; it benefits strong nations at the
expense of weaker ones, and rich interests at the expense of the
rest of us. Globalization means turning the clock back on many
twentieth-century reforms: no freedom to boycott products, no
prohibitions against child labor, no guaranteed living wage or
benefits, no public services that might conceivably compete with
private services, no health and safety protections that might
cut into corporate profits.[iv]
GATT and subsequent free trade agreements allow multinationals
to impose monopoly property rights on indigenous and communal
agriculture. In this way agribusiness can better penetrate
locally self-sufficient communities and monopolize their
resources. Ralph Nader gives the example of the neem tree, whose
extracts contain natural pesticidal and medicinal properties.
Cultivated for centuries in India, the tree attracted the
attention of various pharmaceutical companies, who filed
monopoly patents, causing mass protests by Indian farmers. As
dictated by the WTO, the pharmaceuticals now have exclusive
control over the marketing of neem tree products, a ruling that
is being reluctantly enforced in India. Tens of thousands of
erstwhile independent farmers must now work for the powerful
pharmaceuticals on profit-gorging terms set by the companies.
A trade agreement between India and the United States, the
Knowledge Initiative on Agriculture (KIA), backed by Monsanto
and other transnational corporate giants, allows for the grab of
India’s seed sector by Monsanto, its trade sector by Archer
Daniels Midland and Cargill, and its retail sector by Wal-Mart.
(Wal-Mart announced plans to open 500 stores in India, starting
in August 2007.) This amounts to a war against India’s
independent farmers and small businesses, and a threat to
India’s food security. Farmers are organizing to protect
themselves against this economic invasion by maintaining
traditional seed-banks and setting up systems of communal
agrarian support. One farmer says, “We do not buy seeds from the
market because we suspect they may be contaminated with
genetically engineered or terminator seeds.”[v]
In a similar vein, the WTO ruled that the U.S. corporation
RiceTec has the patent rights to all the many varieties of
basmati rice, grown for centuries by India’s farmers. It also
ruled that a Japanese corporation had exclusive rights in the
world to grow and produce curry powder. As these instances
demonstrate, what is called “free trade” amounts to
international corporate monopoly control. Such developments
caused Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad to observe:
We now have a situation where theft of genetic resources by
western biotech TNCs [transnational corporations] enables them
to make huge profits by producing patented genetic mutations of
these same materials. What depths have we sunk to in the global
marketplace when nature’s gifts to the poor may not be protected
but their modifications by the rich become exclusive property?
If the current behavior of the rich countries is anything to go
by, globalization simply means the breaking down of the borders
of countries so that those with the capital and the goods will
be free to dominate the markets.[vi]
Under free-trade agreements like General Agreements on Trade and
Services (GATS) and Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), all
public services are put at risk. A public service can be charged
with causing “lost market opportunities” for business, or
creating an unfair subsidy. To offer one instance: the
single-payer automobile insurance program proposed by the
province of Ontario, Canada, was declared “unfair competition.”
Ontario could have its public auto insurance only if it paid
U.S. insurance companies what they estimated would be their
present and future losses in Ontario auto insurance sales, a
prohibitive cost for the province. Thus the citizens of Ontario
were not allowed to exercise their democratic sovereign right to
institute an alternative not-for-profit auto insurance system.
In another case, United Postal Service charged the Canadian Post
Office for “lost market opportunities,” which means that under
free trade accords, the Canadian Post Office would have to
compensate UPS for all the business that UPS thinks it would
have had if there were no public postal service. The Canadian
postal workers union has challenged the case in court, arguing
that the agreement violates the Canadian Constitution.
Under NAFTA, the U.S.-based Ethyl Corporation sued the Canadian
government for $250 million in “lost business opportunities” and
“interference with trade” because Canada banned MMT, an
Ethyl-produced gasoline additive considered carcinogenic by
Canadian officials. Fearing they would lose the case, Canadian
officials caved in, agreeing to lift the ban on MMT, pay Ethyl
$10 million compensation, and issue a public statement calling
MMT “safe,” even though they had scientific findings showing
otherwise. California also banned the unhealthy additive; this
time a Canadian based Ethyl company sued California under NAFTA
for placing an unfair burden on free trade.[vii]
International free trade agreements like GATT and NAFTA have
hastened the corporate acquisition of local markets, squeezing
out smaller businesses and worker collectives. Under NAFTA
better-paying U.S. jobs were lost as firms closed shop and
contracted out to the cheaper Mexican labor market. At the same
time thousands of Mexican small companies were forced out of
business. Mexico was flooded with cheap, high-tech, mass
produced corn and dairy products from giant U.S. agribusiness
firms (themselves heavily subsidized by the U.S. government),
driving small Mexican farmers and distributors into bankruptcy,
displacing large numbers of poor peasants. The lately arrived
U.S. companies in Mexico have offered extremely low-paying jobs,
and unsafe work conditions. Generally free trade has brought a
dramatic increase in poverty south of the border.[viii]
We North Americans are told that to remain competitive in the
new era of globalization, we will have to increase our output
while reducing our labor and production costs, in other words,
work harder for less. This in fact is happening as the work-week
has lengthened by as much as twenty percent (from forty hours to
forty-six and even forty-eight hours) and real wages have
flattened or declined during the reign of George W. Bush. Less
is being spent on social services, and we are enduring more wage
concessions, more restructuring, deregulation, and
privatization. Only with such “adjustments,” one hears, can we
hope to cope with the impersonal forces of globalization that
are sweeping us along.
In fact, there is nothing impersonal about these forces. Free
trade agreements, including new ones that have not yet been
submitted to the U.S. Congress have been consciously planned by
big business and its government minions over a period of years
in pursuit of a deregulated world economy that undermines all
democratic checks upon business practices. The people of any one
province, state, or nation are now finding it increasingly
difficult to get their governments to impose protective
regulations or develop new forms of public sector production out
of fear of being overruled by some self-appointed international
free-trade panel.[ix]
Usually it is large nations demanding that poorer smaller ones
relinquish the protections and subsidies they provide for their
local producers. But occasionally things may take a different
turn. Thus in late 2006 Canada launched a dispute at the World
Trade Organization over the use of “trade-distorting”
agricultural subsidies by the United States, specifically the
enormous sums dished out by the federal government to U.S.
agribusiness corn farmers. The case also challenged the entire
multibillion-dollar structure of U.S. agricultural subsidies. It
followed the landmark WTO ruling of 2005 which condemned
“trade-distorting” aid to U.S. cotton farmers. A report by Oxfam
International revealed that at least thirty-eight developing
countries were suffering severely as a result of trade
distorting subsidies by both the United States and the European
Union. Meanwhile, the U.S. government was maneuvering to insert
a special clause into trade negotiations that would place its
illegal use of farm subsidies above challenge by WTO member
countries and make the subsidies immune from adjudication
through the WTO dispute settlement process.[x]
What is seldom remarked upon is that NAFTA and GATT are in
violation of the U.S. Constitution, the preamble of which makes
clear that sovereign power rests with the people: “We the People
of the United States . . . do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.” Article I,
Section 1 of the Constitution reads, “All legislative Powers
herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United
States.” Article I, Section 7 gives the president (not some
trade council) the power to veto a law, subject to being
overridden by a two-thirds vote in Congress. And Article III
gives adjudication and review powers to a Supreme Court and
other federal courts as ordained by Congress. The Tenth
Amendment to the Constitution states: “The powers not delegated
to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it
to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to
the people.” There is nothing in the entire Constitution that
allows an international trade panel to preside as final arbiter
exercising supreme review powers undermining the
constitutionally mandated decisions of the legislative,
executive, and judicial branches.
True, Article VII says that the Constitution, federal laws, and
treaties “shall be the supreme Law of the land,” but certainly
this was not intended to include treaties that overrode the laws
themselves and the sovereign democratic power of the people and
their representatives.
To exclude the Senate from deliberations, NAFTA and GATT were
called “agreements” instead of treaties, a semantic ploy that
enabled President Clinton to bypass the two-third treaty
ratification vote in the Senate and avoid any treaty amendment
process. The World Trade Organization was approved by a
lame-duck session of Congress held after the 1994 elections. No
one running in that election uttered a word to voters about
putting the U.S. government under a perpetual obligation to
insure that national laws do not conflict with international
free trade rulings.
What is being undermined is not only a lot of good laws dealing
with environment, public services, labor standards, and consumer
protection, but also the very right to legislate such laws. Our
democratic sovereignty itself is being surrendered to a
secretive plutocratic trade organization that presumes to
exercise a power greater than that of the people and their
courts and legislatures. What we have is an international coup
d’état by big capital over the nations of the world.
Globalization is a logical extension of imperialism, a victory
of empire over republic, international finance capital over
local productivity and nation-state democracy (such as it is).
In recent times however, given popular protests, several
multilateral trade agreements have been stalled or voted down.
In 1999, militant protests against free trade took place in
forty-one nations from Britain and France to Thailand and
India.[xi] In 2000-01, there were demonstrations in Seattle,
Washington, Sydney, Prague, Genoa, and various other locales. In
2003-04 we saw the poorer nations catching wise to the free
trade scams and refusing to sign away what shreds of sovereignty
they still had. Along with the popular resistance, more national
leaders are thinking twice before signing on to new trade
agreements.
The discussion of globalization by some Marxists (but not all)
has focused on the question of whether the new
“internationalization” of capital will undermine national
sovereignty and the nation state. They dwell on this question
while leaving unmentioned such things as free trade agreements
and the WTO. Invariably these observers (for instance Ellen Wood
and William Taab in Monthly Review, Ian Jasper in Nature,
Society and Thought, Erwin Marquit in Political Affairs)
conclude that the nation state still plays a key role in
capitalist imperialism, that capital-while global in its
scope–is not international but bound to particular nations, and
that globalization is little more than another name for overseas
monopoly capital investment.
They repeatedly remind us that Marx had described globalization,
this process of international financial expansion, as early as
1848, when he and Engels in the Communist Manifesto wrote about
how capitalism moves into all corners of the world, reshaping
all things into its own image. Therefore, there is no cause for
the present uproar. Globalization, these writers conclude, is
not a new development but a longstanding one that Marxist theory
uncovered long ago.
The problem with this position is that it misses the whole
central point of the current struggle. It is not only national
sovereignty that is at stake, it is democratic sovereignty.
Millions, of people all over the world have taken to the streets
to protest free trade agreements. Among them are farmers,
workers, students and intellectuals (including many Marxists who
see things more clearly than the aforementioned ones), all of
whom are keenly aware that something new is afoot and they want
no part of it. As used today, the term globalization refers to a
new stage of international expropriation, designed not to put an
end to the nation-state but to undermine whatever democratic
right exists to protect the social wage and restrain the power
of transnational corporations.
The free trade agreements, in effect, make unlawful all statutes
and regulations that restrict private capital in any way.
Carried to full realization, this means the end of whatever
imperfect democratic protections the populace has been able to
muster after generations of struggle in the realm of public
policy. Under the free trade agreements any and all public
services can be ruled out of existence because they cause “lost
market opportunities” for private capital. So too public
hospitals can be charged with taking away markets from private
hospitals; and public water supply systems, public schools,
public libraries, public housing and public transportation are
guilty of depriving their private counterparts of market
opportunities, likewise public health insurance, public mail
delivery, and public auto insurance systems. Laws that try to
protect the environment or labor standards or consumer health
already have been overthrown for “creating barriers” to free
trade.
What also is overthrown is the right to have such laws. This is
the most important point of all and the one most frequently
overlooked by persons from across the political spectrum. Under
the free trade accords, property rights have been elevated to
international supremacy, able to take precedent over all other
rights, including the right to a clean livable environment, the
right to affordable public services, and the right to any morsel
of economic democracy. Instead a new right has been accorded
absolutist status, the right to corporate private profit. It has
been used to stifle the voice of working people and their
ability to develop a public sector that serves their interests.
Free speech itself is undermined as when “product disparagement”
is treated as an interference with free trade. And nature itself
is being monopolized and privatized by transnational
corporations.
So the fight against free trade is a fight for the right to
politico-economic democracy, public services, and a social wage,
the right not to be completely at the mercy of big capital. It
is a new and drastic phase of the class struggle that some
Marxists–so immersed in classical theory and so ill-informed
about present-day public policy–seem to have missed. As embodied
in the free trade accords, globalization has little to do with
trade and is anything but free. It benefits the rich nations
over poor ones, and the rich classes within all nations at the
expense of ordinary citizens. It is the new specter that haunts
the same old world.
Michael Parenti’s recent books include The Assassination of
Julius Caesar (New Press), Superpatriotism (City Lights), and
The Culture Struggle (Seven Stories Press). For more information
visit:
www.michaelparenti.org
See also
http://www.ichblog.eu/index.php?option=com_seyret&task=videodirectlink&id=491
© 2007 Michael Parenti
[i] Quoted in New York Times, May 21, 1989.[ii] See Lori Wallach
and Michelle Sforza, The WTO (New York: Seven Stories Press,
2000); and John R. MacArthur, The Selling of Free Trade: Nafta,
Washington, and the Subversion of American Democracy (New York:
Hill and Wang, 2000).
[iii] New York Times, April 30, 1996 and May 9, 1997;Washington
Post, October 13, 1998.
[iv] See the report by the United Nations Development Program
referenced in New York Times, July 13, 1999.
[v] Project Censored, “Real News,” April 2007; also Arun
Shrivastava, “Genetically Modified Seeds: Women in India take on
Monsanto,” Global Research, October 9, 2006.
[vi] Quoted in People’s Weekly World, December 7, 1996.
[vii] John R. MacArthur, The Selling of “Free Trade”: NAFTA,
Washington, and the Subversion of American Democracy (New York:
Hill & Wang, 2000; and Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh,
“Nafta’s Unhappy Anniversary,” New York Times, February 7, 1995.
[viii] John Ross, “Tortilla Wars,” Progressive, June 1999
[ix] For a concise but thorough treatment, see Steven Shrybman,
A Citizen’s Guide to the World Trade Organization (Ottawa /
Toronto: Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives and James
Lorimer & Co., 1999).
[x] “US seeks “get-out clause” for illegal farm payments” Oxfam,
June 29, 2006,
http://www.oxfam.org/en/news/pressreleases2006/pr060629_wto_geneva
[xi] San Francisco Chronicle, June 19, 1999.
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