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There Is an Alternative
to Corporate Rule All
over the world, truly democratic approaches are bubbling up from
the grassroots.
By Mark Engler
14/09/08 "CommonDreams"
-- - One of the remarkable features of modern political life
is how consistently global elites deny that viable alternatives
to the current global order exist, even as the terrain of
international politics rapidly shifts. The "imperial globalists"
that rose to power in the Bush years contend that without U.S.
military strength decisively projected abroad, the forces of
evil will sweep the globe. Meanwhile, "corporate globalists" of
Wall Street persist in their belief that, in the post-Cold War
world, we have no choice but to embrace the continual advance of
the "free" market.
Neither idea is credible. The disastrous war in Iraq has firmly
contradicted the neocons' argument that preemptive war can
create security. Meanwhile, mainstream pundits continue to
proclaim neoliberalism -- the radical free market doctrine that
has defined the "Washington Consensus" in international
economics in recent decades -- to be inevitable and
irreplaceable. Yet as that ideology falls into disrepute across
the globe, their contention is revealed as ever more deeply
disingenuous. Today, there exist scores of books and hundreds of
reports that offer new directions for the global order -- plus
innumerable initiatives at local, national, and international
levels to create political and economic systems that uphold
human rights and defend the environment.
In truth, a lack of viable ideas is hardly the problem for those
who reject both corporate and imperial models of globalization.
Whether they are part of boisterous national uprisings or quiet,
persistent community efforts to fuel a truly democratic
globalization -- a globalization from below -- members of
grassroots networks are now engaged in a debate about the proper
balance of vision, program, political strategy, and tactics
needed to move forward.
Changes in the Global Justice Movement
Part of what has fueled public confusion about alternatives was
specific to the political moment when globalization protests
captured the attention of the mainstream media. During the
period around the year 2000, global justice organizing was being
covered only in contexts where participants were providing a
voice of opposition -- at the summit meetings of institutions
like the World Trade Organization (WTO), World Bank, and
International Monetary Fund (IMF). These events became flash
points of resistance for a reason: the summit meetings were
remarkably effective at drawing together a tremendously diverse
body of global citizen activists.
Yet the globalization scene began to shift early in the Bush
years, with the attacks of 9/11 playing an important role in the
change. Just as abruptly as the major news outlets had announced
the arrival of a "new" global movement after the Seattle
protests against the WTO, challenges to the Washington Consensus
became virtually invisible to their reporters once again after
9/11. This only partially reflected what was happening on the
ground. In the months following the attacks, some protests --
notably a major mobilization against World Bank and IMF meetings
in Washington, DC -- were cancelled as the world rose to express
sympathy for the victims. However, the Bush administration's
reckless response wiped out global good will and ultimately
widened the scope of protests.
As strategies to impose elite visions of globalization
continued, global justice protests throughout the world resumed.
Many people, particularly in Southern countries, combined
outrage at U.S. militarism with a repudiation of corporate
globalization. When Bush traveled abroad, he was met with huge
protests, many of which raised economic issues as well as
anti-war concerns. Yet media outlets mostly reported these
demonstrations as incoherent anti-American riots when they
covered them at all. Beltway pundits rushed to declare the
global justice movement dead. Leading the pack was Edward
Gresser of the Progressive Policy Institute, the think-tank of
the pro-"free trade" Democratic Leadership Council, who
pronounced the movement "destined for irrelevance" in a
realigned world.
Millions of people had reason to protest. These activists were
about to redraw the political map of Latin America, preside over
the collapse of neoliberalism's legitimacy, lead a worldwide
rebellion against preemptive war, and push issues of economic
justice to ever more prominent places in the global development
debate. Their efforts for a democratic globalization, they would
assert, were very much alive.
The View From Porto Alegre
As it turned out, a most visible manifestation of the next stage
of global justice movement would come from a modest city of 1.5
million people deep in the south of Brazil, a place whose name
has become synonymous with the pursuit of a more just and
democratic global order. Today, mention of Porto Alegre, the
original home of the World Social Forum, should be sufficient to
forever put to rest the knee-jerk contention that there is no
alternative to dominant visions of globalization.
Even as progressives within the U.S. turned to resisting Bush
administration policies of preemptive war and its reactionary
assaults on Constitutional rights, international movements have
not waited for regime change in the U.S. to further the decline
of the Washington Consensus. Massive crowds have joined
Americans in rallying against the war in Iraq, as on February
15, 2003, when upwards of ten million people in over 500 cities
took to the streets, constituting the largest coordinated global
day of action in history. But, at the same time, local
communities have waged battles to reverse privatization of
public utilities and transnational campaigns have fought for
reforms like debt cancellation. In countries throughout Latin
America, they have successfully overthrown neoliberal
governments, elected leaders who oppose the Washington
Consensus, and they have pressured those officials to enact
social policies that serve working people.
Reflecting this sustained torrent of global activity, the World
Social Forum has grown and matured. While the first global forum
in 2001 hosted 12,000 participants, subsequent events have grown
larger and larger, drawing crowds of up to 150,000 people. In
addition to returning to Porto Alegre for three additional years
after the initial summit, the global event has also convened in
Mumbai, India and Nairobi, Kenya, with smaller forums taking
place at the regional level. At World Social Forum, community
leaders, nonprofit representatives, scholars, organizers, and
progressive lawmakers have presented, debated, and refined ideas
that collectively represent as comprehensive a set of policies
for the global economy as any wonky campaign office could ever
hope to devise. These spaces have served as physical embodiments
of the proposals for a democratic globalization.
Groups meeting in tents designated for discussion of energy and
the environment have strategized about ways to break our
dependence on the oil economy. They have proposed investment in
mass public transportation, high mileage standards for cars, and
shifting government subsidies for hydrocarbon exploitation to
alternative energy. Other environmentalists have worked to
promote an international carbon tax to penalize polluters --
something undoubtedly in the public interest, especially given
mounting evidence about the perils of global warming. All these
represent perfectly viable public policies, but have been
vehemently opposed by the oil industry.
In other tents, family farmers and food safety advocates from
throughout the world have gathered to promote models for
redistributive land reform. Even the international financial
institutions acknowledge that land reform would be beneficial
for the poor, but it has been pushed off the political map by
national elites and agribusiness conglomerates. Other advocates
explained how current government subsidies for exports and for
pesticides boost large-scale "mono-cropping" over organic
agriculture; in response, they argued for a shift in public
funds to support sustainable farming. Indigenous communities
further asserted their right to self-determination, particularly
with regard to maintaining traditional systems of land ownership
and food production.
Tents holding discussions on the need to curb corporate power
have advanced a slate of innovative proposals. These include
public financing of elections to end what U.S. Senator Russ
Feingold has called "a system of legalized bribery and legalized
extortion." They include laws that allow victims of corporate
abuses in the developing world to sue in U.S. or European
courts. And they include detailed proposals for strengthening
anti-trust law in order to break up business monopolies -- among
them the massive media empires that do much to set the limits of
public debate.
A group called ATTAC, one of the organizations that founded the
World Social Forum, has set up tents promoting campaigning for
the Tobin Tax. First proposed by Nobel Prize-winning economist
James Tobin in the 1970s, the initiative would impose a low
percentage tax on the hundreds of billions of dollars worth of
international financial transactions that take place each day.
This would provide a disincentive for short-term gambling on
currencies, and it would encourage longer-term and more
productive investment. Moreover, even a miniscule levy could
create an annual fund of upwards of $100 billion that could be
used to stop the spread of disease and alleviate global poverty.
Warehouse workspaces hosting labor organizations have offered
myriad methods for protecting workers' rights and ending
sweatshop conditions. Over seventy cities and localities in the
United States have passed Living Wage laws since the early
1990s. These go beyond paltry minimum wage requirements and
mandate that businesses pay employees at least enough to keep
their families out of poverty. At the social forums, U.S.
advocates discussed how to spread these campaigns. Meanwhile,
representatives from the estimated 180 worker-run factories that
formed after capital fled Argentina's collapsing neoliberal
economy in 2001 spoke about their experiences in
self-management. And groups like the Women's International
Coalition for Economic Justice have stressed that U.N.-backed
summits and other international efforts to advance women's
rights must not be subordinated to multilateral trade
agreements.
Finally, workshops organized by representatives from the fair
trade movement profiled endeavors to build direct ties between
producers in the global South and Northern consumers. The fair
trade model aims to eliminate exploitative middlemen, ensure
that workers get a living wage for their labor, and give local
collectives a greater say in the determining the conditions
under which international economic exchanges take place. Like
organic food, fair trade remains a niche market, and it cannot
substitute for wider structural changes in global economy. But
it provides both a living alternative to exploitative trade and
a hopeful model for future change.
Even this wide range of activity hardly constitutes an
exhaustive survey. Unlike the corporate and imperial models, a
globalization from below does not take the form of
one-size-fits-all prescription for the global economy. With
regard to alternative policies, the model of participatory
democracy produces, in the words of another slogan, "One No,
Many Yeses." It generates a strong challenge to structures of
neoliberalism and empire, but allows for a wider sense of what
might replace them.
Contrary to individual manifestos that presume that a lack of
ideas is the problem for progressives, the advocates at Porto
Alegre have presented an agenda for change rooted in local
struggles and campaigns that have long been underway. Excellent
volumes such as Alternatives to Economic Globalization, a book
compiled by the San Francisco-based International Forum on
Globalization, have profiled other aspects of this agenda. The
Human Development Reports produced annually by the United
Nations Development Program have backed many of these same
initiatives. A number of progressive proposals have even been
introduced as legislation in the U.S. Congress in such measures
as the recent TRADE Act, advanced by fair trade advocates this
summer. Needless to say, the elite beneficiaries of corporate
and imperial rule, still steadfast in their contention that no
alternatives exist, would prefer that the public not take notice
of any of these developments.
Just Saying No, or First Do No Harm
The ideas, experiences, and proposals of the World Social Forum
provide a trove of information for all those who want to
construct a new agenda for the global economy. At the same time,
as long as democratic movements do not have the power to
overrule political and economic elites, there exists an
important case for just saying "no" -- for first insisting that
those now in power stop doing harm.
When Wall Street neoliberals and Washington militarists ask,
"What is the alternative?" they base the question on faulty
assumptions. Their question serves to naturalize very radical
agendas of empire and corporate rule, suggesting that these are
normal and acceptable states of affairs. They are not. In a
situation where power is grossly imbalanced, where crimes are
being perpetuated in the name of democracy, and where ever
larger sections of public life are being handed over to the
market, saying "no" to these radical agendas can be a perfectly
worthy task in itself.
In an important respect, the alternative to invading Iraq is not
invading Iraq. The alternative to NAFTA is no NAFTA. The neocons'
invasion of Iraq has cost thousands of American lives, taken the
lives of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians, produced some
two million refugees, and is set to squander over a trillion
dollars of public funds. It has generated heightened regional
tensions, greater instability, and more terrorism. Given the
disastrous history of U.S. interventions -- not just in Iraq,
but also, to mention some particularly ignoble examples of the
past 60 years, in Vietnam, Indonesia, Chile, Guatemala, El
Salvador, Iran, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua -- calling
for a moratorium on such military actions, official and covert,
is a first step in stemming the damage of imperial
globalization.
The agenda of corporate globalization, which unfortunately
thrived during the Clinton presidency and is still popular
within the right wing of the Democratic Party, is subtler. But
this, too, has relied on forceful maneuvering to come into
existence. Neoliberalism involves aggressively opening markets,
clearing the way for a previously unheard of level of
speculative capital transfer, and dictating the restructuring of
local economies. None of these things occur naturally, and they
deserve opposition. A moratorium on harmful "free trade" deals
and on further expansion of the WTO, especially into areas
beyond the traditional realm of trade, is a vital immediate
demand.
Simply refusing each of the mandates of the Washington Consensus
-- or at least rejecting the idea that they should be imposed
world as a one-size-fits-all uniform for development -- would
itself allow for a substantial restructuring of globalization
politics. The true utopians in the global economy are people who
embraced the market fundamentalist fantasy that unchecked
capital would serve the common good. Refuting this idea can be
fairly straightforward.
Neoliberal corporate globalization prescribes the elimination of
tariffs and other protections for local enterprises. An
alternative would be to allow poorer countries to keep these
intact, reviving what is known in trade agreements as "special
and differential treatment." This model would give developing
countries more flexibility in choosing to nurture infant
industries and to protect agricultural commodities that are
important to traditional cultures and to the security of their
food supply. When the Washington Consensus demands the
privatization of public industry and the division of the commons
into private property, an alternative is to keep these things in
the hands of the public, defending the provision of public goods
as a way of ensuring economic human rights -- including
guaranteed public access to water, electricity, and health care.
If it calls for cuts in social services, an alternative is to
reject the cuts, maintaining or bolstering these services and
instead pushing for a redistributive tax system that makes the
wealthy pay their fair share.
When Washington mandates a more "flexible" labor market -- one
without unions or worker protections -- an alternative is to
defend living wages, collective bargaining, and the right to
associate. And when IMF bailouts for wealthy investors create a
situation in which, to paraphrase author Eduardo Galeano, "risk
is socialized while profit is privatized," an alternative is
simply to end these bailouts, making speculators bear the cost
of their gambles.
The demand to reverse neoliberal structural adjustment policies
proposes a fundamentally different relationship between wealthy
nations and the global South than currently exists. It would
grant countries the freedom to determine their own economic
policies, priorities for government spending, and rules for
controlling foreign investment. Instead of imposing a single
hegemonic model on the entire world, this new relationship would
allow for broader diversity and experimentation in international
development. While this does not by itself constitute a vision
for ensuring human rights or protecting the environment, it
nevertheless represents an important strategic gain. It alone
would likely bring change of great enough magnitude to make the
politics of the global economy look virtually unrecognizable to
those who have grown accustomed to Washington-dictated corporate
globalization.
Those who reject corporate and imperial models of globalization
have a wealth of ideas at their disposal, a healthy internal
debate to refine their strategies, and a vibrant, growing
international network of citizens that see their efforts as part
an interconnected whole. They also have very powerful enemies.
Fortunately, as we enter the post-Bush era, the international
community has voiced a firm rejection of unilateralism and
preemptive war. Likewise, ever-larger swaths of the globe view
the neoliberal doctrine of corporate expansion as a failed and
discredited vision. This creates unique opportunities for
citizens to fight to bring a democratic globalization into
existence. More exciting still is that many people are already
doing so, and, on key issues like debt relief and across entire
regions like the Latin America, they are winning. The punditry
is increasingly taking notice. For there is nothing so dangerous
to those who insist that the world must remain as it is as the
simple, stubbornly defiant doctrine of hope.
-- Mark Engler, a senior analyst with Foreign Policy In Focus,
is author of How to Rule the World: The Coming Battle Over the
Global Economy (Nation Books, 2008), from which this article is
adapted. He can be reached via the web site
http://www.DemocracyUprising.com
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