Global Subjects: How Did We Get Here?

Developing nations are actively seeking the participation of foreign capital in their growth process . . . ' this statement rankled when I read it recently and set me to recollecting, of all things, the 1960s.

There was an undercurrent of excitement and promise in the early years of that decade as the last remaining colonized nations regained their sovereign status. Discussions centered on establishing nationhood and political identity out of the debris of the past. Not prominent at the time were economic analyses of one of the major outcomes of colonization: the massive transfer of wealth (capital) from the colonized nations that became a cornerstone of the industrial expansion of the West.

Finance capital is a nation's savings that c a n be invested to generate further wealth and productivity. In a strictly capitalist world economy, lack of capital is a dire predicament indeed. This was the first of three stages of wealth depletion that underlies the plight of many developing nations today.

The second stage of loss of capital occurred in the ensuing years. During the 1960s and 1970s, the economies of most developing nations were built around the export of primary products, agricultural and natural resources such as jute, cocoa, tin and copper. Protectionist trade restrictions and tariffs imposed by the industrialized nations ensured extremely low prices for these raw products. Furthermore, tariffs were least for unprocessed products and escalated with each step in processing, thus discouraging processing before export. This created a favorable climate for international manufacturers and punishing conditions for local middle class entrepreneurs. Developing nations lost millions of dollars in revenues.

These policies by the industrialized countries in Europe and the United States served the interests of transnational corporations who played an increasingly dominant role in this process.1 Transnational corporations bought u p local industries belonging to middle-class entrepreneurs who either could not resist the high prices offered or feared forced sales later. At the same time, they created local subsidiaries of their own corporations that capitalized on cheap labor and production costs. It is critical to note that no trade agreements, such as the General Tariff and Trade Agreements (GATT), which were weak to begin with, governed the trade between the local subsidiary a n d the foreign-based firm. Globalization, as the international control of finance, production and distribution of goods has come to be known, firmly established itself.

A serious misconception is that transnational corporations bring much-needed capital to developing countries. Exactly the reverse has been true; they have contributed to the flight of capital on a large scale. Through their subsidiaries, transnational corporations use up scarce local capital for their operations rather than bring in new capital. When savings are low, banks in developing countries prefer to lend to a big name subsidiary corporation rather than a struggling local business. An exhaustive United Nations study by Fajnzylber2 shows that during the 1960s, transnational corporations financed 83 percent of their Latin American investment locally. In the manufacturing field, it was 78 percent.3 We should note that during the same time, 52 percent of all profits in manufacturing were sent to the USA.4 A UN study in 1973 covering disparate countries around the world such as Kenya, India and Jamaica, found that local savings provided the bulk of financing for foreign investors.5

As export prices for primary goods fell and import prices for manufactured goods rose, developing nations were earning less money than they were spending. Thus they emerged out of the 1970s i n a serious state of debt in the balance of payments. High interest rates on the external debt meant that more and more of the countries' resources were now going to repay debts, initiating the third phase of finance-capital flight. One study shows that $ 115 billion was transferred from developing countries to the industrialized nations between 1983 and 1988.6 For poor people, this was an unmitigated disaster resulting in entrenched impoverishment as adjustment measures to balance the budget were financed largely through cuts in government spending for human development. Middle class entrepreneurs in developing countries faced a brick wall at every turn: low prices for exports, high tariffs on processed goods, lack of capital and rising prices. These same conditions have been ideal for transnational corporations which prospered greatly.

POWER ADJUSTMENTS

The sting for industrialized nations was that the decline in economic viability of developing nations also meant a concomitant drop in their ability to be consumers of Western goods. One result was that U.S. exports reduced significantly and U.S. unemployment skyrocketed in the mid-1980s. Unemployment, combined with widespread financial speculation and the exodus of U.S. corporations to countries with cheap labor, began a process of downward mobility for the North American middle class.

The world economy is so interlinked that economic decisions have international repercussions. Realizing this, one path is to promote growth and development with equity. Regrettably, the path chosen by industrialized nations in the 1980s, partly to solve the U.S. recession,7 follows a triad of policies, imposed through the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), to promote liberalization, deregulation and privatization. These policies further dismantled trade and investment barriers, ended economic controls of the market such as subsidies, price regulation, environmental protection and labor regulation, and transferred government operations to private, profit-making enterprises. Known as Structural Adjustment Programs (SAP), these policies effectively spelled the end of economic autonomy for the developing nations. Ostensibly to aid countries pay off their debts, these far-reaching, permanent changes set national economies firmly on the path to a global economy dominated by some 100 transnational corporations8 that control 2/3 of all global trade.9 A small number of elite families in the developing countries share some of this bounty.

The concentration of wealth that this represents can be grasped by another statistic: in 1996, the income of the world's 447 richest individuals was equal to the income of 52 percent of humanity.10 When Ted Turner, owner of the mass communication giant CNN, recently contributed $1 billion to bail out the United Nations from its financial crisis, his gesture was laudable. But a perspective is gained when we realize that $1 billion was simply the increase on his net worth since January.11 It is interesting to note that he has retained the right to dispense the money only to programs he approves. His top priority is to ban land mines. Today's global economic system is widening the divide between the rich and the poor, in developing as well as industrialized nations.

This level of wealth connotes great power: the power to transform financial and political agendas to suit the transnational corporations, the power to influence the fabric of our lives at all levels. Transnational corporations decide what crops we will grow, what we will eat, wear, buy, study and research. They decide what society should value, what news is publishable, which entertainers are worth watching, the state of our environment and even the fate of our governments.

Transnational corporations harness their power by manipulating finance capital on a worldwide scale, by controlling technology and monopolizing marketing and distribution channels.

MANIPULATING CAPITAL

Modern communication technology makes it possible to play global currency to one's own advantage. This flow of money, traded by private persons in private markets, largely goes on unsupervised by any financial institutions. The impact of currency speculation by a single individual, billionaire George Soros, has seemingly managed to derail the economies of several Southeast Asian countries.12 National economies are also delicately balanced against one another: changes in one nation are bound to impact others. Thailand is facing outright recession next year in part because China kowtowed to foreign investors way back in 1994 by devaluing its currency by 35 percent.13

TECHNOLOGY AND AUTOMATION

In the field of technology, scientists all over the world work for those who pay the bill, which more and more tend to be corporations; it stand to reason therefore, that the agenda for that research is set to maximize profits, not necessarily to sustain humanity. Transnational corporations retain ownership and strict controls over their technological innovations which thus become lost to local entrepreneurs.

A critical outcome of technology is its impact on employment. An examined assumption is that foreign investment will increase employment. In Bangladesh, for instance, there has been an increase in low-skill workers but the number of educated unemployed has also increased.14 Unemployment and inflation are major problems facing Filipinos.15 As prices rise, nutrition levels are dropping in the Philippines: one out of five families experiences food insecurity.16 The SAP- instigated deregulation measures have crippled the labor movement all over the world, ensuring low wages and zero bargaining power. Still, there are jobs, we thought. Now we find transnational corporations are bent on eliminating as many jobs as possible through technological innovations in automation. This process is already very advanced in the U.S.A. and is quickly following suit in corporations located abroad. Fewer and fewer workers will be needed to produce the world's goods. After all, automation is even cheaper than cheap labor.

Major employers globally are restructuring their operations and creating permanent reductions in the workforce.17 Women will be deeply impacted by this because many of the jobs eliminated are middle-management positions, often held by women. Workers with years of experience are being made redundant, largely by reliance on computers. Most distressing is that there are few areas of job growth except in the leisure industries and a small number emerging in the "knowledge" sector, employing scientists, computer programmers, and  professional educators. This will serve only a fraction of the millions who will lose jobs, and as computer technology also happens to be a male dominated field, women will lose by being newcomers.

IDEOLOGICAL CONTROL

In some ways, control of marketing has had the greatest impact on all our lives. Global companies need a global market of world consumers with the same tastes and habits. If this has meant manufacturing those desires in people, mass media and marketing techniques have been the greatest allies of corporations in making consumers out of all of us. On a global scale, this repeats the concerted campaign in the U.S.A. early in this century to dampen the ethics of austerity and thrift traditionally associated with the early Americans, transforming them into status-conscious customers ashamed to use homemade products, with needs never before perceived.18 A person who is satisfied with very little cannot be a successful customer; the objective of advertising is to manipulate us into a constant state of discontent. The middle-class housewife worldwide is targeted heavily by mass media as a prime candidate to become a heavy shopper. Young people are also major targets. What are the broader implications of a generation of "discontented" youth?

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

Money and the conduct of business have always had their place in human societies, but they generally have been informed by spiritual and moral values. In traditional Hindu society, the order of business is placed in the third tier, the business caste being governed by Brahmins, keepers of spiritual well-being and knowledge, and by Kshyatryas, the rulers and preservers of peace and order. In Islamic societies, the times for prayers precisely interrupt the daily activities of commerce and business so people can seek divine guidance for all their actions. Jesus objected passionately to the "house of God" being taken over by the merchants.

Today, however, "creation of wealth" has become the fundamental value at the center of global society and analyses of economics are devoid of issues of morality, human needs, and social conscience. Competition and efficiency have become noble pursuits and profits, the Holy Grail. Sacrificed are the quality of human life and the sanctity and preservation of this earth.

To rescue ourselves from here, we must consider some reversals that will return balance to the pursuit of business.

Calling on corporations to put brakes o n their growth and apply moral scruples to their activities has become an unthinkable option. But that is exactly what is required for the well-being of the human race. The global activities of transnational corporations should be regulated by designated international institutions, just like other activities (war, science, human rights). Globalization of production should also include globalization of reasonable standards of pay, work hours and labor rights for workers. Agribusiness decisions need critical oversight because they can have disastrous consequences on the health and nutrition levels of populations. Worldwide unemployment is self defeating for everyone concerned, particularly business which will lose customers. An international forum is urgently needed to analyze the problem of automation, project the consequences and introduce curbs.

Half-hearted efforts to sustain the environment have led to the ecological disaster in Southeast Asia this year. An international body, such as the World Court, must have the authority to impose sanctions on countries and corporations which do not honor environmental agreements and regulations.

Finally, we as consumers have a role to play. We can consciously support companies which are not considered "efficient" because they pay higher wages and benefits to their workers or protect the environment—even if it means paying higher prices. We can remain alert, analyze, read between the lines, speak out, refuse to be manipulated, keep the greater good in mind. Is the economic landscape we want one where we are subject to business, or one where business serves us?

Hayat Imam is a Muslim feminist who has worked internationally on development concerns. She was former executive director of the Boston Women's Fund and coordinator of Isis  International workshops at the Women's NCO Forum m Beijing. Presently she's a consultant to the National Family Violence Prevention Program of the Women's Crisis Center.

1 Uner Kirdar, ed., Change: Threat or Opportunity? vol. 2 (New York: United Nations, 1992), p. 59.
2 Fernando Fajnzylber, Estrategea Industrial y Empreseas Internationales: Posicion Relativa de America y Brasil (Rio de Janeiro: United Nations, 1970), p. 65.
3 R. Bamet and R. Muller, Global Reach (London: Jonathan Cape, 1974), p. 153.
4 Ibid.
5 P. Streeten and S. Lall The Flow of Financial Resources: Private Foreign Investment (Geneva: UNCTAD, 1973).
6 Kirdar, op. cit., p. 7.
7 E. Villegas, "The Political Economy of the Current Intemational Situation", IPS Journals, September 1996, p. 13.
8 The Nation, Sept. 29, 1997.
9 Antonio Tujan, "APEC and Globalization", Ibon Philippines, June 1996, p. 11.
10 The Nation, Oct. 13, 1997, p. 7.
11 Ibid., p. 4. It is interesting to note that he has retained the right to dispense the money only to programs he approves. His top priority is to ban land mines. A question to ponder: If Ted Turner was i n support of land mines, would Jody WiUiams have won the Nobel Peace Prize this year?
12 USA Today, Oct. 7, 1997.
13 The Economist, Sept. 6, 1997, p. 70.
14 The Impact of Globalization on the World of Work, International Labor Organization, 1996, p. 4.
15 Philippine Daily Inquirer, Sept. 24, 1997.
16 R. Heaver and J . Hunt, Improving Early Childhood Development (Washington, D C : World Bank, 1995), p.3.
17 J . Rifkin and J . Hunt, Improving Early Childhood Development, 1995, p. xvii.
18 J . Rifkin, op. cit., pp. 20-21

Can Big be Beautiful?

By its etymology alone, globalization is such a big word. So big that it's affecting all of us—some of us without even knowing it. The kind and magnitude of the effect, however, vary. For some, in great positive ways; for others, in many negative ways. Still for others, in devastating proportions.

For some Asian countries (at least before the crash) globalization seemed to have worked for them. They were able to take advantage of rapid technological developments and were able to expand their markets. In effect, improve the standard of living of their people.

In contrast, countries like Indonesia and the Philippines, both desperately attempting to follow the NIC (Newly Industrialized Country) model, are paying a steep price i n the name of globalization. Kowtowing to the demands of international monetary' institutions and foreign transnational corporations, they have willingly sacrificed their own people's well-being. First to suffer cutbacks are social services on health and education, which are far from adequate to start with. Other areas that have also been badly affected are labor and employment and the state of environment. The fact that transnational corporations are taking the lead in globalization and will continue to do so creates an alarming scenario. Unlike governments, business corporations are not accountable to people. It is very easy for them to disregard workers' welfare, human rights and the environment in their pursuit of greater profits.

The collapse of Southeast Asian currencies also raises a lot of questions. With the recent crash of the Hong Kong stock market, it is evident that no one can really be completely shielded from a global financial shake up. As Michael Walton, former World Bank chief economist for East Asia stressed," inequality is back on the agenda."

In all of these, it is the women who are the most affected. While this statement is a cliche, it is also true. Women's right to education, better health care and gainful employment are further threatened. Moreover, this so called internationalization of production has given birth to an ever increasing informal sector with women and children as the primary workforce. In Asia, two of the key industries that have so far been greatly affected are garments and agriculture. In both industries, new modes of production such as sub-contracting and contract growing as well as flexible working practices have been affected, endangering labor rights in the process. There is hardly any opportunity for workers to organize among themselves.

Now, what is the role of the women's movement—and of other social movements for that matter—in this phenomenon that looms over us? Are there any means by which we can maximize the benefits of globalization? Given the necessary training, education as well as access and control of resources for production, do women and all other marginalised groups stand a better chance?

This issue of Women in Action examines the impact of globalization on women, particularly Asian women.

And while we're looking mostly at consequences to women and the other marginalised sectors, we're also trying to find ways to turn the situation around and see if globalization's benefits really trickles to the bottom. We invite you to a dynamic exchange of opinions on globalization through this last issue for 1997. Read on and take part.

Women & APEC: Weaving a Tapestry of Strategies

They want to change a rapidly globalizing world—a world that is getting worse for women all over the world.

From 18-19 November, 500 delegates, about 100 of them from outside Canada, shared situationers, exchanged views, sang, danced, prayed and performed so they can look forward to the day when globalization is transformed.

The worsening situation is not accidental, said Sunera Thobani, spokesperson of the Second International Women's Conference Against APEC (IWCA) in a speech she delivered during the Conference's opening plenary on 18 November in Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada. It is the outcome of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) agenda itself, which is based on the oppression of women, Thobani believed.

During an earlier press conference, Thobani told a large group of journalists that the Second Women's Conference "completely rejects APEC's anti-democratic policies of trade liberalization, deregulation and privatization for they promote human rights violations, erosion of democracy and social justice, environment al degradation and the increased impoverishment of women and our communities. "The women's forum is the only People's Summit event that has taken a clear position in opposition to APEC, Thobani stressed. "Women are the worst affected by APEC's policies, but everywhere women are also at the forefront of struggles to ensure that people's needs and ecological integrity are at the center of any and all economic, social and political decision-making," Thobani added. The position re-affirmed that of the First Women's Conference held in November 1996 in Manila, which was attended by 74 women and two men delegates from 14 countries.

The Second Women's Conference, organized by the National Action Committee on the Status of Women (NAC) —Canada, was organized into four main themes: the subject of women and labor, human rights, the environmental impacts of APEC and other trade agendas. The second day, was devoted to building strategies and action plans. It was the first in a series of issue forums at the People's Summit which was held at the same time as the APEC leaders gathered for their ministerial meetings that preceeded the summit of heads of state.

ECONOMIC PLURALISM

Marjorie Cohen and Lee Ying Chuen, resource people for the Economic and Social Development Workshop, Cohen is the head of Women's Studies at Simon Fraser University, discussed how the economic and financial framework being created by big business and neo-conservative governments and institutions are widening the gap between rich and poor throughout the APEC region. "This provides a view of the world i n which the interests of the powerful are defined as necessary, while the demands of the poor appear as greed," said Cohen.

Women are the worst affected byAPEC's policies, but everywhere women are also at the forefront of struggles to ensure that people's needs and ecological integrity are at the center of any and all economic, social and political decision-making

In calling for a critical economic analysis, Cohen advocated economic pluralism—the need for not just one, but many different strategies to address globalization. She suggested the creation of an international institute to monitor the movement of capital around the world and to discipline corporations.

Lee Ying Chuen focused on the issues facing sweatshop workers i n China. There are free trade zones in China that have few safety and environmental regulations. What protections do exist are being furt her downgraded or dismantled. Chuen also warned about the increase in occupational deaths among female workers in China.

MEGA DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS

International pressure for globalization of the economy, such as that exerted by the World Bank (specifically, FAO projects and the economic push for foreign currency), have resulted in the emergence of the mega development projects. These projects receive greater importance than individual rights according to Khushi Khabir, who works with landless peasants in Bangladesh. Khabir added that human rights are violated when production is threatened, environments are degraded by farming methods involving salination of land and water, forests are lost and other species are displaced.

The discussion on mega projects raised a number of questions. Where is the power of governments? Can we develop and make alternative policies at the national level? If GDP is not an appropriate means of measuring a country' s growth, what is? How do shifts in policy and power work, and why do they happen? Closing the session, Sunera Thobani posed the following to take into today's action plan: What do we want to change, how c an we take that forward and where do we start from?

FOCUSING ON THE ACTION PLAN

A crucial question in developing an action plan was whether to engage governments and other institutions behind globalization. In a workshop, women analyzed the possible outcomes of engaging or not engaging, and examined the sources of the different positions on the question.

Other workshops included consumer campaigns and boycotts; children's rights (including child labor and sex trafficking); the question of a borderless world and challenging nation-state structures; challenging the hyper-mobility of capital, the creation of regulatory bodies and the changing economic systems; mobilizing and organizing.

Cheung Lai-ha from the Hong Kong Confederation of Trade Unions, speaking on labor, pointed out that "government is focusing on high growth sectors and ignores the effects on women and also plans to employ huge numbers of migrant workers." She said, "businesses cry out for wage suppression i n the name of developing the economy." The Provisional Legislative Council calls for a suppression of wage increases against inflation and has moved to repeal labor laws protecting the rights of workers. Lai-ha stressed that "our next important act is to educate and organize woman to fight for our rights."

In a passionate speech on human rights violations, Bella Galhos of East Timor told the audience "In the past 23 years, one-third of my people have died, and the murder, rape and torture continue." Galhos condemned "grand rhetorical speeches about human rights." She does not believe that trade allows dialogue. "APEC is another forum where General Suharto will ignore the East Timorese people. They will be sacrificed in the name of economic development. Suharto will insist if [that] Canada wants to trade with Indonesia, Canada must ignore the human rights violations of his country." "There is no freedom of expression or ideas" in her country, said Galhos. She ended her speech with a song because "to express our struggle, we do it through song."

Bangladesh said, "protection of the environment is not a luxury, and women must lead in the movement." Khabir explained that in her culture, "environment physical environment. It includes family relationships, social relationships and relationships with nature." She added that "women are the nurturers of the family, and of the land the family lives on," but that under the new agenda what women grow and how they grow it " is completely taken over by the market."

Khabir's strategies focused on widening the understanding of the global situation and on being dictated by the market: building local resistance and alternatives that do not feed international  markets . To women outside Bangladesh, Khabir reiterated the importance of building strong movements as a means of supporting women in her country.

HIGHLIGHTS

In the end, the second International Women's Conference Against APEC agreed to:

The turnout and interest in issues showed that women are really hungry for an activist-based women's movement.

  • Continue communication, including using and improving existing networks, and to set up an international coordinating body to build on the first two Women's Conferences
  • Coordinate national and in ternational popular theatre campaigns which uses music, dance and performance to make their message clear
  • Debunk the myth of corporate social responsibility and develop alternative structures such as co-ops, credit unions and barter systems
  • Recognize intellectual property rights, protect women and children from violence and develop culturally-appropriate programs; uphold self-determination and equal representation and issue a call to keep aboriginal land out of trade agreements
  • Reach out to youth, support migrant workers, develop gender-sensitivity in union programs and break down barriers that keep women from union leadership positions; organize in non-traditional sectors
  • Re-affirm and build on the position of last year's conference in Manila and fight for workers' and human rights, regardless of the question of engagement with APEC
  • Put pressure on corporate accountability, mobilizing through education and acting from the perspectives of the workers involved (not calling boycotts unless asked); demand the right to know the conditions under which products are made and the promotion of incentives for corporations
  • "Feed the family and trade the leftovers"
  • Build alliances, educate workers, and destroy the myth that APEC creates jobs, a myth that also leads to the destruction of the environment
  • Create centers for children, put more money into education, work to have laws that prosecute sex tourists and develop alternative means of income for families
  • Have faith on our daughters. As the women said it: "it's okay to pass the torch because we've got the fire"
  • Make the sessions of the next conference accessible to disabled women; organize sensititvity training for IWCA workers and volunteers; distribute clear information; consider quiet rooms; provide American Sign Language (ASL) signers and other devices, refrain from the use of scents and perfumes; ask women with disabilities about potential needs and be pro-active.

SURPASSING EXPECTATIONS

"One of the goals of the women's conference was to strengthen- a n international women's movement," said Nandita Sharma, an organizer at the Women's Conference. Sharma said the women's conference was a huge success. "It surpassed all of our expectations," she said. "The turnout and interest in issues showed that women are really hungry for an activist-based women's movement. "One of the biggest historical mistakes we can make," said Sharma, "is to ignore it."

Concepcion Garcia Ramilo, of Isis International-Manila and a member of the steering committee of the First International Women's Conference, said that the second conference is a "big improvement in terms of attendance and range of participants. "The Zapatista women were not in the first conference, she said. She also noted that more areas of concern were discussed in the 1997 Conference, such as the disabled and children. The Second Conference, however, did not indicate the extent of accomplishment of the first conference's action plans.

References:
1997 People's Summit on APEC, Daily Summit Communique, Issues No. 6 (18 November) and No. 7 (19 November), 2nd International Women's Conference Against APEC
Notes from Opening Plenary, 2nd International Women's Conference against APEC
Women and APEC, Highlights of the First International Women's Conference on APEC, 15-16 November 1996, Manila, Philippines published by Isis International-Manila