Resisting Globalization
The South American consensus
by David Moberg
In These Times magazine,
December 2003
United States is having trouble selling
the latest model of souped-up global trade deals as a cure-all
for the world's economic ills. First, talks in Cancun last September
to expand the World Trade Organization collapsed. Now talks scheduled
in Miami for November 17-21 to create a new free trade agreement
for the Western Hemisphere likely will be marked by conflict and
similarly end in stalemate.
One conflict will be between the Bush
administration and demonstrators, who oppose the Free Trade Agreement
of the Americas (FTAA) and hope to mount the largest U.S. protest
against corporate globalization since the terrorist attacks of
September 11, 2001, dampened a growing popular movement.
But the trade ministers will not be able
to blame the protestors alone for their likely failure in negotiating
the FTAA. Opposition in Latin America is widespread; hemispheric
governments disagree over what should be in the agreement, and
more and more economists are recognizing that the model for economic
development embodied in FTAA is deeply flawed.
Negotiators had planned to wrap up talks
on this new agreement, which the United States hopes will be modeled
on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), by the end
of 2004. But Brazil and the United States, the negotiation co-chairs,
are deeply divided. Several Latin American countries want to slow
down negotiations or set aside touchy issues the United States
is pushing-like expanded rights for investors- until the United
States is willing to remove trade barriers and agricultural subsidies
that give U.S. exports an unfair advantage. The United States
also is insisting that FTAA go beyond NAFTA and deregulate all
services. Countries would then have to negotiate to exclude any
service they did not want deregulated. Latin Americans fear that
free trade in all services could lead to the privatization of
telecommunications, water delivery and even education.
Equally important, Latin Americans, having
had a bad experience with "liberalization" of markets
over the past two decades, are strongly against the kinds of radical
free market policies that FTAA would impose.
Negotiators face sticking points
Domestic politics in individual countries
also will complicate discussions. With a presidential election
a year away, the Bush administration is unwilling to talk about
a key issue for Brazil: the high tariffs protecting the Florida
citrus industry from Brazilian competition. And most of the Democratic
presidential contenders are critical to varying degrees of trade
strategies like FTAA, even though it was launched under Bill Clinton.
Very little in the preliminary FTAA text protects worker rights
and the environment, a minimal demand of most candidates. The
United States is likely to propose that countries agree to enforce
their own laws, but AFL-CIO trade expert Thea Lee argues that
such a provision would have less influence with traditional labor
rights violators, like Central American countries, than existing
labor rights protections in the U.S. trade law, which requires
countries to live up to core international standards to qualify
for special tariff reductions.
Neoliberal policies, including NAFTA,
have not worked well for most of Latin America since they began
to be imposed or adopted during the "lost decade" of
the '80s. During that time Latin American countries, saddled with
a massive foreign debt, averaged annual economic decline of eight-tenths
of a percent per year, compared with average growth of 2.9 percent
a year from 1960 to 1980. And starting in 1990, a boom decade
in the United States, Latin American economies grew only an average
of 1.6 percent a year. During even that period of growth, inequality
and poverty in Latin America remained extremely high or got worse.
In a recent poll, only 16 percent of a
broad cross-section of Latin Americans expressed satisfaction
with the free market model. According to the Financial Times,
"Most Latin Americans live in fear of losing their jobs and
believe the free market reforms of the past decade have done little
to improve their living standards."
Bolivians defend resources
In one of the most dramatic recent expressions
of that sentiment, Bolivians blockaded roads and staged mass protests
bringing down neoliberal President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada on
October 21. The protests were triggered by plans of President
"Goni" to sell U.S. corporations natural gas via a new
pipeline through Chile. But Bolivian peasants and miners know
from centuries of experience that exports of their country's natural
resources have benefited only the wealthy elite- like Goni. And
they understand that since the mid-'80s when Goni was an architect
of radical free market, or neoliberal policies, inequality has
increased and most Bolivians were worse off than before.
Cheap agricultural imports have since
driven many peasants off the land and into urban settlements like
El Alto, the center of the most militant clashes with security
forces. Peasants also were incensed at the Bolivian government's
enforcement of an anti-free market plan by the United States to
eradicate coca, a traditional Andean crop that provided much-needed
cash.
Washington Consensus crumbles
In recent years, popular uprisings against
neoliberalism have led to new governments in Brazil, Argentina
and Venezuela-the countries that are now the greatest FTAA skeptics.
Massive popular protests also have shaken Ecuador, Peru, Costa
Rica, Colombia and Mexico. The governments in Uruguay, Paraguay
and the Caribbean also have resisted much of the U.S. agenda.
All governments in Latin America, even those most solicitous of
the United States, know they are negotiating the FTAA with a loaded
and angry popular movement cocked at their political heads.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
has greatly misjudged the effectiveness of the "Washington
Consensus" model for development, which emphasizes export-led
growth, open markets, deregulation, privatization and fiscal austerity.
In 13 of the last 17 years, the IMF has overestimated growth in
Latin America for the coming year by an average of 1.6 percent,
according to Dean Baker and David Rosnick of the Washington-based
Center for Economic and Policy Research.
The rosy projections also have led to
the implementation of bad policies that in turn have increased
unemployment and have left Latin Americans once again drowning
in debt.
"The principles of the Washington
Consensus are not a useful guide to promote economic growth in
Latin America," Harvard University economics professor and
trade expert Dani Rodrik told the World Bank last March. "The
periods of economic growth have no relation with the policies
of integration to the world economy."
Trade talks hinder growth
Trade negotiations have been oversold
as a way for countries to develop, Rubens Ricupero, secretary-general
of the United Nation's Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD),
said in October. According to UNCTAD's annual report, Latin American
policies that focused on free markets and "getting prices
right" blocked technological change and capital accumulation
needed for growth. Former World Bank chief economist Joseph Stiglitz
argues that getting institutions right, which includes greater
democracy and unionization of workers, is at least as important
to make trade work. Further, developing countries should grow
by increasing domestic demand through implementing policies that
raise incomes of workers and peasants as much as by exporting
goods.
Although NAFTA is the model for FTAA,
Mexico's experience is not inspiring. Timothy Wise from Tufts
University's Global Development and Environment Institute recently
reported that since Mexico began opening its markets, economic
and job growth have been slow, job quality and wages have declined,
poverty has increased, environmental quality has deteriorated,
the rural sector is in crisis, and Mexico has a global balance
of payments deficit despite its trade surplus with the United
States. Corporations have used NAFTA's provision for investor
lawsuits against governments to pursue-and typically win-millions
of dollars in compensation from all three NAFTA governments for
regulations designed to protect public health and the environment.
Free marketeers eye Brazil
Venezuela, which under Hugo Chavez has
become the FTAA's fiercest critic, wants as a precondition the
establishment of a development fund like the one the European
Union established for integrating poorer member countries. Also,
if the United States won't discuss its procedures to fight dumping
or agriculture subsidies, then Brazil is not interested in discussing
deregulation of services or investor protections. Meanwhile, Brazil
is trying to consolidate Latin American trading relationships,
while the United States is using a combination of threats and
promises to establish bilateral trade relations with individual
countries such as Chile and with smaller groups of countries like
the Central American Free Trade Agreement, which may be completed
this year.
The United States' veiled threats to negotiate
FTAA without Brazil are hollow because that South American giant
is the big corporate prize. "Going after bilaterals and the
Central American Free Trade Agreement is all about getting Brazil,
backing them into a corner and making them feel they have to give
in," says Sarah Anderson, director of the global economy
project at the Institute for Policy Studies.
While Bush has domestic political reasons
to postpone negotiations, his corporate allies feel they're in
a race against time. Popular resistance to the policies enshrined
in FTAA is growing. "They figure if they don't lock it in
now," says Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global
Trade Watch, "it won't be possible."
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