The South in the North
by Anuradha Mittal
Policy Director, Food First -
Institute for Food and Development Policy
excerpted from the book
Views from the South:
The effects of globalization
and the WTO on the Third World
edited by Sarah Anderson
p167
BOOMING ECONOMY WITH GROWING POVERTY; THE "THIRD WORLDIZATION"
OF AMERICA
In the media and in the speeches of national leaders, Americans
are often presented with an official portrait of America's progress.
This portrait typically includes the Gross Domestic Product, the
stock market, the Index of leading Economic Indicators, the balance
of trade, the inflation rate, and other similar measures. These
figures and measures mold our perception of the state of the nation
and provide a false answer to the question "How are we doing?"
and "Can we attribute this growth to the free market policies?
In order to know the true state of our union, we need to explore
other measurements. These include the well-being of America's
children, the accessibility of health care, the quality of education,
the adequacy of housing, the security and satisfaction of work,
adequate access to food for all, and the nation's sense of community
and diversity. Only when we have a complete view of the nation's
progress, can we answer how America is doing and what issues we
need to address.
The true effects of global corporatization on working people
can be seen in the damage that has already been wreaked upon Americans,
which has paralleled the destruction of livelihoods, environment
and agriculture in the southern economies. It is now well documented
that NAFTA has hurt workers in all these countries. The U.S. Economic
Policy Institute has estimated that NAFTA eliminated some 600,000
U.S. jobs during its first two-and-a-half years. During the same
period, the new jobs created within the United States were mostly
in the lower-paying sectors of the U.S. economy. According to
its more recent estimates, the manufacturing sector has lost 272,000
jobs since March 1998. The hardest-hit industries include textiles
and apparel (90,000 jobs lost), electronic equipment and components
(88,000), industrial machinery, including machine tools and construction
equipment (54,000), and iron and steel blast furnaces (8,000 jobs
lost since June, 1998 alone). Five thousand aerospace jobs were
lost in January 1999, reflecting a 20 percent surge in airplane
parts imports in 1998. Technological innovation and anti-labor
government policies have caused some of the job loss, but economic
globalization is the driving force.
Another trend evident in this new economy is that the workplace
is now highly volatile and characterized by high levels of job
insecurity. A study done by San Jose-based Working Partnerships
USA and the Economic Policy Institute, Washington-based think
tank, shows that only 21 percent of California workers have been
in their jobs for more than 10 years. For example, high tech companies
tend to use high numbers of contract and temporary workers to
do a specific project. This new economy is also characterized
by widening income and benefits gap between those with high skills
and those in lower-end service jobs.
In the meanwhile, the U.S. job losses due to NAFTA continued
to increase in 1998. The U.S. Department of Labor certified that
216,156 workers have lost their jobs because of either shifts
in production to Mexico or Canada or because of increased imports
from those countries. These kind of closures and lay-offs have
ignited workers response to trade agreements around the country.
For example, it prompted United Steel Workers of America to challenge
the constitutionality of NAFTA in May 1999. According to the USWA
President, George Becker, "We want NAFTA scrapped and look
forward to presenting our arguments on why NAFTA must be viewed
as a treaty. Our government has never explained to the hundreds
of thousands of workers and their families across America who
have lost their livelihood, how NAFTA is an executive agreement
and not a treaty."
Along with this disturbing trend, the country's merchandise
trade deficit rose 25 percent in 1998, its highest level on record.
The aggregate U.S. trade deficit in goods hit a staggering $248
billion in 1998. The International Monetary Fund recently estimated
that the U.S. current account deficit, the broadest measure of
the U.S. trade balance, will increase by an additional $57 billion,
or 25 percent in 1999. Rising trade deficits have already taken
a toll on the manufacturing sector which continues to suffer in
1999 as the trade gap widens.
What is the human dimension of this economic globalization?
Despite glowing media reports on our booming economy, an estimated
46 million Americans, nearly 17 percent of the population, live
below the poverty line. New data released by the USDA in its report
on Household Food Security in the United States, 1995-1998, suggests
that despite the strength of the national economy, hunger remains
a serious problems for a sizeable number of Americans. In 1998,
approximately 36 million people in 10.5 million households across
the country did not have adequate access to food. About 20 percent
of all children under the age of 18 (or 14 million children) lived
in food insecure homes where food may have been scarce. United
States' Agricultural Secretary, Dan Glickman, was reported as
saying, "During this, the most prosperous economy in decades,
it should shock most Americans to learn that hunger persists and
it is in every state. The problem of hunger amid America's plenty
cannot be ignored."
The Children's Defense Fund (CDF) released a report in August
1999 which documents that the number of children living at or
below one-half of the poverty line increased by 426,000 between
1996 and 1997. Today one in five children under five lives in
poverty-the highest rate among industrialized countries. As many
as 7 million Americans are homeless. In just one city, San Francisco,
health department figures show that a record 157 people died on
the streets in 1998. Their deaths were attributed to the lack
of shelter beds and affordable housing.
The number of Americans who lack health insurance continued
to increase, climbing to 44.3 million in spite of a prosperous
economy. The ranks of the uninsured grew by about I million in
1998, according to the figures released by the Census Bureau,
and the proportion of those without coverage is still one in six.
Economic globalization has only widened the after-tax income
gaps between those with the highest incomes and other Americans
and is projected to reach their widest point in 1999. The top
2.7 million people have as much income as the bottom 100 million.
In other words, the richest I percent of Americans is projected
to have as much after-income in 1999 as the 38 percent of Americans
with the lowest incomes. Wealth is even more concentrated at the
top than at any time since the Depression, with the wealthiest
I percent of households owning nearly 40 percent of the nation's
wealth. The bottom 80 percent of households own just 16 percent
of the nation's wealth, less than half of what the wealthiest
one percent of the population possessed.
While the wealthy grow steadily richer, riding the stock market
surges, millions of working Americans grope for their infinitesimal
share of the boom. Many are victims of layoffs or lack the skills
now in demand; many have been forced off welfare as part of nationwide
reforms. Wages often are too meager to allow self-sufficiency;
work is grueling or mind-numbing, on night shifts, without health
insurance or other benefits.
It doesn't have to be that way, in a nation like ours. The
wealth and resources clearly exist for every man, woman and child
to have a roof over their head and food in their belly, and for
them to have access to a decent education, health care and a job
that pays a living wage. The sad truth is that blind pursuance
of the market has created an economy that puts corporate profits
before people's lives, that places economic efficiency over opportunity
and compassion for all.
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