Pro Patria, Pro Mundus
It's time to ask self-styled "borderless"
corporations which side the are on
by William Greider
The Nation magazine, November 12, 2001
A recent New York Times headline asked an insinuating question:
"After the Attacks, Which Side Is the Left On?" The
Times should find I the nerve to put the same question to the
major players of business and finance. Which side is Citigroup
on? Or General Electric and Boeing? Where does loyalty reside
for those American corporations that have rebranded themselves
as "global firms"? Our resurgence of deeply felt patriotism,
with official assurances that Americans are all-in-this-together,
raises the same question. At a deeper level, the patriotic sense
of unity collides with familiar assumptions advanced by the architects
and cheerleaders of corporate globalization. The nation-state
has been eclipsed they explain, and no longer has the power to
determine its own destiny. The national interest, they assert,
now lies in making the world safe for globalizing commerce and
capital.
In these threatening times, such claims sound suddenly unpersuasive.
Frightened citizens turn naturally to their government for security-the
original purpose of the nation-state-and business enterprises
do the same. The global corporation, however, intends to have
it both ways: American first when that serves its interest, but
otherwise aloof from mere nationality. Since these companies are
busy waving the flag at the moment, one needs to recall how they
described themselves during the past decade, as they dispersed
production worldwide and planted their logos in many distant lands.
"The United States does not have an automatic call on our
resources," a Colgate-Palmolive executive once explained.
"There is no mindset that puts this country first."
The much-admired CEO of General Electric, Jack Welch, portrayed
GE as a "borderless company," and he brutally enforced
the logic. When GE wanted additional cost savings on turbines,
jet engines and appliances, it told its US suppliers to pick up
and leave, or else-that is, move the jobs to Mexico or other locales
where the labor is much cheaper, or GE would find different suppliers.
A GE executive in Taiwan once remarked, "The US trade deficit
is not the most important thing in my life...running an effective
business is."
An aerospace executive who supervised 11~ McDonnell Douglas's
production in China told he New York Times: "We're in the
business of making money for our shareholders. If we have to put
jobs and technology in other countries, then we go ahead and do
it." A few years later, McDonnell was swallowed by Boeing,
which likewise subscribes to an unsentimental view of national
identity. Boeing's on-site manager of the Xian Aircraft Company
in China, where $60-a-month machinists make tail sections for
the 737, told me, "We've got suppliers that we've dealt with
for fifty years, and we're asking all of them to off-load production
to China." In addition to the low wages, American firms trade
US jobs and technology for access to such burgeoning markets.
The US government looks the other way or sometimes even facilitates
the transactions.
Then there is Citibank, a pioneer in global banking and now
part of the mammoth financial conglomerate called Citigroup. John
Reed, Citibank's former CEO, used to complain regularly about
the stultifying bank regulations imposed by the United States,
and he often threatened to relocate Citibank's headquarters to
a more banker-friendly nation. "The United States is the
wrong country for an international bank to be based," Reed
asserted (though the US government more than once bailed out his
bank when it was on the brink of failure). Citibank, it happens,
is also a notorious channel for wealthy autocrats trying to spirit
ill gotten fortunes (including drug money) out of their home country
($80-100 million for Raul Salinas, the corrupt brother of Mexico's
corrupt former president). Citigroup has lobbied to weaken the
new regulatory rules required to halt the flows of terrorist money
in the global financial system.
Which side are you on? In the aftermath of September 11, the
question was swiftly resolved by the multinational lobbyists who
mobbed Washington for handouts. Boeing, the second largest military
contractor, expects to be a big winner from the crisis (never
mind the 30,000 workers it is laying off) because Boeing agents,
in and out of Congress, are pushing for huge new orders of modified
jetliners and cargo transports for the Air Force and Navy. IBM,
though the majority of its work force is now non-American, has
lined up at the trough with Silicon Valley's high-tech firms to
lobby for new government subsidies. American International Group,
the world's biggest ; insurer and a leading apostle of unfettered
global markets, is out front promoting a new federal safety net
for the insurance companies-a bailout that will compel US taxpayers
to share in the industry's risks. GE, Citigroup, AIG and other
financial services firms persuaded House Republicans that the
US economy should be stimulated by giving them a $21 billion tax
break for their overseas operations. When the going gets tough,
these guys turn out to be real, red-blooded Americans.
Other Americans will be rightly infuriated as they see the
urgent need for national unity exploited for private gain. Activists
associated with the Seattle movement might devote some energy
to educating other citizens who don't yet grasp the contradiction.
But this new crisis exposes much more fundamental issues than
corporate hypocrisy. It upends the fictitious premises used to
sell the supposed inevitability of corporate led globalization.
Nation-states, at least the largest and strongest ones, have not
lost any of their powers to tax and regulate capital and commerce,
to control international capital flows and other globalizing practices.
In the face of market pressures, major nations simply retreated
from exerting those powers. The United States, as principal promoter
and defender, led the way. Other advanced economies gradually
followed, often reluctantly. Poorer nations, of course, did not
have much choice but to go along if they wished to attract investment
capital from the wealthy economies.
Now, crisis requires leading governments, especially that
of the United States, to do an abrupt about-face and begin to
employ their neglected sovereign powers, that is, to intrude purposefully
in the marketplace and impose some rules in behalf of society.
The most compelling example is the need for new regulatory controls
on capital flows in the global financial system in order to smash
the terrorists' critical support base-the secretive, cross-border
access to money. The global bankers, led by Citigroup, resisted,
claiming it's too complicated to trace movements of illicit money.
Complexities do exist, but the plain truth is that the United
States, joined by a handful of wealthy nations (Germany, Japan,
France, Britain and a few others), has the power to shut down
any subsidiary banking system in the world that refuses to cooperate-simply
by rejecting all money transfers from that country.
Citigroup and other major banks want weak enforcement not
because they are soft on terrorism but because they recognize
that policing terrorist money can lead to tougher enforcement
aimed at their own activities-their profitable role serving wealthy
clients in money laundering and the massive tax evasion that occurs
through offshore banking. The evasion of national laws is a principal
hallmark of the laissez-faire global system, one that governments
have lacked the will to confront. The Bush Administration's sincerity
will be tested on this issue since it must choose between defending
the privileges of international banking and protecting the security
of American citizens.
Imposing new forms of accountability on global finance leads
ultimately to a much larger question-how to exert moderating controls
(and taxation) on the destabilizing surges of capital that have
ignited recurring financial crises (and led to massive bailouts
by unwitting taxpayers). Only nations have the power to solve
this problem. "At some point, we have to ask whether orderly
free capital is a benefit to everyone," a financial economist
with a leading hedge fund once told me. "Free capital is
certainly a benefit to people who own the capital. But they couldn't
exist if these governments did not exist to protect them. No one
wants to locate the Chicago Board of Trade in Bangkok or Jakarta."
The logic of globalization has led, in fact, to a redefinition
of national interest, at least for the United States, in which
government policy assumes that advancing the well-being of shareholders
and global firms-as opposed to the general population, workers
and communities-provides the highest overall benefit. This preferential
order is never frankly acknowledged, of course, but it has been
embraced by both Democratic and Republican Presidents. The contradictions
for the nation have long been visible, but they were explained
away with propagandistic economic claims (much the way authorities
ignored obvious contradictions in the stock-market bubble). Over
the past twenty-five years, for instance, the wage levels of ordinary
working people have been stagnant in real terms as the prime manufacturing
jobs moved offshore. Partly in consequence, the United States
became a debtor nation-buying more from abroad than it sells and
borrowing the money to do so-with accumulated indebtedness that
has surpassed 20 percent of GDP. The multinationals claim US trade
deficits don't matter for them, they don't. For the rest of us,
this condition has led to a deepening dependence on foreign investors
and the potential for an eventual breakdown of the global system
itself, when the proud leader and principal consumer in global
trade someday taps out.
My point is this: The patriotic tensions generated by war
and recession can spawn a rare clarifying moment-the political
opportunity to educate and agitate Americans on these deeper contradictions
in power between the nation-state and the global system. Inattentive
citizens are no longer so passive, but suddenly paying attention
to world news. The Seattle movement, as Kevin Danaher of Global
Exchange observed, has a potential to connect with a much broader
audience, now ready to listen and learn. The teach-in curriculum
should begin closer to home, not for 'narrow nationalistic purposes
or to stop globalization but to build support for fundamental
change in how globalization proceeds. If the global system is
to be reformed-made more humane and democratic, more equitable
and respectful of each society's values-the power to achieve those
goals belongs only to national governments, not to remote international
institutions. For obvious reasons, that power resides especially
in the politics of Washington, DC.
An important first step is to re-establish the nation's sovereign
prerogative to legislate its own standards of decency as governing
values in global trade. The exercise of national legislative initiatives
is not as remote as it may sound. Bipartisan legislation is pending,
for instance, to close US markets to goods exported by Burma until
that notorious regime halts its forced labor practices (American-in-name-only
companies like Unocal are complicit). The measure's leading sponsors
are ideological opposites-Senators Jesse Helms and Tom Harkin-who
share outrage over the trading system's laissez-faire tolerance
of gross human abuses. Their measure, on its face, seems to violate
World Trade Organization rules; in fact, the advocates actually
hope it will provoke the Burmese generals into filing a formal
complaint with the WTO. If the WTO upholds the US law, it would
open the way for broader measures of social reform. If the WTO
rules against the United States, the indifference to brutality
will further discredit the WTO.
Another, similar measure is "right to know" legislation
that would require multinationals based in the United States to
report the location and conditions of their overseas factories-everything
from toxic pollution to health and safety standards to the status
of labor rights. The bill does not attempt to set standards of
behavior for foreign countries but requires US companies to report
the facts to local workers and communities as well as to the US
government-information that can stimulate grassroots agitation
for change. The measure would establish an important principle:
Congress cannot impose American values on others, but it does
have the right to impose them on multinationals that call themselves
American.
A more ambitious project would be to confront US multinationals
on the ambivalent nature of their own patriotism. Air the facts
and name the names. If the companies are truly global and without
responsibility to this particular nation, then why are US taxpayers
expected to subsidize their success and bail them out of failure?
The legislative vehicle for forcing a debate on these questions
would be recurring amendments to cut off the firms unwilling to
accept explicit obligations to nation and citizens. One might
describe these measures as "homeland security."
Critical questions about global corporations are no longer
abstract propositions. As is already clear from recent actions
in Washington, some Americans are regarded as special in crisis-
and awarded billions of dollars in protection from malign market
forces. Other Americans are told to keep a stiff upper lip. This
malformed definition of national unity is ripe for attack by the
true patriots.
William Greider is The Nation's national affairs correspondent.
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September
11th, 2001 - New York City
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