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Saving the poor from the world’s coming depression

The gathering economic crisis, which the financial papers are sombrely predicting, has too many of the makings of turning into a World Depression, must be a time for mental stock-taking. If we wind back the clock just a few years to the beginning of the century when big banks in Wall Street precipitated the “Great Recession” we could say, looking back, that today’s imminent crash comes after one of the most successful boom periods in history. For a while it seemed to sweep all before it. It coined a new word “globalisation- open your doors wide and you’d gain more on the swings than you’d lose on the roundabouts.

President Bill Clinton and his Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin were passionate proponents of this brand of economics which began its shelf-live in their day. Despite all the evidence and turbulence, they and many economists and politicians still appear unshaken about the usefulness and deficiencies of globalisation. In the long run the theory of globalisation and 100% wide open doors and windows in the financial and economic markets may make a lot of sense (and some of it in the way Adam Smith described free trade still does) but, as John Maynard Keynes said, “in the long run we are all dead”.

It should come as no surprise to rational men and women that other rational men and woman- right now in Taiwan, Hong Kong, China and Malaysia- once total devotees of let-it-all-hang-out economics- are now realizing some local control in the absence of even a modicum of international control is called for.

Why is there belatedly only now discussion of how globalisation has failed the Western working class, putting tens, if not hundreds, of millions out of work, as their comparative advantage was competed away? In the US there became, as jobs disappeared, a plague of the misuse of opiates including the dangerous drug fentanyl that has savaged whole communities. No wonder they voted and will vote for ex-president Donald Trump. (He didn’t do much in giving economic aid to these people, but he did slow down the impetus of cheaper Chinese imports, and was the garner of protest votes.) In the UK, the present prime minister, Boris Johnson, has talked much about what he called “levelling up”- channelling government investment to the poor north to pull it up to the standards of the rich south. But after three years of Johnson’s government not much has been achieved.

Why is it that the Western financial powers, to give but one example, will give no thought to the introduction of the Tobin tax (named after the Nobel prize winning Yale University economist, James Tobin) that would, by taxing international currency transactions, act as a brake on speculators who dive in and dive out of a currency without any inhibitions whatsoever? The tax would provide a very useful pool of international funds that could replenish the capital of a re-thought International Monetary Fund. The money could be used to aid development in the poor Third World who are suffering badly from the knock-on effect of the West’s grave economic problems. It could also be used for job re-training in the industrialised countries.

The most damning evidence to be marshalled against the supposed benefits of unfettered globalisation is to be found in successive Human Development Reports, published by the United Nations Development Programme. This measures economic progress in all its dimensions, not just income per head but life expectancy, adult literacy and educational achievement.

In the round the figures look good, even spectacular. The poorer countries of the Third World have covered as much distance in human development during the past 40 years as the industrialised world did in over a century. A simple but telling fact: a child born today in a developing country can expect to live 18 years longer than a child born 35 years ago.

But this is more because of the hard humdrum work of better rural health services and the rapid growth of primary schools- and the often-derided work of the aid agencies- than because there has been a massive surge in economic growth brought about by globalisation, although good growth has helped.

Because of the coming Western-led depression, involving present day rising interest rates plus mounting debt plus the impact of Covid, climate change and the unnecessary war in Ukraine, many countries in the Third World are experiencing serious economic decline, with much more decline to come. To lock-in what has been accomplished on the eve of perhaps the world’s greatest ever depression, bar the one of the 1930s, is going to require a bit less concern about the alleged long run benefits of globalisation and more, much more, awareness about the immediate possibilities of on-going human development. Advancing it even in hard times need not be an exorbitantly costly undertaking- it means focusing in on the essentials of basic education, health, nutrition, reproductive health, family planning, safe water and sanitation. The UN’s Development Program reckons it would cost a mere 0.1% of world income. “Barely more than a rounding error”, it observes. And the results would be incredibly telling. There is no need, as they suffer already from the slow-down in economic activity up north- countries like Indonesia, India, Nigeria, Tanzania and Peru- to say a whole generation now faces no future but a fall back into the poverty they so recently escaped.

Already countries as disparate as Costa Rica, Tanzania, Barbados, The United Arab Emirates, Oman, Malaysia and Taiwan have shown, at varying levels of development, what can be done given political will. With well-directed resources they have sharply improved the well-being of their ordinary citizens, at no overwhelming cost. With more more aid from Europe, Japan and North America many more could emulate them.

A little less grand theory on the supposed widespread benefits of globalisation, now shown to be something of an illusion as far as many poorer people are concerned both in the developed and developing countries, and a little more reflective listening to the grass roots could produce a better world- even if there is a mammoth world depression.

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Jonathan Power

Jonathan Power has been an international foreign affairs columnist for over 40 years and has interviewed over 70 of of the world's most famous and influential presidents, prime ministers, and political and literary icons including Ignacio Lula Da Silva, Indira Gandhi, Sonia Gandhi, Willy Brandt, Julius Nyerere, James Baldwin, Martin Luther King, Paul McCartney, Mario Vargas Llosa, Eldridge Cleaver, Jimmy Carter, Olusegan Obasanjo, Georgio Arbatov, Dilma Rousseff, Olof Palme, Helmut Schmidt, Jesse Jackson, Andrew Young, Stokely Carmichael, Bobby Seale, Jose Saramago, Ben Okri, Manmohan Singh, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Barbara Ward, Valeria Rezende, Pranab Mukherjee, Ben Mkapa, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Pervez Musharraf, Imran Khan, George Weah and Angela Davis. Many of these were full-page broadsheet interviews. For 17 years Jonathan Power wrote a weekly column on foreign affairs for the International Herald Tribune. He has also been a frequent guest columnist for the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post. He has written eight books on foreign affairs and, in his early days as a journalist, made films for the BBC, one of which won the Silver Medal at the Venice Film Festival. Previous to his journalistic career, he worked on the staff of Martin Luther King. Jonathan has probably been printed more times in American newspapers than any other European. He is also listed in Who's Who.

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