In
the month of September, 2004, a joint workshop was
organized by IDEAs in collaboration with the
MAIDS
(Masters of Arts Programme in International Development
Studies) programme, which is run by the Faculty of
Political Science at Chulanlongkorn University, Thailand.
The workshop, entitled
'Liberalisation, Macroeconomic
Policy and Development Options in Asia', was
held in Bangkok from the 25th
to 28th
of September, 2004. The second leg
of the workshop was held in Manila in collaboration
with the Philippines based organization,
Action
for Economic Reform,
from the 24th
of September to the 1st
of October, 2004.
The
purpose of the workshops was to bring together a group
of economists from diverse locations and specializations
in order to disseminate knowledge among the participants
regarding the nature of the liberalization polices
currently pursued in general and in East Asia in particular,
and the possible macro-economic implications of these
policies for the entire population of this region.
The idea was to cover the many theoretical and policy
debates on this issue, to present critiques of existing
theories as well as to offer alternative analyses
of current economic trends.
The
participants in the workshop in Bangkok included students
and teachers from Thai universities, NGO workers both
local as well as foreign, such as from the Heinrich
Boll Foundation, as well as some government officials.
Foreign participants from Germany and Japan stationed
in Thailand also participated actively throughout
the workshop.
Each
day of the four day period of the workshop were divided
into two sessions. The speakers included Jomo K.S.,
the then chairman of the IDEAS’ Executive Committee,
who is currently the Assistant Secretary general of
the UN in the Department of Social and Economic Affairs,
The United Nations. The other speakers included
Prabhat Patnaik and C P Chandrasekhar from the Centre
for Economic Studies of Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru
University, New Delhi, India who are respectively
in the advisory and executive committees of IDEAs,
Korkut Boratav from the Department of Economics, Ankara
University, Turkey and a member of the Turkish Social
Science Association (TSSA), Erinc Yeldan from Bilkent
University, Ankara, Turkey, Alex Izurieta from the
Cambridge Endowment for Research in Finance (CERF),
Cambridge University, UK and Madhura Swaminathan,
from Sociological Research Unit (SRU), Indian Statistical
Institute, Kolkata, India.
The
first day of the workshop was dedicated to introducing
the broad theoretical and ideologicalmotivations and
underpinnings driving the policy of economic liberalisation.
Prof Jomo K.S began the
proceedings and spoke on 'The
Political Economy of Financial Flows, Macro Policy
and the Role of Capital Controls'
and discussed how open financial flows under the liberalization
regimes had made developing economies vulnerable to
volatility in short term capital flows and generated
crises. Prof
Prabhat Patnaik spoke at length on 'The Current
Nature of Capitalist Globalisation'. He traced the
transformation of capitalism from its golden age in
the pre World War II phase to its current stage, where
it is characterised by highly mobile global capital
finance and which therefore, has a destabilising impact
on the world economy.
The second day’s first session began with Prof
C.P Chandrasekhar speaking
on ‘Industrial
policy, FDI and Privatisation’.
He spoke of the transition from the
old economic structure to the new market based structure
and how globalisation has rendered the acceptable
and acknowledged premises on which this shift was
to take place, extremely weak if not irrelevant. In
the second session
Prof Madhura
Swaminathan
spoke on 'Liberalisation
and its Adverse Impact on Agricultural Growth and
Food Security'. The speaker
concentrated on the several adverse impact of the
current stage of globalisation on the rural population,
sighting examples from India and other developing
economies.
The
first session of the third day began with Prof
Korkut Boratav speaking on 'Recent
Patterns of Global Trade and Financial Flows'
and discussing how national accounting methodologies
could obscure the true nature of the balance of payments
situation and project a much more positive picture
of international trade and financial patterns than
was actually true. In the afternoon session,
Prof Erinc Yeldan
spoke on the 'Financial
Crises in Emerging Markets' where
he underscored the importance of understanding
and dealing with the rising number of crises in many
markets, including in Brazil, Mexico and Asia.
On the last day Prof Alex Izurieta
spoke on the 'Macroeconomic Policies of Industrial
Countries'. He argued that the prospects of a US-led
worldwide recovery are inconsistent with the unprecedented
and unsustainable debt exposure of main sectors of
the US economy. The central case put forward as antidote
to the risk of such a global impasse would be the
reinstatement of the appropriateness of fiscal policy
in tandem with properly regulated credit and external
sectors, co-coordinated worldwide, suggested the speaker.
The
Manila part of the workshop program was similar to
the one in Bangkok. All the speakers spoke on the
same topics as they did in Bangkok except for two
new speakers from the University of the Philippines:
Prof Joseph Y Lim from the
School of Economics who spoke on 'External
Debt Issues' and Prof Mavric Leonen from College of
Law who focused attention on the 'Feminist Perspectives
on Development'. Apart from the lecture sessions,
this workshop also featured two round able sessions,
one on the 28th
of September entitled 'On the current status of Agricultural
Trade Negotiations' and the second on the 1st
of October entitled 'On the Fiscal Crisis and the
Unemployment Crisis'.
The participants, about 70 in strength, included economists
from UP Diliman, UP Manila, DLSU, AdMU, UP Los Banos,
Xavier University in Cagayan de Oro City, and Ateneo
de Zamboanga University in Zamboanga City, participants
from non-government organisations and people’s organisations
across many sectors (e.g. farmers, labor), legislative
staff of Congressmen, representatives from Departments
of the Executive Branch, funding agencies and multi-lateral
organisations, as well as students from UP, UP Los
Banos, UP Manila and AdMU.
November 2, 2004.
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