IDEAs
workshop on 'Workers, Nation States and the Role of
Finance'
26th January, 1.30 pm at PUC (the Catholic University,
Porto Alegre),
Building: 15, Room: 228
The workshop was chaired by Erinc Yeldan and the panelists
were Jomo K.S., Prabhat Patnaik, Ozlem Onaran and
Samir Amin. The audience of about a hundred consisted
of academics, activists, people involved in policy-making
and concerned citizens. The workshop sought to clearly
articulate, and therefore to draw the attention of
the audience to, the new role of the 'nation-state'
in the era of globalization and financial liberalization.
In recent times the state has emerged, not as a producer
and investor and thereby a creator of demand, but,
on the contrary, as a controller of inflation and
thereby attractor of foreign capital. The workshop
also discussed the effects of financial liberalization
on workers, and explored possible alternative policies
for the future.
In his opening remarks as chairperson, Erinc Yeldan
spoke about how ironical it was that all the developing
countries had become nothing but 'emerging markets'
for the north. Their people had lost their individual
identities and their only role was as 'market actors'.
Jomo K.S. began his presentation by introducing IDEAs
to the audience. He discussed its aspirations, beliefs
and commitments and invited the audience to visit
the website hosted by IDEAs.
Subsequently, he discussed the role of financial liberalization
(FL) that is now associated with the increasing importance
of financial capital both by itself and in the development
of economic theory and practice. The push for financial
liberalization over the last two decades has taken
place at two levels. First, at the domestic level,
FL was apparently meant to destroy so-called 'financial
repression'. But in reality it did not. Second, FL
was meant to stop misallocation of scarce resources.
But again, evidence shows that it did not. Not only
has there been slower economic growth and slower reduction
in poverty in countries that pursued FL with zest,
there is evidence that FL was associated with rising
income inequalities at both national and international
levels.
The intellectual arguments underlying FL have been
theoretically weak. The policies that have been pushed
through have their theoretical and empirical foundations
in the work on South Korea by McKinnon and Shaw, where
it was argued that South Korea had a low savings rate
because of the financial repression that allowed banks
to keep interest rates down. FL, it was argued, would
free the financial sector from regulation and raise
interest rates. However, the assertions were not borne
out even empirically, since Korea actually had a rising
savings rate over the sixties and the seventies.
Even if the theoretical argument is accepted, McKinnon
himself had argued for a proper sequencing of FL.
In reality this was not followed, especially so in
the case of capital account. Reckless FL, for example
in South Korea, has been a major reason for the crises
in many developing countries.
The period following FL has proved false many of the
claims forwarded by its proponents. First, it has
not resulted in capital flows from the capital-rich
to the capital-poor countries, as claimed. Second,
the cost of finance has risen steeply instead of coming
down, as promised by the proponents of FL. Third,
the argument that FL would lead to financial deepening,
which in turn would lead to a stable financial system
since foreign capital would fill in any movements
by domestic capital to stabilize inter-state variations,
exchange rate movement, etc., has been proved to be
completely false. Now risk has simply been shifted
to a counter party; so systemic risk is in fact much
more concentrated, leading to a more unstable system.
The development of the system and the instruments
of control have therefore made risk more concentrated
and more intense. This is the reason why currency
crises have become so common in today's world. The
risk control instruments that have been developed
by the IMF have not addressed the nature of the system
itself, and further, any attempt to find a solution
have tended to be subverted by the US government.
Finally, Jomo K.S. made two further interesting points.
First with the increase in the importance of finance,
there has been a pressure to follow deflationary policies
- 'inflation targeting' has become the new buzzword,
New Zealand being its pioneer. But this has been the
cause of slower economic growth around the world in
the last two decades. Second, for late industrializers,
the availability of long-run development finance is
crucial. But with the advent of financial liberalization,
this possibility has almost been wiped out. Now most
regional banks, even those like the Asian Development
Bank, in their bid to emulate the World Bank, have
stopped disbursing long-term development finance.
Considering that development in many countries like
Japan, South Korea and Brazil (to name just a few),
has heavily depended on such finance, its unavailability
will crucially undermine the process of development
in today's developing economies.
The next speaker, Prabhat Patnaik, highlighted the
role of cross-border flows of capital as finance vis-a-vis
the role of the nation-state. This capital is not
meant for creating productive capacity in the form
of factories, etc., but operates just as finance that
is highly speculative in nature and highly global,
in the sense that it is free to move anywhere. So
now a new contradiction has emerged between finance
that has assumed a global character and the nation-state
that is national. Given the pressures from the World
Bank-IMF, national governments are committed to look
after the interests of global finance and forced to
create conditions within their countries that retain
the interests of investors, often to their own detriment.
This implies a withdrawal from the state's domestic
role as a producer and investor, since private investor
confidence seems to get adversely affected by an interventionist
state. The nation-state's capacity to intervene in
the economic sphere within its own boundaries therefore
gets undermined.
The reasons behind and the implications of this downswing
in investor confidence, occurring as a result of an
interventionist state, were clearly enunciated by
Patnaik. First, the fear that the state will interfere
is intensified if a state follows expansionary policies,
and this tends to make capital go out. Second, there
is an inherent hostility to state activism unless
it is for the cause of finance. There is also the
fear that it will put up controls and barriers. Third,
where the state is inactive and is withdrawing from
the role of producer and investor, it will privatize
its industries and international enterprises will
be free to buy these up very cheap. Fourth, if funds
are free to move and interest rates are the same everywhere,
finance has a tendency to move to the north rather
than the south, since the former is the home base
of capitalism. So financiers have to be bribed in
the form of a higher real rate of interest, ensuring
that the south is never left with a level playing
field. Fifth, if the real rate of interest is higher
the government debt will actually keep on increasing,
and this compounds the problem of public finance for
the nation-state. The national government has now
emerged as a protector of international finance. Capital
has always needed a protector domestically, and since
there is no global state, this role has to be performed
by nation-states.
The functioning of global financial capital has a
recessionary impact on the entire world economy, but
even more so in the third world countries. Deflation
always has an adverse impact on primary producing
countries since the terms of trade always move against
agriculture. The whole process is like re-colonization,
characterized by a change in the terms of trade, no
role for the state to provide welfare or productive
services, recessionary policies, etc. It is imperative,
therefore, for the developing countries to put up
a resistance, to fight back this process. As history
has shown, pointed out Prabhat Patnaik, growing oppression
has always been followed by growing resistance. Factors
like Lula getting elected to power in Brazil point
towards this. But to these must be added deliberate
resistance. Many types of pressures and arm-twisting
tactics are being used by the imperialist powers to
subvert such processes, but there is now increasing
protest against these.
The role of the nation-state is crucial in the process
of moving back from globalization and negating its
role as a protector of finance capital. Moving back
does not mean a complete reversal but rather an economy
with more controls on trade and capital flows, and
one that can ensure tangible benefits for large sections
of the people, which includes fair terms of trade
for the peasantry. The people's support for their
national governments is a must for such a process,
and Lula's victory in Brazil could be a situation
to be replicated in all developing countries.
The third speaker, Ozlem Onaran, highlighted the catastrophic
impact of neoliberal policies on labour. She argued
that the new era of globalization that is so consumed
with 'inflation targeting' and ensuring the interests
of finance capital has changed the power relations
between the working class and the capitalist class
considerably. There are certain features that this
has given rise to. The first is the rise in the power
of multinationals vis-à-vis the power of the
nation-state. Second, the increase in unemployment.
Third, the ability of physical and financial capital
to move across borders undermines the bargaining strength
of trade unions, since there will always be the threat
that capital will move out. Fourth, financial capital
makes economies more vulnerable by paving the way
for financial crisis in the short run and increasing
the long-term rate of interest in the long run. This
also means higher accumulation and lower growth, which
in turn leads to unemployment. The rise of 'short
term-ism', led by shareholder capitalism, is also
not good for employment.
As major macroeconomic developments across the world
have shown, financial liberalization, with its discourse
of stability and deregulation, actually brought back
a regime of re-regulation, this time in the interests
of the capitalists. In countries of Latin America,
Turkey and East Asia, where they stuck to policies
of re-regulation with market fetishism, there was
stagnation in growth and employment, and wages either
stagnated or real wages fell. Despite increased exports,
manufacturing employment has stagnated or fallen.
The crisis in Asia did prove that exports have its
constraints. Even strong countries can be victims
of overaccumulation and overindustrialization which
make them prone to crises. During the East Asian crisis,
in the two years following 1997, 2 million jobs were
lost. In Turkey, urban unemployment increased from
8 per cent to 13 per cent during the course of the
crisis. During these crises, workers ended up suffering
while capital conveniently flew out.
The future agenda has to come to term with these problems.
For this, both domestic and international policies
have to be pressurized away from exploitation of labour.
The policy agenda must include central bank targeting
of inflation and not of unemployment, deregulation
of labour markets, regulation of financial markets,
and getting states to formulate effective welfare,
industrial and trade policies that could ensure a
redistribution.
Finally, Ozlem Onaran stressed the fact that higher
profits could not lead to higher growth in output
and employment. Since the propensity to consume out
of wages is higher than to consume out of profits,
the global economy is more wage-driven than profit-driven.
A wage-favouring distribution is therefore the key
to higher demand, and higher growth. The problem is
that policies like this cannot be formulated unless
workers are empowered, but this is difficult with
so much unemployment. However, the need of the people
must necessarily be placed before that of profits.
Samir Amin, the final speaker, spoke about the political
issues in front of us with very fundamental economic
considerations. He drew the attention of the audience
to the challenges that a new large popular alliance,
if it is sought to be built, would face in the world
today.
The fact is that no economy can grow or develop by
itself independently of the social set-up. So even
within capitalism, a change in the balance of forces
is crucial. Earlier, the alliance between the workers
and peasants had worked. In today's world, half of
the 6 billion people are peasants. So the question
of land and food are crucial at this juncture. Obviously,
producing more food will give a boost to this section
of the world population. But even when more food could
be produced, it is the farmers in the US, and the
European Union that have benefited, and most farmers
in the world have not. It is a fact, Amin stressed,
that no poor farmer can survive free competition without
subsidies. Any policy that eliminates such subsidies
is therefore obviously planned to benefit developed
country peasants and destroy the others.
The other alternative before the world is not socialism,
he argued, but to have the right of access to land
as equal, or at least as little unequal as possible,
for all peasants. This should form the basis for development
and should be a continuous strategy to be pursued
even in the future. Prof. Amin suggested that the
earlier commitment to the peasantry has largely been
forgotten, even by left-wing political groups across
the world. Now, even the declaration of human rights
does not include any provision on the right of access
to land. This situation needs to be remedied at once.
Of the other half of the population, two-thirds are
the popular classes, who are not owners of minimum
education and minimum resources. These people are
negated in other productive systems. Fifty years ago,
they constituted 70 per cent of the world population,
and today this proportion is still high, about 50-60
per cent. This proportion is high even in the north
and is massive in the south.
The change in the attitudes towards these people created
the space for neoliberal economics. The forms of organizational
struggle that were effective earlier have lost their
effectiveness now. The need today is for a unified
struggle of labour – both peasant and industrial.
Only after that is there need for articulation in
terms of planning, in terms of prices and incomes,
management of balance of payments, tax policies, etc.
More difficult than the economics of such planning
is the difficulty of achieving and converging on that
planning and its implementation. But first, the task
before economists is to build a strong worker–peasant
alliance.
The audience seemed to be concerned about the economic
policy choices facing President Lula in Brazil today,
and this was reflected in the many questions that
were asked. The panelists suggested that Lula needed
to broaden and strengthen his support base among the
people (Jomo K.S., Patnaik), and maybe find some slack
from where to give some immediate relief to his people
(Patnaik). All of them agreed that the situation was
very complicated and that Lula had to tread extremely
carefully.
Another question asked whether freeing labour mobility
could counter the negative impact of free capital
mobility that the speakers had discussed. The panelists,
especially Prabhat Patnaik, answered that it is true
that labour has not been free and this was the major
reason for the divide between the north and the south.
But even if it was, labour by its very nature could
not be completely free in a practical sense, since
it is not possible for a labourer in a backward developing
country to just go and settle down in a developed
country if he so chose. So that dichotomy is likely
to remain.
Answering questions, including one on Africa, on how
to find the resources and the slack, Ozlem Onaran
suggested that the debt of the south needs to be cancelled,
while Prabhat Patnaik suggested a squeezing of foreign
creditors rather than squeezing of people to service
debts.
The discussion ended on a note of optimism, but also
with recognition of the new and dangerous threat posed
by financial capital to the economic well-being of
developing countries and their peoples.
January 29, 2003.
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