Following upon the World Social Forum events organised at Mumbai, IDEAs
organized an international Conference on 'The
Economics of the New Imperialism'
at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi, during 22-24 January, 2004,
with the support of the UNDP. The conference, as the title suggested, was to
focus on the emergence of ‘new’ imperialism and to analyse the workings of
national and international markets in the age of 'free' global trade and the
dominance of finance. Apart from very eminent economists of the likes of
Samir Amin from
the 'Third World Forum' based in Dakar, Senegal;
Korkut Boratav from the Ankara University, Turkey; Prabhat Patnaik from
the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, JNU, Utsa Patnaik of the same
Centre, William Tabb from the Queens University, New York; Jomo K.S. from
the University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur and IDEAs Executive Committee
Chairman; Terry McKinley from the UNDP; etc., the conference also benefited
from the presence of some eminent Indian thinkers such as Prof. Irfan Habib.
The conference was organised
around three central sub-themes namely: The Contours of the New Imperialism;
Instruments and Mechanisms of Neoliberalism with focus on international
trade and international finance; and Current Processes in the International
Economy. Thus, in the very first session, papers by Prabhat Patnaik, Samir
Amin and Korkut Boratav looked at defining "New Imperialism".
As Prabhat Patnaik captured it very aptly, while imperialism in the sense
of a structured relationship of domination and subordination among the
capitalist and pre-capitalist economies of the world has been with us
since the very beginnings of capitalism, new imperialism was being used
in the conference in the sense of a condition and an accompaniment of
capitalism. There are however different phases of imperialism, corresponding
to the metamorphoses occurring in the nature of capitalism, each of which
has its own specific characteristics. The era of new imperialism is generally
associated with the pervasive imposition of neo-liberal economic policies
and marked by an unmistakable preference for a deflationary policy, which
in turn points to the hegemony of a new form of international finance
capital in the contemporary period. Along this line of thought,
there were other papers which looked at the homogenization of financial
structures across the world and issues of capital flows and capital flight
from the developing world. Other papers focused on international trade
as the other major instrument through which new imperialism manifests
itself and included topics on commodity terms of trade, multilateral trading
system of the WTO, regional trade agreements, etc. Under current processes
in the international economy, presentations were made on Africa’s encounter
with neoliberalism, the Chinese State’s currency management under US pressure,
the Venezuelan state’s resistance against US imperialism, etc.
The conference brought
together about sixty economists and social scientists from across the four
continents, including: Alicia Puyana from La Facultad Latinoamericana de
Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO), Mexico; Madhavan Palat Dean of the School of
Social Sciences, JNU; Jimi O. Adesina, Rhodes University, South Africa;
Venkatesh Athreya, Professor and Head, Dept. of Economics, Bharathidasan
University, Tiruchirapalli (Tamil Nadu); Sheila Bhalla from the Centre for
Human Development, New Delhi; Alejandro Bendana
from the Centre for International Studies, Managua,
Nicaragua,
Mumtaz Keklik who is a Policy Advisor, Trade and Investment South & West
Asia Sub-Regional Resource Facility (SURF), UNDP, Katmandu, Pat Mooney, Bob
Pollin, Rathin Roy, Public Resource Management Advisor, UNDP, New York;
Sunanda Sen from the Academy of Third World Studies, Jamila Milia Islamia
University in New Delhi; Ravi Srivastava from the Centre for Strategic and
Regional Development, JNU, Madhura Swaminathan, Indian Statistical
Institute, Calcutta, Todd Tucker from the Centre for Economic and Policy
Research (CEPR), Washington; Erinc Yeldan fro the Bilkent University Ankara,
and Ahmet Dikmen and Galip Yalman from
Turkey;
Cui Zhiyuan,
Fellow Wissenschaftskolleg Zu Berlin and now Professor
Tsinghua University, Beijing;
B. Bhattacharyya, Dean of the Indian Institute of Foreign
Trade, New Delhi; C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh both from the Centre
for Economic Studies and Planning (JNU) and IDEAs Executive Board members,
Abhijit Sen, Praveen Jha and Subrata Guha from the same Centre, Ashwini
Deshpande from the Delhi School of Economics; Murali Kallummal from the
Centre for WTO Studies, IIFT, New Delhi; Prasenjit Bose from the Academy of
Third World Studies, New Delhi;
Parthapratim Pal, Ranja Sengupta and Smitha Francis from
IDEAs; among
other academicians from within Delhi.
The following papers
were presented at the conference:
- 'The Contours of
the New Imperialism' by Samir Amin
- 'The New
Imperialism' by Prabhat Patnaik
- 'Some
Recent Changes in Relatıons Between the Metropoles and the Periphery of
the Imperialist System’ by Korkut Boratav
- 'Development
under the Current Multilateral Trading System: An Oxymoron'
by Mumtaz Keklik
- 'Regionalism,
Foreign Investment and Control: The New Rules of the Game Outside the
WTO' by Jayati Ghosh
- 'Is There
Convergence Between North American Free Trade Agreement Partners?' by
Alicia Puyana
- 'Capital
Management Techniques in Developing Countries' by Jomo K.S.
- 'Capital's
Response to Globalisation: A Comparative Analysis of the Adjustment
Patterns of Mark-Ups in Post-Liberalisation Developing Countries' by
Erinc Yeldan
- 'Homogenising
Financial Structures: The New Instrument of Imperialism' by C.P.
Chandrasekhar
- 'The Chinese
Response to the US Pressure on RMB Appreciation' by Cui Zhiyuan
- 'Oil State in
Revolt: Venezuela and the Fight Against Neo-Liberalism' by Todd Tucker
- 'From Development
Crisis to Development Tragedy: Africa's Encounter with Neoliberalism' by
Jimi O. Adesina
- 'Understanding
and Challenging
Global State Economic Governance'
by William Tabb
-
'Economic Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction: PRSPs, Neo-Liberal
Conditionalities and 'Post-Consensus' Alternatives' by Terry McKinley
- 'Agrarian Crisis
in Developing Countries in the Current Context' by Abhijit Sen
- Panel Discussion
on ‘Resisting Imperialism Today: Prospects and Challenges’ chaired by
Irfan Habib with panelists Samir Amin, Korkut Boratav, Utsa Patnaik,
Alicia Puyana, Prabhat Patnaik, Aijaz Ahmad.
Having been held at the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), widely known
for its intellectual vigour and tradition of student debates, the
conference saw widespread and active participation from the students of
the University, not just from economics, but covering a wider spectrum
of disciplines such as sociology, political science, etc.
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