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Sydney Morning Herald (Au)
Wednesday, January 5, 2000





                 Why we should be wary of the
                 WTO's mantra of globalisation

                 The World Trade Organisation operates
mainly for the benefit of corporations, not people,
writes Helen Caldicott.

                 HENRY Kissinger ruminated recently
(Herald,December 27) that although globalisation has
successfully generated unprecedented wealth for
the United States, the "impact on the rest of the
world has been more ambiguous".

                 This is an understatement.

                 In analysing the failure of the
recent World Trade Organisation talks in Seattle,
Kissinger, who urged the US to take a more imaginative
approach to
globalisation, concluded: "The basic challenge for
America and for those who believe in free trade is
to match economic growth with political imagination.
                 The challenge is to foster an
international sense of social responsibility without
strangling a highly successful economic system in
regulations imposed by international bureaucrats."

                 Many feel it is already too late. The
damage has been done. There are people in Australia
who, like me, believe this New World Economic Order
operates mainly for the benefit of the corporations,
not for the ordinary people of this country, or indeed
of any country. All we have to do is look around us -
from the demise of Souths to Kerry Packer's data
bank of information on every Australian to the
SOCOG fiasco to the devastation of our hospital
system to the proposed turning of the Australian
desert into the world's nuclear waste dump.

                 Established in 1995, the WTO emerged
from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, an
international body founded in 1944 by the world's
nations to accelerate global economic development -
in itself not a bad thing. Trade then was limited to
manufactured goods.

                 In 1986, at the instigation of the
transnational corporations, which were rapidly growing
in power, a new round was held in Uruguay whose
purpose
was to radically reorganise the international
economy.

                 The ensuing negotiations were
conducted behind closed doors in secrecy, attended
only by representatives from the transnational
corporations
and the major industrialised nations of Japan,
Britain,
Europe and the US.

                 New GATT rules on tariff reductions
in goods and services were forged - largely by
corporate lawyers for the benefit of their employers.
After eight years of transformational negotiations,
the WTO became
the operating body of GATT. Based in Geneva, it now
has full executive authority to implement GATT and
more than 20 major new international agreements
governing, among other things, agriculture, banking,
insurance, data management and financial services.

                 Some 125 countries (now 134) signed
on to the WTO in 1995, even though their citizens were
largely unaware their national sovereignty was under
threat. What was this radical reorganisation of
world trade? For one thing, it now involved more
than tariffs. What the corporations were after was a
global playing field - without rules and access to
unregulated labour, consumer markets, and natural
resources without having to operate under the
restrictions of national laws. And what the
corporations wanted is what they got: their agenda
became paramount as national and even state laws
relating to environmental protection, human and
consumer rights, local culture, social justice issues
and even national sovereignty fell before the new
hegemony of the WTO. The WTO, however, actively
encourages national militarisation.

                 Globalisation invoked four mantras -
"free trade", "deregulation", "privatisation" and
"commodification"  - the last meaning that even the
genetic basis of life itself can be bought and sold.

                 International and corporate disputes
relating to trade are adjudicated by a three-person
WTO panel of trade officials and lawyers with little
or no expertise in the subject areas they are dealing
with - areas such as the environment, patents, labour
laws, health care or agriculture. Dispute resolution,
which places no economic value upon clean air, water,
forests or biodiversity, takes place behind closed
doors in
absolute secrecy.

                 Although in this New World Order the
economies of many developed countries have ostensibly
never looked better, the truth is that the
distribution of wealth is dramatically uneven.
American CEOs are
paid on average 419 times more than their workers,
while the gap between the rich and poor in most
societies is growing rapidly, including, sadly, in
Australia. What is more, of the 100 largest global
economies 52 are corporations and only 48 are
countries.

                 The economic rationalist/free trade
ethic embodied in the WTO also demands major spending
reductions by nations in social programs such as
health, education, wage support and support for
small business. The effects of these catastrophic
policies are cascading through Australian institutions
as we can see every day in the news stories about
our hospitals and universities. Yet as recent
reportage in this paper has revealed, the very
governments that are starving our medical and
education systems with one hand are doling out
massive subsidies to large corporations with the
other.

                 All this is but the tip of the
iceberg. Those who dismiss critics of the WTO as
economic Luddites are out of touch with reality, the
reality of egalitarianism and a fair go that has until
recently been the hallmark of civilised society,
especially Australia's.

                 To participate in this flight from
reality by according it our silent assent would be the
ultimate folly.

                 The Seattle demonstrations were a
long-overdue wake-up call about the WTO that the Big
End of Town would have preferred we did not hear. But
we did.

                 Helen Caldicott is a pediatrician,
founding president of Physicians for Social
Responsibility and secretary of Our Common Future
Party.

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