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----- Original Message -----
From: Karen Lee Wald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2001 9:28 PM
Subject: End of the Global Gilded Age



 Today's commentary:
 http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2001-11/28brecher-costello.cfm

 ==================================

 ZNet Commentary
 End of the Global Gilded Age November 28, 2001
 By Jeremy Brecher and Tim Costello

 While America's politicians and media focus on terrorism and
 counter-terrorism, the global gilded age is coming to an end.  While
 advocates of globalization gloat that September 11 has silenced the critics
 of globalization, the emerging global recession will soon put the deep
flaws
 of the global economy back at the center of the global agenda.

 The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development reported that the
 global economy shrank last quarter for the first time in 20 years.  J.P.
 Morgan Chase & Co forecast that global economic growth for this year and
 next will be the lowest in 20 years -- barely 1%.

 In the US, the gross domestic product dropped by four-tenths of a percent
in
 the second quarter -- well before the September 11 attacks -- and no doubt
 has continued to fall.  415,000 people lost their jobs in September.

 The riotous progress of economic globalization has gone into reverse.
 Growth in global trade fell from 13% in 2000 to only 1% in 2001.
Stunningly,
 cross-border investment has dropped by half.

 Argentina has gone into de-facto default -- the largest default of
sovereign
 debt in history.  (Perhaps they should try a conversion to Islam, or a
 relocation of the country to the Afghan border, to persuade the US and the
 IMF to bail them out like Turkey and Pakistan.)

 Economists at J.P. Morgan project declines in Japan, Singapore, Malaysia,
 Thailand, and Taiwan.  The unemployment rate in Japan is the highest since
 the end of World War II.  Prices of natural resource commodities, on which
 developing countries depend, are off 40%.

 Mexico's economic growth has fallen from nearly 7% last year to close to
 zero -- including a loss of 150,000 jobs in the NAFTA-spawned maquiladoras
 on the US Mexican border.

 The German economy, which represents one-third of the euro zone, is now
 shrinking.  Overall growth for the euro zone is projected at 1.3% for this
 year and next.

 The glittering promises of globalization are turning to ashes all over the
 world.  According to WTO head Mike Moore, "Jobs have been shed everywhere.
 There's not a minister of finance, a mayor or a governor of a province
 anywhere that is not facing declining revenues."

 The same is true in spades for the ordinary folks around the world who are
losing those jobs and suffering the effects of the cutbacks in government
 services.

 The emerging recession is marked by "overinvestment" in industry, leading
to
 overproduction, intense global competition, falling prices, plummeting
 profits, and consequent downsizings, layoffs, and bankruptcies.

 That in turn is leading to a downward spiral of reduced consumer demand,
 falling government revenues, and public sector cutbacks.  Government
 deficits at local, state/provincial, and national levels are reaching
crisis
 proportions both in the rich countries of Europe and North America and in
the Third World.

 The global economy is now facing the unfamiliar prospect of deflation.
 Deflation is already occurring in Japan, and an index that projects future
 price levels in the US is predicting the same for the US.

 "Today, inflation pressures are at their lowest levels in a generation
 because of the first synchronous global recession since 1973-75.
 Historically, such deflation has often resulted in a downward spiral, as
 investors stop investing and consumers stop buying in the expectation that
 prices will fall even lower.

 "Contagion" -- the global linkage of such downward spirals -- is as much an
 aspect of globalization as the global currency market or the World Trade
 Organization.  European economies, for example, were widely expected to be
 less affected by the downturn in the US, because the US is only one of
their
 major markets -- but they are being severely hurt by the decline in Latin
 American and Asian markets that are in turn being hurt by the US bust.

 Interestingly, the countries that are doing best are the ex-Communist
 countries like China, Russia, and parts of Eastern Europe that are not
fully
 integrated into the global economy.  But even they are being seriously
 affected.

 Besides linking economies, globalization and neo-liberalism have dismantled
 non-market counter-forces and institutions that have limited economic
 downturns in the post-World War II era.  Counter-cyclical programs like
 unemployment compensation have been decimated in the US.

 Even developed nations have largely lost their capacity to impose effective
 capital controls on their currencies, so that stimulating one country's
 economy often leads to capital flight rather than job creation. The effort
 to coordinate growth policies in the major capitalist countries has been
 largely abandoned.

 And the original policies of the International Monetary Fund, designed to
 allow countries to correct currency imbalances without driving their
 economies into recession, have been replaced by near-universal requirements
 for "structural adjustment" austerity.

 In the face of the current downturn, policymakers have cut interest rates
 and are beginning to forsake neo-liberal principles and promote government
 budget deficits to stimulate the economy.

 (Of course some of those proposals -- notably those of the Bush
 Administration and the Republican Party in the US are nothing more than
 giveaways to businesses and wealthy individuals that will not increase
their
 incentive to invest.)

 But the big lesson of the past twenty years is that such national policies,
 by themselves, have become less and less effective in a global economy.
 Countering this recession is likely to require a substantial dismantling of
 the neo-liberal edifice.

 During the global financial crisis of the late 1990s there was a lively
 discussion of a "new architecture for the global economy."  The
 establishment quickly abandoned that discussion when the US bubble seemed
to
 restore globalization's manic growth.  Today there is a stunning silence in
 the establishment -- whether economists, policymakers, or pundits -- about
 what to do to prevent a global crash and to restore economic growth.

 The problem is that any serious fix for the emerging economic downturn will
 have to address the basic problems that have been raised by the critics of
 globalization.  And for that reason, the critique of globalization will
soon
 return to the top of the global agenda.

 Jeremy Brecher and Tim Costello are co-authors with Brendan Smith of
 Globalization from Below and the producers of the video documentary Global
 Village or Global Pillage? [www.villageorpillage.org].

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