The case for globalisation


THE anti-capitalist protesters who wrecked the Seattle trade talks
last year, and who hope to make a great nuisance of themselves in
Prague next week when the city hosts this year�s annual meeting of the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, are wrong about most
things. However, they are right on two matters, and the importance of
these points would be difficult to exaggerate. The protesters are
right that the most pressing moral, political and economic issue of
our time is third-world poverty. And they are right that the tide of
�globalisation�, powerful as the engines driving it may be, can be
turned back. The fact that both these things are true is what makes
the protesters�and, crucially, the strand of popular opinion that
sympathises with them�so terribly dangerous.

International economic integration is not an ineluctable process, as
many of its most enthusiastic advocates appear to believe. It is only
one, the best, of many possible futures for the world economy; others
may be chosen, and are even coming to seem more likely. Governments,
and through them their electorates, will have a far bigger say in
deciding this future than most people appear to think. The protesters
are right that governments and companies�if only they can be moved by
force of argument, or just by force�have it within their power to slow
and even reverse the economic trends of the past 20 years.

Now this would not be, as the protesters and their tacit supporters
must reckon, a victory for the poor or for the human spirit. It would
be just the opposite: an unparalleled catastrophe for the planet�s
most desperate people, and something that could be achieved, by the
way, only by trampling down individual liberty on a daunting scale.
Yet none of this means it could never happen. The danger that it will
come to pass deserves to be taken much more seriously than it has been
so far.

Pandering as they go


The mighty forces driving globalisation are surely, you might think,
impervious to the petty aggravation of street protesters wearing silly
costumes. Certainly, one would have hoped so, but it is proving
otherwise. Street protests did in fact succeed in shutting down the
Seattle trade talks last year. More generally, governments and their
international agencies�which means the IMF and the World Bank, among
others�are these days mindful that public opinion is anything but
squarely behind them. They are not merely listening to the activists
but increasingly are pandering to them, adjusting both their policies
and the way these policies are presented to the public at large (see
article). Companies too are bending to the pressure, modest as it
might seem, and are conceding to the anti-capitalists not just
specific changes in corporate policy but also large parts of the
dissenters� specious argument.
These outbreaks of anti-capitalist sentiment are meeting next to no
intellectual resistance from official quarters. Governments are
apologising for globalisation and promising to civilise it. Instead,
if they had any regard for the plight of the poor, they would be
accelerating it, celebrating it, exulting in it�and if all that were
too much for the public they would at least be trying to explain it.

Lately, technology has been the main driver of globalisation. The
advances achieved in computing and telecommunications in the West
offer enormous, indeed unprecedented, scope for raising living
standards in the third world (see our survey). New technologies
promise not just big improvements in local efficiency, but also the
further and potentially bigger gains that flow from an infinitely
denser network of connections, electronic and otherwise, with the
developed world.

The �gains� just referred to are not, or not only, the profits of
western and third-world corporations but productive employment and
higher incomes for the world�s poor. That is what
growth-through-integration has meant for all the developing countries
that have achieved it so far. In terms of relieving want,
�globalisation� is the difference between South Korea and North Korea,
between Malaysia and Myanmar, even (switching timespan) between Europe
and Africa. It is in fact the difference between North and South.
Globalisation is a moral issue, all right.

If technological progress were the only driver of global integration,
the anti-capitalist threat would be less worrying. Technological
progress, and (it should follow) increasing global integration, are in
some ways natural and self-fuelling processes, depending chiefly on
human ingenuity and ambition: it would be hard (though, as history
shows, not impossible) to call a halt to innovation. But it is easier
to block the effects of technological progress on economic
integration, because integration also requires economic freedom.

The state of the developing countries is itself proof of this. The
world is still very far from being a single economy. Even the rich
industrialised economies, taken as a group, by no means function as an
integrated whole. And this is chiefly because governments have
arranged things that way. Economic opportunities in the third world
would be far greater, and poverty therefore vastly reduced, right now
except for barriers to trade�that is, restrictions on economic
freedom�erected by rich- and poor-country governments alike. Again,
the protesters are absolutely right: governments are not powerless.
Raising new barriers is as easy as lowering existing ones. Trade
ministers threaten to do so on an almost daily basis.

The likelihood of further restrictions has increased markedly of late.
Rich-country governments have all but decided that rules ostensibly to
protect labour and the environment will be added to the international
trading regime. If this comes about, it will be over the objections of
developing-country governments�because most such governments have come
round to the idea that trade (read globalisation) is good. Europe and
the United States are saying, in effect, that now that the poor
countries have decided they would like to reduce poverty as quickly as
possible, they can�t be allowed to, because this will inconvenience
the West.

If that reason were true, it would be a crime to act on it. But it isn
�t true, or even all that plausible. Rich-country governments know
very well that the supposed �adjustment problems� of expanded trade
are greatly exaggerated: how convincing is it to blame accelerating
globalisation for the migration of jobs from North to South, when
America has an unemployment rate of less than 4% and real wages are
growing right across the spectrum? Yet even under these wonderful
circumstances, politicians in Europe and America (leftists,
conservatives, Democrats and Republicans alike) are wringing their
hands about the perils of globalisation, abdicating their duty to
explain the facts to voters, and equipping the anti-capitalists with
weapons to use in the next fight.

It would be naive to think that governments could let integration
proceed mainly under its own steam, trusting to technological progress
and economic freedom, desirable as that would be. Politics could never
be like that. But is defending globalisation boldly on its merits as a
truly moral cause�against a mere rabble of exuberant irrationalists on
the streets, and in the face of a mild public scepticism that is open
to persuasion�entirely out of the question? If it is, as it seems to
be, that is dismal news for the world�s poor.




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