Angry and effective
W A S H I N G T O N ,   D C







The threat of renewed demonstrations against global capitalism hangs
over next week�s annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank. This new
kind of protest is more than a mere nuisance: it is getting its way



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 N30, A16, S11, S26. If you are part of the anti-capitalist
resistance, these terms will need no explaining. Each denotes a day of
protest against �corporate-led globalisation�. First came the World
Trade Organisation�s ill-fated ministerial meeting in Seattle in
November 1999; then the spring meetings of the World Bank and the IMF
in April this year; next, the World Economic Forum�s gathering in
Melbourne on September 11th; and, coming to Prague next week, the main
annual meetings of the Bank and the Fund. Each term also connects you
to a website where the plans for the demos, and other useful
information for would-be protesters, are posted.

The approach is the same every time. A variety of ill-defined and
sometimes spontaneous �radical� groups�environmentalists, feminists,
anarchists, neo-communists, and assorted non-aligned malcontents, to
name only some�join to march on the streets. A �convergence centre� is
proposed, usually a disused warehouse. (As The Economist went to
press, the Prague venue had not been announced.) This is where
protesters are housed and fed (vegan food preferred); and where they
receive medical and legal advice, plus training in �non-violent� civil
protest.

The lack of hierarchy is ostentatious. The protesters have no leaders.
They join small �affinity groups�. Despite this, the events are well
organised. Possible activities include colourful puppets, street
theatre, catchy slogans and lots of noise, and for some (to quote the
S26 site) �pickets, occupations of offices, blockades and shutdowns,
appropriating and disposing of luxury consumer goods, sabotaging,
wrecking or interfering with capitalist infrastructure, [and]
appropriating capitalist wealth and returning it to the working
 people�. The immediate aim is to shut down, or at least badly
disrupt, the meetings of the global elite. Afterwards, the movement
evaporates into cyberspace.

Seattle saw both the birth and, to date, the high point of this new
mode of activism. There had been isolated days of anti-corporate
protest before, notably in Britain, but the disruption of the WTO
gathering, amid street scenes reminiscent of the 1960s, confirmed
Seattle�s standing as the birthplace of the �backlash against
globalisation�.

Onward and eastward


If the protest websites and the elite�s contingency planners can be
believed, Prague may not be far behind. Organised almost exclusively
by European activists�the Ruckus Society and other veterans of America
�s protests do not plan to attend�demos there could prove more
disruptive and more violent than anything so far. There will be around
18,000 delegates, financiers and assorted hangers-on; the Czech
interior ministry is expecting some 20,000-25,000 protesters (other
estimates say 5,000-10,000). Many would-be protesters have already
been denied entry at the border. Even so, this could be the biggest
invasion of foreigners since the Russian army arrived in 1968. All
these elitists and anti-elitists will be crammed together into Prague�
s warren of narrow winding streets�a tricky situation for the
authorities.
The Czech police have been co-operating with the FBI and the British
police. Not noted for restraint, they are inexperienced at dealing
peacefully with large-scale protest. Some errant officers have
reportedly sent death threats to protest organisers. Meanwhile, some
of the organising websites sound an ominous note. One of them,
www.destroyIMF.org, promises a �mass working-class protest�,
dismissing Seattle as a �passive ideological showpiece�. Neo-Nazi
skinheads may turn up as well, to fight on one side or the other.

As a result the town is preparing for siege. Schools and theatres have
been told to close. Officials have advised those without business in
Prague, as well as the old and those with small children, to leave.
Hospital beds have been set aside. One bank has asked its top people
to declare their blood group. Other bigwigs have been advised to leave
their spouses at home (usually the annual meetings are an occasion for
heavy-duty socialising). Many bankers have just decided to give this
year�s gathering a miss.

Even if all this preparation and anxiety turn out to be overdone, this
is far from business as usual�so, whatever happens, the protesters
have won a kind of victory. Protest groups are already planning next
year�s events. These include action in April against the Summit of the
Americas gathering in Quebec; a global May Day rally (codeword,
M12K01); and, yet again, protests at the next IMF/World Bank annual
meetings, this time in Washington in September 2001.

What, if anything, does all this signify? Is it, as some claim, the
start of a global citizen-activist movement? (If you took that view,
you might see Europe�s current fuel-tax �revolt� as part of the trend,
despite its anti-green, middle-class character.) Or is it, in the
words of Naomi Klein, an anti-corporate sympathiser and author of a
recent book deploring the power of corporate brands, merely �a
movement of meeting-stalkers, following the trade bureaucrats as if
they were the Grateful Dead�?

The protesters are certainly not part of an intellectually coherent
movement. They represent a diverse set of groups, often with very
differing agendas, and sometimes with mutually contradictory ones.
Almost all they have in common is a loathing of the established
economic order, and of the institutions�the IMF, the World Bank and
the WTO�which they regard as either running it or serving it. The
League for a Revolutionary Communist International sums up the
all-encompassing disaffection pretty well in a 19-page manifesto
demanding an end to debt, poverty and capitalist exploitation; for
good measure, it also wants to liberate advances in genetics and
pharmaceuticals from the tyranny of patent rights and to �eliminate
the meaningless and harmful marketing of useless products�.

Blinkered, as yet


Many of the protesters know little about the organisations they are
attacking�but not all of them, by any means, are in it merely to vent
incoherent rage or have a fun day out. The more thoughtful among them
recognise that street protests are only a convenient tactic in a
larger war, and that if their movement is to grow it will need a
vision�positive proposals, that is, as well as a list of things it
hates. So far, this vision is lacking, though a few ambitious types
are working on it.
The International Forum on Globalisation, based in San Francisco, has
been preparing a document that it hopes will win the support of a wide
range of activist groups. According to John Cavanagh, head of the
Institute for Policy Studies, a radical think-tank based in
Washington, DC, this manifesto would outline a new �global democracy�
based on human rights and ecological sustainability. It would also
define new rules for globalisation. (For instance, certain goods and
services, such as bulk water and living things, should not be subject
to patents and trade rules.) And it would demand new bodies. The Fund,
the Bank and the WTO should be shrunk or shut down. The UN�which is
deemed more accountable and democratic�should be souped up.

Whether any agenda, even one so general, could be adopted by such a
rag-bag of protesters is unclear. An effort by Vaclav Havel earlier
this year to broker a meeting between the protesters and the boss of
the World Bank foundered because the activists could not agree on
whether such negotiations were a good idea: in fact, they had no way
of actually making any decision. Who should represent a disparate
collection of websites, all of which take pride in their lack of
leaders? (Mr Havel has since managed to set up a forum on September
23rd that will be attended by Bank and Fund officials and by assorted
opponents of globalisation.)

Nonetheless, it would be a big mistake to dismiss this global militant
tendency as nothing more than a public nuisance, with little potential
to change things. It already has changed things�and not just the
cocktail schedule for the upcoming meetings. Protests organised
through the Internet succeeded in scuttling the OECD�s planned
Multilateral Agreement on Investment in 1998; then came the greater
victory in Seattle, where the hoped-for launch of global trade talks
was aborted. It is still unclear when, or whether, that round will
start.

Also, many of the groups have already swayed the decisions of firms
and official institutions. Global Exchange, for instance, is an outfit
of 40 people based in San Francisco, and an avid believer in street
protest. It reckons it bullied Starbucks into promising to sell �fair
trade� coffee beans in its caf�s, starting next month. (�Fair trade�
coffee is supposedly bought at a price that offers peasant producers a
�living wage�, rather than at the �exploitative� price paid for
commercial coffee.) Starbucks says it had been thinking about doing
this anyway.

Similarly, �anti-sweatshop� campaigns, mostly in America and mostly
student-led, have had effects well beyond the university campus. A
coalition of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), student groups and
UNITE, the textile workers� union, for instance, recently sued
clothing importers, including Calvin Klein and Gap, over working
conditions in the American commonwealth of Saipan in the Pacific.
Faced with litigation and extended public campaigns against their
brands, 17 companies settled (others, including Gap, are still
fighting the case). The deal includes promises to improve working
conditions. The factories will be monitored by yet another group,
Verit�, based in Massachusetts, and part of a growing industry of
organisations dedicated to inspecting labour conditions in third-world
factories.

Activist groups have been just as successful in causing big
international agencies to bend. A World Bank project in China, which
involved moving poor ethnic Chinese into lands that were traditionally
Tibetan, was abandoned after a political furore led by a relatively
small group of influential pro-Tibetan activists. Similarly, the Bank
had a tough fight to fund an oil pipeline through Cameroon because of
activists� efforts.

Technology of complaint


The Internet has proved a crucial tool in organising these groups for
protest; it has also directly furnished the protesters, once
organised, with a potent weapon. E-mail makes it much easier not only
to gather activists and disseminate information, but also to bombard a
target with protests from around the world. As Debra Spar of the
Harvard Business School points out, the activists have globalised
faster than the firms they target. Global Exchange�s online anti-Gap
campus-organising kit has pro forma letters to send to the company,
anti-Gap flyers and suggested slogans and chants. All are easily
downloaded. It is hardly surprising that firms are often wrong-footed.
The activists have also raised the profile of �backlash�
issues�notably, labour and environmental conditions in trade, and debt
relief for the poorest countries. This has dramatically increased the
influence of mainstream NGOs, such as the World Wide Fund for Nature
and Oxfam. Such groups have traditionally had some say (albeit less
than they would have wished) in policymaking. Assaulted by unruly
protesters, firms and governments are suddenly eager to do business
with the respectable face of dissent.

In the Bretton Woods institutions, in particular, the shift is
striking. Public protest has accelerated change on several fronts,
notably debt relief. The rallies, human chains and petitions for debt
cancellation organised by the Jubilee 2000 campaign applied enormous
political pressure for debt write-downs. As a result, groups such as
Oxfam were all but co-opted into designing the debt-relief strategies.
Next week is likely to see more measures announced to speed up the
process, so that governments can say they will keep the promise they
made in 1999 that at least 20 poor countries will see their debt
burdens lifted this year.

The IMF, long regarded as impermeable to outsiders, now runs seminars
to teach NGOs the nuts and bolts of country-programme design, so that
they can better monitor what the Fund is doing and (presumably)
understand the rationale for the Fund�s loan conditions. Horst K�hler,
the IMF�s new boss, has been courting NGOs. Jim Wolfensohn, the Bank�s
boss, has long fawned in their direction, but in the Bank too the pace
of bowing down has been stepped up.

In Prague this year a programme of meetings has been designed for
non-government, non-corporate groups. At last count well over 300 had
signed up. This raises the interesting possibility that radical groups
will try to prevent slightly less radical groups from attending their
meetings. Mark Malloch Brown, the administrator of the United Nations
Development Programme, has gone further. He has a board of NGOs
(including some fairly radical ones) to advise him, and he explicitly
wants to position UNDP as an honest broker, arbitrating the interests
of firms, government and civil society in individual developing
countries.

Presuming too much?


The increasing clout of NGOs, respectable and not so respectable,
raises an important question: who elected Oxfam, or, for that matter,
the League for a Revolutionary Communist International? Bodies such as
these are, to varying degrees, extorting admissions of fault from
law-abiding companies and changes in policy from democratically
elected governments. They may claim to be acting in the interests of
the people�but then so do the objects of their criticism, governments
and the despised international institutions. In the West, governments
and their agencies are, in the end, accountable to voters. Who holds
the activists accountable?
Some politicians are beginning to press this point. The Foreign Policy
Centre, a think-tank sponsored by the British government, recently
proposed a code of conduct for NGOs that would include certification
by a regulator. For now, though, governments and international
institutions would rather bend at least part of the way to the NGOs�
demands than question their credentials.

There could be no objection, of course, to the influence of NGOs and
protesters if they were merely stating their case. Many protesters are
out to do more than that�up to and including �sabotaging, wrecking or
interfering with capitalist infrastructure�. When they get their way,
that looks likes a defeat for democracy rather than a victory. Then
again, even this might be all right if the concessions won by
protesters genuinely advanced the cause of the world�s poor, whose
interests most protesters claim to defend. This too is very much in
doubt.

Forcing higher labour standards on factories in Saipan, for instance,
may simply cause the �sweatshops� to move on, leaving the workers
without jobs. Poor countries cannot afford rich-country standards of
labour regulation; people in poor countries will bear the cost of
denying this fact. Similarly, the furore over Tibet simply led China
to withdraw its loan request. The Chinese decided to fund the project
themselves, presumably with less regard for the environment and human
rights. Even debt relief is capable of doing more harm than good�as
when it channels new capital to countries whose economic policies are
in disarray.

A more complicated issue is the World Bank�s thinking on poverty and
development. Recently, the organisation has undergone a pronounced
shift, clearly visible in its latest World Development Report, the
Bank�s flagship publication. Poverty is now described as a
�multidimensional� problem that includes powerlessness, voicelessness,
vulnerability and fear�as well as mere lack of food, shelter and other
economic necessities. Combating poverty therefore requires not only
economic growth, it is argued, but also �security� and �empowerment�.

Empowering poor people, says the Bank, means strengthening their
ability to shape decisions that affect their lives�by removing
discrimination, promoting equity (for instance, between the sexes) and
ensuring that government institutions are more open, accountable and
oriented towards the poor. The Bank reckons it should no longer impose
reform strategies on its clients. They should be designed mainly by
poor countries themselves on the basis of a national dialogue with
various civil groups.

In part this �fuller� account of development reflects a shift in
thinking that was under way before the backlash began. Some economists
were already becoming more sympathetic to the view, almost universal
before the 1980s, that growth by itself is not enough to reduce
third-world poverty; and a consensus (broader than the one on growth
and poverty) was already forming around the idea that the Bank�s
traditional lending conditions are not the best way to promote
economic reform. But the NGO critics, scores of whom were invited to
discuss the new report while it was in preparation, gave these
intellectual tendencies a mighty push.

Again, whether the developing countries will benefit is very much in
doubt. Empowerment, supposing the idea is taken seriously, may
distract governments and the Bank alike from the simpler pro-growth
tasks that they already appear to find impossibly difficult. And it
seems odd for the Bank to demand that third-world governments, often
these days democratically elected, should design their reforms
alongside civil groups that are unelected, unaccountable and very
often unrepresentative.

But these are not points to worry the protesters as long as they enjoy
the sympathy of many people in the West, as they appear to. Many of
the issues they raise reflect popular concern about the hard edges of
globalisation�fears, genuine if muddled, about leaving the poor
behind, harming the environment, caring about profits more than
people, unleashing dubious genetically modified foods, and the rest.
The radicals on the streets are voicing an organised and extremist
expression of these widely shared anxieties. Along with mainstream
NGOs, the protesters are prevailing over firms, international
institutions and governments partly because, for now, they do reflect
that broader mood. If their continuing success stimulates rather than
satisfies their appetite for power, global economic integration may be
at greater risk than many suppose.


 Links to sites mentioned (the Ruckus Society, the League for a
Revolutionary Communist International, the International Forum on
Globalization and Global Exchange. Or visit the raucous public protest
sites: A16 and S11):
http://ruckus.org/
http://www.workerspower.com/wpglobal/lrci.html
http://www.ifg.org/
http://www.a16.org/
http://www.s11.org/


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