If I'm reading this correctly, UNCTAD is calling for an end to the
neo-liberal trade model (as per the IMF and World Bank) and basically
junking the entire economic analysis and global trade approach of the last
30 years! The reverberations of this approach would be profound.
 
Bravo!
 
Mike
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Sid Shniad
Sent: Thursday, September 16, 2010 12:12 PM
Subject: TRADE: It's the End of the Export-Led Growth Model, Says UNCTAD


http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=52837


TRADE

It's the End of the Export-Led Growth Model, Says UNCTAD 

Isolda Agazzi 


GENEVA, Sep 15 (IPS) - While the recovery from the financial and economic
meltdown remains fragile in especially the developed world, the outlook for
Africa inspires optimism, according to UNCTAD. The agency also believes the
crisis might be the death- knell for the export-led economic growth model --
especially African countries should leave it behind.

With the major industrial countries not being able to consume as much as
before, export-led growth - mainly by encouraging investment in cheap
labour-intensive industries - has no future. 

Developing countries, especially in Africa, should therefore boost domestic
consumption and allow wages to increase in line with productivity growth,
according to UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development). 

The findings are contained in the agency's Trade and Development Report
2010, entitled "Employment, Globalisation and Development, which went public
on Sep 14. Export-led growth prescriptions are associated with the
neoliberal capitalist Washington Consensus. 

The global economic and financial crisis has marked the end of the model of
export-led growth for everybody, since "there must be somebody who imports
and somebody who exports", Dr. Supachai Panitchpakdi, UNCTAD secretary
general, stated at the presentation of the report in Geneva. 

Now that the debt-financed consumption boom in the U.S. has ended, the U.S.
economy will no longer serve as an engine of growth for the global economy.
China, the euro area and Japan are unlikely to assume that role in the near
future. 

"Domestic demand in China is only one-eighth of that in the U.S.,"
Panitchpakdi continued. 

"Therefore, even if the Chinese economy tries to increase domestic spending,
it cannot compensate for the loss of demand from the U.S. We advice
developing countries to stay away from total export-led growth involving
compressing domestic wages, because this will lead to less demand
domestically and less employment creation." 

It has been demonstrated that keeping wages low is not correlated with
employment creation, Panitchpakdi argued. "We have to look at wages and
income as a source of demand and with the lifting of wages, in line with
productivity growth, demand could increase and lead to more investment." 

To the question of how wages can be increased in a global environment where
multinational companies pull out of countries and reinvest in others with
more docile labour laws and lower wages, the response is that "it depends on
a country's economic policy strategy", declared Dr. Heiner Flassbeck,
director of the UNCTAD division for globalisation and development
strategies. 

"If you believe that a flexible labour market is the best thing in the
world, you will not strive to create institutions that could stabilise
domestic demand. This has been the paradigm of the last 20 to 30 years and
that is why such institutions do not exist." 

There is a need for a paradigm shift, Flassbeck said, and UNCTAD, together
with the financial institution the International Monetary Fund, should be
able to convince governments about the need of establishing tripartite
agreements to discuss national strategies. "This is a totally different
approach for many countries, in particular for developing ones", he added. 

Tripartite agreements involve the government, capital and trade unions. 

The International Labour Organisation has cautioned countries about the
fragility of the global economic recovery, since jobs have been created
mainly in the informal sector. 

UNCTAD believes that sustainable policies for wage increases need to cover
both formal and informal labour markets and there needs to be a linkage
between the two of them. An example would be guarantees on farming income as
established by some countries. 

This is particularly true for Africa, where "more than 20 years of orthodox
macroeconomic policies have had limited success in creating the conditions
necessary for rapid and sustainable growth", the report states. 

By the end of the 1990s, according to the report, Africa's "production
structure was reminiscent of the colonial period, consisting overwhelmingly
of agriculture and mining". 

There is not a shortage of employment in absolute terms in African
countries, but a lack of productive and decent jobs, states the report.
Agriculture still absorbs more than 60 percent of the labour force and there
has been a rise in employment, mainly informal, in urban services and
small-scale commerce. 

Formal wage jobs account for only 13 percent of employment and 60 percent of
the employed are working poor. 

Panitchpakdi pointed out that, "today, as shown by the recently released
UNCTAD World Investment Report 2010, we are seeing an emergence of a
different kind of investment policy, a mix between liberalising measures and
more rules and regulations, particularly in developing countries." 

Governments understand that investment left to its own devices could lead to
dislocation of industries. Thus states are starting to again guide direct
investment to specific geographic, social and economic areas. China, for
example, is reorienting its investment policy from cheap labour-based to
technology-based industries. 

"UNCTAD is concerned with fragile and uneven recovery," Panitchpakdi stated.
"There is real risk for some governments if they withdraw their support for
the recovery too early. The pressure put on some countries, particularly
industrialised ones, to try and balance their budget so early could dampen
earlier stimulus measures and lead to weak growth." 

But Flassbeck added that UNCTAD is "optimistic about Africa. The continent
has not experienced such a dramatic drop in production in 2009 and we have
seen a rebound of growth in many countries. In our view, Africa could have a
continuation of 4,5 percent GDP (gross domestic product) growth in 2010."
(END/2010)



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