Bruce Leier

-----Original Message-----
From: 50 Years Email List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
50 Years Is Enough Network
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 2:34 PM
To: 50 Years Email List
Subject: (50 Years) McQuaig on G8 in Alberta

[The Jubilee USA Network report the author refers to --
co-authored by a 50 Years Is Enough Network staffer -- can be
found at http://www.jubileeusa.org/More_Grief_Than_Relief.pdf]

Toronto Star
Sunday, June 30, 2002


With the world leaders packed up and gone, we can now ponder
whether Africans will get fed and how the summit will affect Jean
Chretien's profile.

All this is stuff we can relate to. The protestors, on the other
hand, seem more perplexing. To begin with, their behaviour doesn'
t fit with the standard model, where everyone is simply out to
maximize their own self-interest.

How to explain the fact that thousands of people across the
country took part in demonstrations last week to champion debt
relief for Africa, without even receiving handsome retainers or
improving their chances of getting into an MBA program? All this
concern for others seems hard to fathom.

Clearly, it would be a lot more comfortable for everyone here if
these young people would just do something normal - like shop.
Why can't they behave like regular folks and put their energies
instead into, say, getting a fancier gas barbecue for the
cottage?

It's tempting perhaps to conclude that those engaging in
snake-dancing without pay or taking off their clothes without the
prospect of a porno film deal must be confused - about their
lives and about the issues. G8 leaders and other global economy
enthusiasts are hoping we'll conclude that.

But it's worth noting that much of what the protestors say jibes
with what an intellectual superstar like Nobel-Prize winning
economist Joseph Stiglitz has to say. And, interestingly, when
Stiglitz said these things in the late 90s, it didn't go down any
better with the world's ruling elite. He soon found himself
dumped from the prestigious position of chief economist at the
World Bank. (So even if they dispense with the green hair and
balaclavas, protestors shouldn't count on much of a hearing from
the G8 crowd.)

Stiglitz has no green hair, and when I interviewed him last year,
he was in the back of a very mainstream stretch limo (on his way
to meet then Finance Minister Paul Martin, who had sought his
opinions.)

What Stiglitz and the protestors have in common, though, is a
distrust of the economic model that the G8 leaders - and the vast
bureaucracies of the IMF and the World Bank that answer to them -
have been imposing on the world in the past two decades, in the
name of "globalization."

To listen to a lot of commentators last week, the problem has
been that the west has selflessly squandered billions on Africans
without demanding a proper accounting (perhaps Arthur Andersen
could have helped out), and rendering them dependent. In this
version of events, Africa is akin to the legendary beer-slugging
welfare mom who can't make anything of her life because she's so
hooked on hand-outs.

This is a comforting thought for the west. People are dying over
there despite our generosity. What's needed is a little tough
love on our part. Trade not aid.

But Stiglitz - who witnessed things close up, from inside the
Washington power circle - presents the west's role as far less
benign. It turns out that these no-strings-attached hand-outs
never existed. Stiglitz notes that we routinely force developing
countries to accept a rigid set of conditions aimed at weakening
their governments and opening their markets for western
penetration, even though all successful economies - including the
U.S. and the celebrated east Asian tigers - got started with some
mix of strong government and protected markets.

It wasn't surprising, then, that when a group of African leaders
came forward with their own aid package, known as NEPAD, they
adhered to this open-market formula, knowing who they were
appealing to. (No point in pitching abstinence to a room full of
priests.)

Stiglitz says IMF experts regularly make decisions about what's
best for Third World countries while experiencing little more
than the room service and pool facilties at the local first class
hotel. Many IMF economists, he suggests, seem to regard
themselves as "shouldering Rudyard Kipling's white man's burden."

The results haven't been good. After two decades of  being
subjected to this open-market, weak-government model, no country
has worked itself out of the debt that brought it to the IMF and
World Bank in the first place, according to the Washington-based
Jubilee USA Network.

Of course, the same two decades produced great wealth,
particularly for a tiny elite in the west who now finance an
industry of think tanks to convince everyone else that
"globalization" is beneficial and, even if it isn't, it's
inevitable, so get used to it.

Meanwhile, at country clubs and golf courses throughout North
America, there seems to be much certainty that Africa could do
fine if it just faced up to the fact that what it needs is more
trade and less aid. And there's similar conviction that if those
young protestors would just think a little more clearly, someday
they could all be driving  BMWs.



#############################################################
50 Years Is Enough            http://50years.org
This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing
list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Send administrative queries to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Reply via email to