At 05:30 PM 12/3/99 , Pete Farmer wrote:
>Jay Fenello [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] quotes Scott McConnell, whose work
>apparently was on a Pat Buchanan website, as writing
>
> >>  After Seattle, it looks like real democracy may be starting
> >>up again.
>
>I see it quite differently.  I suspect the vast majority of protestors in
>Seattle would be *dead set against* a "democratic" WTO.
>
>Imagine a WTO that gives proportional representation to nations based on
>population.  Who would end up with the vast majority of delegates?  The
>developing world.
>
>Say goodby to labor protection.  Say goodbye to environmental restrictions.
>Say goodbye to the protestors' agendas.
>
>So much for "democracy."
><snip>


Hi Pete,

Get a clue!

The previous piece referenced U.S.
democracy, not world democracy!

And the rest of your analysis is
backwards as well.  Perhaps this
summary will help:

Jay.


-------- Original Message --------

December 6, 1999

THE CORPORATE-DOMINATED TRADING SYSTEM IS BEING CALLED TO ACCOUNT.

The Battle in Seattle
by ROBERT L. BOROSAGE

[See below for background and related information.]

It's billed as the Battle in Seattle. In the suites will be the 
representatives of 135 nations gathered for the Third Ministerial 
Conference of the World Trade Organization, hosted by the Clinton 
Administration. On the streets will be a raucous gathering ranging from US 
environmentalists and union members to the Zapatistas from Mexico and Jos� 
Bove, the French sheep farmer who became a folk hero when he tore the roof 
off a local McDonald's with his tractor.

For Clinton, Seattle is legacy time. After having presided over the US 
adoption of NAFTA and the WTO, and the agreement on China's entrance into 
the trade organization, Clinton wants the Seattle meetings to launch a new 
"millennial round" of global trade negotiations that he can portray as a 
historic achievement. Calling for the WTO to open up, to pay at least 
nominal attention to labor rights and the environment, Clinton will restate 
his commitment to putting a "human face on the global economy" while 
celebrating the progress of globalization on his watch.

For the demonstrators, Seattle will mark the rising tide of opposition to 
that same corporate-dominated trading system. At the last WTO conference, 
in Geneva in May 1998, the protests of thousands caught officials by 
surprise. The even larger protests in Seattle will put all on notice: The 
era of backroom deals among private interests is over. Indeed, the Clinton 
years may be remembered less for the triumph of the corporate trading 
system that he has promoted than for the beginning of the struggle to call 
it to account. At the very least, from now on the future will be contested.

The WTO has been in existence for only five years, overseeing and enforcing 
the trade accords that countries have signed on to. Globalization preceded 
the WTO and would have proceeded without it. So why is it such a lightning 
rod? To understand what is at stake in Seattle, it is worth stepping back 
to get the context.

Over the past quarter-century, transnational corporations and banks forged 
a new global economy, with the flow of goods, services and particularly 
money across national lines expanding exponentially. Apologists paint this 
as an act of nature, driven by revolutions in technology, communications 
and transportation. But markets are made, not born. This global market was 
constructed by and for global corporations, aided by a forceful assertion 
of state power. When conservatives seized the commanding heights of the 
industrial world starting in the seventies--Thatcher in Britain, Reagan in 
the United States, Kohl in Germany--a new consensus formed on 
privatization, deregulation, fiscal austerity and "free trade." Indebted 
developing countries were force-fed what became known as the "Washington 
consensus" by their creditors, with the International Monetary Fund acting 
as Big Nurse.

The WTO is the culmination of this process. Former director-general Renato 
Ruggiero characterized the task as creating the "constitution of a single 
global economy." The impetus behind it was the desire of global 
corporations and banks to regulate the world economy in their 
interest--setting global standards, protecting investments, enforcing 
patents, quashing nonconforming local and national laws and regulations. 
The various agreements that the WTO enforces were initialed by the member 
countries, but they were largely drafted by and for corporations. For 
example, a coalition of corporations including Monsanto, Du Pont, Merck and 
other giants helped draft the US position in the Uruguay Round of GATT 
negotiations on patents and copyrights. Needless to say, the end 
agreement--hammered out behind closed doors by the rich economies and 
foisted on the poor ones--protected the interests of the wealthy, not those 
of the small farmers, subsistence peasants or consumers of the world.

The global economy that the WTO is now intended to police has worked 
remarkably well for the multinationals. By 1999 the United Nations 
Development Program was reporting that multinationals accounted for a third 
of all global exports. A wave of cross-border mergers is creating 
megacorporations. The ten largest corporations in each sector controlled 86 
percent of the telecommunications industry, 85 percent of the pesticides 
industry, 70 percent of the computer industry, 35 percent of 
pharmaceuticals, 32 percent of commercial seed. The combined assets of the 
three wealthiest billionaires were more than the combined GNP of the 
forty-eight least-developed countries.

But the new economy has not worked very well for most working people. By 
1999, 200 million more people lived in abject poverty (on less than $1 a 
day) than in 1987. Inequality has grown both between and within countries. 
Only thirty-three countries achieved sustained 3 percent annual growth in 
GNP from 1980 to 1996. In fifty-nine countries, primarily those in 
sub-Saharan Africa and the former Eastern bloc, GNP per capita actually 
declined. Environmental despoliation is getting worse. The Nike economy saw 
the rebirth of the satanic mills--child labor, young women working for a 
pittance in export-processing zones where union organizers are routinely 
fired, beaten or killed.

Even in the advanced countries that should have benefited the most from the 
system, workers haven't fared particularly well. In Europe, slow growth has 
left millions unemployed. Japan has suffered a decade of decline. In the 
United States, now basking in its extended growth, wages declined after the 
mid-seventies and still have not recovered the ground lost over those 
years. Inequality has hit new heights, while most families actually have 
less net worth now than they did two decades ago.

Opponents of all this were generally dismissed as protectionist 
victims--the "turtles," as New York Times columnist Tom Friedman dubbed 
them--who just couldn't keep up. But then, beginning in 1997, the 
opposition showed its clout in the United States. An unlikely coalition of 
progressives concerned about labor rights and the environment and 
isolationist conservatives blocked fast-track presidential trade authority 
twice. The political defeat was reinforced by the global financial 
crisis--the worst since the Great Depression--which shook the confidence of 
the financial elite.

Since that time, the Clinton Administration has been scrambling to contain 
and co-opt the rising opposition. The Jubilee 2000 movement, a coalition of 
religious and secular groups, forced wealthy countries to put debt relief 
for the most impoverished countries on the global agenda. A coalition of 
labor, consumers and environmentalists torpedoed negotiations on the 
Multilateral Agreement on Investment, which would have pushed financial 
deregulation further. Consumer revolts, led by students against sweatshops, 
had companies like Nike scrambling for the cover of codes of conduct.

President Clinton's response was to adopt the rhetoric of reform, calling 
on the WTO to be more open, pushing the International Labor Organization to 
promote a ban on the worst forms of child labor, supporting a working group 
on labor rights at the WTO. But as Seattle's streets will illustrate, the 
President's gestures won't suffice. By its very existence, the WTO strips 
away the myth of free trade. That becomes even clearer as its secretive 
panels of corporate trade lawyers and experts challenge national laws that 
conflict with WTO rules--a European ban on hormone-treated meat, a US law 
to protect dolphins, a Massachusetts law to boycott Burma. If the global 
economy is regulated, people will demand that its regulations reflect more 
than the private interests of corporations and banks. As AFL-CIO president 
John Sweeney has made clear, labor will applaud progress on a working group 
to study labor rights at the WTO but will not end the demand for 
enforceable labor rights in trade accords.

The real tests won't come in Seattle. They will come in continuing battles 
on fast track, environmental regulation and future trade accords. They will 
come when the US trade deficit becomes unsustainable. They will come as 
developing countries turn away from export-led growth. It is only if the 
corporate project is stalled that governments will be forced to respond to 
their people.

The current moment is akin to the last period of Progressive reform at the 
turn of the century. At that time corporate trusts and banks forged a 
national economy that featured the stark inequalities of sweatshops in the 
Gilded Age. To consolidate their position, pre-empt local and state 
regulation, manage competition and limit instability and protest, the 
corporate leaders wielded their political clout to develop new national 
regulatory laws and authorities. But a rising tide of popular 
movements--unions, women's movements, socialist and populist 
parties--forced broader reforms. Over time, national laws were passed to 
enforce the forty-hour week, a minimum wage, consumer and environmental 
protections, the right to organize, prohibitions on child labor. But each 
concession was bitterly fought. In the end, it took a Great Depression and 
World War II to make significant progress.

The struggle to civilize the global economy has just begun. Progress will 
be slow; the resistance will be fierce. Perhaps the agonies of the past 
century of reform will make the way easier in the next. But as the 
demonstrators in Seattle would say, don't count on it.

E-mail this story to a friend.

Robert L. Borosage, a contributing editor of The Nation, is co-director of 
the Campaign for America's Future. continued at:

http://www.thenation.com/indexshtml


Respectfully,

Jay Fenello,
New Media Relations
------------------------------------
http://www.fenello.com  770-392-9480

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