New from EPI:

The unremarkable record of liberalized trade
After 20 years of global economic deregulation, poverty and inequality are
as pervasive as ever

by Christian E. Weller, Robert E. Scott and Adam S. Hersh

http://www.epinet.org/briefingpapers/sept01inequality.html

juicy excerpt:


" . . . Finally, the World Bank’s conclusion that the lot of the poor has
improved during the era of increasing trade and capital flow liberalization
relies substantially on data from China and India, but the experiences of
both countries are anomalies. In reality, the facts in these countries
undermine the case for a connection between greater deregulation of capital
and trade flows and falling poverty and inequality. While in China the
percentage who are poor has fallen, there has been a rapid rise in
inequality (World Bank 2001a). Most notably, inequality between rural and
urban areas and provinces with urban centers and those without grew from
1985 to 1995. Also, a large number of China’s workers labor under abhorrent,
and possibly worsening, slave or prison labor conditions (USTDRC 2000; U.S.
Department of State 2000, 2001). This situation not only means that many
workers are left out of China’s economic growth, it also makes China an
unappealing development model for the rest of the world. Thus, improvements
in China are not universally shared and leave many workers behind, often in
deplorable conditions.

Using India to illustrate the benefits of unregulated globalization is
equally problematic to the World Bank’s position, since India’s progress was
accomplished while remaining relatively closed off to the global economy.
Total goods trade (exports plus imports) was about 20% of India’s gross
domestic product in 1998, or 10 percentage points less than in China and
only about one-fifth the level of such export-oriented countries as Korea
(IMF 2001a). Moreover, that the IMF (1999, 2000) continuously recommended
further liberalization of India’s trade and capital flows—the only large
developing economy for which this was the case—suggests that the IMF viewed
India as a laggard in deregulating its economy. . . "

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