[A ZNet daily commentary
<http://www.zmag.org/ZSustainers/ZDaily/1999-11/26henwood.htm>]

Nov 26, 1999

What Is Globalization Anyway?
By Doug Henwood

If there's one thing that analysts and activists across the political
spectrum agree on today it's that we live in an era of economic
globalization. This is taken by both critics and cheerleaders as
self-evident and largely unprecedented. We should think twice about
this consensus.

The concept that has now entered daily speech as "globalization" is
both exaggerated and misspecified. It's described as an innovation,
when it's not; it's described as a weakening of the state, though
it's been led by states and multistate institutions like the IMF;
it's been indicted as the major reason for downward pressure on U.S.
living standards, even though most of us work in services, which are
largely exempt from international competition; and it's been greeted
as an evil in itself, as if there were no virtue to cosmopolitanism.

Let me expand a bit on each of my opening claims. First, the novelty
of "globalization." One of my problems with this term is that it
often serves as a euphemizing and imprecise substitute for
imperialism. From the first, capitalism has been an international and
internationalizing system. After the breakup of the Roman Empire,
Italian bankers devised complex foreign exchange instruments to evade
Church prohibitions on interest. Those bankers' cross-border capital
flows moved in tandem with trade flows. And, with 1492 began the
slaughter of the First Americans and with it the plunder of the
hemisphere. That act of primitive accumulation, along with the
enslavement of Africans and the colonization of Asia, made Europe's
takeoff possible.

Not only is the novelty of "globalization" exaggerated, so is its
extent. Capital flows were freer, and foreign holdings by British
investors far larger, 100 years ago than anything we see today.
Images of multinational corporations shuttling raw materials and
parts around the world, as if the whole globe were an assembly line,
are grossly overblown, accounting for only about a tenth of U.S.
trade. Ditto trade penetration in general. Take one measure, exports
as a share of GDP. By that measure, Britain was only a bit more
globalized in 1992 than it was in 1913, and the United States today
isn't a match for either. Japan, widely seen as the trade monster,
exported only a little larger share of its national product than did
Britain in 1950, a rather provincial year. Mexico was more
internationalized in 1913 it than was in 1992. Exports are just one
indicator, for sure, but by this measure, the distance between now
and 1870 or 1913 isn't as great as it might seem.

Indeed, it's probably more fruitful to think of the present period as
a return to a pre-World War I style of capitalism rather than
something unprecedented, and to rethink the Golden Age of the 1950s
and 1960s not as some sort of norm from which the last 25 years have
been some perverse exception, but the Golden Age itself as the
exception.

Another thing that must be rethought is the role of the state, which
we constantly hear is withering away under a new regime of stateless
multinational. While there's no question that the state's positive
role has been either sharply reduced or under sharp attack, its
negative/disciplinary role has grown. In the U.S., we've experienced
a mad, cruel incarceration boom, accompanied by increased snooping
and behavioral prescriptions. Elsewhere, the neoliberal project has
been imposed by states, whether we're talking about the Maastricht
process of European union, or structural adjustment in the so-called
Third World - states acting in the interests of private capital, of
course, but that's the way states have been acting for centuries.
And, over the last 20 years, we've seen an almost entirely new role
for the state, preventing financial accidents from turning into
massive deflationary collapses - our S&L bailout of the 1980s, far
from being unique, was replicated in scores of countries around the
world, most extravagantly in Mexico right now, where a massively
expensive (and controversial) bank bailout is underway.

OK, so what about pressure on living standards? We First Worlders
have to be very careful here, since, as I argued earlier, the initial
European rise to wealth depended largely on the colonies, and while
we can argue about the exact contribution of neocolonialism to the
maintenance of First World privilege, it's certainly greater than
zero. It was embarrassing to hear Ralph Nader and the Fair Trade
Campaign describe NAFTA and the World Trade Organization as threats
to U.S. sovereignty, echoing the rhetoric of Pat Buchanan; Washington
has been abusing Mexican sovereignty for over a century - which is
why it's a good idea to stop saying globalization when you mean
imperialism.

But I'm not going to deny that plant relocations to Mexico and
outsourcing contracts in China have put a sharp squeeze on U.S.
manufacturing employment and earnings, and the threat of those things
has greatly reduced the bargaining power of U.S. workers. How much
has this contributed to downward mobility and increasing stress? The
econometricians say that trade explains, at most, about 20-25% of the
decline in the real hourly wage between 1973 and 1994. (The real wage
has actually been rising for the last five years.) That still leaves
75-80% to be explained, and the main culprits there are mainly of
domestic origin. I'd say an important reason that trade doesn't
explain more of our unhappy economic history since the early 1970s is
that 80% of us work in services - and a quarter of those in
government - which is largely exempt from international competition.
What did "globalization" have to do with Teddy Kennedy and Jimmy
Carter pushing transport deregulation, or with Reagan's firing the
air traffic controllers, with Clinton's signing the end-of-welfare
bill, or with Rudy Giuliani being such a repressive pig? What does
"globalization" have to do with cutbacks at public universities or
the war on affirmative action? While lots of people blame the
corporate downsizings of the 1990s on the twin demons, globalization
and technology, the more powerful influences were Wall Street
portfolio managers, who were demanding higher profits - which they
have gotten, by the way, which is one of several reasons why the Dow
has done so well.

And when did internationalization become something feared and hated
in itself? I got a piece of email a few months ago from a feminist
group claiming that globalization was threatening to undermine
commitments made at the Beijing women's conference. But what is the
Beijing women's conference but a kind of globalization? A couple of
women who attended that conference told me that contacts made there
by some Latin American women's groups allowed them to organize for
the first time against domestic violence. Isn't that both global and
good?

Now there's no reason, as Keynes said, why a British widow should own
shares in an Argentine railway. Nor is there any reason why Bankers
Trust should run Chilean pension funds, nor is there any good reason
why GM should be taking advantage of Korea's crisis to buy up that
country's automobile industry. The case is a bit murkier when it
comes to relative peers - what precisely is so horrible about Toyota
running plants in Tennessee, aside from the ecological horrors of the
automobile and the social horrors of capitalist production relations?

Surely there are things being traded now that wouldn't be traded in a
more rational, humane world. The only social gain in Nike's producing
shoes in Indonesia is claimed by Phil Knight and the shareholders of
Nike. Indonesian resources and labor would be much better devoted to
feeding, clothing, schooling, and housing Indonesians than making
$150 running shoes while being paid pennies an hour. It's a
tremendous waste of natural resources to ship Air Jordans halfway
around the world. Export-oriented development has offered very little
in the way of real economic and social development for the poor
countries who've been offered no other outlet.

But does that mean trade itself is bad? Does that mean the movement
of people across borders is bad? I thought the left opposed
xenophobia and embraced intercourse of all kinds among the people of
the world. Why do we find so many people lost in fantasies about
self-reliance, pining away for a lost world that never really
existed? Why, in other words, do so many people treat globalization
itself as the enemy, rather than capitalist and imperialist
exploitation?

But we can hardly say "capitalism" anymore, much less socialism.
Instead, we say "globalization," and "technology." And that's bad for
both intellectual analysis and transformative politics.

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