March
19 , 2009 - Issue 316 |
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The Rich Countries’ Faltering "United
Front" |
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By now we’ve heard “The worst economic crisis since the 1930s” – or words to that effect - so many times it’s become like a mantra. But as the days roll on it begins to appear that it might just be an understatement and that not only does the economic situation appear more like the late 1920s, the politics of the world sound much like that period as well. Early in a full page article on the present economic situation, Martin Wolf, associate editor and chief economics commentator for the Financial Times, referred to “a huge recession if not something worse…” Later, he observed “a huge financial crisis, together with a deep global recession. If not something worse…” You can be sure if Martin Wolf is not sure how bad the situation is – or will become – there is little reason for optimism. And when the commentator
who has tried to convince us that the world is flat (technologically speaking)
starts to sound like Henny Penny, I sit up and
take notice. “It’s always great to see the stock market come back from
the dead. But I am deeply worried that our political system doesn’t grasp
how much our financial crisis can still undermine everything we want to
be as a country,” writes columnist Thomas Friedman in the New York
Times. “Friends, this is not a test. Economically, this is the big
one. This is August 1914. This is the morning after On Sunday, the chair of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, Christina Romer, said the country is involved in an “economic war,” the outcome of which is yet to be determined. Meanwhile, the Financial Times says editorially that “the world economy has already stumbled over the edge of a ravine” and the historian Paul Kennedy writes on its pages of the need to “put the shattered Humpty-Dumpty of international capitalism back together again.” It called for the major powers to form a “united front.” The crisis is, indeed, worldwide and system-wide and if the current actions being taken by the major players to head off something much more serious that what we are witnessing today are any indication, all the kings horses and all his people are making a mess of things. In some respects,
the situation in the rest of the world is even worse than it is here.
Trade is down within the European Union and between it and the rest of
the world. For The worst victims of the crisis, however, are the people of the planet whose lives in the era of globalization are always the most precarious. “The odd situation is that we have trillions of dollars directed at banks and bail-outs but we’re told there’s nothing for the poor,” says Jeffrey Sachs, a special UN economic adviser. “Meanwhile, we are teetering on the brink of collapse and violence in parts of the world where people have been pushed to the brink.” Kevin Watkins, director of UNESCO’s Global Monitoring report, observes: “With the slowdown in growth in 2009, we estimate that the average income of the 391m Africans living on less than $1.25 a day will take a 20 per cent hit. When you convert economic growth effects into human costs the picture looks even grimmer. Best estimates point to an increase in infant mortality of somewhere between 200,000 - 400,000 [a year].” It is against this backdrop that next month’s G20 world leaders are headed for a meeting that is beginning to look more like a 1920s-style showdown between rival camps in the capitalist world. The conferees will include the Group of Seven industrialized countries - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and U.S, the European Union and leading developing nations like Brazil, China and India. A new level of international cooperation is the imperative of our age. It is critical for confronting climate change, AIDs and other plagues, violent conflicts, world poverty and a world economic system verging on the dysfunctional. In the runup to April 2, the prospects in the area of economic relations don’t look too promising. You might not know it, if you are dependent on the “The summit of
the group of 20 leading advanced and emerging countries in The stumbling
block – in a nutshell – is that The spin is on;
every effort is being made in advance to play down expectations for the
summit. The The G20 meeting
could be a major embarrassment for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown,
the meeting’s host. Only a few weeks ago he was in Last week the London-based financial magazine The Economist dismissed the “epic agenda” Brown had set forth. “A big agenda can give everyone something they want, but it can also give everyone something to disagree about,” the editors wrote. “Americans are suspicious of the European desire for a system of global regulation that may threaten their sovereignty Europeans do not agree with American demands that governments spend yet more money - partly because they are worried about the size of the state; Asians, who blame America and Britain for the crisis, do not want a souped-up IMF unless they have a greater say in how it is run. The summit may agree on minutiae like tax havens (none of which will be represented) and bankers’ bonuses (nobody loses votes bashing bankers). But on the important stuff, the stage is set for disappointment.” The Economist
did come up with a united front proposal – so to speak. “The second priority
is to present a united front against protectionism. This does not just
mean fine words. They are too easy to ignore. The Much attention will be focused on the world’s stock exchanges in the days and weeks ahead. A perception that the summit will fail to come up with a united front could jolt investor confidence. Alistair Darling, the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, says failure to use coordinate approach could even deepen the ongoing crisis. “In 1933 governments failed to reach agreement with disastrous consequences,” he said. “For economists,
the German-American conflict brings back unpleasant memories,” said the
German magazine Der Spiegel Monday.
“During the world economic crisis of the 1930s, the European countries
and the “At their first
summit meeting last November in In response to the continuing conflicting statements concerning the issues before the G-20 summit, Dominique Seux, editor and chief of the French daily financial newspaper Les Echos, wrote “These exchanges are worrying because they show the differences in mind-set a few weeks before the G-20 … They are of all the more concern considering that - according to the World Bank and the IMF - the planet could experience its first global recession in 60 years this year. That means that growth in emerging countries will not be sufficient to compensate for the big developed countries’ retreat. There is absolutely no doubt that the economy will pick up again, but after having plunged millions of men and women into poverty and unemployment.” “Each side defends
its own position. Barack Obama, who has put 787 billion dollars on the
table to sustain economic activity, is asking Europeans and “Above all, they refuse to go any further as long as Washington has not clarified its position on the reforms of the financial system that are deemed indispensable, something Federal reserve President Ben Bernanke timidly began yesterday. ‘What are you ready to do concretely and do you agree to draw up the new rules together?’ the Europeans ask the American president and Gordon Brown. Obviously, these are normal arguments. But they also show that a G-20 failure is possible.” “While global
leaders disagree about what to do, the world economy tumbles at accelerating
speed,” Financial Times Associate Editor Wolfgang Munchau
wrote Monday. “Last week’s news of the virtual collapse of the German
manufacturing sector is the clearest sign yet that “Our ability to
solve these various collective action problems will ultimately determine
how bad this crisis is going to get,” concluded Munchau.
“The G20 is clearly not the ideal forum because it is too large for effective
intergovernmental co-ordination. But for the moment, there is no alternative.
The Brazilian President
Luis Incacio Lula da
Silver has called for building of a “new world financial architecture,”
saying the London Summit must take a hard look at the banking system and
offer some reforms. Pointing to the economic downturn affecting working
people, he said, the “G20 must do something about this. We can’t go to
“This crisis doesn’t yet have a name,” writes Editor Bob Kuttner, co-editor of the magazine American Prospect. “It has all the hallmarks of a depression, but people are understandably reluctant too use the D-word. So let me suggest one: The Great Collapse, since this was both a financial collapse and an ideological one.” “This great collapse doesn’t have to be a second Great Depression – if government does nearly everything right, and soon. And when we come out the other side, we could have a more decent and sustainable society.” “But if government doesn’t do more, and fast, this could be worse than the 1930s.” The danger is not of doing nothing, but rather of doing to little,” Wolf wrote in the Financial Times. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Carl Bloice is a writer in |
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