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© Hazel Henderson, June 2003
www.hazelhenderson.com
(1,129 words)
"Europe Rising"
Brussels,
June 2003
Brussels, June 2003 This ancient city, bursting with
tourists, diplomats, business lobbyists, activist civic groups and
traffic jams, is emblematic of the new importance of Europe in global
affairs. Cranes and construction crews are expanding the European
Parliament and other official buildings ready for the 10 nations, due to
join the European Union (EU) in 2004, swelling its population to 500
million.
Brussels is full of debates about the coming 25-member
EU’s expanding role in the world, its new constitution, foreign policy
and tax harmonization. The strong euro now accounts for 35% of all world
trade and currency reserves. Indeed, in 2002, more securities were
issues in euros than in US dollars. Many countries have diversified
their currency reserves into euros, putting the euro on course to parity
with the US dollar as the other global reserve currency.
I participated in two conferences with contrasting views
on the meaning of the rise of the EU – one of the most significant and
noble experiments in humanity’s long struggle for peaceful, just
democratic governance. Renaissance Europe, in the Euro Parliament,
hosted by Swedish MEP Anders Wijkman, was convened by European
foundations, enterprises and NGOs. This conference explored scenarios
for creative social transformation to more equitable, environmentally
sustainable lifestyles based on social and technological innovation,
renewable energy and resource utilization.
Meanwhile in the nearby Biblioteque Solvay, a
masterpiece of the art nouveau style, the Commission on Globalization
based in San Francisco, California and The Hague, Netherlands, debated
post-Iraq world order and challenges to national sovereignty.
The nations of the EU have pooled many aspects of their
sovereignty to create a peaceful union and common currency. The
militantly nationalistic USA pursues a course of unilateral action and
the new Bush doctrine of its right to preemptively strike other
countries in “preventive” self-defense. Heated exchanges characterized
this conference. US participants still traumatized by the 9/11 attacks,
insensitively referred to the USA as “America” and themselves as
“Americans”. European, Canadian and Latin American delegates were
critical of Bush’s foreign policies particularly toward the
International Criminal Court. Billed as a “multi-stakeholder dialogue”
the speakers were predominantly elderly Caucasian males.
James Woolsey, former Director of the US Central
Intelligence Agency, now Vice President of Booz Allen Hamilton, promoted
the Bush Administration worldview along with other US “conservatives.”
The Canadians were more conciliatory, including former foreign minister
Lloyd Axworthy, Jeremy Kinsman, Ambassador to the EU and Gordon Smith,
former deputy minister of foreign affairs. France’s Georges Berthoin,
honorary chairman of the Jean Monnet Association and Oliver Giscard
d’Estaing, founder of the INSEAD management institute urged broader
agendas of global governance. The always-thoughtful Prince Hassan bin
Talal of Jordan and Palestinian professor, Nabil Ayad, sought deeper,
cultural and religious understanding. Ayad warned that, “terrorism is
now a hydra-headed monster in a mutating environment.”
The US participants’ conflicting views of their
country’s policies dominated. Most agreed on the USA’s military super
power status, while I and others stressed its economic fragility, trade
and growing deficits, domestic debt, the eroding currency-reserve status
of the dollar. European, Russian, Mid-Eastern and Latin American
delegates wondered why these sharply-divided views were not reflected in
US media and why US polls showed continuing support for Bush’s external
(if not domestic) policies.
Many agreed that the continuing trauma caused by the
9/11 attacks, the constant drumbeat of government warnings of dangers of
worldwide terrorism reinforced the Bush Administration’s mandate. Those
critical of US unilateralism, including Tom Spencer, former British MP
and President of GLOBE, the environmental legislators’ group, politely
warned that US efforts to divide the EU, a la Donald Rumsfeld’s clumsy
rhetoric about, “old and new Europe” was becoming self-defeating.
The Euro-Parliament’s President, silver-tongued Irishman
Pat Cox, presented the inspirational view of a unified, enlarged EU.
Many now hope the EU will balance the US military approach as an
influential, diplomatic “soft superpower” in world affairs. Most agreed
that the world also needed a revitalized, reformed United Nations (UN),
still the only multilateral body capable of convening all the global
players – important as ever, despite the Bush attempts to declare it
“irrelevant.”
The rising economic might of China, already becoming the
world’s manufacturing giant, was seen as challenging US economic, not
military, hegemony, with its currency, the rmb, while still pegged to
the US dollar at 8, was more realistically valued today at 3 rmb- US$1.
The “soft weapon” of choice in this new century is currencies, all
floating in today’s unregulated “global casino” of daily $1.5 trillions
of currency transaction. Oliver Giscard d’Estaing boldly called for
regulation and taxation of such global activities as currency
speculation, arms trading and transportation – a view I have also
long-advocated.
Leaving the debate at the Bibliotique Solvay for the
Renaissance Europe conference added to the breath of fresh air walking
to the EU Parliament through the greenery of the Leopold Park. This
group of some 70 “change agents,” entrepreneurs and civic activists was
younger, more female, diverse and energetic. Malina Mehra, an
Indian-born spokeswoman for an organization of Asian businesses in
Europe, eloquently represented their desire to be more involved in
shaping a sustainable equitable and innovative Europe.
Private companies focusing on addressing social needs,
i.e., social enterprises, were well represented, including the member
companies of the European Business Council for a Sustainable Energy
Future; socially-responsible companies, including Dutch-based Rabobank
and the “Triple Bottom Line” conference conveners, Brooklyn Bridge.
Internet-based networks as well as local initiatives in Pari, Italy and
Robertsfors, Sweden exemplified the “glocalization” models of human
development.
Host MEP Anders Wijkman enthusiastically endorsed the
Renaissance Europe group’s expanding influence in all present EU and the
10 new “accession” countries. He also emphasized the need to change the
old dysfunctional paradigms of GDP/GNP-measured economic growth, which
has led to greater poverty gaps and environmental/social/cultural
disruption – toward broader, multi-disciplinary indicators of
sustainable quality-of-life.
Marcello Palazzi, President of Progressio Foundation
(Netherlands), co-chair of the conference with Marta Bonifert of the
Regional Environment Centre, announced that a high-powered electronic
platform, London-based VIA3.net would provide networking, communication
and barter exchange facilities for all the groups represented to
continue the conference and collaboration in cyberspace.
Virtually all participants agreed that cooperative
models and strategic alignment of collective values, goals and projects
could lead to a greatly enhanced effectiveness and new coalitions to
address wider social and environmental challenges. Competitive
profit-making corporations in the old money-systems can exploit
Metcalfe’s Law – network effects that can lead to monopolies like
Microsoft. Social enterprises and civic groups can use the same network
effects by cooperating, sharing, bartering and new alliances – creating
new levels of abundance using information – rather than money as the new
medium of exchange.
I left this conference, honored to be invited (as a US
citizen of British birth) to present my own comments, and energized by
the visionary views of Renaissance Europe. The ferment in Brussels may
well play a creative, influential and increasingly decisive role in
building a more human world order.
****
Hazel Henderson,
author of Beyond Globalization and other books, co-creator of the
Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators, is also a board member
of VIA3.net.