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© Hazel Henderson, December 2002
(1,053 words)
“GLOBALISATION’S
SURPRISES”
Economic and technological
globalization was always a project of global corporations, financiers
and their political allies in mature industrial societies. The
blueprint was the “free” market enthusiasms of Ronald
Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. This
Anglo-Saxon model of capitalism was followed by the ”Washington
Consensus” policies we still see today.
The
World Trade Organization (WTO), NAFTA and the incipient Free Trade
Area of the Americas, all follow the same recipe for export-led
GNP-growth, open capital markets, convertible currencies, privatization,
deregulation, increasing world trade.
Even though a welter of
evidence is now in – from the 1997 Asian meltdown, Russia’s
default and now that of Argentina, the ideologues who believe in
this form of globalization still promote these policies with the
familiar cry: TINA (There Is No Alternative). As
psychiatrists know, people who cannot conceive of any alternatives
to their current behavior are deemed to be suffering from clinical
depression. And scientists
note that it is illogical to imagine that repeating a similar experiment
could lead to dissimilar results.
But
we now see an even deeper set of contradictions, all signaling
a lack of systems thinking among the ideologues of laissez faire globalization In the West, these interdependencies are recognized as ‘what
goes around – comes around.” In
the East, the same phenomena are known as “Karma.”
Let’s
examine some of these karmic effects of today’s globalization:
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The USA, globalization’s most fervent promoter,
has up to now, reaped the greatest benefits – when the
dollar became the world’s defacto reserve currency – over
valued today by between 15-25%. This has led to unsustainable US trade deficits, the sucking in of
the lion’s share of world exports and increasing inability
of US-based companies to export.
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The USA’s long ride on the over-valued dollar
is now coming to an end as its trade deficits continue growing
to unsustainable levels (some 4.5% of US GDP). Until
recently, countries which export to the USA (China, Taiwan, Japan,
Mexico and many others) kept accepting US dollars in payment
and buying US Treasury bills for their currency reserves. This
system, with the USA absorbing so much of the world’s exports
and capital – trying to serve as the world’s “locomotive” – is
now bogging down in the weakening dollar (currently below the
euro).
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The US Federal Reserve has lowered interest rates
to 1.25%, the lowest in 40 years in order to try to hype the
domestic economy – so far with little success. The
Japanese “deflation malaise” may be in store for
the post-bubble USA as well. Countries
holding their towering piles of US dollars in their currency
reserves are diversifying into euros (now becoming the world’s
alternative reserve currency).
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Private holders of US T-bonds and stocks look
on with alarm as the dollar continues to weaken and the interest
they now earn is close to zero when corrected for inflation. These
private investors are worried about the US economy’s fundamentals:
historically high levels of corporate and consumer debt; over
$1 trillion of unfunded corporate pension liabilities in the
auto and other “Old Economy” sectors; the corporate
crime wave continuing to undermine confidence in auditor’s
reports and stock markets; the Bushies’ foreign strategy
of playing global policeman; preemptive strike plans on Iraq;
warring worldwide terrorism and evil leading to ever-larger deficits – and
the unsupportable US trade deficit. It
is only a matter of time before more private investors switch
to euros, Swiss francs and other investments – where interest
rates are higher and fundamentals are more favorable.
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US officials and economists say that productivity
is higher in the USA than Europe – advising investors to
keep betting on the US economy. However,
closer examination reveals the different ways that Europe and
the USA measure “productivity” (the USA method flatters
the US – Europe uses a broader measure). When
these methods are compared, the difference in productivity is
trivial. Add to
this, that US capital productivity in the late 1990s was negative – i.e.,
trillions of dollars were wasted in “investments” in
half-baked dot com businesses – during the bubble. Indeed,
a recent survey of 300 global fund managers by Merrill Lynch & Co
found some two thirds considered Wall Street the most over-valued
of the world’s top five stock markets.
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The
global economy was always a power game – and currencies are
becoming the weapons of choice. Revulsion
against all weapons of mass destruction, as well as land mines and
small arms are producing a global backlash. Bullying
by military superpower – the USA – is producing a rise
in anti-US opinion in many countries, including allies. Even
pro-business advocate Jeffrey Garten, Dean of Yale University business
school in The Politics of Fortune urges US CEOs to criticize
Bush’s unilateralist policies for imperiling global stability.
Yet
9/11 showed that the 21st century is the age of “asymmetric” weapons – where
computer hackers, money-launderers, assorted terrorists gangs and
even currency traders and OPEC now hold a new balance of power. For
example, the USA, which blocked and then supported China’s
entry into the WTO, may regret enforcing “Washington Consensus” policies
onto the WTO. China
must shortly make its currency the “yuan” convertible,
and further open its markets. Today, China is fast
becoming the world’s newest superpower – and supplier
of many of the world’s goods – producing 50% of cameras,
30% of air conditioners and TVs, 25% of the washing machines, 40%
of all microwave ovens sold in Europe, and fast moving into computers,
mobile phones and DVD players. China views its low-priced
exports as a boon for the world’s poorer consumers – while
the US now fears global deflation. Yet lower wages and cheap export
platforms used in China and elsewhere by US multinationals were
supposed to be the advantage of globalization These
global supply chains were touted as taming inflation and hyping
economic growth. Most
central bankers still fixate on inflation, not deflation. Now
the US Federal Reserve is bracing for deflation while its main
tool of choice – interest rate adjustments – has stripped
the gears of monetary policy. Will
the Fed fight deflation by “talking down” the dollar? Or – another
surprise – when China shifts to a convertible currency (now
pegged at 8 yuan to the dollar) will the Chinese yuan (now
undervalued) lead to the dollar’s further devaluation? As
sages have said: “Beware
of what you ask for – because you may get it.” What
will happen to Bush’s “global policeman” ambitions
then?
****
Hazel
Henderson is author of Beyond
Globalization, Building a Win-Win World and other
books.