Progress in technology has rendered an eventual one
world order and globalization inevitable. However, globalization has
made many people in many lands to suffer. It is imperative therefore to
consider the defects of globalization and seek ways and means to remove
them. To discover the flaws of globalization there can be no better way
than to study what led to the plight of its victims.
Let us consider the
plight of arguably globalization’s biggest victim.
Judging by
the yardstick of a nation’s potential matched against its performance
the biggest victim of globalization could well be the United States of
America. Two decades ago the US was the unchallenged leading world
power. The standard of living of its people was the world’s envy. Today
the US is struggling to have its say in a multi-polar world. Its economy
is in a shambles. Its citizens are losing jobs, homes and social
security. The US is a huge debtor to China and Japan. If globalization
allows big multinational corporations (MNCs) to exploit people worldwide
how come the nation in which the largest and most powerful MNCs are
headquartered is declining so quickly? The answer is, this happened
because of corrupt politicians and greedy businessmen. Globalization
would be a boon if democracy was allowed to function. Globalization
became a curse after democracy and national interest were subverted by
corrupt politics and corporate greed.
Consider how America got
into its present mess. To keep the economy buoyant it was necessary to
keep up demand. To do that wages and purchasing power also had to keep
pace. Higher wages meant lower profits. To maximize profits business
corporations utilized globalization to invest in cheap labor outside the
US. The obvious giant sweat shop for cheap labor was China. Violating
all labor norms, ignoring minimum wage norms, the US big business and
China got into a mutually beneficial arrangement. The virtual slave
labor in China manufactured goods for western business firms at a
fraction of the cost which would have occurred through manufacture in
the US itself.
This arrangement suited US business by augmenting
its profits. It suited the czars of totalitarian China by allowing
communist party functionaries to become billionaires while Chinese labor
was ruthlessly exploited judging by world standards. Corrupt US
politicians allowed a five to one adverse balance of trade with China
for decades because they were bribed by both the business corporations
in the US as well as by representatives of Chinese business interests.
The bulk of Chinese exports were owned by the People’s Liberation Army
which used the profits to enrich China’s army personnel and build up
China’s military might. One representative of the PLA in the US, Wang
Jung, was brazen enough to actually visit the White House in order to
donate funds to a US President!
In the early years of
globalization the representatives of American labor wanted to enclose a
social clause in the Dunkel Draft which laid guidelines for global
trade. The social clause demanded some correlation between labor wages
in the first world and the third world. This would have impeded the
flight of US capital from the domestic to the international market. If
this clause had been implemented it would have benefited American labor
by halting the loss of jobs created by the flight of capital. It would
have benefited Indian labor by raising the wages of workers. But the
clause was shot down because of opposition by US business interests as
well as by Indian trade union leaders who were concerned more by empty
notions of economic sovereignty than by the interests of the workers
they claimed to serve. While Indian trade union leaders and the Left
succeeded in preventing a rise in workers’ wages by opposing the social
clause, they could not prevent the influx of foreign direct investment
that was attracted by cheap Indian labor.
It may be seen
therefore that the perils of globalization, and indeed of the worldwide
economic meltdown, are traceable not to esoteric economic reasons; they
arise from the subversion of democratic norms that are enshrined in the
constitutions of all democratic nations and in the United Nations
Charter of Human Rights. These factors are not economic, they are
strictly political. Globalization cannot serve humankind as long as
democracy is subverted to harm the national interest. The subversion of
democracy cannot be prevented unless political corruption and corporate
greed are curbed.
September 26, 2009
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