pha-exchange Mailing List Archive: PHA-Exchange> Neoliberalism worldwide (1 of 2)[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Ways in which Neoliberalism is Radically Redistributing wealth Worldwide by Jeff Gates (the author was once an official in the US Congress and then ran unsuccessfully for governor in Georgia as a Green). 1. The bottom and the top. As the US is the leading advocate for the neoliberal/WTO model of globalization, the trends emerging in the US are instructive. The wealth of the 400 richest Americans grew by an average of $1.44 billion each from 1997-2000, for an average daily increase in wealth of $1,920,000 per person ($240,000 per hour or 46,000 times the minimum wage). The financial wealth of the top 1% of US households now exceeds the combined household financial wealth of the bottom 95%. The share of the nation's after-tax income received by the top 1% nearly doubled from 1979-1997. By 1998, the top-earning 1% had as much combined income as the 100 million Americans with the lowest earnings. The top fifth of US households now claim 49% of national income while the bottom fifth gets by on 3.6%. In the 1970s, the average wealth of the 400 richest families was $200 million and the list included 13 billionaires. By 1986, the average wealth was $500 million. By 2000, $725 million in wealth was required for admission to a list where average wealth was $1.2 billion and the list included 274 billionaires. Between 1979 and 1997, the average income of the richest fifth jumped from nine times the income of the poorest fifth to roughly 15 times. The average hourly earnings for white-collar males was $19 in 1997, and $19 in 1973. These results reflect the key distributional principle embodied in neo-liberalism and in the present version of globalization. 2. Democracies or plutocracies? Today's capital markets-led development model is replicating US wealth distribution patterns worldwide. For instance, 61% of Indonesia's stock market value is held by that nation's 15 richest families. The comparable figure for the Philippines is 55% and 53% for Thailand. Worldwide, there's now roughly $60 trillion in stocks and bonds. If the WTO succeeds in reviving the Multilateral Agreement on Investment, no member-nation could impose conditions on cross-border capital flows. Even without this, neoliberal rule-making will bring a future where a handful of the world's most well-to-do will pocket more than 50% of that $60 trillion in financial wealth. The neoliberal goal is for the forces of finance to operate unimpeded by public policy. 3. Producing for the common good or "skimming"? Unsustainable production methods are now standard practice worldwide, due largely to globalization's embrace of a financial model that insists on maximizing net present value. That richly rewards those who reap in gains and disregard external costs (such as cleaning up the environment). Today's shareholder value-maximizing model leads managers to embrace short-sighted manufacturing practices worldwide: "Maximize financial returns and, trust us, everything will work out fine." US money managers now invest relying on that mechanistic model. This WTO-endorsed "money on autopilot" paradigm assumes that any increase in numeric value automatically adds to the common good. 4. Of the rich and the poor. Today's version of globalization assumes that unrestricted economic flows will benefit the 80 percent of humanity living in developing countries as well as those 20 percent living in developed countries. Yet UNDP reports that 80 countries have per capita incomes lower than a decade ago; sixty countries have grown steadily poorer since 1980. In 1960, the income gap between the fifth of the world's people living in the richest countries and the fifth in the poorest countries was 30 to 1. By 1990, the gap had widened to 60 to 1. By 1998, it had grown to 74 to 1. Meanwhile, the world's 200 wealthiest people doubled their net worth in the four years to 1999, to $1,000 billion (165 of the 200 live in OECD countries). Their combined wealth equals the combined annual income of the world's poorest 2.5 billion people. Three billion people presently live on $2 or less per day while 1.3 billion of those get by on $1 or less per day. With the global population expanding 80 million each year, World Bank President James Wolfensohn cautions that, unless we address this imbalance, 30 years hence we could have 5 billion people living on $2 or less per day. UNDP further reports that two billion people suffer from malnutrition, including 55 million in industrial countries. Current trends suggest that in three decades, today's version of globalization could create a world where 3.7 billion people will suffer from malnutrition. UNDP's assessment is that: "Development that perpetuates today's inequalities in neither sustainable nor worth sustaining." In the 7 years since the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 33,000 US farms with under $100,000 annual income have disappeared --a rate six times steeper than the pre-NAFTA period. During those seven years, farm income declined (in the US, Mexico and Canada) and consumer prices rose. Over that same period, the giant agri-businesses who pushed these policies reported record profits. Prosperity is not trickling down, as the assumption underlying globalization goes --it is trickling up. 5. Of oligopolies and monopolies. Prior to the dot-com companies collapse, Wired Magazine projected Microsoft's Bill Gates would become a trillionaire by March 2005 and, by March 2020, a quadrillionaire (a million billionaire). We can look forward to a future where a single person could have more financial wealth than his/her entire generation combined. From 1983-1997, only the top five percent of US households saw an increase in their net worth, while wealth declined for everyone else. While the global economy grows 2 to 3% each year, transnational firms typically grow 8 to 10% annually. The 200 largest firms account for 28% of global economic activity while employing less than one-quarter of one percent of the global workforce. The wave of cross-border megamergers is fast concentrating economic power in megacorporations. 6. Climate change. We must add to today's fast-widening economic gap the fact that industrial nations (located mainly in Northern temperate zones) are primarily responsible for the ongoing loss of natural capital elsewhere in the world. In its July 2001 report, the International Panel on Climate Change confirms that relentlessly rising global temperatures --due primarily to fossil fuel use in the world's 30 most developed economies-- are going to create catastrophic conditions worldwide. Agricuture, health, human settlements, water, animals --all will feel the impact on a planet that's warming faster than at any time in the past millennium: the poor of the world will be the hardest hit. With 4.5% of the world's population, the US accounts for 25% of the CO2 emissions that contribute to global warming. (contd)[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index] Last Updated: Thu Mar 15 00:13:34 2007 |
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