by miniTAX » Sun 22 Jan 2006, 11:39:21
Coyote,
Thank you for taking time replying to me with documented argumentation.
As for Madagascar :
Madagascar has begun its decline right after independance from French colons. I have grand parents who had been there and describe an immensely rich country with a mineral plenty soil.
And for more than 30 years since its independance in 1960, it lived mostly isolated from the world with a communist leaned policy. When it started to open, it was already in bad shape, with its forests clear cut, its unique indigenous animal species almost exterminated. Some new natural reserves have been set recently, but by far insufficiently to recover from the irreversible damages done to nature due to extreme poverty and over-population. Saying that its dire straits are cause by globalization is simply a gross exageration.
As for the IMF:
The IMF puts its nose in a countrie's affairs when things go sour by definition. And I don't reject that its medicine are many times unadequate and do a lot of harm. But how can it be otherwise when its role is curative and never preventive ?
Don't forget that the IMF intervenes in countries already very indebted and with structural economics problems.
Don't also forget that IMF has succeeded in many countries like Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, Argentina. And in the course, you can't only count victims because those countries, often with bad government have done harm to their people even before the IMF intervene. You must also count the beneficiaries, short term and long term of a good economics policy.
Rejecting the faults on globalization is almost equivalent to giving a good excuse for dictators to rip off the wealth of their countries : we are poor, we are indebted, that's the fault of globalisation and international agencies. EASY.
For example, Nigeria which is one of the poorest african countries and has the biggest debt the African continent ever had is immensely rich in oil. Algeria is a big gaz exporter has an iddle and desperate youth, all the same for Indonesia, a gaz and oil rich country but one of the most corrupt one. Sudan is an immensely vast and rich country but submerged by famine and violence due to ethnic conflict (see Darfour)...
You see, the third world situation is much more disparat and complex than a simple problem of North-South exploitation.
As for India :
India has recently opened its economies after year of socialist (soviet inspired) autartic policy, just like the above example of Madagascar. I'm surprised that you don't know that it's one of the main beneficiary of globalization. It belongs to a group of countries called BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China), future global power players due to their huge population and territories. You can find a description of India in Wikipedia or by searching by Google (india + globalization). Or right now, you can have news and reports about BRIC on the BBC.
As for poverty :
Don't get me wrong. I didn't say that globalization bring prosperity to everyone. It's simply not true. I travel a lot, and I see changes, sometimes for the worse, sometimes for the better. In some countries, there is more prosperity, in others poverty is aggravating, almost always because of overpopulation. In some countries, globalization is very important in the local economy, in others not much.
But showing me something like the distance beetwen the richest and poorest countries is definitely insufficient : simply because humanity is richer now than ever before. Even the level of poverty is just a statistical measure : it equals half the median income (someone under this level is considered as "poor"). The US for example has a very high GDP, so the level poverty is very high (around 21.000$ per house hold compared to France's 14.000$ ) which means that a "poor" american has the same revenue as a French low income household and the same resources as a rich Indonesian.
The gap widen not always because the poor are poorer but ALSO because the rich get richer. What is to blame for that ? An economy where people can't dream of beeing richer even if they are "already" rich is a communist enonomy doomed for failure.
And to stick to facts, your quote tells about Life Expectancy, Infant mortality and Literacy. But don't you see that they all progress, even if the RATE of progress is slower ? What does it mean, that the world become poorer ? I don't think so. Maybe it's just like tennis playing : you first progress very fast because you come from nothing, and then the RATE of progress slow as you reach a good level ? Well, I said that just as a logic asumption, but I have no proof of that, just as you have no proof that a slower progression of these indicators mean that poverty is rampant.
As a conclusion, I would say the panorama of the consequences of globalization is mixed and much more complex than just a set of bad influence on poor countries as you seem to state. Maybe 21th century globalization is just like 20 th century communism. Something to ostracize and to combat because people need something to be a scapegoat.
Communism (or islamism) is the right target.
I'm not sure globalization, regarding its complex implications, is the right one also.