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IMF Misses Epoch-Making Changes in the Global Economy
Finance ministers, bankers, and businessmen will gather in Washington DC this week for the annual Fall Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. As is customary, the IMF is publishing its analysis of the world economy, and this year it has released some research that is sure to cause controversy and provide some fuel for its critics.
The IMF found that foreign investment and technology (but not trade) were associated with an increase in inequality in developing countries.
But there is much less here than meets the eye. What the Fund has missed - and has pretended not to notice for the last quarter century - is a much more profound change in the world economy that has accompanied the set of economic reforms, including "globalization," that the Fund has forcefully advocated. Over the last twenty-six years there has been a sharp slowdown in the growth of income per person in the vast majority of low-and-middle income countries.
As would be expected when growth rates fall off, these countries have also seen substantially reduced progress on major social indicators, including life expectancy and infant and child mortality.
The Fund is taking advantage of the generalized lack of knowledge of economics and economic trends among its audience. Although the distribution of income gains is an important determinant of economic and social well-being, if income does not grow, then there is nothing to distribute. In a country as rich as the United States, one could argue about how much we might reduce poverty and unemployment, and improve the quality of life through redistribution and policy changes such as universal health care - although politically it is generally more difficult to accomplish much in these areas if the economy is stagnating. But, for the poorest countries, increasing productivity is a matter of survival, and for developing countries generally it is a necessity if they are going to be able to provide education and health care to their citizens.
Especially these days, as countering global climate disruption takes its rightful place as an urgent priority, economic growth is often seen as a problem rather than a solution. But increasing productivity - and that is basically what we are talking about when economists refer to growth in income or GDP per person - is not inherently environmentally destructive. The Internet, for example, has increased productivity while expanding the potential for environmentally-positive outcomes through telecommuting and reduced paper usage. At a more basic level, technical, organizational, and distributional changes - including land reform, and the provision of credit and seeds -- that allow poor farmers to produce more food per acre and per labor hour are also not necessarily environmentally destructive. Growth is also what the IMF and its affiliated institutions have promised that their policies would deliver - not redistribution. All the pain and "creative destruction" associated with privatizations, indiscriminate opening to trade and capital flows, more restrictive monetary and fiscal policies, and other generally unpopular reforms were supposed to increase economic growth.
But, the typical country in the middle quintile of the world income distribution (per capita income only $2364-$4031 in 2000 dollars) in 1960 could expect its income per person to increase by 67 percent in two decades. A similarly situated country in 1980 could expect an increase of only 22 percent over the same time period.* This growth collapse has had a vastly greater effect on most people in the countries affected than any measurable impact of globalization on inequality.
There are a handful of countries that actually did grow faster in the post-1980 era of "globalization." But these countries - such as China, India, and Vietnam - did not follow the policy formula prescribed by the IMF.
Fortunately, most countries have voted with their feet and have paid off the IMF, thus avoiding having to take its advice. The Fund's loan portfolio has shrunk from $105 billion in 2003 to just $17 billion today, with most of this owed by Turkey and Pakistan. This has freed most middle-income countries, but the poorest countries remain under the tutelage of the Fund and its allied institutions, which are dominated by the US Treasury Department. These countries, too, will have to become more independent if they are to reach their development potential.
* * *
*This slowdown is not attributable to "diminishing returns," i.e. the fact that it becomes harder to achieve the same rate of growth as a country gets richer. The slowdown in progress on social indicators (life expectancy, infant and child mortality) is also not attributable to diminishing returns (i.e. it is more difficult to increase life expectancy from 60 to 65 than from 45 to 50). For more data and information on the methodology, see "The Scorecard on Development."
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. (www.cepr.net).
This op-ed was printed in the International Herald Tribune on October 19, 2007.

20 Comments so far
Show All"In a country as rich as the United States, one could argue about how much we might reduce poverty and unemployment, and improve the quality of life through redistribution and policy changes such as universal health care - although politically it is generally more difficult to accomplish much in these areas if the economy is stagnating."
The US is not "rich." Its billionaires are rich. The American people are $9 trillion in debt.
You can't "increase productivity" if your productive sector has been hollowed out. What is it that America "produces" these days besides billionaires?
If you wanna see what America and the rest of the White western world is gonna look like in a few short years, rent *The Children of Men*. I note that images of Flint Michigan in Michael Moore's movies already look this way.
Conservatives, by nature, are against redistribution from rich to poor via taxation and anything socialistic. But doesn't it somehow work out, in the absence of those forces, that redistribution goes on anyway all by itself, from poor to rich? Anywhere and everywhere?
zoya October 19th, 2007 3:18 pm
"You can't "increase productivity" if your productive sector has been hollowed out. What is it that America "produces" these days besides billionaires?"
America has cornered the market with its expansion and production of deceitful and corrupt practices. That's about the extent of our increased productivity as a nation, in addition to producing more billionaires.
Then there is the explosive growth of human population, like bacteria in a fixed size pond. Per person wealth cannot increase, when the total sustainable productive human support capacity of the earth is already exceeded, and is deteriorating due to over exploitation and climate change.
We are lucky the cheap oil is running out, otherwise it would fuel the growth game for longer. In the absence of real growth in the total biological supports for life, only a radical redistribution of wealth could hope to reduce the amount of extreme poverty. Only by attention to population, climate change and sustainability, will the earth support us for long. Population control means guaranteed health, education, and contraception for women controlling reproduction.
Without attention to population, sustainability and climate change, we will soon all be slaughtering each other with nuclear missiles, for the right to be the last ones alive on a dead, hot, plutonium dusted earth.
Those "..generally unpopular reforms.." were always meant as a weapon. The IMF and the World Bank are, and always were, nothing more than stealth tools of the corporate U.S. establishment and they were always meant to weaken any country gullible enough to deal with them.
jmacneil, Costa Rica is a case in point; twenty years ago and right now. Nice place if you didn't have a family bean and rice farm to be converted into a "market share" operation producing tulips for export. The people who engineer these disasters don't live in the messes they make.
um. hi. stupid person that i am. in my humble opinion there is nothing that this discussion board can do than other have another lifeless and useless voice of reason in a debate that has gone on since walk softly and carry a big stick diplomacy... a million people can march on washington and crap in the face of congress and it will do NOTHING. period. vietnam was a fluke brought on my partisan lookings into nixons crimes, but sadly that will never happen now. the laws have been passed. the IMF is going bleed the blood of anyone who does not let the people who head the corporations + their stockholders live a life of absolute luxury.
i am sorry but Chile, Argentina, Honduras, Iraq, Iran, Brazil, Nicaragua, Cuba, Haiti, Columbia, Costa Rica, Mexico...... know the price...
we are all guilty. we know this...
but we cannot stop it. period.
unless you can destroy these corporations, you will not change the world. unless you do not destroy the 'schools' where this ideology is told, then you will do NOTHING.
advertised media and money controls the world...
sorry.
get in your car and drive to the supermarket to get your packaged fruit from a country 6000 miles away and wonder who does the damage.
Read John Perkin's "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man"
What will the IMF and World Bank do when their paymaster--the United States--is plummeting headlong in a total market meltdown?
G--I was thinking of that very book as I was reading these posts; I think I will read it again.
C. Black-- you certainly do "c black". If nothing else, we can still bitch here. We are actually some of the more powerful dispossessed people in the world, if that's any consolation.
Daniel David--you're right of course. We have a global trickle down economy. The trouble is that money trickles down, but gushes upward. The biggest problem with capitalism is that labor is treated like a commodity; that is to say, our work is purchased, therefore WE are purchased. We are still slaves even though we are paid. As long as we derive our income from work, we will be treated like objects, not people. We do not become people in the eyes of the capitalist until we own rather than work. That's kind of a Marxist perspective, but it still fits.
Daniel David October 19th, 2007 3:00 pm
"Conservatives, by nature, are against redistribution from rich to poor via taxation and anything socialistic. But doesn't it somehow work out, in the absence of those forces, that redistribution goes on anyway all by itself, from poor to rich? Anywhere and everywhere?"
No it doesn't. The income gap has expanded because of rules and agreements meant to aide the rich at the expense of everyone else.
IE: Trade agreements written to allow, even encourage corporations to move to low wage unregulated areas of the world and then export the same products right back to the area they just took the jobs from tariff free. The corporations profits grow exponentially but neither the workers in the low wage area nor the high wage earners that lost their jobs benefit.
IE: The drug companies that have lobbied for and gotten laws passed that prevent consumers from being able to import medicines from foreign countries. That way they can overcharge in the American market without fear that anyone can import the same drug made in the same factory from a foreign country, IE; Canada, at a 30% to 70% lower cost. Thereby insuring that the drug companies can maintain their profit levels and that the drug companies investors will profit.
etc. etc. etc.
Lobo Gris
"Money is a new form of slavery, and distinguishable from the old simply by the fact that it is impersonal -- that there is no human relation between master and slave.": Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy - (1828-1910) Russian writer
There are a lot of people out there who want true and a free society.Those were the very ideals Hutch Min expressed when he took power.The powers that be did not want Vietnam to be a true democracy, the rest is history.That's what the leaders of Venezuela are trying to create power from the bottom up wards
You cannot create any fair society with out addressing the question of MONEY SUPPLY.As long as we allow Private Banks to create money out of NOTHING as a exponential compound interest bearing DEBT we will all remain enslaved from cradle to the grave.
Money will go into manufacture of Arms which will be used against the people to suppress them, press will be used to peddle false hood, elected representatives will be bought off from creating a true democracy.
Once the Money Supply is in the hands of the people, where the elected representatives are the sole distributors of the funds for productive capacity that will benefit every one, then you may be on a far better world
Illusion, yes the American people are living in an illusion as they are enslaved from cradle to the grave as the rest of the world.The Out Standing Market Credit Debt of that country in the last count stood at $76.63Trillion dollars, the Government will never be able to service the loan let alone repay the capital. Every day this amount is reflected in the books it accrues exponential compound interest. The US lives on a daily overdraft of Billions from the People's Bank of China (a turn up for the books), and others.
Every thing and every body in the US is owned by private banks, and you pay interest on every thing on money created out of NOTHING
But in the first world fed on rubbish both in mind and body, just to be healthy to be Cannon fodders to fight some one Else's war. In the Third World Eight million children die every year this has gone on for decades the holocaust is alive and well.
U$ 100 million are repatriated every day to the Western Banks as interest payments, so that more money can be created as debt. Every THREE SECONDS a child dies in order to pay this amount.
As long as Banks create money out of NOTHING as a compound interest bearing DEBT to finance wars where the profit margins are better than anything on offer you are in a vicious cycle of violence.
The arms industry is the most subsidised industry in any country, especially in the US..
''If you want to be a slave and pay the cost of your own slavery, let the banks create the money'
''Let me control and issue a nations' currency, I care not who writes its laws''
So you can 'ELECT' any party of any colour, it wold not matter an iota
Peace is profitless. as a committed pacifist, I cannot understand ordinary people allowing this to go on. You can take non violent action.
As the Late Lord Hailsm, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales pointed out, that we live in a tripartite totalitarian dictatorship; Press, Elected and Financial.
Interest is NOT necessary or inevitable, this insidious and invidious imposition on humankind should be abolished immediately and can be abolished
We are told we are all free and live in a democracy. People can be fooled all the time.
"You can fool some of the people all of the time, and those are the ones you want to concentrate on." - George W. Bush
There is hope one Asian leader set the example by informing that th IMF and WB are not fit to run a pig stye and refused to acept their medicine, turned the economy of the country around in SIX months, confounding the economic pundits of both sides of the Atlantic.
What the Third & Developing world needs is leadership
For a revealing expose' of the "lending practices" of The World Bank and IMF, and how it all ties together the disaster capitalism of the last 40 plus years, run (don't walk!) to the bookstore and get Naomi Klein's brilliant new book titled, The Shock Doctrine. She's connected all the dots.
The same shock therapy will be practiced on America should Iraq (and then Iran) be counted as success stories.
Don't know much about economic eye glazing detail. We all know about Oligarchy.
1. Oligarchy has never needed a consumer economy to RULE us, and they have RULED us for most of the last 4000 years.
2. Oligarchy HATES & DESPISES Democratic participation by the general population, and any literate middle class with leisure time they have ever encountered. Either will drive them into a psychotic killing rage. Think about the SC plantation owner's response to Nat Turner. That's how our Plutocrats think about us.
3. Globalization, IMF, extortionate loans, declining standards of living for the 80%, just a different form of our feudalistic slave plantation model of life. Everybody works for Master, or starves.
4. The Roosevelt Legacy of Taxation, Corporate Regulation along with Glass-Seagal, Support for the Wagner Act, e.g. Unions, & a Social Safety Net - almost 'disappeared' our Oligarchy. By the mid-60's, 30 years of the Legacy produced the greatest distribution of wealth ever seen in the history of the world, we had 35% unionization in the private sector, we had fixed benefit pensions, a 37.5hr work week (w/lunch) and Health Care didn't bankrupt you. And yeah, our Oligarchy was nearly moribund and within another 20 years would have disappeared entirely as we wiped out poverty in this country. By the mid 60's the end of poverty was in sight and lifetime stable employment was on the horizon. To achieve this civilized life-style all we had to do was make a place for everyone at the table and reject war and conquest as a way of life. We were unable to resist the seductions of 4000 yrs of debt-bondage submission to Master, oppression of minorities (physical slaves), and the rape thrill of conquest. After all, "We always Win".
5. Our current economic, social, and political chaos is the direct and immediate result of a 40 year class war waged by the billionairefilth upon us all so they could take back THEIR country. The key was an exclusionary society based on White Male (Aryan supremacy), gender slavery, human slavery, and constant war. Constant war is the single greatest means of distracting social attention, consolidating the power of Elites, with steam shoveling transfers of wealth to those same Elites, see: top ¼ of 1%. Male supremacy ties every 30 cent white guy to the interests of Master when he owns a wife (see: gender slavery) as a means of increasing his wealth. She makes free labor for him with a two-fer in the form of free-labor children, and she eats last, whatever is left over. That is why the huge pushback on a woman's right to terminate a pregnancy, right to birth control in any form, right to participate as a worker, right to own property. Yes, ALL of those are at risk in this society. You remember the Mick Jagger line, "Under my thumb…" Look around. This is what America "chose".
6. 10 years in Vietnam; mass destruction of economic and social justice movements by hounding them into silence and suicide, false imprisonment, or extra-legal execution; off-shoring manufacturing jobs and service; purchase of the political class in wholesale lots; creation of a prison industrial complex to contain and suppress excess population; controlled placement of Judicial appointments to the Federal Courts and Supreme Court; consolidation of media; obliteration of the entire Roosevelt Legacy except Social Security and they're working on that. Master's Model of Life includes: Slavery for the Global South with lots of credit cards, sub-prime mortgages, and predatory monopolistic corporations for the debt-bondage market at home. How many pay-check loan companies do you have in your neighborhood?
7. The rest of the world is shaking off this last great attempt to restore global slavery by our Masters. We however are the core of the disease. We made our choice long ago. The avalanche has begun. Too late for the pebbles to vote. The Masters always lacked the gene for self-restraint. Hi Hillary, how go the War-Plans for Iran? You know, the Last Aryan Empire NUKES the First Aryan Empire. I did say 4000 years. We are nothing if not irony deficient.
Sorry.
Peace.
... "The need for a constantly expanding market for its products chases them over the whole surface of the globe.....All old established national industries have been destroyed, they are dislodged by new industries whose introduction becomes a life and death question..,by industries that no longer work up indigenous raw material, but raw material drawn from the remotest zones; .. The cheap prices of its commodities are the heavy artillery with which it batters down all walls... It compels all nations, on pain of extinction to adopt their mode of production... in one word, it creates a world after its own image;"
These words were written in 1848 by Karl Marx. (To clarify: I am not a Marxist but I think many of his thoughts on capitalistic economy have proved to be correct...)
What is remarkable about Marx is that he predicts the big problems of capitalism that we are facing now: Globalization,over-production,economic power concentration, extreme volatility of a market society, etc.
Marx also realized the dilemma of employment in a market system: " they (workers) find work only so long as their labour increases capital....these labourers are a commodity, like every other article of commerce, and are consequently exposed to all the vicissitudes of competition, to all the fluctuations of the market.. the uneasing, ever more rapidly improvement of machinery, makes their livelyhood more and more precarious..." the economy imposes its conditions of existence upon society as an over-riding law..."
To come back to Mark Weisbrot´s article: It is no surprise that this economic system increases inequality both in developed and developing countries. Those who decide the rules in this global game make sure that it is played to their advantage: banks ("financial markets", corporations and investors are the major beneficiaries of the global rules (born out of neo-liberal ideology) laid out by the WTO, the IMF and the World Bank.Compliant politicians provide help ("corporate welfare") from the state to guarantee that the "trickle-up" effect does not stop and the frustration of the population (seeing the injustice) is mitigated by the old "bread and games" tactic of the Romans - in modern guise of course (TV, sports hype, game shows, silly soaps,etc. - anything to prevent the electorate from critical thinking)
The latest figures about the income rise of US CEOs show where the priorities lie: The top executives now earn in a day as much as the average US worker (364:1, in the 1980ies it used to about 80:1). In Europe the game is the same: e.g. the head of the Deutsche Bank, Josef Ackermann earns about USD 1.800 per hour, while the really important jobs (like nurses, policemen, firefighters, teachers, small farmers,etc. whose services we all badly need)earn a pittance in comparison. Any complaints (e.g. asking for a substantial pay rise, demanding decent health care for all Americans, etc.) are quickly dismissed as unrealistic either because there "is not enough money" or because it would endanger the competitiveness on "the global market" or interfere with "market"-rules. The market ("growth") is our god, on its altar we worship and sacrifice all the things that constitute dignity and humanity....
I think that Mark Weisbrot is wrong in his judgement that economic growth is not inherently destructive to the environment.The whole concept of endless growth is incompatible with the natural world (it´s resources are of course not endless and ever increasing production and consumption will destroy the system) Ecological rules make sure that there is no overproduction,no waste, that all systems are running with the best possible energy-effciency, that problems with sub-systems can appear from time to time and are buffered without endangering the system as a whole (in contrast:e.g. the industrial production-system we have created is so dependent on fossil fuels that problems with its supply can have fatal consequences for the whole system..)
Weisbrot also claims that "to allow poor farmers to produce more food per acre" is not necessarily bad for the environment. Well, it is in this system: In the Western world, the "green revolution" was considered a huge success because crop yields have doubled or trebled since the introduction of agrochemicals. But the ecological damage that this system has created is simply not factored in and the energy dependence it has created is also economic madness: Where is the improvement when output has trebled but energy input has increased 10fold? We now also know that industrial agriculture needs huge amounts of water and produces 20% of all greenhouse gases.So where is the progress? Farmers in earlier generations were not stupid and neither are the indigenous farmers in other continents. In his latest book STUFFED AND STARVED Raj Patel (a former World Bank employee) gives a shocking account how the modern food-system is working. How the multinationals are getting ever bigger slices of the cake while those who do the hardest work get only the crumbs..... With their easy access to governments and global institutions like the WTO, these food multis set trade rules, receive millions of subsidies and dump their products on the poor, thereby underminding local production.
In India thousands of farmers have committed suicide after extensive crop-failure of GM cotton. To buy the patented seeds and the necessary agrochemicals, they ran into huge debts and when the crop failed they drank Monsanto´s herbicide Roundup....
The truth is that modern agriculture is an ecological nightmare since it promotes everything nature abhors: monoculture, overproduction and energy-inefficiency, toxic waste, creation of new, persistent (not biodegradable) chemicals like PCBs,degradation of soil fertility, reduction of biodiversity (also undermined by genetic engineering) advancement of (new) infectious diseases through factory-farming, etc. From an ecological point of view our industrial system is a cancer, a system that is out of control, that needs to multiply all the time but by doing so it kills the host system...
The symptoms of "climate change" are already here and the hurricances, floods, droughts, etc. are just the beginning.... There is no "techno-fix" for this problem. The ridiculous attempts by our leaders to cope with a problem of this magnitude show that Einstein was right to say: You cannot solve a problem with the same way of thinking that created it in the first place."
The bitter truth is that our economic system is unsustainable in the long run. We need a big paradigm change in economic thinking: no more growth in quantity but in quality. To stay alive the goal must bee stability (a dynamic equilibrium)not "growth" (meaning expansion).
But I don´t see any politicians who are willing or able - (including Al Gore) to challenge the established wisdom.... Cutting Co2 emissions is not enough, our whole lifestyle must be changed, all production must be ecologically controlled, not put on the market to make a profit and the problems "be externalized" to society as it has been done for such a long time...
How about us? How much longer are we going to follow the PR-industry like sheep and buy all the stuff they are advertising? Do we need i-pods and SUV´s to lead a happy life? Can we afford to buy hundreds of things without knowing how much damage these products are creating during their life-cycle? We ought to stop being "consumers" and become citizens again....
(My apologies for using so many words... but this is such an important subject...
Very informative and extrospective comments, luckylefty and minitru. Thank you.
Undoubtedly, we're on a collision course with reality (nature). Hold on everybody.
Peace and best of luck to all.
''We need a big paradigm change in economic thinking:''
The only Paradigm change is to addresses the Money Supply with out interest.this insidious and invidious practice is not necessary or inevitable, and thus inflation is eliminated.
To the surprise of every one we are working on a non violent economic model which will ensure an organic steady growth provide every one with the basic requirements by right with out begging the system
42 million people in the US is with out the very basics, living in poverty.
Yes a new economic model not dictated by workers / bankers but truly democratic will be unveiled.
The financial tsunami / cyclone destroying the world right in front of our eyes, will warrent that,and people will be amenable to new thinking, and we are ready.Unless WW1V is started by the mad neo cons, Hillary included.
Watch this space
''We need a big paradigm change in economic thinking:''
The only Paradigm change is to addresses the Money Supply with out interest.this insidious and invidious practice is not necessary or inevitable, and thus inflation is eliminated.
To the surprise of every one we are working on a non violent economic model which will ensure an organic steady growth provide every one with the basic requirements by right with out begging the system
42 million people in the US is with out the very basics, living in poverty.
Yes a new economic model not dictated by workers / bankers but truly democratic will be unveiled.
The financial tsunami/ cyclone will warrent that,and people will be amenable to new thinking, and we are ready.
Watch this space
Lobo Gris:
"The corporations profits grow exponentially but neither the workers in the low wage area nor the high wage earners that lost their jobs benefit."
I think that is precisely the point I was making about the rather automatic redistribution from poor to rich (to the corporations) in absence of either sufficient taxation or socialistic laws to the contrary.
Ditto the drug companies. If we had the price controls on medicines here that many other countries have, there would be no need to try to import drugs here. Price controls are one of those socialistic policies I'm talking about.
In "Natural Capitalism" Amory Lovins makes the interesting observation that 60 years after the end of WWII, it looks as if it was US inner cities that suffered the bomb attacks, rather than England, Germany and Japan.
And the IMF wants to export the economic system that achieved this result.
FYI, minitru, Lovins also points out how and why economic development and environmental improvement are compatible. Not just compatible, but essential to each other.