Do You Want Free Trade -- or Fair Trade that Helps the Poor?
Whenever the world trade talks begin to seem like a coma-inducing bore-a-thon, I am jolted back to consciousness by the throat-stripping smell of rubbish; miles of rotting rubbish. A few years ago I found Adelina - a skinny little scrap of an eight-year-old - living in a rubbish dump, where this stench made her eyes water all the time. It is this smell - and her sore, salty eyes - that hung over the corpse of the Doha trade talks this week.Just outside the Peruvian capital of Lima, there is a groaning valley of trash, and, inside it, hordes of children try to stay alive. Adelina spends her days picking through the refuse looking for something - anything - she can sell on for a few pennies. Then she returns to the few steel sheets she calls home to sleep on a crunchy carpet of cans. She has never left the rubbish dump; its walls are the walls of her consciousness. She told me three of her friends had recently died by falling into the rubbish, or being pricked by fetid needles, or slipping on to broken glass. I asked her how often she eats, and she shrugged: "I don't like to eat much anyway." She will be 10 now, if she has survived.
When we juggle the dry, dull statistics of world trade, we are really asking if Adelina will remain in her rubbish dump - and if her children, and grandchildren, will live and die there.
The way we - the rich world - organise the world trading system today traps Adelina. But it just broke. This week, in Switzerland, the poor countries of the world refused to play along with the Doha trade negotiations. The mass movement of ordinary people demanding our governments Make Poverty History that rose up in 2005 needs urgently to reconvene.
To help Adelina, we need to start with a basic question: how do poor countries turn into rich countries? The institutions that dominate world trade - especially the World Trade Organisation (WTO) - have a simple answer: all markets, all the time. They tell poor countries to abolish all subsidies, protections and tariffs that protect their own goods. If you fling yourself naked at the global market, you will rise. If the poor countries disagree, they are cajoled to do as we say.
There's just one problem: every rich country got rich by ignoring the advice we now so aggressively offer. If we had listened to it, Britain would still be an agrarian economy manufacturing raw wool, and the US would be primarily farming cotton.
Look at the most startling eradication of poverty in the 20th century: South Korea. In 1963, the average South Korean earned just $179 a year, less than half the income of a Ghanaian. Its main export was wigs made of human hair, and Samsung was a fishmonger's. Today, it is one of the richest countries on earth. The country has been transformed from Senegal to Spain in one human lifetime. How?
South Korea did everything we were pressing the poor at Doha not to do. Dr Ha-Joon Chang, a South Korean economist at Cambridge University, explains in his book Bad Samaritans: "The Korean state nurtured certain new industries selected by the government through tariff protection, subsidies and other forms of government support, until they 'grew up' enough to withstand international competition." They owned all the banks; they controlled foreign investment tightly. The state controlled and guided the economy to the international marketplace.
But we are so pickled in market fundamentalist ideology that we have blotted out this history - and even our own. Until the Tudors, Britain was a backward rural country dependent on exporting raw wool. Turning that wool profitably into clothes happened elsewhere. Henry VII wanted Britain to catch up - so he set up manufacturing bases, and banned the export of wool, so clothes were manufactured here. It's called protectionism. His successors kept it up: by 1820, our average tariff rate was 50 per cent. Within a century, protected British industries had spurted ahead of their European competitors - so the walls could finally be dismantled. Dr Chang explains: "Trade liberalisation has been the outcome of economic development - not its cause."
The US did the same. By 1820, the average tariff was 40 per cent; Abraham Lincoln then pushed them higher, and they stayed there until the First World War. Yet if Lincoln had been at the Doha trade talks, the United States of 2008 would have described him as a "fool" who was "harming his own people" with "despicable policies".
Before you make your child work, you give him an education and skills and abilities. Before a country pushes its infant industries on to the world market, it needs to do just that. Nokia, Samsung and Toyota all had to be cushioned with subsidies and tariffs for decades before they made a cent. Every one of these companies would have been stampeded to death on the open market as a toddler otherwise.
Yet the reaction to the poor world's rejection of Doha in our media has been mostly bemusement. Why have these simple-minded povvos declined our medicine? Are they mad? Amy Barry of Oxfam provides a quiet counter-balance, pointing out that if the agreement on the table at Doha had gone through, Brazil alone would have lost 1.2 million jobs, and "most poor countries would have deindustrialised, or never industrialised at all".
From the rubble of Doha, a new world trade system needs to be built - on the principle of fair trade, not free trade. If we really want to end extreme poverty, then we need to open up the markets of rich countries, while allowing poor countries to protect and subsidise theirs. It is the recipe that ensured you, today, are not hungry and tilling the fields.
But the WTO can only ever achieve half of that goal, at best. It is built on the market vision that there should be no trade barriers or "distortions" anywhere. That means opening up rich markets, which is great. But for each step in that direction, they demand a symmetrical concession from the poor. It is like telling Bill Gates and Adelina they both have to make sacrifices - and Gates won't shift until she does.
Here in the EU and US, there are hefty forces determined to smother fair trade in its cot. The current system works well for corporations, who get to wrench open poor economies without any risk of local competitors rising up. It works well for some slivers of workers here too, who thrive on rich-world subsidies. These forces are regrouping, but their system is lying in a crunched-up heap by the side of the road.
Our governments will always find a way to put these powerful sectional interests first - unless we, the people, make them do otherwise. Today, Adelina needs Make Poverty History to rise again to demand fair trade, not on a few fancy supermarket shelves, but as the principle governing world trade. Let the poor do what we did. Let them rise. Otherwise, those rivers of rubbish will be home to generation after generation of Adelinas the world over, and the stench will never clear.
©independent.co.uk
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25 Comments so far
Show AllI have been wanting to see these issues discussed for a LONG time, so please bear with me for a long post (reprise from elsewhere):
I submit that this election season is a good time to actively inject these issues into the process for the corporations could not succeed in their agenda without the agency of the gov'ts, especially ours, that sign the agreements that set up the WTOs and the NAFTAs. The arguments are well set up in multiple references, including the one mentioned in the article.
Perhaps the first trick is make folks in this country understand that the same policies that are destroying people in the "3rd" world are destroying people in our own "1st rapidly becoming 3rd" world. Too often progressives shy away from espousing "protectionism" because it has been successfully linked in people's minds by the free-traders with isolationism, xenophobia, racism. etc. etc. This has been a very effective strategy for keeping us quiet. But in our eagerness to prove we are NOT xenophobes, racist etc, we have been dancing around this "trade" issue for too long .Recently we have been playing around this issue of "fair trade" as a possible solution, unwilling, for the previous mentioned reason, to embrace the concept that sometimes "No Trade" may be the best way for a country to best provide for its own people.
We are all in this together - isn't that what CD means? The argument that most seems to trip progressives up is the one where they say "but these poor folks are doing better even under these less than fair factory conditions than they would be with no factory at all. Sure, they're working 16 hours a day, but at least now they can buy shoes, before they couldn't do that. If we raise our tariffs or quotas so that their goods are too expensive over here (i.e. to a point where domestic producers could actually "compete" here at home without beggaring our workers), we will be hurting all those poor folks!" Man that seems to get us every time. So we mumble about "fair trade" - "O.K. we say, for the sake of those poor folks, we'll allow our manufacturing base to disappear and retrain our folks for hi-tec work, but you we will only buy stuff that gives your people a bigger share of the pie! So there!"
This is a recipe for failure. We are finally being taught by those "3rd" worlders that they do not just want fair prices for their bananas, they want to be able to make and sell banana bread. They do not want to HAVE to grow things we can't grow here, even at Fair Trade prices, like coffee or cocoa beans to survive, they want to not only grow other things, like corn and beans, but to be able to manufacture other things to buy and sell in their own countries even if they might be "cheaper" from here, because they are more secure when they do. They don't want to be forever at the mercy of international markets and the vulnerability of monocultural economies. This is a lesson that we need to learn for ourselves as well.
As much as Henry Ford was not a very nice fellow in other ways, he did do one thing that made a great deal of sense. When excoriated by his fellow car makers for giving his workers a raise, he reportedly told them "I want my workers to be able to afford the product they are making". If we "protected" our own workers from the cheap products made off the backs of slave labor overseas, the MNCorpse would be faced with a choice - either abandon all the capital investments they have made in those countries or pay those workers enough to buy what they are making. In addition, once they needed the producers of their products to be the consumers as well, as Ford and the other manufacturer's did in the first half of the 20th Cent. in this country, they would have to deal with other demands as well. If you argue that they will just abandon there and come back here as they have abandoned here to go there, I would suggest to you that, having tasted the potential of markets of millions overseas, they will fuss and fume at having to dip into their profit margins to pay their workers but they will not walk away. And if they do, that is where a truly useful US foreign aid program could come in - to transfer technology for the sole purpose of helping those folks to feed and clothe and house and manufacture for themselves, not by having to buy from "our" corporations.
"Free Trade" was all about separating producers from consumers - keep the rich consumers and strip the poor producers. Only now that the "rich" consumers in this country aren't so rich any more... Don't you get it folks? Once we lost our manufacturing base we lost the ability to pay, not only for consumption but for service jobs and infrastructure and everything else. Building a Green Economy" is a chimera if we wind up buying all the goods we need for it from somewhere else! Where will we get the solar stuff and the wind stuff and all that other stuff we will need if we don't protect domestic industry here? From the same place we're getting our underwear from now!
Progressives need to understand that backing away from protectionism domestically while espousing it for the benefit of "developing" nations will NOT help any of us. This is one discussion we NEED to have, both for ourselves and for those we purport to champion with "Fair Trade". And think about it folks, if you really want the corporate duopoly in this country to get nervous, and you really want the support of the "little folk", THIS is the discussion to have! Come on Indys, get on board!
(Sorry about a post that's wordy even for me, but I have been dying to have this discussion, so please, let 'er rip!)
Diodd, exactly right. A surprising number of people seem to have been unable to reach this conclusion from an analysis of the facts that everyone knows.
Taking the blue pill is more comfortable. That's all some people care about. Unfortunately, all of us seem to have comfort as our #1 priority.
Only people who prefer the red pill are free.
marc, you don't get around much do you?
Ask those brain-damaged Obama-ite worshippers to ask Obama his positions on "free" trade and they'll ignore you. The same for the so-called "pro-lifers" in Mccain's camp.
If you really want to end these "free" trade scams, you should give real leaders such as RALPH NADER a chance to step in and steer the ship before it further sinks !
VOTENADER.ORG
DIODD: Very tragically true.
There's only one problem with this article: its title. Fair trade doesn't "help the poor" in the sense of charity. Fair trade "pays" the poor what is owed.
Every time we in the rich world buy something at "everyday low prices" that was produced under "free trade" rules (minimal pay, 16-hour workdays, no sick or vacation time, no healthcare or education, etc.), the poor of the world are actually providing US with charity: they are going without the basic things they need to maintain their lives, so that we can get a product for less than the true cost of production.
Globalization vs Regulation. Globalization is by definition corporate economics that is designed to function from the corporation downwards to the local level supply side.
It boils down to that corporations have decided that they are indeed the new world order which they call globalization. To this end, they are trying to create the economic system for it but... they do not want regulations.
Yet regulations (until parity is achieved economically like so korea did) are what the local level needs to get started.
Globalization without regulation (tariffs to level the playing field etc. ... does China's state controlled capitalism bother the globalization purists?) allows the system to serve the needs of the big corporation without serving the needs locally.
What would make them help an impoverished country get on it's feet but regulations.
Those at the top chafe at restrictions placed on their power.
Perhaps small impoverished places can have their whole economy managed from the corporate perspective and the locals can become franchise holders of portions of their commonweal?
The new world order is sold at Wal-Mart! No really. Lots of places too. Like Chevron in Burma. Why don't they help? To them that is help.
Power seeks easy and organized control... and always without restrictions on them doing so.
Regulations vs Globalization.
What is needed is a local exception. If China can have a state controlled economic system... poorer countries should be allowed an exception as 'special economic zones' where tariffs etc were necessary for growth and improvement of the local level.
AS COMMONDREAMS WON'T FIX ITS "Edit this" feature, I'm re-posting my comment above with corrections/amendments:
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RTDRURY writes: "East Asian 'tiger' economies defied the Washington Concensus which resulted in great successes for them..."
rtdrury proves my point. Free trade only works if a country maintains its economic and political sovereignty - i.e. its independence. Being bullied or forced into certain trading practices against one's will is not free trade at all.
You can't have free trade under a global economic system in which all barriers between countries - bar geographical ones - are brought down. The term then becomes non-sensical, as it's equivalent to advocating free trade within a single country (free trade region) - free trade is an activity that's carried out between countries - not within a country!
"Free trade" is a term that's abused by the right in the same evolution is abused:
It's not about the "survival of the fittest" - it's about the survival of the best adapted to one's NATURAL environment. Humans have created a completely artificial environment to inhabit, a completely artificial way of living, and you cannot apply evolutionary concepts to that.
For instance, the right claims that "parasites" and "leeches" - those that "sponge" off others - are a drain on society, yet these words are the names for creatures in the natural world, and evolution has favored parasites, leeches, and sponges.
The right selects concepts from evolution it likes - those that support its prejudices and biases! - redefining their meaning along the way, and ignores evolutionary concepts it dislikes.
RTDRURY writes: "East Asian 'tiger' economies defied the Washington Concensus which resulted in great successes for them..."
rtdrury proves my point. Free trade only works if a country maintains its economic and political sovereignty - i.e. its independence. Being bullied or forced into certain trading practices against one's will is not free trade at all.
You can't have free trade under a global economic system in which all barriers between countries - bar geographical ones - are brought down. The term then becomes non-sensical, as it's equivalent to advocating free trade within a single country (free trade region) - free trade is an activity that's carried out between countries - not within a country!
"Free trade" is a term that's abused by the right in the same evolution is abused:
It's not about the "survival of the fittest" - it's about the survival of the best adapted to one's NATURAL environment. Humans have created a completely artificial environment to inhabit, a completely artificial way of living, and you cannot apply evolutionary concepts to that.
For instance, the right claims that "parasites" and "leeches" - those that "sponge" off others - are a drain on society, yet these words are the names for creatures in the natural world, and evolution has favored parasites, leeches, and sponges.
The right selects concepts from evolution it likes - those that support its prejudices and biases! - redefining their meaning along the way, and ignores evolutionary concepts it dislikes.
IT'S FREE TRADE!!
If people start supporting "fair" trade, it changes nothing. It says, we let the dominant remain dominant, but just try our best to mitigate the worst effects of this.
Free trade is something countries choose to participate in - it's not coerced, and there's no pillaging or exploitation involved. For free trade to work, countries must maintain their political and economic sovereignty. Also, subsidies, tariffs, and quotas can and should be used alongside free trade - it's about finding a mix that works well for each country, NOT ideological fundamentalism!
You think "fair" trade changes anything? It just opens up another avenue for corporations to exploit. A supermarket in Britain was selling bananas for significantly more than its other bananas, saying they were helping the poor farmers by paying them more - "fair" trading practices!
It turns out the supermarket - Sainsbury's - only gave 20% of the price increase to the farmers, the other 80% it pocketed itself.
The customer was being taken for a ride thanks to this misleading concept called "fair" trade.
If "fair" trade is implemented by the dominant economic players, it won't be fair trade. It'll just be used as a way to pacify the rest of us, fool us into thinking our "activism" has worked.
A band-aid isn't the solution!
"South Korea did everything we were pressing the poor at Doha not to do"
East Asian "tiger" economies defied the Washington Concensus which resulted in great successes for them - this story needs to be told over and over. It's kind of surprising that Castro and Chavez haven't. It may be that East Asia has imposed a gag rule. It wouldn't be surprising if Washington, Tokyo and Seoul have a little agreement as well. But that won't matter - the planet is going to settle on localism soon enough.
It isn't just special interests who like free trade... The typical Wal-Mart shopper wants cheap shirts, and if the rest of the world has to starve for it, so what?
Weekly Wal-Mart shoppers support Bush at higher levels than any other easily identifiable group, and if Bush could deliver cheap gas along with the other trash from Wal-Mart, he would still be on top of the polls.
"Do You Want Free Trade – or Fair Trade that Helps the Poor?"
Do we get a choice?
Fair trade is trade that benefits both nations equally and improves the general welfare of it's citizens. Free trade as currently practiced today, is the same as it was practiced by the British in the 19th century. It is trade that exploits the resources of one nation, and impoverishes the exploiters nation at home. It's purpose is Empire building and global domination.
Obama is for free trade, as is McCain, and every President of the last 30 years has promoted it.
Obama = Free Trade = screwing the American worker.
ssn - to answer your last question.... I HOPE SO!
What baffles me is how the negotiators for the developed world could be so apathetic to the plight billions of the poor in the rest of the world would be condemned to if their proposals are accepted. How arrogant can they get to believe that their monstrous terms would be accepted by the under-developed world ! How do they dare to propose what they very well know - to believe otherwise would be extreme naïveté - would be catastrophic to billions of human beings, nevermind they belong to 'other' nations. Can there be an uglier face of unregulated capitalism ?
I care enough about poverty to keep the hell out of it. Why is the debate always about poverty - there is so little poverty in the US that its hardly worth fighting anymore. after all the trillions spent of the great society cured all poverty from Inez KY to baton rouge La.
send any remaining poor folks to live with John, $400 haircut, Edwards.
"If we really want to end extreme poverty"
That's the thing isn't it. The WTO and the moneyed interests that run it, don't CARE about poverty... they care about further enriching the shareholders of the multinational corporations that write their paycheques. If they really cared about ending poverty, they wouldn't be forcing these disastrous economic policies on developing nations.
I want fair trade.
For anyone interested in fair trade and the Palestinian situation - please check to see if you can purchase fair trade olive oil and other products from Palestine in your area.
In Canada you can contact Zatoun (Arabic for olive) at http://www.zatoun.com/. In the US, the Friends Service Committee sells it in some cities. It is also available in the UK.
For more information , check out the Palestine Fair Trade Association at http://www.palestinefairtrade.org/
If its not Fair Trade, its not Free Trade.
"Free Trade" as practiced now simply means everything for the top, nothing for the middle and less than that for the bottom.
Re: Brazil - a reposting of link to a June report - first in a series that will be coming out:
Brazil of Biofuels
Impacts of Crops on Land, Environment and Society
http://www.reporterbrasil.org.br/biofuel/
very readable w/ broad scope of concerns covered
The wealthy employ the same strategy as terrorists, holding prosperity hostage to their demands.
We need FREE TRADE, not fair trade. Fair trade implies having to impose control over a dominant party, or parties. Those that are dominant need to be stopped, NOT managed.
Under FREE TRADE, countries are not obligated to open up their economies for the dominant to walk in and take over. That's not trade at all! Neither is moving one's manufacturing base abroad to take advantage of cheap labor.
Free trade is something you decide to participate in, either fully or partially, to expand your economy. Hence subsidies, tariffs, and quotas, and free trade, are not mutually exclusive.
For free trade to work, countries must maintain their economic and political independence, not be subsumed under some global economic system controlled by the dominant, even if it is tempered with "fair" trade.
Free trade, above all, is an agreement with other countries that's conducted on equal terms.
Below is a comment I penned at another blog that is frequented by FIRE and Wall Street types. Most of them did not like it.
"This is good news. The developed west would not agree to open their markets to goods that most of the small developing countries somewhat have competitive advantages (e.g Agricultural subsidies to conglomerates/farmers in the West). The rest of the world is beginning to wake up to the lop-sided trade agreements. The West's profit-assured socialists will be able to pick off a few weak developing countries. Nevertheless we are seeing the beginning of the end of so called 'free trade' that only offers extreme disadvantages to most developing countries."
"...the corporatocracy, its band of EHMs [economic hit men], and the jackals waiting in the background would never allow the little guys to gain control." - John Perkins, pg 89 of CONFESSIONS OF AN ECONOMIC HIT MAN.
An EHM goes into developing countries, lies about the projected path of development for a country, telling it's leadership that it's going to be better than it will be, encouraging the government to seek IMF and World Bank loans, accordingly, which end up indebting the poor performing economy/ country to rich countries and their investors, whose 'development' is of their own profitable businesses. If leaders don't agree with the direction set out for them by the EHMs, they can be physically 'hit' by jackals (CIA et al). If jackals don't work, our 'democratic' armies can go into action, as they did in Iraq.
We all know this stuff instinctively, unless we are mentally defective. It just takes many insiders and/or experts, over time, to tell us about it, authoritatively, for (most of) us to feel confident enough to state the case, in our everday lives in myriad ways, and argue forcefully for real change.
I was struck by Peter Dale Scott's contention that the common view of the world as one with an overworld layer of normal stuff that is more or less in the open, however good it is, and another, underworld layer of crimimals etc., is not accurate. It's really all one big ball of wax.
I discovered John Perkins indirectly, as a result of my interest in offshore tax havens, something else that can be focussed on by concerned citizens who want real change. Elsewhere in Common Dreams, William Greider (whose book ONE WORLD, READY OR NOT is excellent, informative and useful) is referred to by a poster who says Greider's solutions involve getting the 'personhood' of corporations stripped from them and dealing with their tax breaks. For sure!
Other writers, including Mark Schapiro, who was or is a fellow Nation magazine contributor of Greider's, have taken a look at the way corporations, aided and abetted by de facto criminal governments, such as the U.S., practice tax evasion (tax avoidance, tax efficiency). Naomi Klein, also writing for The Nation, wrote the influential NO LOGO, in which she talks about Export Processing Zones, which are tax holidays invented to give developing countries a leg up, a well meaning and sensible thing. Companies and capitalists have taken this mile and stretched it out to a million miles. EPZs were supposed to disappear. Our benefactors in power, here in the developed nations (like Canada where I live), have the chutzpah to openly discuss the possibility of bringing EZPs to Canada! We can't get bosses to pay a living wage or to give rate increases to wage earners at least sufficient to deal with inflation, but they want to get themselves into economic zones in which they get (more) tax breaks, pay lower wages and weasel out of other costs, such as environmental and workplace safety costs! (I'm not a whole-hearted supporter of The Nation. It, or it's management, promotes the Democratic Party as the solution to the Republican Party, which is utter nonsense.)
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/08/02/10770/
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20020506/schapiro
I would also mention taking away corporations' charters to do business.
Of course, Before we get to any of those solutions, we have to deal with the 'crisis of representation'. It comes up often these days, even if it isn't focussed on. The same Common Dreams article, by Barbara Minton, in which Greider is referred to, essentially underscores that the problem we have is a problem of representation. Corporations 'do' run the world. We are told that we should vote if we want a say, or if we are going to express an opinion (which is too simplistic a position in my view), implying that our input into matters affecting us is sought and that electoral politics, as practiced, will give us the reality of political representation once we vote. We do our part but our elites are screwing us.
Those 'leaders' who don't talk about this crisis demonstrate bad intentions and should be outed.
Chomsky figured it out a long time ago. The people are the enemy, the "bewildered herd" (quoting Walter Lippmann) who need elites to tell them what to do. The Trilateral Commission obsessed about it, identifying a "crisis of democracy."
Instead of treating politics like entertainment, in which all that is sought is good drama and lots of salaciousness as we route for our 'team' and our 'champion' players, we need to see it as being the important social arena it is, where all stakeholders have input and decision makers are authorized to make decisions only once they have demonstrated not just competence (clever orators can win elections and are therefore useful tools to uncaring elites, if they can buy them), but good intentions.
Our (various political) systems cut us, the people, out of the picture once a decision maker has won political office. That doesn't work.
I don't really believe we will have success. But I believe we should care. I just don't believe many of us will. The change we can't bring in will still be brought however. And we don't know exactly what it will look like.