Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Researchers: Can the poor save the world?..change in attitudes needed

By Jean-Michel Severino and Olivier Ray, Project Syndicate, From GPS on CNN website, March 13, 2012

Editor's Note: Jean-Michel Severino is Director of Research at the Fondation pour les Études et Recherches sur le Développement International (FERDI), Manager of Investisseur et Partenaire, and co-author, with Olivier Ray, of Africa’s Moment. For more, visit Project Syndicate's website, or check it out on Facebook and Twitter.

Events in 2012 so far have confirmed a new global dissymmetry. Caught between unprecedented financial insecurity and a somber economic outlook, the rich OECD countries and their middle classes fear geopolitical weakening and downward social mobility. In much of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, however, optimism reigns.
Among developed countries, this unexpected shift of fortune has incited protectionism, exemplified by French calls for de-globalization. Meanwhile, among emerging economies, pride has sometimes manifested itself as conceit, tinged, after decades of Western arrogance, with schadenfreude
(satisfaction or pleasure felt at someone else's misfortune). But, because the world’s developed, emerging, and developing economies are now so closely linked, they will either dog-paddle out of this crisis together or enter into a danger zone unseen since the 1930’s.
After World War II, a new global economy emerged, in which a growing number of developing countries adopted export-led growth models, thereby providing industrialized countries with raw materials and household goods. This new economy was an undeniable success: more people left poverty in the twentieth century than in the preceding two millennia. And it enriched OECD countries, as imports of cheap goods and services strengthened their purchasing power.
But this model also weakened rich countries’ social structures, widening inequalities and excluding a growing proportion of their populations from the labor market. Moreover, it is responsible for the financial imbalances that besiege us today: in order to counter the effects of widening inequality and slowing growth, OECD countries have boosted consumption by rushing into debt – both public (leading to Europe’s public-debt crisis) and private (facilitating the American subprime crisis).
This would have been impossible had the OECD countries’ main suppliers of energy and manufactured goods not, over time, become their creditors. In a remarkable reversal of history, the world’s poor now finance the world’s rich, owing to large foreign reserves. Indeed, the hypertrophy of today’s global financial sector largely reflects efforts to recycle emerging-market countries’ rising surpluses in order to plug the rich countries’ mounting deficits.
Until recently, this dynamic was considered transitory. Emerging countries’ growth would necessarily lead to convergence of global wages and prices, thus halting the erosion of manufacturing in the OECD countries. The demographic transition in the world’s emerging countries would encourage the development of their domestic markets, a fall in their saving rates, and a rebalancing of global trade.
That might be true in theory, but the length of this transition period, which is at the heart of the global financial crisis, has been badly underestimated. The “inversion of scarcities” – the new abundance of men and women actively participating in the global economy, combined with a once-abundant natural world’s increasingly visible limits – risk prolonging the transition indefinitely, for two reasons.
First, from a macroeconomic perspective, we can no longer count on declining prices for raw materials, one of the economic stabilizers in times of crisis. Given rising demand in emerging countries, the cost of natural resources is bound to be a growing constraint.
Second, from a social perspective, after a doubling of the workforce in the global labor market during the twentieth century, another “industrial reserve army” has arisen in China, and among the three billion inhabitants of the world’s developing countries.
A rapid rebalancing of global growth by reducing financial imbalances between OECD economies and their emerging-market creditors is risky, because it would cause a major recession for the former – and then for the latter. Moreover, it is unlikely, because it assumes that emerging countries will run trade deficits with OECD countries, and that their domestic markets will become drivers of global growth.
If this analysis is correct, a new global rebalancing strategy will need to begin somewhere other than the wealthy OECD economies. The implementation of new growth models in the developing world – the parts of South Asia, Latin America, and Africa that have not adopted export-led strategies – can provide at least part of the missing demand that the world economy urgently needs.
The success of this scenario depends on a combination of three dynamics. First, interstate trade between emerging-market and developing countries must accelerate, thereby building the same kind of consumer-provider relationship as that between emerging and advanced countries. Second, domestic markets in the world’s poorest countries must be developed in order to foster more home-grown growth. And, third, financial flows to developing countries – both official development assistance and foreign direct investment – must rise, and must come not only from industrialized economies, but also from emerging and oil-exporting countries.
Recycling global surpluses through the world’s “bottom billions” presupposes a complete overhaul of standard economic models, which essentially assume that the Asian economic miracle can be replicated. After all, even if the world achieves significant economic growth between now and 2050, two billion of the world’s nine billion people will still live on less than two dollars a day, and a further billion will have little more than that.
For emerging and wealthy economies alike, the world’s poor should not be viewed as a burden. In the current global economic crisis, they are the best exit strategy we have.
The views expressed in this article are solely those of Jean-Michel Severino and Olivier Ray.
  1. increased inter-state trade between emerging-market and developing countries must accelerate;
  2. domestic markets in poorest countriesmust be developed to foster home-grown growth;
  3. financial flows to developing countries – both official development assistance and foreign direct investment – must rise
If these three developments are going to happen, each country, including Canada, must change out attitudes to the rest of the world. We must stop seeing labour as merely another "raw material" to be gutted of its "essence" and left to the heap of both injured and maimed in middle and old age. And we must stop seeing the "rest" of the world as nothing more than a "market" to consume our products, so that we can continue to live "high on the hog" as the vernacular puts it. And, with respect to foreign aid, we must see this as part of our own self-interest, instead of the patronizing, condescending and gratuitous "donations" that flow from our abundance and not as a matter of profound pragmatism.
There is a wonderful and memorable phrase in the Sermon on the Mount about the "meek inheriting the earth"....and for decades, perhaps centuries, we have taken that as a teaching about personal humility and not as a beacon for macroeconomics.
Perhaps, through a more global acceptance of the role and importance of the poor we might find a path toward more equitable sharing of both resources and the revenues and benefits that derive from them in all countries, on all continents, and while the numbers of the poor will continue to haunt discussions among the wealthy nations and corporations, a new integrated perspective will be needed if we are to achieve some kind of economic equilibrium which must include the equilibrium that we are all equal in fact and not just in theory.




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