The Summit of the Americas, which the US government would restart talks on the creation of a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), failed to reach agreement last weekend. Campaigners celebrated, massive protests 'greeted' Bush, and you can read more here:
People's Global Action on protests
Zmag article on Argentina vs Bush
Account of People's Summit vs FTAA
From Global Envision.com
Summit Rhetoric Soars While Economy Sinks
Why leaders should stay home from regional summits – and truly address the world's economic ills.
NEW HAVEN: From Brussels to Buenos Aires, world leaders have once again been packing their bags for rounds of summitry. They would do the world a lot of good if they stayed home and took the necessary but unpopular steps to right the listing global economy.
In late October, the leaders of the European Union gathered to discuss trade, finance, and jobs – and they are scheduled to meet again before year's end. This week, the heads of state of the western hemisphere, except Fidel Castro, are meeting to debate governance, jobs, poverty, and trade. And next month, the first-ever East Asian Summit, comprised of sixteen nations (and pointedly excluding the US) will be held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. To be sure, these meetings constitute only a snapshot of the state of economic globalization in these waning months of 2005, but it is not a pretty picture.
In the first place, these regional summits demonstrate the limits of such meetings in terms of grappling with the most difficult challenges in the respective regions. The EU, for example, knows that a more competitive union is essential to compete with the US, on one side, and with Asia on the other. The leaders of Germany and France are most eloquent in outlining the particular measures that all countries on the continent should take – the need for more investment in R&D, for example, or the requirement for a more flexible workforce. But their own national policies are an entirely different issue. For almost a decade now, the EU has purported to have a program to at least rival US competitiveness, and every summit meeting features hand-wringing about failure to meet the targets. And as for the national policies of key countries, the directions are pathetic. In the most recent summit, for example, French President Jacques Chirac protested that trade liberalization was going too far. Germany's imminent coalition government was falling apart because of failure to agree on any major future policy.
These regional get-togethers also help clarify the winners and losers in the global economy today. For example, East Asia is a clear winner, and Latin America is clearly a loser – and Europe is quickly becoming one. Losers spend too much time contemplating their unique political, social, and economic models; they look inward rather than outward. Latin America, for example, keeps defining itself against policy prescriptions coming from Washington. Meanwhile, a positive vision for the continent is hard to discern. Europe is obsessed with debating the pros and cons of the Anglo-Saxon model. In both cases, there seems to be a search for an elusive third way between capitalism and socialism. Yet in most of East Asia, the focus is on growth, investment, and dropping trade barriers. No time for navel gazing there.
In the most recent summit, for example, French President Jacques Chirac protested that trade liberalization was going too far.
Third, there could well be a disturbing emerging trend, wherein both Asia and America, the two most vibrant parts of the world, disengage from more comprehensive global involvement. This could be happening for different reasons in each region. In the Pacific, for example, enormous effort is going into building closer economic ties among neighbors. A China-centric development pattern is arising, as many other Asian nations – not just developing Southeast Asian nations, but also Japan and South Korea – are becoming increasingly intertwined with the Middle Kingdom. There is growing economic interaction between China and India. Even the two Koreas are beginning to integrate, albeit slowly. Though the region will not be disengaging from the rest of the world, it is more preoccupied with its own backyard than with a broader notion of globalization.
The US is another matter. Although the Bush administration has toned down its anti-multilateral rhetoric, the United States has retreated from its leadership role in building an open world economy. This retreat is partly due to Washington's preoccupation with the Iraq war and other Middle East issues. Also, the administration deep down favors unilateral measures when possible, and relies on international help only when it gets in trouble (hence, the call for UN help with Iraqi elections and for other nations' assistance in containing Iran and North Korea). And US leadership has waned also due to its exceptionally large fiscal and current account deficits; the United States now borrows more than US$2 billion every working day to service its debts – thereby weakening its leverage in global economic matters.
The centrifugal forces enveloping America and Asia, combined with other regions' weaknesses, collectively constitute a big danger to the global economy. Although countries in various regions naturally have common issues to discuss, the big economic questions are global – not regional – in scope. The enormous financial imbalances between the US, Asia, and, more recently, the oil-producing nations can only be dealt with on a global scale. The issues of the environment, energy, poverty, pandemics, natural disasters, to name just a few, cannot be handled on a regional scale alone. And yet there is a huge void in relevant global capabilities, and no single nation or international organization is now able to constructively fill that vacuum.
The IMF and the World Bank, for example, are seriously reviewing their roles, and many of their sovereign shareholders too are unsure of the answer. The United Nations is mired in scandal, although some parts of it, such as the World Health Organization, still enjoy considerable support and confidence. A particularly egregious case of incompetence and eroding prestige at the center of the world economy is the Group of Eight. Forget for a minute that countries such as China, India, and Brazil are not even members – a fact that alone discredits the group's legitimacy. This year, the G-8 chair is none other than Russia's Vladimir Putin – a leader who is engaged in a rear-guard effort against two of the great trends sweeping the globe: increasing economic openness and democracy. both.
The United States now borrows more than US$2 billion every working day to service its debts- thereby weakening its leverage in global economic matters.
The absence of leadership at the center of the global economy may in fact be the crucial factor in evaluating regional summits. What the world needs most are more economic reforms at national levels and increased action on the global level. For a clear demonstration of this fact, look to Hong Kong in December, when trade ministers of the 146 countries of the World Trade Organization will meet to give a final push to the global trade negotiations dubbed the "Doha Development Round." In order for a satisfactory resolution, key nations will have to make big trade concessions – and this, in turn, will require adjustments in national policies.
If the Doha negotiations fail, or if the deal in Hong Kong is weak, the impetus toward more regional trade arrangements will grow, as would the centrifugal forces surrounding America and Asia. This turn of events would be dangerous, as these bilateral and regional trade arrangements are balkanizing a healthy, non-discriminatory global trading system. Moreover, the heavily unbalanced global economy requires that Asians continue to export to the West, lending their customers the money to purchase their products. Any hint of protectionism that might follow a breakdown of the Doha negotiations could result in a trade and financial crisis.
So watch the interplay between the events in the regional summits and in Hong Kong. The outcome could say a lot about globalization for the rest of this decade.
Contributed by Jeffrey E. Garten, Juan Trippe professor in the practice of international trade and finance at The Yale School of Management. Reprinted with permission from Yale Global Online. Rights: © 2005 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization.
To read another Global Envision article about the Summit of the Americas, see Summit Rhetoric Soars While Economy Sinks.
Posted by: Shahzada Sher Saddozai | 24 November 2005 at 01:46 PM
CONFESS
THE HARVARD CREATED WORLD ECONOMY COLLAPSED!
ECONOMIES OF PAKISTAN ARGENTINA TURKEY MALASIA EGYPT IN ORDER OF PARTNERSHIP CANNOT BE REJUMPED BY WASHINGTON AT ALL!
UNITEDLY THE NOBELLIONS DECLARED 'MONEY ALONE WILL NOT BE SOLUTION EITHER!
DECLARED' MODREN SCIENCE IS A GREAT ENGINE AND NEEDS A COMMANDER!
IN SHORTEST SPHERES OF COMMUNICATION WITHIN LIKE SUB ATOMS AFFAIRS HAVE CLASHED BUT THE SINGULAR OBJECTIVE CLAIM IS VISIBILY NOT BEING STEERED BY THE COMMANDER AS THE GOVERNMENTS ARE SLOW OR INTIMIDATED TO RESPOND!
THE PHYSICAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF NATURE THROUGH SIGNS WAS IGNORED! USA AND PAKISTAN ARE RECORDING WORST CALAMITIES THE CALL TRADEGY BUT THE ARARCHY AT CAPITAL IS NOT ANNOUNCED SINCERELY!
THERE IS NO NATIONAL INTERNATIONAL GOVERNMENT OR ADMINISTERATION ON EARTH TODAY WITH SPECIFIC CLAIM TO DEVELOPMENT OF GREAT/GOOD GOVERNANCE.
THE POLITICAL LEADERS ARE SHORT OF ANNOUNCING THAT GLOBALISATION IS A PRIVATE STAKE OF PUBLICS AND NAIONAL GOVERNMENTS ARE IN NO POSISTION EVEN MORALLY TO AFFORD THE SUPER CORPORATIONS .
THE GLOBAL SECURITY MOVES IN FORM AND ARRAY STANDS NON CLAIMANT WITH PRESENT LEADERSHIP AND COOMONLY WELL HUMOURED AND GRACEFULLY INTEGRATED AT ANY CENTRAL POLICY OF THE GOOD GOVERNANCE RULES!
NO GOVERNING BODY TO HOLD BUT THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS WHICH ONLY CONTROLLED ALL THROUGH TWO DECADES WITH SOCIAL EFFECTS AND AUTHORITY ONLY.
THE TWO DECADES OF DODGING REAL CHANGE IN ECONOMIC POLITICAL FREEDOMS WAS TRIED TO SHARE/CLAIM/HIJACK AND ALL THE TERMINOLOGIES PREVAIL BUT INSETTED IN WORST CHAOS AND A GREAT ARARCHY!
THERE IS NO POLITICAL LEADER IN USA TO REACTIVATE A CUBEWORK OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS WITHIN BYSTANDING ACCOUNTS OF J
OHN F KENNEDY RICHARD NIXON/ HENRY KISSINGER RONALD REAGAN WHITE HOUSES AND THE LONGEST SERVING TENURE OF GEORGE BUSH FROM 1978 TO 2005 ALONG WITH A DUMMY EIGHT YEAR OCCUPANCE OF BILL J CLINTON HAS ALREADY SWIRLED AWAY FROM BUSH FAMILY AND BUSINESS PARTNERSHIP'S HANDS .
UK HAS DEFINITIVELY NO ROLE POLICY ANYWHERE IN THE AFRICAS OR ASIA AND LATIN AMERICA ITSELF IS WATCHING ITS REGIMES BREATH LAST AFTER ALL ATTEMPTS TO GLOBAL SCENE.
THE LONGEST YEARS OF WORLD PEACE DEMOCRATIC RIGHTS EQUALITY AND FREEDOM HAVE BORN THE FRUIT OF COMPLETIONS BUT ONE REGIME ALLOVER HAS INSTITUTED A WAR BETWEEN TWO COVERT SERVICE BANKS NAMELY UNION BANK SWITZERLAND AND CITBANK WHICH HAVE TO ANNOUNCE THEIR FUTURE TO SPECIFIC GOVERNMENTS OF USA AND SWITZERLAND EU OR THE WORLD AND LEADERS WILL WAIT UNTILL THESE THE CAUSES OF MILITAERY DETRACTION TO REAL CHANGE HYPOCRATICALLY HIOLD THEMSELVES INSIDE INTELLIGENCE WARS BETWEEN USA PARTNERSHIPS AND USA.
THE SOCIAL SCIENCE HAS BEEN FAR THOUGHT BUT LAST THREE DECADES OF COMMERCIAL FILM SEX AND VIOLENCE HAVE EQUALISED A STATE OF VOLUME WITH CORPORATE MEDIA THAT IS BALANCING POOREST THOUGHT AND PORTRAYING UNBALANCED SHARIA AND LAWS. THE TWIST IN MARGINS AND BARRIERS HAVE HELD MANKIND BEHIND THE REAL KNOWLEDGE OF HEAVENS AND EARTHS AND ACCOUNTABILITY AND HUMAN AND ENVIRONMENTAL FORMS ON/OF THE PLANET EARTH.
THERE HAS NEVER BEEN A CHANGE IN GOVERNMENT AS IT AQUIRES A REGIMA FORM AND PROUDLY CONFESSES THE CRUEL DEMERITING BUT AT STAGE NINE IS ONLY CORRECTING OR PRMISING TREATS AND THREATS AND BRIBES AND DYING PAINFULLY BUT IN HISTORY RECORDS OF THE SAMURAI THE 1857 DEHLI MUGHALS AND KHORASAN SADDOZAI AND US PRESUMED BERMUDA TRIANGLE GOVERNMENTS ONLY LEAVE WITH SUICIDE OR ARE REMOVE$D LIKE CUBAN OR IRANIAN REVOLT . THE SICKNESS OF REGIMES IS THEIR OWN PROPRIETY TO SCRAMBLE FOR LIFE OR OR ANNOUNCE FREEDOM OR CONFESS WEAKNESS TO REQUEST MERCY LIFE IN STATE EXPENSE HOSPITALISATION .
Posted by: Shahzada Sher Saddozai | 24 November 2005 at 02:35 PM
See also this article: http://www.alternatives.ca/article2216.html
Posted by: Oscar | 24 November 2005 at 04:27 PM