
Wage war on poverty
by David Ransom
New Internationalist magazine, November 2001

James Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, appeared on
television in Britain shortly after the catastrophe on 11 September
and concluded that poverty is now the greatest economic challenge
facing the world. He is one of very few metropolitan mandarins
to have broken ranks and opened up debate in recent weeks. For
the most part the pillars of the global economy have seen it as
their duty to remain unruffled, to radiate confidence.
Not so at 'Ground Zero' on Wall Street. Here dealers precipitated
the biggest stock-market crash since the Great Depression. Fears
grew that the destruction of the Twin Towers would tip an already
'teetering' world economy over the brink into full-blown recession.
Manic uncertainty prevailed.
If there's one racing certainty, however, it is that the cost
of any recession would fall most heavily on those least able to
bear it. In the Great Depression of the 1930s the privations in
poor Southern countries far exceeded those in the North. More
recently, during the 1989 currency crisis in Argentina, the incidence
of poverty all but doubled, to an astonishing 47 per cent of the
population; in Russia it increased from 22 per cent to 33 per
cent following the collapse of 1998.'
Lest we forget, half of humanity already lives on the equivalent
of just two dollars a day or less. More than a billion people
live on less than one dollar a day. This outrage visits agonizing
death on millions of innocent people, including children, every
day. As things stand, there is no prospect of a remedy within
the meagre life expectancy of its billions of potential victims.
Rather, inequalities are spiraling out of control, to what the
UN Development Programme calls 'historically unprecedented' levels.
This represents an ocean of humiliation and suffering, of violence
against the dignity of human life, from which indiscriminate outbursts
of homicidal rage are surely more - and certainly not less - likely
to surface.
Yet, by any orthodox economic measure, the world economy was
until quite recently in rude good health, particularly in the
US. We are now being told that only the mighty consumers of America
can save us from recession - by consuming even more. Unfortunately,
their ability to do so rests on an over-inflated bubble of consumer
credit, and on the ability of the US to run a ballooning trade
deficit, thereby consuming the rest of the world's resources as
well.
No wonder the US Government therefore feels compelled to project
military might. But, as the days passed after 11 September, calls
for a military 'firework display' became strangely muted. Consumers
were urged to 'go shopping for freedom', but their loss of confidence
evidently related quite as much to the prospect of an endless,
ill-defined 'war on terrorism' as to terrorism itself
Gigantic sums of public money have now been spirited into
existence as if from thin air: $40 billion for 'reconstruction',
$15 billion for 'airlines'; $18 billion for the 'military-industrial
complex'; untold support for insurance and finance houses; $500
million by way of a bribe to the military dictatorship in Pakistan;
a blank cheque for the war on terrorism itself. The anticipated
US Government budget surplus of $173 billion was 'made available'
within a matter of days.
In practice, this money goes straight into the pockets of
the already rich and powerful. It is, nonetheless, three times
what the UN says is required to eliminate the very worst kind
of poverty from the world - a sum which the wealthiest nations
have sagely dismissed as impossibly vast up to now. The resources,
it is evident, are not lacking. What we lack is the political
will to fight a war on poverty, rather than terrorism. But that
political will could emerge once it becomes clear that a war on
terrorism is impossible either to fight or to end. A war on poverty
would, after all, be more effective in restraining terrorism -
and more likely to succeed. It would be waged against an easily
identifiable enemy: and a start could be made by cancelling the
$59 million a day the world's poorest people are still required
f to give their creditors.
But a serious war on poverty would also entail some check
on the increasingly liquid movement of money around the world.
Here there is a sickening twist. Immediately prior to 11 September
dealers with foreknowledge were evidently making fortunes for
the terrorist cause on financial markets. In its wealth and sophistication
Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda group has, like the drug cartels, come
to resemble a transnational corporation. All such financial transactions
will have to be brought under much stricter democratic control
in future. Hitherto this has been rejected as both undesirable
and impossible. If it turns out to be possible after all, then
so are desirable democratic measures like a 'Tobin' tax on speculation,
properly deployed to reverse the downward spiral of inequality.
A strategy that pins our fate to a war on terrorism backed
by excessive consumption in America - or anywhere else for that
matter - will ultimately blow up in our faces. A war on poverty,
on the other hand, can and must be won.
David Ransom is a co-editor of the Nl based in Oxford. davidr@newint.org
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