
Larry Summers
New Internationalist magazine, July 2001

Larry must have felt right at home. The new President of Harvard
was greeted by a noisy demonstration outside the Loeb Hall press
conference where his ascendancy was announced earlier this year.
Summers' career has been marked by periodic protest due to his
unflagging commitment to letting the market decide'. He might
argue that he comes by this honestly as the nephew of the dean
of liberal economists, Paul Samuelson. Summers, the former chief
economist of the World Bank and most recently Treasury Secretary
in the Clinton cabinet, has managed to land on his feet after
the Bush coup d'etat in Florida. With the reported help of his
longtime Wall Streetwise mentor, Robert Rubin, Summers was picked
for the Harvard job by a blue-ribbon panel. The demonstration
against him was organized by the University's Progressive Student
Labor Movement - the local link to the burgeoning campus movement
against sweatshop labour in the global clothing trade.
Summers' commitment to the free market has outweighed all
other values, whatever the rhetoric. He has usually been what
singer Jackson Browne describes as 'one of the men in the shadows'-
making sure from behind the scenes that the free-market orthodoxy
of the Washington Consensus held firm. His meteoric rise to the
top had him jump from his doctorate year to Reagan's Council on
Economic Advisors. At z8 he was the youngest professor to be granted
tenure at Harvard.
But it was when he landed the job at the World Bank that he
started to emerge as a major figure shaping policy in the interests
of US capital. His one big political mistake at the Bank was when
he penned a memo on 12 December 1991 on the impeccable economic
logic of locating dirty industries and dumping toxic waste in
poor Southern countries. In the memo Summers opined: 'I think
the logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage
country is impeccable and we should face up to that.' He concluded
the memo with the caution that his analysis could be turned around
and used more or less effectively against every bank proposal
for liberalization.' He turned out to be prophetic. The memo was
leaked and sparked a huge controversy that helped fuel a movement
to ban the trade in toxic waste.
However Summers weathered the storm and went on to become
a major architect of international policy. As Clinton's Treasury
Secretary since 1997 he is reported to have been the most powerful
cabinet member after the President. He has been a stalwart in
guarding the economic orthodoxy of the IMF and particularly the
World Bank. Since the 19805 the Bank has come under heavy criticism
from large portions of the aid-and-development community and governments
from the South who have been forced to administer highly unpopular
structural-adjustment programmes.
In response the Bank became more pluralistic, incorporating
at least the rhetoric of change, adopting screens for ecological
impact and gender, for example, and hiring a number of its critics
like the environmental economist Herman Daly. While most such
critics were marginalized within the Bank - Daly eventually quit
in frustration - another critic, Joseph Stiglitz, did assume an
important job as the Bank's chief economist in 1997. In the wake
of the meltdown of the Asian economies Stiglitz made a name for
himself as an outspoken critic of the structural-adjustment policies
of the IMF and by implication the World Bank. Stiglitz felt that
these policies increased the vulnerability of Third World economies
and of the poor in particular.
Summers was reportedly furious and demanded that Stiglitz
be silenced. Gradually pressure began to build from the US Treasury
and by November 2000 Stiglitz was forced to resign. The final
bit of leverage Summers needed came when World Bank President
James Wolfensohn showed interest in a second term. Without the
approval of the US Treasury that was never going to happen. Stiglitz
paid the price.
But Summers wasn't through yet. One of Stiglitz's protégés,
Ravi Kanbur, had been put in charge of writing the Bank's World
Development Report focusing on world poverty. The Report was to
be released in September but by June Kanbur felt in all conscience
he couldn't continue. When the report finally appeared, Kanbur's
sections on the necessity of social spending, redistributive tax
policies and control of speculative capital were either gone entirely
or had been significantly watered down. With the help of pressure
from the US Treasury the politics within the Bank remained firmly
in favour of the Washington Consensus.
We haven't seen the last of Larry Summers. With the Republicans
in power in DC there is little danger that anyone will stray too
far to the Left. But when the time _ comes again for the Democrats
to take over the helm keep your eyes out for Summers. He will
be there somewhere, making sure that the interests of major banks
and corporations do not take second place to any outburst of populist
zeal for social justice.
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