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FLC Class 2/19/2003 “Global Capitalism & Economic Development II” Liberal Concept of Comparative Advantage Developed by 19th century English economist David Ricardo. Example: Portugal producing wine and England producing cloth An economy should produce and export products where it has a comparative advantage It should cease domestic production and import products from other countries where it is at a comparative disadvantage Myths about trade & comparative advantage Incentives for global trade Winners (export industry) & Losers (labor) of free trade and its political ramifications Core Elements of Neo-Liberal Economic Concepts Reading: Kelleher/Klein 1999 Supply & demand economy—free and open markets rule via “comparative advantage” Privatization and private ownership Specialization and division of labor within a global economy—Economies of scale Free trade instead of protectionism or autarky Laissez-faire government Promotion of (foreign) capital investment Overcome poverty & promote development by capitalist growth strategy Criticism of Neo-Liberal Policies Neglect of unequal opportunities, power and resources of LDCs 1. Continuous effects of colonialism & neo-colonialism, e.g. monoculture in agriculture, underdevelopment, debt burden hamper efforts of industrial development strategy 2. Free trade is good among equal partners. But world is divided in poor and rich, powerless and powerful. Example: TNCs dominate, monopolize, bribe, or blackmail developing countries, its elites, and economies 3. WTO, IMF, World Bank are undemocratic. They promote agendas of wealthy countries & overlook “free trade hypocrisy.” Example: Wealthy countries practice hidden trade protectionism through subsidies for their vulnerable industries/sectors 4. Structural Adjustment Policies (SAP) cut governmental social and welfare programs and hurt the most vulnerable groups in LDCs plus increase domestic inequality. Policies help local and foreign businesses but not peasants and workers Criticism of Neo-Liberal Concepts Edward Goldsmith 2002, “It’s the Economy, Stupid. Empires without Armies” Thesis: Global development is imperialism w/o the need for military conquest Same goals, same aim (extract raw materials, exploit cheap labor, sell goods, see Free Trade Zones) The Gospel of ‘Free Trade’ to use competitive advantage of the hegemonic economy, later replaced by colonization Setting up a Westernized elite to impose ‘development’ aid programs that profit donor and arms sales Boycott or remove governments unfavourable to Western interests (‘regime change’ interventions) Kill domestic economies of colonized countries, destroy indigenous crafts, re-orientate production toward small range of exports, prevent export substitution through structural adjustment program loans (SAP), transform peasantry into urban proletariat and create cosmopolitan consumerist bourgeoisie Lending money & create dollar dependency & debt to open country to global economy & capital-intensive development by TNCs Overview Globalization: The Age of Development, 1945-1979 POST-WWII Reconstruction New institutions (e.g., U.N. 26 June 1945, Marshall Plan 1947, NATO 1949) Bretton Woods Agreement: 1944 Conference to construct post-war international economic system -- Especially post WWII reconstruction of Europe -- Created two international organizations International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) International Monetary Fund Bi-polar World-Cold War b/w the 1st and 2nd World (Churchill Speech I) Winston Churchill’s ‘Iron Curtain’ speech, March 5, 1946 Fulton, Missouri “The United States stands at this time at the pinnacle of world power. It is a solemn moment for the American democracy. For with this primacy in power is also joined an awe-inspiring accountability to the future. As you look around you, you must feel not only the sense of duty done, but also you must feel anxiety lest you fall below the level of achievement. Opportunity is here now, clear and shining, for both our countries. To reject it or ignore it or fritter it away will bring upon us all the long reproaches of the aftertime.” What is the “Third World”? A group of nations with tremendous variations, more defined by what they were not/are not, rather than what they were/are Third World - not industrialized, and not communist Pejorative? - third and last place in world order Exceptions: Relative growth of oil-producing countries (Nigeria, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela) Newly industrializing countries like Brazil, Argentina, Korea, Thailand Mixed character of nations like Israel, South Africa and Portugal (neither heavily industrialized nor poor) DCs = Developed Countries, First World, the West + Industrialized Socialist World (Second World), the North, “Modern” LDCs = Less Developed Countries, developing countries, underdeveloped countries, Third World, Non-West, the South, “Tradition” The Cold War and the Age of “Development” “The old imperialism – exploitation for foreign profit – has no place in our plans. What we envisage is a program of development based on the concepts of democratic fair-dealing.” President Truman’s ‘Point Four’ 1948 Theories of Economic Growth Poverty = Material misery, hunger unrest seed-beds for Communism State intervention necessary (experts, technology, planning): Marshall Plan as model Economic development defined as “a rise in the levels of living of the common people” Measure: growth of per capita income W. Rostow’s Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist Manifesto (1959) “… the most stimulating contribution to political and economic discussion made by any academic economist since the war.’ The Economist ‘Imaginative, stimulating statement of the economic goals of technologically undeveloped nations, and how they can be most effectively achieved without resort to Communism.’ New York Times W. Rostow’s (1959) Stages of Economic Growth Traditional society Pre take-off stage Take-off The road to maturity The society of mass consumption Modernization Theory Makes an essential difference between ‘modern’ and ‘traditional’ Development = planned social transformation aimed at “economic growth” to alleviate “problems” of the LDCs Continuums in Modernization: traditional => modern physical capital => human capital import substitution => export-oriented industrialization Questionable Assumptions of Modernization & Development of Third World Growth path of first world uncritically transposed First world (Western capitalism and democracy) as role model Ignorance of history and legacies of colonialism/imperialism Ignorance of local and national cultures, traditions, economies, polities Focus of Development Programs Reducing Imports and Building Industry (1950s) e.g. “Import-Substitution” Programs Building Infrastructure (Transportation, Communication, Energy) Technological Innovations in Agriculture e.g. “Green Revolution(s)” (1970s; current) Export of Manufactured Goods e.g. Export Processing Zones (1970s-present) Building on Local Resources, e.g. Tourism and Ecotourism