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Globalization and Health Equity: Towards Sustainable Development? Ronald Labonté, PhD, FCAHS Canada Research Chair, Globalization and Health Equity University of Ottawa, Canada Chair, Globalization Knowledge Network WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health [email protected] …there is as yet no credible, socially just, ecologically sustainable scenario of continually growing incomes for a world of nine billion people. UK Sustainable Development Commission, Prosperity without Growth? 2009 Inequalities on the rise • High net worth individuals – the 24 million or so in the world with income assets between $1 and $50 million • Ultra high net worth individuals – the 80,000 or so in the world with income assets exceeding $50 million • Billionaires – over 1,200 individuals with income assets representing a staggering 77 percent of total global wealth, much of it stashed in offshore financial centers (tax havens) Redistribution, regulation and rights “Policies should provide for: • systematic resource redistribution between countries and within regions and countries to enable poorer countries to meet human needs, • effective supranational regulation to ensure that there is a social purpose in the global economy, and • enforceable social rights that enable citizens and residents to seek legal redress.” Deacon, B., Ilva, M., Koivusalo, M., Ollila, E., & Stubbs, P. (2005). Copenhagen Social Summit ten years on: The need for effective social policies nationally, regionally and globally (GASPP Policy Brief No. 6). Helsinki: Globalism and Social Policy Programme, STAKES. Available: http://gaspp.stakes.fi/NR/rdonlyres/4F9C6B91-94FD-4042-B781-3DB7BB9D7496/0/policybrief6.pdf. In the wake of the food, fuel and financial shocks, a fourth wave of the global economic crisis began to sweep across developing countries in 2010: fiscal austerity (p.v). http://www.networkideas.org/featart/sep2011/Isabel_Jingqing_Matthew.pdf Mass protests in Greece against the government and the IMF Greece bailout requirements: • Cut in pensions • Huge decrease in public spending • Cancel some welfare programs • Privatize health system, state assets • Raise VAT • Soon coming to other countries near you! Those who support fiscal tightening argue that it is indispensable for restoring the confidence of financial markets, which is perceived as key to economic recovery. This is despite the almost universal recognition that the crisis was the result of financial market failure in the first place… (p.V) UN Social Protection Floor Initiative http://www.socialsecurityextension. org/gimi/gess/ShowTheme.do?tid= 2485 …not only directly affect social security beneficiaries and consequently the standards of living of a large portion of the population but also, through aggregate demand effects, slow down or significantly delay a full economic recovery (p.7) all recipient governments were expected to cut spending none were given flexibility to defer debt payments, and http://www.eurodad.org/uploadedFiles/Whats _New/Reports/Bail-out%20or%20blow-out.pdf • half were instructed to reduce deficits and introduce wage freezes • all recipient governments advised to increase VAT (regressive) taxes, privatize financial and energy sectors, and deepen liberalization Time for a Financial Transaction Tax? Annual tax revenues: • 0.05% on foreign exchanges: USD 250 billion • 0.005% on foreign exchanges, derivatives and over the counter trades: USD 863 billion • 0.05% on foreign exchanges, derivatives and over the counter trades: USD 8.63 trillion …there is as yet no credible, socially just, ecologically sustainable scenario of continually growing incomes for a world of nine billion people. UK Sustainable Development Commission, Prosperity without Growth? 2009 Growth is Not Working Percent changes in GHG emissions 1990-2004 by sector Woodward, D. & Simms, A. 2006, Growth is Failing the Poor: The Unbalanced Distribution of the Benefits and Costs of Global Economic Growth, ST/ESA/2006/DWP/20, United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, New York, 20. The major challenge remains that of economic growth…the idea of freezing the current level of global inequality over the next half century or more (as the world goes about trying to solve the climate problem) is economically, politically and ethically unacceptable (p.vi). Growth is Not Working Percent changes in GHG emissions 1990-2004 by sector Woodward, D. & Simms, A. 2006, Growth is Failing the Poor: The Unbalanced Distribution of the Benefits and Costs of Global Economic Growth, ST/ESA/2006/DWP/20, United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, New York, 20. Trade, Technology Transfer and the Environment • Energy use and transportation (essential to global trade) the two sectors contributing most to climate change • Intellectual Property Rights can slow green technology transfer • USA in 2011 succeeded in a trade dispute over China’s subsidies for its wind turbine development Ethiopia has sold leases to 3 million hectares of its best farmland to foreign companies yet relies on 700,000 tonnes of emergency food aid each year Karmjeet Sekhon, project manager for Indian food company Karuturi Global, with crops in Ethiopia's Gambella province. Photograph: John Vidal for the Guardian US green stimulus: 1.5% - 3% of total 0.1% of GDP Chinese green stimulus: 10% of total Stern Report of minimum public spending needed: 2% of GDP 20x the US stimulus Low-income countries High-income countries Global health diplomacy? Oslo Ministerial Declaration – global health: a pressing foreign policy issue of our time Vol 369 - April 21, 2007. Ministers of Foreign Affairs of Brazil, France, Indonesia, Norway, Senegal, South Africa, and Thailand What is to be done? • • • • • • • • • • Radical re-regulation of financialized global economy New forms of global taxation and closure of tax havens More progressive national taxation Comprehensive health and social protection End subsidies to environmentally damaging economic activities (internalize environmental costs) Promote subsidies to environmentally protective economic activities Government purchasing to promote environmental and social sustainability Change trade rules to permit both, including TRIPS flexibilities for green technologies and not simply drugs Improve developed/developing world burden sharing through exemptions for those below USD 9,000/year and progressive carbon taxes on those above Localize where possible capital flows, and water, food and other life resources Redistribution, regulation and rights “Policies should provide for: • systematic resource redistribution between countries and within regions and countries to enable poorer countries to meet human needs, • effective supranational regulation to ensure that there is a social purpose in the global economy, and • enforceable social rights that enable citizens and residents to seek legal redress.” Deacon, B., Ilva, M., Koivusalo, M., Ollila, E., & Stubbs, P. (2005). Copenhagen Social Summit ten years on: The need for effective social policies nationally, regionally and globally (GASPP Policy Brief No. 6). Helsinki: Globalism and Social Policy Programme, STAKES. Available: http://gaspp.stakes.fi/NR/rdonlyres/4F9C6B91-94FD-4042-B781-3DB7BB9D7496/0/policybrief6.pdf.