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Published on Tuesday, October 16, 2001 by the Inter Press
Service
Joseph Stiglitz, whose critiques of free market fundamentalism
cost him a senior job at the World Bank in 1999 but won him
the Nobel Prize for economics last week, has succinct advice
for the global justice movement: Keep it up.
by Tim Shorrock
WASHINGTON - Joseph Stiglitz, whose critiques of free market
fundamentalism cost him a senior job at the World Bank in
1999 but won him the Nobel Prize for economics last week,
has succinct advice for the global justice movement: Keep
it up.
''The
recognition that the trade agreements of the past have been
unfair is one of the important lessons of the anti-globalization
movement,'' he says. ''I think it's something that will stick
with us. And if we go forward with another round of trade
talks, it will shape our discussions.''
Regardless of whether a new round of comprehensive trade
negotiations is launched next month at the World Trade Organization
ministerial meeting in Qatar, he says, the United States and
other rich countries should follow Europe's 'everything but
arms' agreement by opening their markets to the least developed
countries (LDCs) ''and say, for the poorest countries, we
aren't going to wait for a round of trade. To show our good
faith, we will commit ourselves to the poorest countries,
opening up our markets immediately.''
''It's not a question of negotiation. The amount that it
would hurt the developed countries is so small,'' he adds.
''It would provide an opportunity for them (the LDCs) to produce
something with a market.''
As for the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which Stiglitz
has rebuked for its myopic focus on ''old problems'' like
inflation, he proposes a new direction that would return the
institution to its post-World War II mission of addressing
real-world problems, such as the recession that has deepened
since the events of Sep. 11.
''It's time for the IMF to worry about the global economic
slowdown and provide the liquidity that would allow for global
expansion,'' Stiglitz says. He urges the IMF to target the
substantial funds it controls towards ''global economic needs''
such as the ''fight against terrorism, the fight for a better
global environment, the fight for a more equal world that
would reduce the disparities between the haves and the have-nots.''
Stiglitz's advice and analysis will receive more attention
now that he, along with U.S. economists George Akerlof and
Michael Spence, has won the 2001 Nobel Prize for economics.
The award, announced Oct. 10 in Sweden, was made for their
research in the 1970s and 1980s showing that markets, when
mixed with imperfect information, fail to allocate resources
fairly. Governments, they concluded, have an obligation to
address this problem by playing a stronger role in the market
system.
''Joseph Stiglitz's many contributions have transformed the
way economists think about the working of markets,'' the Nobel
committee said in making the award. Stiglitz now is a professor
of economics at Columbia University in New York.
During the Clinton administration, he served as chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisers and was later appointed
chief economist of the World Bank. There, he earned the wrath
of then Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, the administration's
chief proponent of the IMF, by publicly criticizing the fund
for bailing out rich investors and driving Asia into a depression
during the financial crisis of 1997 and 1998. The Bank fired
him, reportedly on Summers's orders, in 2000.
Stiglitz explains the relationship between his theories and
his analysis of the Asia crisis thus: The crisis was sparked
when banks refused to roll over loans in 1997 to South Korea
and Indonesia. ''That was a financial market imperfection
caused by information,'' he says. ''So the credit markets
were not working well. The economics of information provided
an explanation for why that was the case.''
Asked what he would say to Summers and IMF and World Bank
officials who disliked his critique of the so-called ''Washington
consensus'' on market liberalization, Stiglitz chuckles at
''the irony'' of the situation.
''In the 1970s and 1980s, the period for which I got the
prize, there was an increasing recognition of the problems
of the market fundamentalist model,'' he says. ''The Washington
consensus, which was based on market fundamentalist ideas,
lived on as an institutional position and became solidified
. just when academia was saying these ideas do not provide
a good description of the economy.''
Stiglitz says the George W. Bush administration has recognized
that the IMF bailout policies did not work and were, in effect,
''corporate welfare'' for investors funded ''by taxpayers
not in the United States but in Russia, Brazil and other countries,
who ended up paying the bills (for) the people doing the bad
lending.''
But recent actions by the Bush administration, he adds, underscore
that ''special interests do have a lot of influence'' in Washington.
Specifically, he criticizes the administration's decision
earlier this year to investigate whether imports have injured
the U.S. domestic steel industry, an action that is likely
to lead to import quotas on foreign steel.
''You can't help but raise questions when someone says 'I
believe in a market economy' and then announces he wants to
set up a global steel cartel,'' he says.
Stiglitz also is sharply critical of the United States and
Europe for subsidizing agriculture and refusing to liberalize
trade in certain industries, such as ocean shipping.
During the next trade round, he says, ''what I would like
to see is redressing some of the imbalances of the past and
going forward with far more sensitivity to the needs and concerns
of the developing countries.''
Agriculture is one area where developing countries hold a
comparative advantage ''but they can't compete into markets
where there are these huge subsidies in the United States
and Europe.''
In the area of services, he notes that wealthy countries
like the United States have only agreed to open financial
services. ''Which country is the major exporter of financial
services? United States. What services were not opened up?
Construction services, maritime services, services of unskilled
labor that are of concern to the developing world. Those remain
closed.''
This is why the issues raised by the anti-globalization movement
are so important, Stiglitz says. He points to the pharmaceutical
industry, which became the target of developing countries
and anti-globalization critics for selling life saving drugs
at prices that ordinary people and the poor could not afford.
Agreements proposed by the U.S. Trade Representative would
have supported the companies' pricing policies, he adds.
''The global outrage was so strong that they (the companies)
made an agreement to make them available,'' he told IPS. ''It
was a global outrage, a civil society movement, that stopped
that.''
He says he first became aware of the imperfections of markets
while working as an economist in Kenya in the 1960s.
''The period that I spent in Kenya really provided a lot
of inspiration for the work that I did over the subsequent
years,'' he says. ''You cannot live or spend time in a country
like that without thinking a great deal about unemployment,
about how markets don't work. And it turned out that many
of the ideas that I developed in Kenya, when modified, applied
as well to developed countries.''
Copyright © 2001 IPS-Inter Press Service
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