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The state is more powerful
than ever
By John Pilger
There is a view fashionable in the media that
the world is being taken over by huge multinational corporations,
accountable to no one.
“Governments are reduced to playing the role
of servile lackeys to big business,” Noreena Hertz, the dissident
financier, wrote recently. Even the US government has surrendered
state power, she says, citing “George W. Bush’s shameful obsequiousness
to big energy corporations.”
For all the vivid examples of modern corporate
power, such as the annual income of Motorola being equal to
the annual income of Nigeria’s 118 million people, it is folly
to believe that big business on its own is shaping the new world
order. This allows the argument against globalization to be
depoliticized, reducing it to single issues of “ethical trading”
and “codes of conduct,” and inviting its co-option. Above all,
it misses the point that state power in the west is accelerating.
“Globalization does not mean the impotence of
the state,” wrote the Russian economist and activist Boris Kagarlitsky,
“but the rejection by the state of its social functions in favor
of repressive ones, irresponsibility on the part of governments
and the ending of democratic freedoms.” The illusion of a weakened
state is enticing: indeed, it is the smokescreen thrown up by
the designers of modern, centralized power. Margaret Thatcher
concentrated executive power while claiming the opposite; Tony
Blair has done the same. The European project is all about extending
the frontiers of the state. Totalitarian China has embraced
the “free” market while consolidating its vast state apparatus.
The autocracies in Singapore and Malaysia achieved the same
while growing stronger. (Not surprisingly, Blair is an admirer
of Singapore.)
It is the American state that surpasses them
all, and it has never been more powerful. The notion that George
Bush is “obsequious to big energy corporations” (and ought to
be ashamed of himself) is naive. Big oil, like big weapons manufacturing
and big agribusiness, has always been as one with the occupants
of the White House and the US government; they are interchangeable.
That is the American way. Without government patronage, some
of the greatest corporations would fail. The Cargill Corporation,
which dominates the world trade in food grains, would not enjoy
its monopoly were it not for years of big subsidies to American
agribusiness, as well as US government policies that used “food
aid” to subvert the agriculture of developing countries.
It was the triumphant American state that fashioned
the present “global economy” at Bretton Woods in 1944, so that
its military and corporate arms would have unlimited access
to minerals, oil, markets, and cheap labor. In 1948, the State
Department’s senior imperial planner, George Kennan, wrote:
“We have 50 percent of the world’s wealth, but only 6.3 percent
of its population. In this situation, our real job in the coming
period is to devise a pattern of relationships which permit
us to maintain this position of disparity. To do so, we have
to dispense with all sentimentality . . . we should cease thinking
about human rights, the raising of living standards and democratization.”
The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund were invented
to implement this strategy. Their base is Washington, where
they are joined by an umbilical cord to the US Treasury, a few
blocks away. This is where the globalization of poverty and
the use of debt as a weapon of control was conceived. When John
Maynard Keynes, the British representative at Bretton Woods,
proposed a tax on creditor nations, designed to prevent poor
countries falling into perpetual debt, he was told by the Americans
that if he persisted, Britain would not get its desperately
needed war loans. More than half a century later, the gap between
the richest 20 percent of humanity and the poorest 20 percent
has doubled; and “structural adjustment programs” have secured
an indebted imperium greater than the British empire at its
height.
The danger of the “moderate” view, which refuses
to contemplate the sheer rapacity of western state power, is
that it can be co-opted. The World Bank and the IMF, now under
siege as never before, have devised their survival tactics in
relation to this. Overnight, the IMF, the greatest of the loan
sharks, has begun to sound like an institutional Mother Teresa,
with a “mission to defeat poverty.” Together with the World
Bank, and the World Trade Organization, it now promotes “dialogue”
with “moderate” non-governmental organizations (NGOs) opposed
to globalization, anointing them as “serious opponents,” in
contrast to the “hooligans” on the streets.
Clare Short’s Department for International Development
employs this tactic, co-opting leading NGOs for “consultation,”
even commissioning them to contribute to government white papers.
This collaboration should not be underestimated. Following the
successful attack on the WTO in Seattle two years ago, more
than 1,200 groups and organizations from 85 countries called
for a “moratorium” on further liberalization of trade and an
“audit” of WTO policies as the first stage of reforming it.
The WTO and its creators in Washington were delighted, for its
legitimacy was not in question. Yet, this secretive, entirely
undemocratic body is the most rapacious predator devised by
the imperial powers. The Economist calls it an “embryo world
government” -- which no one has voted for. Beware of moderates.
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