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Siege of summits
THE DECISION OF the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank to substantially reduce the duration of their 2001 annual
meetings in Washington is yet another sign that global economic
summits and conferences are now under siege from the streets.
After the protests at the G-8 summit in Genoa, the Government of
Italy has been trying to persuade the Food and Agriculture
Organisation to shift the World Food Summit, scheduled for
November, out of Rome. Now, the organisers of the high profile
IMF-World Bank meetings must suffer the embarrassment of their
being reduced from a full week to just two days over a weekend in
end-September. The reasons have not been explicitly stated, other
than to cause ``the least possible disruption to people who live
and work in Washington''. But with up to 50,000 protestors
expected in Washington and the city asking the federal Government
for $40 million to organise security for a week-long conference,
it is clear that the fear of disturbances and the cost of
security persuaded the two multilateral organisations to scale
down their 2001 annual meetings. The Genoa summit showed that the
only way the world's leaders could now meet was behind barbed
wire, steel fences and heavily armed police, all of which make
for a poor advertisement of global efforts to build a better
world.
The violence on the streets of Genoa - as much by the security
forces as by the protestors - shifted the focus from what the
protestors are saying to concerns about public safety. These are
no doubt important concerns and it only requires a handful of
violent protestors to drown out the voices of peaceful
demonstrators. But the core issue here is not law and order but
concerns that are beginning to affect everyday life in the rich
and the poor countries. The Washington organisers have not
cancelled their protests after the IMF and World Bank scaled down
their annual meetings - the groups on the streets would be
espousing a mixture of concerns on globalisation, inequality,
Third World debt, the environment, job losses and also some
extreme causes. But the frequency and the scale of protests
suggest that there is a strong global under-current of
unhappiness about globalisation which cannot be dismissed as the
doing of cranks and marginal groups. In Washington, for the first
time in almost two years, organised labour will be present in
vast numbers as the U.S. unions gather to march against trade
which, even before the present global slowdown, pushed thousands
of skilled workers out of jobs. An unwillingness to listen to
these voices carries the risk of strengthening the forces of
protectionism that would be pleased with the introduction of
``labour standards'' in trade, which in turn would only hurt
workers in the Third World.
Labour is only one of the protesting voices and it is also wrong
to dismiss the marches as the work of ``do-gooders'' in the
developed countries. While some of them may indeed have vague and
fuzzy ideas about how economic growth should be organised, the
unease about the present global economy is growing. The difficult
economic situation that Argentina, for instance, now finds itself
in shows how easily even a ``star globaliser'' can quickly
descend to an economic morass. The IMF and World Bank would do
more for the global economy if they used their curtailed annual
meetings for some introspection about the policies they
recommend, which have remained the same notwithstanding the
cosmetic changes in recent years.
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Section : Opinion Previous : For a 'Framework' of Goodwill Next : Caste and the U.N. meet | |
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