spacer
spacer search

Search
spacer
header
The Story of Bottled Water

World People's Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth
Cochabamba, Bolivia
April 19 to 22, 2010

Visit the website
Sign Up for Working Groups

FOCUS@COP15

Trade & Climate Caravan 2009
Advancing a Peoples’ ASEAN: Continuing Dialogue
cha-am
Call for Civil Society’s Participation
In the 2nd ASEAN Peoples’ Forum / 5th ASEAN Civil Society Conference
18-20 October 2009
Cha-am, Phetchaburi Province, Thailand
http://aseanpeoplesforum.net

Asian People's Solidarity for Climate Justice
The Gr8 Climate Sale

Video now available! To obtain a copy please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

The issue of climate change has come to the forefront and people both in the North and the South have been feeling the devastating effects of global warming. However, the links between the neo-liberal system and the model of over consumption to the climate crisis are not clearly stated.


Read More
Watch the Full-Length Video

climatejusticelogo
Climate Justice Conference
Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok Thailand

For more information and to download the proceedings, visit the official website

Alternative Regionalism and ASEAN Phil Workshops
tarp_asean_phil_2009_big
Click here to download conference proceedings

FOCUS STAFF INTERVIEWS
Walden Bello on WSFtv , Aljazeera
Nicola Bullard talks about climate justice on Realworld Radio
Shalmali Guttal on WSFtv
Walden Bello talks about Asian Economy
Watch Aljazeera's 101 East Discussions on the Asian Economy.
Part 2

Focus India Headlines
Focus Philippines headlines
Login





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Focus Staff Only
Webmail
Library
Syndicate
Template Chooser
JavaBean
 
Home

Die Tagezeitzung Interviews Walden Bello Print E-mail
This is a transcript of the Die Tagezeitzung's interview with Walden Bello.

Dr. Bello, what is is the impact of the current crisis on the global South?
The current global crisis will definitely have a massive impact on the South.  It is especially those economies that globalized most fully and followed strategies of export-oriented industrialization that tied their growth to foreign markets that will suffer most.  Those countries that have globalized least, like many in Africa, will be much less affected.

Could you give examples?
Exports have declined precipitously throughout the East Asian region.  China has seen 20 million workers lose their jobs in the last few months, according to the Chinese government.  The value of the Korean won has fallen by over 30 per cent in the last few months.  Remittances are going to fall and laid off migrant workers are going to return in Indonesia and the Philippines.  Argentina and Brazil's agricultural exports are in a freefall.

Are you afraid of a further worsening of the situation?
Yes, definitely.  We are just at the beginning of the global freefall and I really don't know when we are going to hit rock bottom and once we reach it, how long the global economy will lie there.  The global economy is just like a German U-Boat that has been depthcharged, and it's descending rapidly to the ocean bottom, and once it reaches the bottom, you don't know how the crew is going to get the submarine back up.  Will the crew's tortuous maneuvers get it back to the surface, as in the film Das Boot, or will it just stay at the bottom?  Will Keynesian methods of reflation work today?  We don't know.

How do you assess the politics and economic program of US president Obama and his administration with respect to global matters?
I think that in terms of economic policies, the administration is turning inward, away from policies of globalization and free trade.  It talks about multilateralism and against protectionism, but this is largely words still.  I think Obama's overwhelming priority is to stabilize the US economy and foreign economic policy can wait.  Will the US take a leading role in creating a global financial architecture, with strong regulatory controls at next month's G 20 meeting in London?  I think rhetorically yes, but the focus of regulatory work in the US will be domestic.  Once the freefall of the US economy stops, then you will see Obama move on to international economic issues.

What about the European Union?
The EU is probably going to look inward too, but whether it will come out with viable region-wide policies or revert to national policies of stabilization remains to be seen.  I think that the support for multilateralism and globalist policies is going to erode in Europe.  You will see a similar turning inward, as in the United States.  I worry about what will happen to the migrant workers from the South and from the East under conditions of economic contraction.  Racism and ethnic prejudices might run riot.

What do you expect from the upcoming G20 summit in Londonwikth respect to calming the global economic turbulenc?
No.  I think the conditions are not there to create a new Bretton Woods system.  Everybody is still at the "every man for himself" stage.  There is little support for a reform of the IMF and bigger role for the World Bank.  There is little support for completing the Doha Round of the WTO because of distrust of globalization.  People also see the Basel process as having failed to come up with the necessary regulatory framework for the banks.  There will be a great deal of rhetoric about multilateralism but little reality.

What should urgently be done to avoid the deepening of deglobalisation and disintegration?
Deglobalization must not be equated with disintegration.  Given the excesses of globalization and the way it made economies so vulnerable to collapse because it integrated markets and production and did away with protective barriers between the domestic economy and the international economy, deglobalization accompanied by regionalization of economies and the strengthening of national economies is a good thing.  The problem with globalization is that it destroyed national economies.  The challenge for us now is how to create a global system where participation in the international economy strengthens the capacity of national economies rather than destroys them.

What would be the appropriate contribution by the politically and socially critical spectrum in the North to stop disintegration?
We must see this as an opportunity to create a deglobalized world, where there is more equality between and within countries, where countries can pursue economic policies that respond to their values, goals, and rhythms as societies instead of being crammed within a neoliberal one-shoe-fits-all-model, where diversity, as in nature, is seen as a strength, where there is space to pursue sustainable development policies that do not reproduce the high consumption model of the North.  I repeat: crisis spells opportunity.

What is your general assessment of the stand of the Left and the social movements in answering the crisis?
The Left has the theoretical tools to understand the crisis, and here the Marxist analysis of capitalism's tendency to overaccumulation and overproduction, including the insights of Rosa Luxemburg, are very important.  Where the challenge lies is in building a mass movement globally and nationally to promote an anti-capitalist soution to the crisis, a solution that lies in democratizing the economy along with a fuller democratization of politics.  We must move fast, because it people are not persuaded to go left, they might be persuaded to go right, and we don't want countries falling into a Germany-in-the-1930's kind of scenario again.

What changes are now necessary?
The changes I've alluded to above.

Thank you very much for answering the questions. Is there an up-to-date photograph of yours available?




 
Next >
spacer
Water justice, like water, travels in networks: notes on reclaiming public water

An international seminar of the Reclaiming Public Water Network brought together participants from more than 30 countries, who shared knowledge and experiences about how to improve water provision through the democratization of water management.





wallstreet
Wall Street: The Causes of Collapse
by Walden Bello
Updated: 18 October 2008
Download the Presentation

Links
robinhoodtax2

PAAR
paar
The initiative People’s Agenda for Alternative Regionalisms, involves regional alliances such as Hemispheric Social Alliance (Latin America), Southern African People’s Solidarity Network- SAPSN (Southern Africa), Solidarity for Asian People’s Advocacy – SAPA (South East Asia), People’s SAARC (South Asia) as well as organisations and networks in Europe, including Transnational Institute (TNI), that struggle for “Another Europe”. These networks and the organisations part of them, share a strong commitment on the need to RECLAIM the regions, RECREATE the processes of regional integration and ADVANCE people-centered regional alternatives.

For more information, visit the website
INTERNSHIP OPENING AT FOCUS, INDIA
Focus on the Global South - India is accepting applications for internships.
Click here for more details>>
Latest Publications from Focus
occ6small

Occasional Papers 6

CLIMATE CHANGE AND CHINA: Technology, Market and Beyond
frontocc5

Occasional Papers 5

BACKGROUND PAPER: Investment Liberalization in the EU-ASEAN FTA

 frontocc4

Occasional Papers 4
BUSINESS AS USUAL: Responses within ASEAN to the Food Crisis

 unfaircompetition3
Fierce, Fair and Unfair Competition: The EU-China Trade Race and its Gender Implications. - Chinese Translation
 
New Power Politics in Asia:Briefing Note on the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
 
 China’s New Role in Africa and the South: A search for a new perspective
 water-report
 WATER DEMOCRACY:RECLAIMING PUBLIC WATER IN ASIA
thumb_annual-report-2006-cover
 Annual Report 2006
 thumb_at_the_door_cover_image
 At the Door of all the East': The Philippines in United States Military Strategy
thumb_landstrugglesg-2
 Land Strugggles:LRAN Briefing Paper Series
 thumb_cover-front1

Occasional Papers 2

Contract Farming in Thailand:A view from the farm

 thumb_unconventionalwarfare 1
 Unconventional Warfare: Are US Special Forces Engaged in an ‘Offensive War’ in the Philippines?
 thumb_cover-front
ALBA Venezuela’s answer to “free trade”: the Bolivarian alternative for the Americas

More publications>> 


Who's Online
We have 17 guests online

 
© 2010 Focus on the Global South
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.
JoomSEF SEO by Artio.
spacer