Cross-Cultural Understanding
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Opinion Editorials, April 2008 |
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Bad Samaritans: The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism, By Ha-Joon Chang A Book Review By Jim Miles ccun.org, April 6, 2008
very now
and then a ‘prize’ of a book comes along that includes all the elements
of good writing.
Bad Samaritans
( The main underlying position that demolishes the myth of capitalist free trade and its supposed successes with globalization is that all the current wealthy countries achieved their wealth not through free trade, but through the use of highly protective tariffs and effective use of subsidies and laws that regulated foreign business within their own country. He starts
with his own country, According to the
neo-liberal economists – the supporters and apologists for free trade
capitalism – Chang then
starts his journey around the globe.
Along the way, he exposes this double
standard, as well as debunking myths about democracy as an accompaniment
to free trade and economic development, and also eliminates culture as a
reason for success or lack thereof, and corruption as an excuse for
failure.
Using per capita income as his measure,
rather then the neoliberals’ cherished GDP figures, he journeys through
Hong Kong, Africa (with its “damning indictment of the neoliberal
orthodoxy”), on to Taiwan, Singapore, China, India and Chile to sum up
that “the truth of post-1945 globalization is almost the polar opposite
of official history…peddled in order to mask the failure of neo-liberal
policies.”
Using From these
leading examples and conclusions it is easy to further the argument that
free trade is not working because it forces developing countries to
eliminate the very same protective barriers that the rich countries used
to gain their wealth.
At this point the
reader also needs to consider the tendencies of “full spectrum
dominance” both militarily and economically as an imperial tendency of
the The
arguments against free trade then become more specific concerning
different aspects of the arguments.
First, the regulation of foreign investment
is considered, with the prime example being Nokia in Looking more
specifically at private versus public enterprise, and again journeying
around the world via The next
focus is on intellectual ‘rights’, the idea of borrowing ideas.
Once again, historical examples show that
the rich countries previously copied much information and technological
information while denying protection to foreign ideas in order to create
their own wealth.
Simply put, if the neoliberals truly
believed in promoting development they would make it easier to acquire
the information needed to do so rather than prevent its acquisition.
Democracy’s
relationship with economic prosperity takes a strong hit, with a
discussion of corruption and its various forms (bribery, employment,
voting).
Chang, using examples from In fact,
“The Bad Samaritans have recommended policies that actively seek to
undermine democracy in developing countries,” with a corollary that “it
is unlikely democracy will promote economic development through
promoting the free market.”
In other words, given a democratic choice,
the people of the world would choose something other than the ‘free
market’ as envisioned and dictated by the wealthy neoliberal supporters
of the world.
Chang provides two strong examples of
re-directing government spending away from military spending to
education, health, or infrastructure development, or promoting economic
growth through creating a welfare state (which supports working mothers,
children, education, hospitals, retirement and all those other nasty
socialist ideas that the people of the world want but the neoliberals
say hinder development).
It all depends on your definition of
development – more GDP for the transnational corporations, or more
security and safety for the general populace.
Chang’s
final conclusion is that if the neoliberals truly believed in creating
economic wealth and development within the developing world, it would be
in their best interest to “accept those ‘heretical’ policies.”
While Chang holds out hope for changing the
minds of neoliberals, I cannot be as optimistic, as the cumulative
entrenched interests would require a strong midcourse correction from
some major event – a catastrophic war, a major financial downturn….hmmm. I would
hope that peaceful persuasion as per Chang would succeed, but the state
of the world today does not hold hope for optimism on this front.
The rhetoric of free trade continues, while
the wars to back it up and the unequal and oppressive regulations to
control it continue to defy its very basic premise of freedom and
democracy. A
wonderfully accessible work, Bad Samaritans should be read by
anyone and everyone paying any attention to either national or global
political affairs.
Those wishing to refute free trade have a
readily accessible volume.
Those supporting “The Myth of Free Trade”
had better take a second look at how their own wealth developed…if they
did not already know the “Secret History of Capitalism.”
An excellent work, it should become a
cornerstone of the discussion moving forward to a more democratic and
equal world.
Jim Miles is a Canadian educator
and a regular contributor/columnist of opinion pieces and book reviews
for The Palestine Chronicle.
Miles’ work is also presented globally
through other alternative websites and news publications. |
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