
The continuing surge in globalisation has had profound human and
social effects on vast numbers of people, the fundamental nature of
these effects depending on their
class position in society, i.e. whether they are capitalists or
workers. On the one hand the opportunities for the capitalist class to
accumulate wealth has increased multilaterally with, for example,
politicians and civil servants in the poorer states quite happy to find
the funding for trade fairs, economic surveys, development studies, and
visits by heads of state in an effort to increase the profits of that
class from the global market.
On the other hand this global frenzy is resulting in upheaval for
whole communities, while the transition from rural to urban living is
in turn altering human geography radically with rural areas either
becoming human deserts or concentrated industrial sprawl. Likewise most
global housing areas resemble one another to such an extent that even
the shantytowns are becoming uniform in the type of building
materials used.
When these social transformations are combined with factors like
the increasing mobility of labour - mobility from the peasantry to the
modernity of wage slavery - they come with well known costs for the
disempowered majority: misery, destitution, family breakdown and
homelessness. The most visible aspects of this are to be seen with
thousands of families living on the
streets of Calcutta, or those families forced to scrape an existence by
living on a waste tip in San Paulo, or perhaps a PhD from Addis Ababa
University driving a cab in New York city, let alone those
staffing a call centre in New Delhi alongside a wall full of useless
diplomas.
Such potential human resources being wasted to further the
interests of profit maximisation cannot but have an impact on rising
social expectations and aspirations. These then come into conflict with
people's sense of achievement. Consequently, we are witnessing a sharp
rise in the incidence of mental health problems. And the resulting
increase in cases of anxiety, depression, insomnia, mood swings and
stress, are to be evidenced in the packed waiting areas of the mental
health clinics, along with the expanding appointments for the services
of psychotherapists. Add this to the overcrowded waiting lists for the
physically sick in the developed and developing countries and many
global health services there are in crisis management mode.
Inequality
Whilst this human tragedy unfolds our political
masters are still chanting the mantra that some of the
wealth created will eventually 'trickle down' to those 2.8 billion
people living on less than $2 a day and also to those 1.3 billion
living in even more extreme poverty.
Unable to solve the problem of absolute and relative poverty, the
global politicians have now agreed in their misguided wisdom to try
and tackle the problems and issues of extreme poverty only. By this
they mean those 1.3 billion people who have to their cost found that
the system of
wage slavery holds no guarantees of the provision of a living wage, and
subsequently finding it impossible to
exist on less than a dollar a day. And where the material difference
between relative, absolute and, and if you so wish extreme poverty, is
so profoundly stark that it creates a sense of inevitability and
disempowerment, it is invariably accompanied by disillusionment. This
is especially so in cultural terms, with millions being forced from the
rural poverty of subsistence living into becoming a landless peasant
within an urban environment dominated by the tyranny of wages and
surrounded by the advertising of
mass consumerism.
The WHO, UN, World Bank, and Jubilee 2000 have reported many of
the indicators of global inequality in recent years, and summarised
they are:
- One-fifth of the world's population is living in extreme poverty.
- 100 million children live or work on the street.
- Half the world's population are lacking access to the most essential
medicines.
- The combined wealth of the world's 200 richest people reached $1
trillion in 1999;
the combined income of 582 million living in the 43 least developed
countries is $146b.
- 70 per cent of the world's poor and two thirds of the worlds
illiterate are women.
- An estimated 827.5m people are undernourished. Of which 647m, or over
one third (37 percent) consist of theworld's children.
- More than 30,000 children die each day from easily preventable
diseases.
- The top fifth own 86 per cent of the world's wealth, while the lowest
fifth own just one per cent.
- The wealth of the world's three wealthiest billionaires is more than
that of the GNP of all the least developing countries and their 600
million people.
- When Argentina defaulted on its debts, 300,000 people were forced to
live off the garbage dumps surrounding the city of Buenos Aires.
- The number of people living in extreme poverty has actually risen by
28m.
Yet it is not only developing and undeveloped countries who are
experiencing issues of inequality; even in the major developed
countries, like the US, income inequality is now on the increase with
one report claiming: "The gap between rich andpoor in America is the
widest in 70 years, according to a new study published by the Center
for the Budget and Policy Priorities The research, based on newly
released figures from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office,
shows that the top 1 percent of Americans - who earn an average of
$862,000 each after tax (or $1.3m before tax) - receive more money than
the 110m Americans in the bottom 40 percent of the income distribution,
whose income averages $21,350 each year. The income going to the
richest 1 percent has gone threefold in real terms in the past twenty
years, while the income of the poorest 40 percent went up by a more
modest 11 percent" (BBC News Online, 25 September, 2003 :http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3138232.stm
).
Much the same picture is painted in the UK with the figures from the
National Statistics Office and Inland Revenue for 2002/3 showing that
the richest 5 percent owned 43 percent of the wealth, while the poorest
50 percent owned just 6 percent; similarly the top 2.4m households
owned assets worth around £1,300b, while the bottom 12m owned
assets of around £150m. Also according to a Policy Institute
report last year, 22 percent of the UK population are still
living below the poverty line, including 3.8m children (or 30 percent
of all children), 2.2m pensioners, and 6.6m working age adults.
In effect a total of 12.6m people in the UK population are confronted
with higher mortality; lower education outcomes; less decent homes; and
financial exclusion, due to surviving on, or below 60 percent of median
income after housing costs.
On a much more local scale the Child Poverty Action Group revealed in
their publication 'Poverty - the Facts (5th edition)' that over 80
percent of the children living in the Townhill district of Swansea were
defined as poor; benefits make up a larger proportion of total income
in Wales than in England or Scotland, with a higher proportion of
children living in households
claiming income support - 18.9 percent - compared to the UK-wide figure
of 13.5 percent; and 32 percent of pensioners in Inner London were
affected by income poverty, and children in London are even worse off
than those in Wales with 24 percent of households in receipt of income
support, or other means tested benefits.
Socialist Outlook
These are just some of the facts and figures
that are considered normal to the modern workings of capitalism. They
help to serve the purpose of illustrating that the globalisation of
capitalism has masked a growing polarisation both within and between
countries and that local circumstances are merely a reflection of the
global situation where 'trickle-down' economics has in reality turned
into a flood of inequality, destitution and instability. This confirms
what Marxists
have consistently stated that the prosperity for the few is dependant
on the deprivation of the many. Indeed, despite the huge amounts of
abundant wealth created by workers within capitalism, the system is
incapable of accounting for the fact that the cases of millions of
people dying through malnourishment, or because they lack clean water,
adequate shelter, and health care is on the increase. This alone
serves as a damning confirmation that there hasn't been any fundamental
shift in the ownership of wealth. It also reaffirms our position that
this state of affairs is likely to continue, besides endorsing the
contention that the capitalist class will use either system of trading
- protectionism or free trade - when it suits their purpose to
accumulate wealth.
Failure to grasp the revolutionary challenge this analysis poses
has led to the formation of the anti-globalisation
protest movement which campaigns on the issues of extreme poverty,
world debt and the adoption of protectionist measures for those
developing and
undeveloped countries who have found that the reality of 'free trade'
only applies primarily to the G8 nations. Whilst there is no denying
that such campaigns have made tremendous strides in highlighting the
effects of globalisation, when it comes to outlining proposals for
viable alternatives to capitalism, their mindset is locked onto the
belief that a 'fairer' global society is possible within the framework
of capitalism.
Their main tactic is to bring mass protest to bear on politicians
and on institutions like the G8, WTO, IMF and World Bank, despite the
fact that such a mindset of working towards a 'fairer' global society
has a long history of failure, based as it is on the false assumption
that capitalism can be made to work in the interest of all - rich and
poor alike.
Although the effects of globalisation with the human suffering it
brings can lead to bleak and negative conclusions about the future, it
is also possible to draw different conclusions, ones that are far more
positive and meaningful. For what comes out of this rather gloomy
picture is the certainty that capitalism has outlived its usefulness as
a progressive mode of production. For it reached its early retirement
at the turn of the 20th Century - once it had established itself as a
global system consisting of integrated and interdependent productive
units. As soon as it reached this point
it had fulfilled its purpose and turned into a global monster of
uncontrollable destructiveness.
With capitalism failing to deliver for the majority it has become more
obvious that now is the time to move on to a system of common ownership
that is capable of meeting the self-defined needs of the great majority
and not just the interests of a wealthy minority. In
order to attain such a system of free access an essential prerequisite
is for a majority of the global working class to reach an understanding
that their sense of social achievement can only be fulfilled by
becoming conscious in class terms that capitalism can never be made to
operate in their interests. Once they have reached this revolutionary
conclusion - and only then - will capitalism lose its basis of support
and be replaced by socialism.
BRIAN JOHNSON
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