DAN SANDERS MEMORIAL LECTURE
11th International Symposium
Cape Town, South Africa, 8th July 1999
Social Development for the New
Millennium: Visions and Strategies for Global
Transformation
Keynote address given by
Dr. Franklin A. Sonn
Former South African Ambassador to the United States
Poverty is
the single greatest social burden in the world today.
It is a timeless matter. It defies all economic and
social systems. Up to this day it occupies the national
debate in varying degrees depending on the nature of the
government in power. Governments' successes are often
determined by the extent to which it is able to meet the
challenge of poverty. Poverty brought governments
down. It insured the demise of economical systems. It
insured the rise of dictatorships. It was also the case
in our country. The bitter conflation of race and
poverty ushered in democracy. Academics and thinkers
have argued through the ages whether a strong monarch or
a resolute authoritarian state or a free market system
is the answer. There is the proposition in the U.S.
that as little government as possible would be able
better to meet the challenge of poverty.
Poverty is
not merely the lack of income. An enormous proportion
of basic needs of people in the wealthiest to the
poorest nations today remain unmet. There is a
distinction between poor people and poverty people. Poor
people lack resources, and when resources are, they
resume their positions in society. Poverty, on the
other hand, is a sub-culture and people are stuck in the
vicious cycle of ever recurring poverty. There normally
is a fundamental lack of understanding among people
outside the vicious cycle that poverty creates. Its'
own norms are marked by very short term objectives and
live for the moment. It is essentially a demeaning and
dis-empowering condition. Few social factors diminish
and demean people like being caught up in the vicious
cycle of poverty.
In South
Africa and in colonialist times, the lack of basic human
and political rights were at the same time the cause and
effect of poverty. The negative attributes the dominant
political group ascribe to the dominated poverty people
are more often than not symptoms of economic deprivation
to be found among poverty people all over the world
regardless of race. Poverty, nonetheless, feeds
racism. To fight against poverty is accordingly a
struggle against racism.
Let me turn
to Robben Island - this hallowed place! It is
propitious that we meet on this island this morning. It
is a tribute to the organizers of this conference that
they have had the foresight to arrange a congregation of
leaders whose primary mandate is poverty and whose
obligation is finding answers to social dysfunction and
injustice. This is the eleventh convention on Robben
Island. This island, after all, is a sacred monument ot
the sacrifice and struggle against racism and poverty of
the people of South Africa. It is more than that. It
signifies in a tangible way the courage of all people
everywhere who gave their talents to work for greater
equity and equality in the world. It is correct that
Robben Island should be the place for fine minds and
tough wills to come together to ask hard questions and
to find right answers. It takes place around the stone
quarry of this island and the air is thin and cold- It
is indeed amidst the belligerent screams of seagulls
that, over decades, our leaders sharpened their ideas
and re-affirmed their commitment to give all they have
to overcome human beings inhumanity. It was on the
wings of the island breeze that the prayers and hopes of
our icons............ were carried to the mainland so
that we, who lived under apartheid, might never give up
the struggle and might continue in the noble tradition
of the example they had set. The island is in the misty
distance from Cape Town. It is a sacred reminder that
acquiescence was... to betrayal.
It is from
these conditions I am honored to say that letters were
smuggled by Nelson Mandela and given to certain people
among who were fortunate enough to be encouraged by the
letters that told us not to give up no matter how hard
it may be. Letters, which in the regularity of the
script and the firmness of the prose, assured us that we
shall overcome and even if we did not in our lifetime,
it was a cause worth dying for. One had fought a
battle which in time will prevail.
This island
used to be a place of isolation for lepers. It became a
prison for people that the apartheid government wanted
to define as utter political and social outcasts or
veritable social lepers. Instead, it became a source of
hope and a symbol of the nobility of our struggle. The
novel values and intentions of our cause and its'
international quality transcended the worse apartheid
could ever do.
Dan Sanders
would be proud to know that a meeting of his friends,
admirers, colleagues, and his fellow believers are
meeting in his honor and that they are meeting on Robben
Island, not as lepers but as warriors, as courageous
women and men who have retained the faith and are honing
the faith into action. It does his memory proud that in
fine tradition we once again are taking courage to make
poverty amidst bounty, powerlessness amidst freedom and
power the centerpiece of our discourse. If thinkers and
leaders driven by social justice and developmental
concerns do not raise and persist in addressing and
naming poverty, it might recede into the background. We
are as humans always tempted to forget. We, after all
are always too inclined to make poverty a weapon of
political struggle and once we assume power we are prone
to feel accused by it. I often said in the U.S. that
poverty is the word least uttered and least liked in
that nation of plenty. I am sure I am correct in saying
that we in South Africa talk less of poverty today than
we did at the height of our struggle.
Was it a
sigh of desperation or was it an admission that we
should neither despair nor be naive when Christ
proclaimed that the poor and the blind will always have
among us?
Ethan B.
Kapstein expresses desperation when he says, "...The
world may be moving inexorably towards one of those
tragic moments that will lead future historians to ask
why was nothing done in time. Were the economic and
policy elite's unaware of the profound disruption that
economic and technological change were causing working
men and women?" The title of which they borrowed from
Lenin and called the commanding heights: the battle
between government and the marketplace that is remaking
the modern world.
They
chronicled a global transformation and proceeded to take
the reader through the various phases of interventionist
policies and practices in an attempt to break the cycle
of institutionalized poverty.
They show
that the cyclical and inexorable interplay between
statism and market forces tend to present history as
dialectic, moving like a pendulum - for every swing in
one direction, there is a swing back. There is a
justified cynicism in their discourse about the
potential capacity of systems- social and economic -
alone to ensure social and economic justice.
Their view
of the progress of history is in terms of a spangled
type inevitable cycle; in the 1890's and in the first
years of this century, the European world enjoyed a
golden age of open trade and laisse-faire government -
the markets had their way. Imperialist colonial rule
where in the ascendancy. The new world was the
possession of the European empires. Our continent in
particular, provided bounty of raw materials and
physical human power. The colonialist imperialist
empires demeaned and exploited our people with impunity
and entrenched arrogance which dies hard.
As early as
1879, Henry George in Progress and Poverty had
this to say," ...At the beginning of this marvelous era
it was natural to expect, and it was expected that labor
saving intentions would lighten the toil and improve the
conditions of the poor laborer, that the enormous power
of producing wealth would make real poverty a thing of
the past." The Industrial Revolution was far from
exacerbating poverty and introduced the element of
industrial poverty which was touted the solution to
poverty. Automation, technological and industrial
advancement succeeded in creating more wealth and
increased avarice. It also heightened the tension
between competing nations which in certain cases
increased the pressure on the workers. It did not,
however, alleviate poverty under the aegis of a liberal
Great Britain. This period of industrialization and
doom produced the Fabians of Britain, the French
communists who trained Deng and Ho Chi Minh and chiefly
produced Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin, who in 1916
presented a book called Imperialism: The Highest
Stage of Capitalism. A response to the effect of the
Industrial Revolution and its' economic consequences of
monopoly and renewed worker exploitation was given.
This wasalso the case in Czarist Russia.
Towards the
end of this millennium we are once again experiencing
another form of Industrial Revolution which consist of
information technology, communications discovery, and
proliferation of mind boggling proportions. Again the
hope abounds that the new found technologies will
somehow help us to , as it were, grow out of poverty.
To return to
the pendulum swing theory: - After World War II,
communism entered its' period of greatest success - The
1950's and 1960's and western governments vacillated
over their economic role as the Colonial era came to
protectionism, deficit spending, and import
substitution.
The oil
shock of the 1970's followed by the debt shock of the
1980's were followed by the collapse of the central
control of the economy by communism. With these three
death blows, statism expired and markets became
ascendant. It presaged a period the political or
military power reigned supreme, but the strongest
producer of goods and services and the country with the
strongest concentration of wealth took center stage a
new and much more sophisticated form of domination.
Some refer to this as the advent of Pax Americana. But
even as people recognize that markets are progressively
more global, in virtually every country there is a
back-lash against perceived inadequacies of the market
as a custodian of the best social values. There was a
growing concern that the bottom line became more
important than care for people.
This clearly
also produces the demand for political authority and
governments to recede in importance. The thrust is to
allow markets to take charge. This particular issue of
less government is the area of confluence between Reagan
and Clinton. Both promised less government and more
free market. Both committed to more deregulation,
privatization, and equal opportunity under democracy.
The government would determine the regulatory framework
and the markets would run free, not only nationally, but
internationally. Globalization accordingly became the
catch phrase.
For a
country with a strong economic base and enormous
resources of disposable wealth and large numbers of
wealthy people this seems attractive. It is arguable
whether in new democracies with limited resources and
vast pools of poverty, that the government can step back
to the same extent or be pushed into this direction by
the dominant nation in the world. In poorer countries
governments have a different and more international
vent............................. role to play.
Smaller
democracies with weaker economies and greater social
challenges and poverty look to conferences like this to
help them find ways to deal with globalization and also
to articulate to the world the limitation and
encumbrances of smaller and poorer countries to follow
the dictates of globalization.
I
furthermore do not think it is our duty as social
development agencies to reflect too much on issues like
less government. What, however, is our duty? Are we to
be like our predecessors at the turn of the century,
viz. "We are simply not beating poverty and as
responsible global citizens we are looking to what is
our duty in the face of this reality."
We do not
see it as our role to mouth palliative solutions for the
consequences of poverty, like soup kitchens, increased
producing,and the return of the death penalty. We must
find truly empowering measures that will bring the
victims of the world that Marx foresaw on the one hand
and the propositions that Adam thought out on the other
hand into the mainstream social, political and
economical.
There is a
contention that growth and economic prosperity by
themselves will destroy poverty and promote good
development programs like schools, health and welfare
services, good housing, and job creation.
Yet the news
from the U.S. is that we should also admit to ourselves
that there are, for the moment, at the very least no
conceivable and plausible alternative economic systems
available which could claim success over poverty. It is
also our moral and academic duty to say to ourselves
that we still have the poor among us and that in fact
global poverty is not.
Receding in
spite to the fact that the U.S. is wealthier than any
other nation has probably been. Growing income
inequality, insecurity, increased criminality and white
and blue collar corruption, however, appears to be the
flip side of globalization. Is it true or am I going
too far to say that the imposed doctrine of
globalization presupposes a restrictive fiscal policy
which is basically telling the poor that the state
cannot afford to offer them a system promise. Is
democracy a free market at election times? The further
logic is that reduced access to the good life and jobs
are a pre-requisite for economic resurgence which
promises us to grow out of the malaise so that we may
successfully provide adequately for our poor. The
further disconcerting reality remains that any state
which at best questions and at worse appears to deviate
too far from the principles of globalization will be
punished by currency markets and bondholders and could
be cast out into the outside darkness. The options for
new democracies opting for free market is not so open.
In fact the central theme in the U.S. is wealth and not
poverty. That does not mean that poverty does not
exist. In fact it is a sad commentary that in the
nation which spawned globalization; which is the only
real super power in the world and where the markets are
in the ascendancy and disposable wealth is poverty still
abounding.
For the sake
of perspective - it is worth our while for a moment to
examine the extent to which the wealthy U.S. is coping
with poverty: President Clinton's first term labor
secretary, Robert Reich, says that the United States is
divided into three social classes: A small over class of
extreme wealth, a large underclass unable to fully enter
the economic mainstream and an anxious middle class
employed but feeling vulnerable.
Amidst the
economic boom of unprecedented proportion, income
equality in the U.S. is at its highest level in 50 years
according to the Census Bureau.
Wealth
enjoyed by the elite few is concentrated. In 1980 the
incomes of the richest one percent of U.S. families
equaled the incomes of the families in the bottom twenty
percent. A decade later inequality doubled. By 1990
the family incomes of the top one percent were greater
than the bottom forty percent. Nearly one in five U.S.
workers live in poverty. The average CEO's salary is
more than 149 times that of a U.S. worker. In Japan the
ratio is 31 to 1. About 40 million U.S. citizens- the
size of the South African population- live below or just
above the federal poverty line at $18,000 for a family
of four. In our own country 17 million out of 40
million - more than 40 percent of people live in
poverty.
Poverty
largely conflates with race in both the U.S. and South
Africa. The further significance being that the people
of enormous wealth are by and large white and those
living in poverty and abject poverty are black.
Let us look
at the situation globally: The accumulated wealth of the
world's top 358 billionaires equals the per capita
incomes of 45 percent of humanity. Sixty percent of the
world's people are living and dying on six percent of
the world's wealth (these figures were published from
the American Economist Xabier Sorostiaga
in the Minneapolis Star Tribune of May 4, 1966 by J.N.
Pallmeyer).
The point I
am making is that this very bad state of affairs is a
result of market forces, historical injustice and bad
public policy. It assumes the contention of growth by
itself removes poverty. All it does is exponentionally
widen the gap between rich and poor and incidentally,
between black and white. This is the effect of
globalization. The world markets have the ability
almost immediately to punish national economies who opt
for what the west perceives as too much government
intervention to distribute wealth. Without
extraordinary measures globalization will continue to
promote equal opportunity as a doctrine within the
democratic state. Everyone knows the real result of
this. The conventional response to poverty tends to be
that those who remain poor or are caught in the vicious
cycle of poverty in a free market democratic state only
have themselves to blame. Under these circumstances it
will be understood by emerging nations which have great
difficulty in embracing economic policies and who do not
promise a real capacity for socioeconomic justice.
South Africa's challenges are exacerbated by the fact
that the bottom 60 percent of the population are the
people who have only just been politically liberated and
are looking to the government. They have voted material
power to help them to overcome poverty. In the next
elections Thabo Mbeki's government will be tested by
this particular criterion. Atul Kohli writes in his
chapter "Development strategies reconsidered" of John
Lewis and Val Kallab under the heading: Democracy and
Development that...... "Where poverty remains
massive and where the state is involved in all manner of
where adult suffrage has come long before the capacity
to feed the adults. Democracy is much more difficult to
sustain." - hope not true in South Africa.
Developmental experts in free democracies must help us
to understand how free market forces can support the
efforts of development agencies to bring more and more
people into the economic mainstream and to close the
large income gap and preserve democracy.
In a country
like South Africa statist delivery programs to the poor
is vital. The rights of citizens, after all, will
remain meaningless for as long as the state fails
economically to intervene in their lives. We are
experiencing a crime wave that is unacceptably high and
extremely worrying. While we remain deeply committed to
it. Rights and democracy despair is creeping in
whether this is the way to deal with the horrendous-
further pressure on democracy.
There must
furthermore be empowerment measures which will enable
enterprising black young people from poor families to
overcome the informal but real obstacles businesses
place in their way to upward mobility. In this regard
the employment equity set is an example.
Market
forces must continue to create wealth but the government
must continue to insist that the market take actions to
redress poverty. Good diplomacy must explain this to
the international agencies like the IMF, World Bank and
the banks.
Foreign
models of development have a double-edged implication
for South Africa. They suggest that South Africa has to
liberalize if it is to have a chance of attracting
foreign capital investment and increasing productivity
growth trade. South Africa's competitors in Eastern
Europe, South East Asia and Latin America are already
well along this path. On the other hand ,
liberalization is not likely to bring quick gains.
Latin experience suggests that liberalization often
worsens poverty in the short run. We have to do things
at our pace and in our own way making
industry................... less labor intensive.
We as a
civil society must redouble our efforts to help our poor
people to come to recognize their power. We must
strengthen civil society. We must create our own
globalization by interacting with civil society. We
must create our own globalization by interacting with
civil society in the U.S. and elsewhere. Strengthening
civil society and creating jobs are the long term answer
to crime which is a symbol of the extent to which
numbers of people have become alienated- though action
is needed.
We must
strengthen the civil consciousness of churches to turn
their faith into a socially active one. Churches can
again be involved in the development process where
empowerment may flourish. New organizations must be
founded and led by the people, but serviced by
independent academies. The reliance on the state may
foster a culture of entitlement while what we need is
self-reliance and independence. Civil society in South
Africa illustrated tangibly what a mighty force it could
be. It could become that force again.
We are
poised on the cusp of the new millennium. Great
challenges are awaiting us. Without sounding
presumptuous I want to suggest that South Africa's
commitment to democracy and the fundamental freedoms is
unquestionable. I must state however, that
socioeconomic realities as I have shown put our
democracy at peril. The demands on our government is
multifarious and varied and often contradictory. EG.
The death penalty is a strong action. In order to bring
this system to the point of effective delivery and to
make an impact on poverty, extraordinary state
intervention is inevitable. When and should this occur
we will look to informed intellectual leadership across
the world to interpret this in the light of the
challenges I addressed in my lecture. South Africa can
succeed because we are young and flexible and because we
have excellent leadership, good though largely untrained
people. We also have a reasonable resource base and a
government able, excited and keen to take all the right
measures.
Should South
Africa succeed in achieving real development economic
improvement of all and genuine empowerment of the
disadvantaged and poor who happen to be largely black -
we should, we hope, be able to show that poverty can be
severely diminished when civil society and the state
work in real partnership.
- People -
Ordinary people must organize themselves and empower
themselves.
A reliance
on capitalism or socialism alone to address
developmental concerns to impact on poverty has never
worked . The third approach is that privatizing poverty
clearly cannot bear fruits because of the huge resources
required.
We must
reinstate civil society and enable civil society to
lobby the state and the private sector to combine forces
and make poverty priority number one. Civil society
must lead the process and should work with government
and business as a triangular partnership.
Once we
empower all people to discover that development is
something they should do for themselves, we will begin
to move towards a better resolution. To make people
wholly dependent on government businesses brings
temporary relief, but is anti-development because of the
culture of dependency and entitlement it creates and the
sense people get that others should solve their problems
for them. This was the single biggest failing of
Leninist-Marxism and certainly also lies at the core of
free market failure.
We the
ordinary citizens must come to a recognition that we are
our brother's keeper and that development without real
empowerment is dead. The state and business must play a
very important part, but the partnership of people is
the vital missing link.
If we value
democracy we must not only protect and nurture it; we
must join hands with the government and businesses to
combat huge social and economic elements which tend to
threaten our democracy and commitment to free market and
a long term reduction rather than increase of
government. We must purge trends like the U.S. that we
simply cannot adopt their strategies and policies. We
must be allowed to accept the support of our friends in
our own way and meet our challenges independently.
CLOSE:
I do not
believe that a generation that gave us the micro-chip
cannot beat poverty through development.
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