DAN SANDERS MEMORIAL LECTURE
12th International Symposium
Istanbul, Turkey. June 19-23, 2001
Globalization and the Social
Responsibility of the State in Developing Countries.
Keynote address given by
Prof. Dr. Gülten Kazgan
Istanbul Bilgi University, Head of Economics
Department and the Research Center.
Dear
Colleagues, ladies and gentlemen,
As a starter, I would like to express my deep feelings
for my election as the Dan Sanders lecturer in the
closing session of this meeting. I feel greatly honored
and I hope that the topic I have chosen as well as the
contents of my paper pay due regard to his thoughts, to
his philosophy.
The topic of
my paper is globalization and the Social Responsibility
of the State in developing countries. Succinctly what I
try to say in this paper is that the Western World led
by the US, has initiated a liberalization movement,
beginning with the 1980s, entitled as globalization.
This movement involves at the same time the
marketization of activities that were formerly
considered to be included under the social
responsibility of the state in developing countries. For
most of them, the last two decades have resulted in
adverse consequences at the economic level, restricting
further the already stringent finances that developing
country governments can allocate to fulfil their social
responsibilities.
My
presumption is that democracy is a regime that, by its
nature, involves the social responsibility of the state.
In developing countries, the run of events is currently
such that, this responsibility is on one hand
constrained by marketization, on the other hand by the
economic effects of globalization. But internationally
determined movements in favor of marketization and
globalization determine by and large government policies
without the endorsement of the nationals of developing
countries; for, such decisions are taken in institutions
where developing countries are either not represented at
all, or if they are members, they have no say in the
decision making bodies of these institutions. I conclude
that developing countries should search for solutions at
the international level, so as to produce solutions to
preserve the social responsibility of the state, hence
democracy.
I shall divide my lecture between 4 main topics:
1) First, I
would like to discuss at the historical and theoretical
levels, the nature of the term the Social
Responsibility of the State.
2)My second subtopic will be confined to the
relationship between political democracy and the current
policies oriented to enhancing globalization and marketization in developing countries (DCs) I presume
here that the first and foremost social Responsibility
of the State is the substantiation of democracy, that I
consider to lie at its core.
3)Third, I shall argue that in DCs, it is not very
meaningful to distinguish the economic Responsibility of
the State from its Social Responsibility, but that
globalization introduces serious contradictions between
these two categories.
4)Finally, I shall propose some policies that may help
improve the current economic problems DCs have been
facing over the last two decades in the process of
globalization and marketization.
I The Social Responsibility of the State : a
historical and theoretical overview
The term Social Responsibility of the State is a
normative concept, which sounds somewhat elusive when
one tries to define it or to delimit it. As observed in
the case of all normative concepts, its connotation
varies widely over time and space, depending on the
ideological setting defining the period and the country
or group of countries; in theory, it is however fairly
well formulated in verbal terms, though somewhat
difficult to estimate statistically. I would first like
to give a brief historical overview of the change in the
coverage of this concept in the western world as related
to globalization; then, I shall do the same across
countries at different levels of development, with a
view to show how it varies over space within the same
period and how irrelevant it is to place all economies
in the same box, as is currently done under the
globalization ideology. The relativity, with respect to
time and space, of the contents and the limits of the
Social responsibility of the state, is indeed highly
telling about the difficulties encountered by its
students.
a) Any
historical overview of the Social Responsibility of the
State in the Western countries reveals the ebbs and
tides it has witnessed over the last two centuries as
well as its close ties to globalization. The period
starting with the Industrial Revolution at the end of
the 18th century and ending with the start of the First
World War marks the first period of the globalization
process under laisser-faire, laisser - passer
capitalism. This is the period of the free movement of
goods, services, human beings as well as of capital in
all its varieties; it is also the period of the
colonization of poor countries and their integration
with the Western metropoles. Underlying this movement
were the uprooting technological changes in
transportation and telecommunications together with the
harnessing of steam power for running the machines that
multiplied by several fold labor productivity, hence
output. The ideology of the period was expressed by Adam
Smiths invisible hand, placing the attainment of
social welfare to the hands of global free markets. The
responsibility of the state was reduced to its classical
functions whereas the solution of social questions were
expected to be found in market determined equilibria.
That is, the state was to carry no social
responsibility, though in expanding markets to overseas
poor lands, it rendered a crucial service to private
capital. Government expenditures in GNP in the advanced
Western states hovered around 10-11% until the outbreak
of the First World War. The state had little social
responsibility aside from the generalization of
educational services to its nationals and none to the
peoples living in the colonies. But, the period was also
marked by violent labor strikes, social upheavals, and
nationalist wars while socialism, the major opposing
ideology, helped introduce a totally different approach
to the social responsibility of the statein the
literature.
The half a
century long period, beginning with the great depression
(1929) and ending with the mid 1970s, in the wake of the
oil crisis (1974), marks the emergence and adoption of
an altogether different ideology and government
policies. It is over these years that the social
responsibility of the state came to the fore; Western
countries began to refer to themselves as mixed
economies, attributing heavy responsibility to the
state in sustaining full employment, raising social
welfare by institutionalizing the social security
system, providing free education and enhancing public
health services etc. Laisser-faire capitalism
concurrently with globalization, was pushed aside as
governments intervened in all markets in the name of
preserving social welfare. This was also the period of
decolonization and of substantial financial as well as
technological support given to the emerging states of
the new DCs. The social responsibility of the state as
it was expanded, resulted in the hike in the share of
government expenditures in GNP in Western countries: it
had reached on the average 40% by the 1980s. The social
responsibility of the state hiked, however, under many
influences, the most important being the presence of the
USSR on one hand and the strengthening of labor unions
with socialist tendencies on the other hand. The
bipolar-world with the USSR as the center of attraction
for the DCs, helped tame the wild exploitation practices
of capitalism in their case, for, the greater the number
attracted to the Western pole, the weaker would be the
Eastern pole.
Beginning
with the early 1980s, with respect to the social
responsibility of the state, the pendulum started to
swing back to its original place in the 19th century.
the threat assumed to come from the presence of the USSR
had considerably weakened in the electronic age.
Additionally, the huge amounts of accumulated capital
called for new policies on an international scale to
raise its profitability prospects. The role of the state
had to be reversed and it was to be confined to its
classical functions. The mixed economy term
disappeared from the literature. The social
responsibility of the state was to be reduced to the
minimum, while markets with their invisible hand, were
to be introduced as substitutes. This was to be the age
of globalization and marketization, driven by new
technological discoveries in telecommunications and
genetics. The economic development literature that
attributed a crucial role to the state in DCs was
shelved and foreign capital was advocated to replace it.
With the collapse of the Berlin Wall (1989) and the
disintegration of the USSR (1991), DCs also were
integrated to the globalization and marketization
movements.
In brief,
the social responsibility of the state over the last two
centuries started first from a minimum then went up to a
maximum and is now in the process of being pushed back
to its original minimum.
b)The Social
Responsibility of the state has varied not only over
time, but it varies also between the advanced and
developing countries. This is primarily because to
perform social functions, governments must be able to
allocate funds for this purpose; if priority in the
allocation of funds is elsewhere, that is in an area
displaying higher social benefits, the strictly social
functions may be delayed for some time. In effect
capital expenditures by the government, in total
budgetary expenditures take up a larger share in most
DCs than in advanced economies. But perhaps more
important is the source of the use of state power and
the mentality or ideology defining the government in
office; it is by and large in the democratic regimes
that social functions come to the fore as the
responsibility of the state. In dictatorial regimes,
usually, the social needs may easily be overlooked. For,
governments, not being elected to take office to use
state power and carrying no direct responsibility to the
electorate, are much less motivated to carry social
responsibilities for the nationals at large. However,
the pro-globalization ideology as well as policies are
now in effect to reduce them everywhere to the minimum,
disrupting the links between democracy and the social
role of the state.
A study of
international indicators, no matter what the underlying
cause my be, reveals wide disparities in this respect
between the advanced and the developing countries:
Whereas in the former government budget expenditures in
the 1990s stood on the average at 45% of GNP, in the
latter category it hardly reached half of this figure;
the difference turns out to be even higher in the case
of social services which cover education, health, social
security, welfare, housing and community amenities, (WB,
Selected World Development Indicators 2000) The
percentage share in GDP of social security expenditures
in the former, for example was around 20% but only 5% in
the latter, on the average, in the same period; not with
standing the pressing social requirements in DCs to be
performed by the state, however, the globalization
movement is sweeping across the board, irrespectively of
the underlying structural set-up.
There is
thus clear evidence to support the argument that the
social responsibility of the state is not a stable
category across time and space, and that it displays
wide variation over both. But, surprisingly, under
globalization the pressure to contract the social
responsibility of the state is no less in the developing
economies than in the advanced countries, where its
overexpansion has become the center of controversies.
At the
theoretical level, however, the social responsibility of
the state is more clearly definable. Social benefit and
social cost concepts may be introduced to indicate its
extent. Both concepts have a coverage that goes beyond
private profitability, to include the overall effects of
investment or other expenditures on GNP and social
welfare at large. We may assume that as such
expenditures expand, the associated social benefits will
decline whereas the related social costs will start to
climb. Where the negatively sloped social benefit curve
intersects with the positively sloped social cost curve,
equilibrium will be struck. At this intersection point
marginal social benefit will be equal to marginal social
cost. This, therefore will be the limit of the social
services supplied, based on the criteria of social
magnitudes. These simple theoretical tools help show
that so long as the former exceeds the latter, there
will be net social gains from increased state social
expenditures whereas net losses will accrue where the
converse is true.
Globalization is now heading for the substitution of
markets, hence the profit criterion, in lieu of net
social benefits. The economic development literature of
the half century between 1930-80 when the social
responsibility of the state came to the fore in the
Western world, taught us one very important lesson;
namely that, due to their structural and institutional
weaknesses, developing economies should rely more on the
criterion of net social benefit in resource allocation
rather that the profit criterion. We may, hence expect
that the approach of globalization to resource
allocation will be inimical to socio-economic
development specifically in the poorer members of the
international community. The protests staged against
globalization definitely rely on firm theoretical
foundations.
II-
Democracy, marketization and globalization
Globalization is proceeding currently on two fronts: at
the political level it is the adoption of democracy, at
the economic level it is marketization that are its
driving forces, assuming that they complement each other
as both are the fruits of the liberal philosophy. But in
a globalizing world where the peoples of high income
advanced economies enjoying high purchasing power meet
in the supposedly free markets, with the low income
peoples of DCs, to what extent will democracy be
substantiated?
First,
democracy is said to be a political regime of the
people, for the people, by the people. It is by and
large in the context of democracy that the social
responsibility of the state can meaningfully be
discussed, as democratically elected governments are
responsible to their nationals, and owe their use of
state power to their votes. In election times, democracy
entitles each person in the electorate to cast one vote,
irrespectively of income and of certain social traits
such as gender, religion, race, ethnicity. Hence, the
majority enjoys the right to vote into office the
political party that will serve its economic as well as
social interests. But, as marketization proceeds, it
takes away whatever social activity of the state is
marketable from the voting power of the individual.
In
developing economies, both marketization and
globalization are externally determined policies,
introduced by governments in times of economic crisis
under the supervision of the IMF and the WB bureaucrats,
as conditions attached to their credits. These
bureaucrats have never been elected by the votes of
developing country electorates nor their policies
endorsed by them; they are policies designed to serve
the enhancement of the profit prospects of the
internationalizing big capital. There is absolutely no
theoretical or practical reason for the overlap of DC
development requirements with such policies. That is,
marketization on one hand takes away the power of the
developing country electorate to vote into office
parties that pledge to fulfil the social functions that
are related directly to the economy; on the other hand
this process is externally determined in their case,
being managed by unelected bureaucrats that enter the
scene in hard times with other purposes underlying their
mandates. As discussed in the following paragraphs,
under globalization, such hard times have become more
frequent and have created more disastrous consequences
than erstwhile. Therefore, at each instance, the
disruption of the basic tenets of democracy becomes more
evident and turns into one of the hottest issues
discussed in the media of the DCs while the government
implementing the mandated policies faces landslide
defeat at the elections. But the case is hopeless, for,
the incoming new government also has to abide by the
same mandates.
Secondly,
free markets are very undemocratic, for, they allocate
economic resources between various economic activities
according to the purchasing power of consumers; the
higher the number of votes cast by consumers, as
determined by their purchasing power, the more the
economic resources that they can divert to their own
requirements and vice versa. The equilibrium price for
example of some food staple, tells us nothing about what
social consequences are taking place in the case of
consumers that remain in the part of the demand curve
below the equilibrium price; at that level, the majority
of the poor may well be going hungry, deprived of the
food staple. Consequently,the further the markets
encroach upon the domain previously considered to be
included within thesocial responsibility of the state,
the less the democratic nature of elected governments.
Finally,
carry this analysis to international markets. Currently,
about 75% of global GNP is controlled by advanced
countries that make up 15% of global population. That
is, to developing economies which make up more than 80%
of global population accrues only 25% of global income,
hence purchasing power. Laisser-faire type of
marketization and globalization, have therefore serious
economic implications that engender undemocratic
consequences: in the global arena, the consumers of
advanced countries enjoy the power to divert the greater
part of global resources to their own requirements,
depriving the poor majority of the resources to meet
their basic needs.
The high
inequality in income distribution observed at thescale
of the globe, does not exist in any individual economy
whether developed or developing; hence the foregoing
argument is no where as valid as it is in the case of
global markets. The anyway undemocratic nature of
markets, added onto the drastic global income inequality
plus the ongoing marketization of the social
responsibility of the state are conducive to the
following argument: Democracy is being transformed into
a virtual one in the age of virtual reality via
marketization and globalization. Therefore, the first
and foremost social responsibility of the state in DCs
is to save democracy by way of fighting against the
encroachment of both of these processes on the social
domain. For, the remaining items coming under its social
responsibility can be meaningful if and only if real
democracy can be instituted. For the people of DCs,one
of the pillars of globalization, namely, marketization,
is destroying the other pillar, namely democratisation,
or transforming democracy into an empty box.
In DCs, it
is not only democracy that becomes virtual, it is also
the state itself that is losing its significance. When
nationals of a country come to realize that markets are
beyond the control of their states and that governments
are unable to implement policies to meet their crushing
economic and social needs, the pertinent questions will
be the following: is this a sovereign state or only a
cosmetic one? In a world where even the judiciary power
of the state, a classical state function, is coming
under the control of international capital and
international organizations,what is really the true
function of the nation state? At the present, with some
advanced countries currently taking over, by their own
decisions, the responsibility to intervene in local
conflicts between poor countries, arent even the
classical functions of the state questioned? That is, it
is not only the social responsibility of the state which
is under attack, but in the developing world its many
classical functions arealso gradually being encroached
upon.
III-
Economic consequences of globalization and the enhanced
requirements for the social responsibility of the state.
Under this
heading, I shall first argue that, in the case of the
developing economies, it is quite difficult to
distinguish the social responsibility of the state from
its economic responsibilities, given the observed
results of globalization. My second argument will be
that globalization introduces or aggravates economic
problems that are conducive to the enhancement ofthe
responsibilities of the state in both the economic and
the social domains. My third argument will be that
globalization, while enhancing the demand for the
increased responsibilities of the state, at the same
time conduces to a reductionin its financial capacity to
produce adequate solutions. Since, however, all the
three arguments are closely intertwined, in the analysis
here below, they will be elaborated upon simultaneously.
a)Economic
development issues
i)First, let
us take up some issues related to economic development.
In the wake of the liberalization of the current and
capital accounts of the balance of payments, competition
between domestic and foreign products plus domestically
produced products of transnational companies has
intensified. But the protection of domestic products via
higher tariffs and / or subsidies is currently at an all
time low level, as called for by the globalization
ideology. The basic tool, in coping with this context,
is raising the efficiency level in the relevant
industries, concomitantly with spurring Research and
Development for the same purpose; this is to be achieved
by raising the general level of educational attainment
as well as labor skills. Here, obviously, the economic,
that is raising the efficiency level, overlaps with the
social, that is providing higher educational attainment
opportunities, a basic social responsibility of the
state. But developing only the latter while ignoring the
former is highly unlikely to be adequate; for, in case
the economy is not growing at a reasonably high rate so
as to provide gainful employment for the educated
population, the end result will be the unemployment of
the surplus over demand. Since learning by doing and on
the job training are the other means of acquiring skills
as formal education in most cases turns out to be
inadequate in this sense, then the aim to raise the
efficiency level will hardly be met.
Additionally, the global demand for highly qualified
labor is extremely high; when enough jobs at
satisfactory wage levels and work conditions cannot be
generated by the market mechanism, the highly qualified
people can easily emigrate to developed countries,
taking away also the capital invested in them. In times
of economic crises when droves of white-collar workers
are laid off, concomitantly with blue-color workers, the
tendency to emigrate becomes a visible phenomenon:
queues before the embassies or consulates of advanced
countries become longer day by day. That is, unless
governments of DCs can ensure constant high growth, the
universally accepted social responsibility of the state
in providing general formal education may only help add
new numbers to the educated but unemployed or emigrant
categories.
Under
globalization conditions, governments in DCs have been
pressured to assign priority to privatization and
liberalization; in the meanwhile, the result has been to
push to the second rank the importance of promoting
economic growth. However, the private sector whether
domestic or foreign, can often reach greater
profitability by speculative games in financial markets;
transnational companies are more interested in buying
local companies, be it public or private, at a pittance
in times of economic crises or investing in the highly
profitable trading activities. This is one of the
reasons why the average annual growth rate of GDP which
attained 4.4% between 1980 and 1990, went down to 2.4%
in the following decade (1990-1999) in the low income
countries. It should be recalled that this latter figure
barely allows a thin margin above the average yearly
population growth rate a similar outcome is observable
in the case of lower middle income countries: the
figures are in their case respectively, 4% and 3.4
percent. (WB, Selected World Development Indicators ,
2000) Similarly, for the research and development
efforts to support private enterprise to raise its
efficiency. If fixed investmentment incentives in
production are lower than profitability rates in
financial games, the results of these efforts may go
unutilized; even the motivation on the part of the
private enterprise to participate in research and
development efforts promoted by
Additionally, the state must be able to
ensure satisfactory economic growth if it is to improve
the great inequalities in income distribution; for, this
can be ameliorated only in the course of economic
development as employment opportunities expand in the
relatively higher value-added sectors and as the better
educated and more skilled workers find the opportunity
to be gainfully employed in such activities. In
stagnating economies and in economic crisis periods,
income distribution inevitably worsens; it is by and
large the majority of the poor that suffer from the
brunt of GNP contraction.
Moreover, as growth rates recede, the
financial capacity of the state to perform social
functions also plummets under increasing marketization
and globalization. Obviously, if the state is to meet
its social responsibilities, it must dispose of adequate
funds to allocate for social purposes. If it is to
maintain its fiscal deficits within acceptable limits,
that is below 3% of GDP, it will have to raise its tax
revenue and keep in check its other expenditures. This
is easier said than done, on account of the expenditure
raising effects engendered by globalization.
Outstanding external debts of DCs, went
up between 1990-98 from $1.5 trillion to $2.5 trillion.
The greater part of this debt is dissociated from
increased domestic fixed investment, hence growth, but
is largely associated with international financial
capital movements: the increased necessity to hold large
gross international reserves, capital-flight, interest
rate arbitrage etc. account for the greater part of the
external debt increase. Note that, also, what is known
to be private debt is under government -guarantee in a
large number of cases. Similarly, in most countries
internal borrowing has supplemented government tax
revenues as monetary expansion has to be curtailed to
keep price increase in check. Additionally, currency
convertibility has entailed a hike in domestic real
interest rates so as to impede capital flight and / or
promote capital inflows. The end result of these three
changes has been to raise the proportion of state funds
allocated to interest payments on domestic and external
debt; that is, globalization via its effects on
government finances, restricts the capacity of the DC
state to render the services associated with its social
responsibility, let alone their enhancement. It has been
statistically proved that more open economies have
bigger governments; this is probably because the
economic and social responsibility of the state is
enhanced to meet the risks introduced by greater
openness. But in the case of DCs, this is seriously
limited, one of the causes being the increasing debt
burden. Turkey is a typical example of the adverse
change in this direction.
Also, under globalization, indirect tax
revenues are anyway pressed downward as taxes on imports
are reduced and export products benefit from tax
redemption, that is, as external trade as a proportion
of GDP climbs upward, the governments indirect tax
revenue from this source tends to go downward. As to
direct taxes, governments have to be careful about
heavily taxing private companies faced with keen
competition from abroad; hence capital tax rates are
kept low so as to keep the companies going. On the other
hand, companies themselves, to keep their profitability
at a satisfactory level in the face of keen competition,
by and large opt for joining the unregistered economy.
In this way they evade not only tax payments but also
premium payments for social security. It is not
surprising that under globalization, DCs have been
witnessing the growth of their unregistered economy;
for, this is one way for keeping their business going in
the face of stiff competititon from abroad.
Here, the contradiction is obvious:
Under globalization, open economies call for bigger
governments with greater social responsibility; but
globalization also introduces such changes in the
expenditure pattern and tax revenues of DC governments
that their capacity finance the expected enhancement of
their social responsibility can hardly be commensurately
enhanced.
b) Financial crises: Globalization
exposes, in particular the so-called emerging markets,
to the vagaries of international markets, hence call for
the enhancement of the social responsibility of the
state if social welfare is to be preserved. Beginning
with the 1980s, the emerging markets have been living
through one economic crisis after another as they
implemented policies to liberalize their goods, services
and capital markets. As the states in DCs ceded their
economic responsibilities to the markets, however, the
frequency of economic crises increased while corruption
and social financial turmoil became pervasive. Crises
are periods with dire consequences for both small
businesses and workers as well as for the banking system
and some large enterprises. Bankruptcies, in particular
of small trading and manufacturing firms, contraction of
output in others that succeed to remain alive, lead to
hikes in the unemployment rate with serious social
consequences, such as the hike in suicides, homicides,
increased violence in the family and in the society at
large. That is, an economic disaster results in serious
social issues that enhance the social responsibility of
the state. But crises also introduce drastic drops in
the financial capacity of DC governments to cope with
the exploding social issues.
A financial
crisis reveals itself with crucial changes in such key
prices as the interest and the foreign exchange rates,
as well as the stock values in the capital market: the
first two prices hike while the third plummet. Thus, in
terms of domestic currency, the burden of external debt
payments (yearly interest plus installment) increases in
direct proportion to the rate of devaluation of the
domestic currency. This is paralleled by increased
interest payments on domestic debt. The result is to
push up government transfer expenditures in the budget.
To meet this increase, if the government borrows in the
domestic market, it will have to do it at the going
skyrocketing interest rates; if it tries to borrow in
the international market, its position will not be much
better as international lenders will incorporate their
higher risks in the interest rate. In the course of
privatization, as the shares of state enterprises are
floated in the capitalmarket, the government will be
faced with lower revenues from the sale of its shares.
This shows only one aspect of the diverging changes
between government expenditures and revenues in crisis
periods.
Secondly,
bankruptcies in the private sector, in particular bank
failures, aggravate the indicated divergence as tax
revenues are constrained thereby.The government,
additionally, has to honor its guarantees with respect
to bank loans given by external creditors or bank
deposits in cases where it has made such commitments.
Note that in DCs where economic crises and the
consequent bank failures are frequent, the governments
are pressured to make such commitments so as to maintain
the smooth functioning of the financial system. The
outcome is, obviously, an increased financial burden for
the government, hence a further expansion in non-social
expenditures that are also conducive to income
redistributing and distorting effects. Such expenditures
are manifold, depending on the institutional structure
and the perception of thedegree of riskiness by lenders
of the developing economy. This shows that, the extent
of the expansion in governmentexpenditures is likely to
vary widely over time and space. But one outcome is
certain: as the incidence of crises increases, so will
the crisis related expenditures, drastically contracting
the funds available for social purposes and distorting
income distribution.
But, periods
of economic crises also considerably enhance the social
responsibility of the state. This is primarily related
to lay offs of blue and white collar workers from the
industrial sector, and the adversely changing terms of
trade for the agricultural sector. Additionally, intense
social turmoil, and political upheavals are never absent
from the scene in such periods of falling living
standards for the masses. But the governments financial
capacity is constrained since tax revenues drop in real
terms as output and employment drop,internal and
external finance can be provided at increasing real
costs; and since monetary expansion is held in check to
control inflationary tendencies.
Governments,
in such hard times often resort to the IMF for fresh
funds, usually extended so that external financial
commitments may be duly honored. The higher the amount
of the funds received the heavier the conditions
attached to the loan; conditions are by and large
related to the further liberalization of the economy,
privatization of the major public companies and the
reduction to the minimum of the social expenditures of
the state. This is also conducive to the curtailment of
the social responsibility of the state in providing
financial support to the agricultural producers
suffering from adverse terms of trade, to the unemployed
or improverished families as privatization proceeds,
together with real drops in payments to government
employees, workers and pensioners. That is , the
governments financial constraints become a source of
the improverishment of the labor force working for the
public sector. This, obviously, aggravates the worsening
unemployment and underemployment rates in the private
sector of the economy. In brief, in crisis periods when
the social responsibility of the state should be
enhanced, not only is its financial capacity limited to
meet requirements, but also, there are institutional
constraints related to the IMF conditions, in cases
where the government resorts to the IMF for financial
support.
It should be
noted that, as the ratio of imports and exports in GNP
or the ratio of foreign capital in domestic capital
increases under the effects of marketization and
globalization, the degree of effectiveness of financial
crises increases in direct proportion. In advanced open
economies, it is the social responsibility of the state
in such periods to provide social protection by raising
expenditures for social purposes. In DCs, as discussed
above, the picture is quite different and leads to the
aggravation of the social consequences of economic
disasters.
IV -
What is to be done?
Although I
abstained from going into discussing a crucial
socio-political problem that affects adversely
government finances, it is in order at this point to
tackle this issue briefly. The problem I have in mind is
corruption, a social illness that seems to have exploded
over the last two decades, parallel to the deepening of
marketization, privatization and globalization. Why such
a parallel movement has mushroomed or how corruption can
be avoided are topics beyond the coverage of this paper
or the expertise of its writer. But,
definitely,corruption has to be eradicated from the
political arena and its avoidance will help enhance the
financial capacity of DC states to allocate larger sums
to meet its social responsibilities.
The second
point concerns the control to be administered over
international financial flows. This may be done on a
national scale, as Mahathir did in Malaysia following
the Asian Crisis that burst out in 1997, or as Putins
Russia has been doing in the wake of the 1998 crisis.
Note also that both abstained from resorting to the IMF
for signing a stand-by agreement; both, however, enjoy
some administrative as well as economic capabilities
that most DC governments are deprived of. It is
preferable that such controls be devised and implemented
at the international level. The so-called Tobin tax,
proposed to be levied on international financial flows
by governments, represents an international attempt in
this direction. It will not only help rein those flows
but will also yield an enormous tax revenue at the
international level at the disposal of the Third World.
Third, the
pressure exercised on DCs via the advanced country
governments, by manipulating the international financial
institutions, to further marketize, privatize and
globalize should be reduced. Historically, aside from
Britain, neither any of the Western countries (Germany,
the USA, France etc.) nor Japan industrialized under the
conditions expected of the DCs in the era of
globalization. The state, in their case, currently,
fulfils both economic and social responsibilities for
enhancing social welfare; it also gives strong support
to its internationalized capital in restructuring the
world economy to enhance their profitability. The sole
purpose of the drive to marketize and globalize
originates in the expected benefits to accrue to
advanced economies. But, in contrast, the DCs are
seriously suffering from the consequences of
marketization and globalizationpolicies in terms of the
drop in GNP growth rateand as the economy is frequently
buffeted by economic crises. In DCs, the first and
foremost social responsibility of the state is to see
that in the framework of democracy social welfare is
enhanced over time and that this is evenly distributed.
But under the pressure coming from the advanced
countries, this responsibility comes to be completely
ignored, to cede its place to other priorities.
Four,
formation of regional economic blocks with regional
banks set up by DCs, a movement already in process,
should be diffused to the whole of the Third World.
Actually, the Third World countries should institute an
international forum themselves, for themselves to
discuss their common economic and socialissues related
to marketization and globalization pressures so as to
produce common solutions. Their motivation to act in
unison has proved to be rather low up till now. The
presence of such a forum will also help invoke some
democratic color to international relations, currently
manipulated by the most advanced states to serve the
profit accounts of their international companies.
Obviously, underdevelopment has features that lead to a
quiet obedience to the patronage of the advanced states.
If the first and foremost social responsibility of the
state is conceded to be the institution of democracy at
the national level, this has to be completed by this
international enterprise; for, as discussed in this
paper. without the latter, the former is likely to
remain as a lame luck.
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