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14th International Symposium
Recife, Brazil, July 25-29, 2005
Social needs, global solutions: creative approaches for
social development
Keynote address given by
Ana Elizabete Mota
I would like to welcome all of you to the
International Inter-University Consortium and Social
Development - IUCISD – held in Recife. This is the 14th
Symposium, uniting researchers, professors, students,
and professionals from the field of Social Work all from
various countries and continents. I would like to
congratulate the co-chairs, Ana Cristina Vieira and
Julie Miller-Cribbs, as well as the members of the
organizing committee for the work they performed.
I am grateful for the recognition and
confidence shown to me by my colleagues at the Federal
University of Pernambuco. I feel honored to be able to
present the theories and policies of the Brazilian Social
Welfare System. It is a system of ethical-political and
professional components which emphasizes the concept of
political and human emancipation in Brazil, together with
the rest of the world.
The theme of my talk is
identical to the theme of this of this conference local
needs, Global Solutions: Creative Approaches to social
development.
I begin my talk by making reference to the
most notable of modern thinkers, Karl Marx, who when he
referred to the need to critically understand the
bourgeoisie society, affirmed that reality is a synthesis
of multiple determinations, and that only by understanding
the movement of what is real, can we reproduce it in the
field of ideas – the expression of concrete thinking – the
movement of reality.
Following this, I will discuss social needs
and global solutions from the perspective of social
totality, using economic movements and the reproduction
processes within the social relations for production,
incarnated by political, cultural, and ideological
dynamics that permeate State actions and large scale
financial capital in the 21st Century.
I will focus on the emergence of social
needs through contemporary capitalism, where economic
initiatives and political decisions reveal globally
constructed conflicts, in an environment marked
attacks by the transnational financial bourgeoisie,
and by the resistance of the classes that “work
for a living”.
I will also discuss the possibilities and
limits of adopting social development as a theoretical and
political option; a base for a strategy designed to
confront current social inequalities.
I refer to social needs as a combination of
economic, social, environmental and cultural deprivations
that are collective in nature and related to the process
of impoverishment that results from the accumulation of
wealth. My definition goes beyond the idea of biological,
natural, or basic needs, dealing instead with a
social-historic process.
Social inequality is inherent to the
development of capitalism and this inequality results in
thousands of people at the fringes of productive society.
The method of producing, distributing and accumulating
material goods and wealth is historic and results from the
actions of men and women who continue to reproduce the
social “relations”.
Men and women make history, but they continue to be
governed by certain conditions and relations.
More than ever, the contrast between
poverty and the dizzying growth of wealth is frightening.
The scope of social inequalities can be seen
statistically. Only 20% of the world population has 82.7%
of the combined income and the poorest 60% of the world
population, must divide among themselves a meager 5.6% of
the wealth produced on the planet.
This is not to deny civilizing conquests,
or the progress reached through development of science and
new modes of living, but to emphasize that the concurrent
impoverishment of workers has been one of the side effects
of such progress.
In the course of this historic development
of capitalism, it is important to note that in contrast to
primitive communism, when the production of necessary
goods for living was based on sexual segregation in the
workplace, in the collective ownership of land, work
tools, and in the collective rewards of the products from
their work – capitalist production is based on the
socialization of work and in the privatization of wealth.
As the employer-employee relationship became formed, the
phenomenon of impoverishment began to appear. This is
responsible for the appearance of poverty as a “social
concern”.
Made public in the 19th Century with the
emergence of the working classes, the ‘social concern’ was
a determinate for the emergence of the working classes,
social problems and social needs emerged as the
degradation of working conditions for the fieldworkers and
craftspeople became unable to support themselves. These
workers then needed to sell the only good that they
possessed: the force of their labor.
Since historically the number of available
workers was always greater than could be absorbed by
industry, those left out remained excluded from the
workforce, forming a
relative super population, which in early
capitalism was the object of repressive social policy, or
from charitable actions of the wealthy and the Roman
Catholic Church.
Therefore, in the 19th Century, the root of
the question destined to defy the 21st Century had
surfaced. Evidence in the 19th Century: the undeniable
tendency for exclusion in the production
process denial of access to material goods and socially
produced culture.
What differentiates the previous situation
from the current problem is the expansive horizon of
capitalism and the
generalization of wage earning society and
welfare. This is in opposition to the expansion of
financial capital and in detriment to production, and
neo-liberal policies that retract the social
responsibilities of the state.
In summary: during the period of expansion,
the State mediated capitalistic accumulation with social
intervention; today, it is a financing agent, delegating
the responsibility of finding “creative” methods of social
inclusion, putting the burden on social organizations and
society.
The concept of a relative super
population demonstrates its vigor for being able to
contest what some refer to as the new poverty. In truth,
we can observe new manifestations of the phenomenon of
poverty, but the real core and center of the concept – the
movement that generates the leftovers of capitalism –
present themselves with the same logic from the 19th
Century.
The emergence of large scale industry and
an urban-industrial society also created an environment
where workers organized themselves and politicized their
needs and shortages, transforming them into public and
collective concerns. As a result of these social
struggles, some needs of the workers and their families
begin to be recognized by the State, prompting social
legislation and policies of social protection. These
public responses to the social needs of the working
classes spawned the development of the “Welfare
State” that became prominent during the 20th Century, and
was seen as a victory for the social movements worldwide.
The combining of social workers´ rights and
the offering of public Social Welfare were responsible for
legitimizing the importance of worker protection and
generated the appearance of ideologies that where the
possibility of combining capitalism, well being, and
democracy emerged.
As long as the central countries live in
full employment and the expansion of security, continued
rapid growth in social development, the periphery of the
world will see modernization and development as a means of
integrating these countries into the world economic order.
The full incorporation of peripheral
economies into the amplified process of capital
enhancement came about in the 70´s when underdeveloped
countries were transformed into vehicles of production and
for the absorption of investment capital. The role of
inducing economic development was delegated to the state
and social concerns were put aside. The need to form a
productive base integrated into the needs of the
international oligarchies, gave origin to the extreme
external indebtedness necessary to fund this expansion.
This situation lasted until the 80´s when the foreign debt
crisis appeared, obligating countries to export capital
for the payment of loans. It was not by accident that, in
such a period, the capitalistic world showed indications
of the appearance of a new world crisis of accumulation
and obligated the developed countries to redefine their
strategies of accumulation.
Even if superficial, the efforts made to
point out the relation between the developed center and
the periphery showed evidence of the inequality under
which this process materialized. Special attention should
be given to the existence of the Welfare State in the
periphery. Just as an example, in the Brazilian case, it
was only in 1988 that formal
bases and constitutions were instituted for what
could be called a Well Being, or Welfare State. The
conditions which allowed for integration into the world
economic order resulted – in the beginning of the 80´s –
in its subordination to the imperatives of neoliberal
thinking, marked by the retraction of the public policies
of social protection, effecting a profound regression in
the exercise of rights, and in the universalization of
Brazilian Social Security.
The picture drawn by the crisis of the 70´s
that spread to the peripheral countries in the 80´s caused
a redefinition/amplification of this social concern. Those
who lived from their work came to confront three concerns
severely limiting their mode of being and living:
structural unemployment and the crisis
of wage labor. Disintegration of the welfare state and
suppression of social rights and fragmentation of the
needs and political organization of the workers.
Capitalistic restoration had implications
in the restructuring of mechanisms for accumulation as
well as in the redefinition of ideo-political mechanisms
necessary for the formation of new and more efficient
hegemonic consensus. Elaborated by the neoliberal
offensive, the social action of the State retreated and
this pulverized the ability to meet the social needs of
workers and limited the social responsibility of the State
to public security, to action as controller, and to the
attendance of only those absolutely unable to produce.
More than an economic crisis emerged.
Conditions appeared for an organic crisis, marked by the
loss of references installed under the paradigm of Fordism,
of the Welfare State, of the great union and partisan
movements, and the vengeance of actual socialism.
Conditions affecting combativeness of the operator
movement were exposed, playing a part from that point on
which is considered to be much more defensive than
offensive in social struggles.
Qualified by many as a period in which
workers lost their center, or a period in which capitalism
was no longer afraid, the years following the decade of
the 80´s are a stage for the process of capitalistic
restructuring centered on two movements. The redefinition
of the economic-world bases through productive
restructuring and changes in the work world. The ideo-political
offensive necessary for the construction of the
hegemony of large scale capital, evidenced in the
emergence of a new imperialism and a new phase of
capitalism that was marked by the dominance of
accumulation of earnings.
In the new
imperialism, hegemony has been exercised by the United
States through means of strategies combining coercion and
consensus. The U.S. exercises a style of world government
that cites the ideology of its opposition in an attempt to
affirm its own ideology as universal.
In opposition to the expanded accumulation
of wealth marking the first half of the 20th Century, what
is in the process of consolidation is really the
accumulation of plunder under the command of rich
countries and their material accumulations. The primary
vehicle for this robbery has been the forced opening of
markets all over the world and institutional pressures
exerted by the IMF and WTO.
This process covers everything from the
patenting of genetic research, passing through the
marketing of nature, to the right to pollute, the
privatization of public goods and the transformation of
public services into businesses, occurring in the fields
of health, social security, and education.
Another result of the growth of industries
manufacturing disposable items is the degradation of the
environment – creating a society of rubble and throwaways.
Merchandising of the production sphere is
also one of the new features of this current phase and is
echoed in two aspects. The expropriation and marketing of
domestic and non commercial private activities (home care
and social caretakers for example). The super
exploitation of families, particularly women, in
peripheral countries, assuming a combination of duties as
part of their domestic activities that truthfully should
be public and state responsibilities.
Substantive changes can also be found in
the work environment: from older forms of labor such as
piecework, working at home, etc.; to the institution of
new work processes, externalizing and
de-territorializing part of the productive cycle,
or building new modes of cooperation included and adjusted
in the same productive process, activities involving
high-tech, super specialization and absolute precision.
Environmental degradation and lack of socially responsible
production occurs in peripheral countries: who end up
conducting most of the dirty and dangerous work that rich
countries need done.
These changes, through use of new
technologies and by redefinition of the space/time and
territorial dimensions, live together with growth of
unemployment and with situations of misery and indigence,
revising – by means of new configurations – the growth of
a superfluous population of the useless and unassociated,
as approached at the beginning of this conference.
Important to the victory of capitalism is
the assurance of the reproduction of this process passes
through reform of the State and a redefinition of
strategies that are formed from new cultures and
socialization are important elements in the victory of
capitalism.
Strictly speaking, social and moral reform
focuses on attending to the social needs without breaking
with the accumulation and distribution of earnings,
expressed in some of the principals and directives (as in
the case of relieving the State of some responsibility),
and the further division of this responsibility with the
rest of society when addressing concerns regarding hunger,
unemployment, and environmental degradation.
Assisted by possessive individualism and by
the naturalization of the marketing of life, the object of
that social reform, among other things, is to transform
the subject-citizen into a consumer-citizen; the worker in
his job; the unemployed client in social assistance, the
working class in partners with the great businesses; and
the communities in local development cells (incubators),
surging to form a solidary and cooperative society.
The results of this fragmentation is the
proliferation of social movements “indifferent” from the
political point of view, and directed towards attending to
personal and/or local needs, in general connected to the
problem of consumer access. This can be considered as one
of the consequences of the globalization process. At the
same time that it manages to join together and articulate
capital from all over the world, it fragments the
identities and needs of those who survive from their own
labor.
It is faced with this picture that I wish
to reflect on the concept of social development as a
strategy for confronting social needs and the phenomenon
of globalized impoverishment.
In a strict sense, approaches
for social development can be outlined around theories of
modernization and dependence, although both deal with
economic development. Whatever the approach is, it becomes
necessary to point out that the policies directed towards
development, particularly in countries peripheral to the
world economic system, do not experience same effects in
confronting hunger, misery, illiteracy, violence, moral
degradation, and the exhaustion of natural resources.
Nevertheless, what we have at
the moment is a new social development theory designated
as being self sustaining and local, supposedly breaking
with economic conditionalities. No longer a consequence of
economic development, but another model that can be seen
as a strategy for confronting social concerns postulated
by the Sustainable Development Commission of the UN, which
defends the implementation of measures established at the
R+10 Conference through the formation of a virtuous cycle
of sustainable development constituted from intelligent
investments, the social responsibility of companies,
generation of jobs, increased wages for the local
population, increased tax collection, generation of
wealth, and the protection of biodiversity.
It is strengthened by the so-called new
social movements such as environmentalism, feminism,
anti-globalization, and the battle against world hunger,
in eco-environmental as well as sustained development.
All share as a premise, the idea that attention to present
needs should not compromise future needs and should be
based on sustained growth, directed always towards human
and social needs, not just accumulation.
Concerns arise regarding the ability of
this proposal to coexist with the permanence, and the
tendencies coming from the process of globalization of
investment capital and the paradox between global and
local needs. If the location constituted is the space for
articulation and implementation of actions directed
towards social development, sustainability cannot be
guaranteed when faced with the needs of large scale
capital. Can a community of workers who depend on fishing,
or those surviving on family farms confront the
construction of dams, the redirection of rivers, and the
amplification of mega projects funded by foreign
investment capital?
If social development is considered as a
method of only temporarily confronting the emergence of
poverty in the short and medium terms, at least some
benefits are brought to poor populations. If the strategy
is one of overcoming poverty, it would certainly conflict
with the territorial and capitalistic logic in power. The
first refers to the State and the second to the individual
capitalist. It is enough to think that faced with whatever
political uncertainty, capital flees from the periphery!
What is the purpose of risco país (published
comparative ratings of each country’s investment risk
potential)? Why alert them and submit State decisions to
the economic interests of the transnationals?
With this in mind I ask: in what condition
can social development confront the destructive logic of
capital?
The only response I have at the moment, and
one that I leave for reflection with this audience; is
that neither economic development, nor social development
are configured as weapons for the eradication of poverty
and inequality. Only the construction of another society
based on total human development can politically and
humanly emancipate men and women on the path to barbarism.
It will only be possible if social movements have the
force to resist the barbarism already installed, and
modify the relations of current forces, promoting
construction of another world; one capable of overcoming
capitalism. From my point of view, social workers from all
over the world should position themselves in service to
this proposal. Thank you very much.
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