|
||
TWN
Info Service on Finance and Development (Apr15/04) Dear Friends and Colleagues, We are please to share with you the analysis below from the Global Policy Watch 2015 series published by Social Watch and Global Policy Forum (globalpolicywatch.org)
With best wishes,
Getting the right balance between public and private sector roles and responsibilities in the Financing for Development and Post-2015 process will be fundamental to prospects for sustainable, inclusive development. Yet early evidence suggests this balance is already awry, skewed far in favour of private interests. Are we seeing a process of outsourcing the international agenda? There’s no question that businesses around the world are sources of growth and employment. But they are also the source of the most serious threats to sustainable development—from pollution to illicit financial flows that undermine prospects for public resources. Can we have a transformative development agenda without the transformation of business? Is it time for a new model of business fully grounded in sustainability and inclusion as inherent, not optional, operating principles? Just
more business as usual? What was discussed instead? One speaker stressed that risks are not as great in many developing countries as many investors think, and that in fact more money can be made there than in rich countries. A representative from the fertilizer industry made multiple interventions, without anyone pointing out the huge environmental and social costs from these products—or that even mainstream commercial farmers have started to see the merits of fertilizer-free approaches to managing the soil. What’s
the zero draft of FfD3 got to say about it? But what track record do businesses really have in being part of the solution where that is not a mandated and enforced requirement? Especially on the systemic, broad scale required for sustainable development? What’s the incentive for the world’s 200 largest corporations, whose combined sales now exceed the size of the economies of 182 countries, to exert their enormous power and influence in any way beyond maintaining the status quo, which has delivered so many benefits to them? The zero draft avoids any strong references to one area where the private sector could be encouraged in many developing countries. That involves the kind of industrialization that provides decent, well-paying jobs, while respecting human rights and environmental limits. This process restructures and diversifies economies, so countries rise above dependence on relatively low-return, volatile activities such as agricultural commodities. Many of today’s rich countries pursued industrial policies that allowed them to take this path. But these are nearly impossible under the current trade and investment regimes, which are dominated by already wealthy countries and corporations. Poorer countries in particular have little chance of entering the global economy in a way that propels domestic industries—and decent jobs. Medicines
for whom? Whose
incentives? Does all this imply that the incentive structure only operates in one direction? Is there an assumption that we should have less confidence in the aptitude of the public sector, so therefore it must do more to operate on business terms? Even when those might be the same terms that have led to the current highly inequitable, unsustainable patterns of development? Why is it appropriate to insist on targets for public financing in the form of Southern development assistance, as has happened during the first round of formal FfD3 negotiations this week, but claim that using targets to control remittance costs for people mostly at the low end of the employment chain will unnecessarily interfere with market mechanisms? We can talk, as speakers at the business hearings did, about “piercing” the sovereign credit rating (set by private agencies) with well-structured projects (by public institutions making themselves attractive to private investors) and that will attract investments (back to the private sector). Since public and private incentives are currently so poorly aligned, it is hard to imagine how public entities operating more and more along private lines will keep up with their primary public responsibilities, including as the main duty bearers for protecting sustainability, inclusiveness and human rights. But at what point should projects vital to human and environmental well-being happen regardless of a business take on the issue? Whose
social contract? Sustainable development is a concept that recognizes relationships, between people and planet; among economic, social and environment; across different countries with their full spectrum of different capacities and responsibilities. It is, in a sense, a kind of social contract, grounded in indivisible human rights, that delivers for everyone alive today, with full consideration for generations to come. Yet many businesses, encouraged by years of deregulation, think of themselves as existing outside this social contract. Or as able to select the parts useful to them—such as through deliberate strategies to reduce tax bills even as they are underpaying workers who then have to rely on social protection schemes paid for by taxation. As a privileged group, they are able to set their own norms, mostly related to their own survival and profitability, and expect the public sector not to stand in the way. Large transnationals have pushed this approach so far that some governments at the United Nations have called for a legally binding framework to regulate them and provide appropriate protection, justice and remedy to victims of human rights abuses. A social contract with gaping exemptions or exclusions is bound to collapse. Many businesses might agree that a contract is binding, not optional. It must be upheld and enforced, and there can be no picking and choosing—no exceptions. What’s Happening Next Post-2015 negotiations
FfD3 negotiations
—UN Sustainable Development Knowledge Platform —Financing for Development III: official website Global Policy Watch 2015 | licensed CC-BY 3.0 by Social Watch and Global Policy Forum
|