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G20
doesn't offer much reform
Despite the hype, the
final communique of the Pittsburgh G20 summit in September only confirmed
that reform at the top of the international economic system is still
a long way off, says Mark Weisbrot.
'THE old system of
international economic cooperation is over,' announced UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the G20 summit
in Pittsburgh.
'The new system, as of today, has begun.'
The first part of that
statement is partly true (see below). The second is a fantasy.
The G20 is not a system
of international economic cooperation, or a board of directors, or a
governing council for the global economy, to pick some of the terms
that have appeared˙ in the media. It is a forum where the heads of state
of 20 economies discuss some of the important economic issues. It has
very little ability to directly implement decisions.
The institutions that
do have economic enforcement capability are the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and World Trade Organisation (WTO). These
first two are directly controlled by the rich countries, mostly by the
United States Treasury Department. The third organisation that actually
makes decisions that affect hundreds of millions (or billions) of people,
the WTO, is not so completely controlled by the US and a few rich countries
as the others are, since it was formed half a century later. Developing
countries have a formal veto power in decision-making. However, it is
still dominated by the rich countries, and most importantly, its rules
are heavily stacked against developing countries and in favour of the
rich countries - and especially rich-country corporations. For example,
the WTO's TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights)
Agreement is unequivocally designed to extract more money from throughout
the world for corporate patent holders such as the big pharmaceutical
companies.
These facts help put
the G20 in context. First, the expansion from the G8 to the G20 is mostly
a symbolic move. Since the rich countries control the institutions with
actual power - in addition to their own enormous international economic,
military and diplomatic influence - the G20 is still mainly the G7 with
the other 13 countries sitting in. (I am counting the G8 member Russia with the other middle-income
countries. The rich countries have still not even allowed Russia to join the World Trade Organisation.)
Furthermore, the new,
augmented G7 is not even as much of a decision-making body as it was
a quarter-century ago. For example, in 1985 five of the G7 countries
(the US, France, UK,
Germany, and Japan)
agreed on the Plaza Accord to bring down the value of the dollar. This
was accomplished through coordinated intervention by central banks.
The dollar lost more than a third of its value during the next two years.
Today the dollar is
even more overvalued and as a result we have large global imbalances
that the G20, in their final statement at Pittsburgh, pledged to rectify. However, do
not expect them to do anything about it.
For now, the United
States government does not even have
a logically coherent position on this issue. Treasury Secretary Tim
Geithner says we want a 'strong dollar'. At the same time, our government
complains that China
is keeping its currency undervalued. These two statements are logically
contradictory, since an undervalued Chinese currency is the same thing
as a 'strong dollar'. And without a fall in the value of the dollar
- not only against the Chinese currency but others as well - we cannot
expect the global trade imbalances to be corrected. (The US trade deficit has fallen by more
than half since this recession started, but this will be reversed when
the economy recovers.)
A solution to this
problem would also require the G7 to accept China as an equal partner, something
they do not appear willing to do. China's economy is now the third largest
in the world (or second largest, depending on how its currency is converted).
'Pro-cyclical' IMF policies
The IMF is the most
powerful of the institutions controlled by the US and
its rich allies, and currently has about 50 agreements with low- and
middle-income countries. In the vast majority of these agreements it
has prescribed 'pro-cyclical' policies such as budget cuts and monetary
tightening that worsen the impact of the world recession. For many years
developing countries have demanded a greater voting share in the organisation,
but the tiny (1.8%) reallocation in 2006 was insignificant. At the Pittsburgh summit the leaders
pledged to reallocate 5% of voting shares from over-represented to under-represented
countries. It is not clear that this will actually happen. The European
governments were reportedly upset at giving up some of their influence,
even though they have almost never gone against the US at
the Fund in the last 65 years. But even if 5% is shifted, this will
not change the balance of power. The United
States, with its 17% share, will be
able to veto important decisions that require 85%; and together with
allies, will have a majority for almost anything it wants.
Most of the other issues
that the G20 included in its final communique at Pittsburgh
are either inadequate or would have to be implemented at the level of
the individual countries. This includes badly needed financial reform
- the rich countries just can't seem to say the words 'too big to fail
is too big' - and economic stimulus. And for the poor countries, where
the recession has pushed tens of millions of people closer to the edge
of survival - the G7 countries have yet to offer any significant debt
relief. Loans are better than nothing, although even these will offer
only a small fraction of the capital inflows that poor countries have
lost due to the world recession that the rich countries have caused.
But most of the poor countries have too much debt already, and can't
afford to take on more.
Reform at the top of
the international economic system is still a long way off.
Mark Weisbrot is
co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington,
DC. He received his PhD in economics from the University
of Michigan. He
is co-author, with Dean Baker, of Social Security: The Phony Crisis
(University of Chicago Press, 2000), and has written numerous
research papers on economic policy. He is also president of Just Foreign
Policy. This article first appeared on the website of the Guardian,
www.guardian.co.uk.
*Third
World Resurgence
No. 228/229, August-September 2009, pp 12-13
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