{ brad brace } on Wed, 23 Jul 1997 19:30:46 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> corporate agenda |
>The following came to me via E-mail and I am passing it along: > > >THE UNITED NATION AND THE CORPORATE AGENDA >by David C. Korten > >It was a true power lunch of lobster and an exotic mushroom salad >held in a private dining room at the United Nations on June 24, >1997. Thirty seven invited participants were co-hosted by >Ambassador Razali Ismail, President of the UN General Assembly, >and Mr. Bjorn Stigson, Executive Director of the World Business >Council on Sustainable Development (WBCSD) to examine steps >toward establishing terms of reference for business sector >participation in the policy setting process of the UN and >partnering in the uses of UN development assistance funds. The >players in the meeting were 15 high level representatives of >government, including three heads of state, the Secretary General >of the UN, the Administrator of UNDP, and the UN Under Secretary >General responsible for presiding over the UN Commission on >Sustainable Development, the Secretary General of the >International Chamber of Commerice, 10 CEOs of transnational >corporations. The CEOs were mostly members of the WBCSD, a >council of transnational corporations (TNCs) originally organized >by Stephan Schmidheiny and Maurice Strong to represent the >interests of global corporations at the United Nations Conference >on Environment and Development in Rio in 1992. > > In a limited gesture toward transparency and >multi-stakeholder participation, two "academics" and two NGOs >were invited to observe. The academics were Jonathan Lash of >World Resources Institute and myself. Chee Yoke Ling of the Third >World Network and Victoria "Vicki" Tauli-Corpuz of the Indigenous >Peoples' Network, Philippines were the NGO participants. > > The meeting's outcome was preordained. It closed with >Ambassador Razali, President of the General Assembly, announcing >that a framework for the involvement of the corporate sector in >UN decision making would be worked out under the auspices of the >Commission on Sustainable Development. > > Listening to the presentations by the governmental and >corporate representatives left me rather deeply shaken, as it >revealed the extent to which most of the messages the world's >NGOs have been attempting to communicate to the UN and its >governmental members at UNCED and the other UN conferences have >fallen on deaf ears. On the positive side, Mr. Thorbejoern >Jagland, the Prime Minister of Norway, called for a tax shift to >place the burden of taxation on environmentally damaging >consumption. Both Ms. Clare Short, Secretary of State for >International Development of the United Kingdom and Mrs. Margaret >De Boer, Minister of Environment for the Netherlands, called for >giving high priority to ending poverty. > > Ms. Chee Yoke Ling of the Third World Network, the only >non-corporate stakeholder voice given the floor, spoke eloquently >of the growing concentration of wealth being created by the >corporate sector and of the corporate commitment to the >unattainable agenda of creating a universal consumer society. She >observed that there are not enough resources in the world for >everyone to live even at the current level of consumption of the >average Malaysian, let alone the level of the United States or >Europe. She further noted that people are becoming increasingly >cynical about the professed corporate commitment to >sustainability given that in corporate dominated forums such as >World Trade Organization (WTO) they talk only of the rights of >corporations and nothing of their obligations. > > >Such moments of enlightenment were the exception. On the less >enlightened side, we were treated to the views of Mr. Samuel >Hinds, the President of Guyana. He was the only speaker to take >any note of Chee Yoke Ling's comments and he dismissed out of >hand. Indeed, he accused NGOs of causing popular unrest by trying >to postpone in the name of environmental protection the >development that people so desperately want. Besides, he pointed >out, if he does not cut down his country's forests someone might >grow marijuana in them. > > The United States sent Larry Summers, Deputy Secretary of >the Treasury as its representative to the luncheon. The Clinton >administration could hardly have sent a clearer message as to how >it views the trade-off between its commitment to sustainability >and its commitment to its corporate clients. Summers is the >former Chief Economist of the World Bank who gained public fame >for advocating the shipping of more toxic wastes to low income >countries because people there die early anyway and they have >less income earning potential so their lives are less valuable. >Summers treated the luncheon guests to a litany of neoliberal >platitudes. He praised privatization, noting that people take >better care of their homes when they own them, implying that >environmental resources will be better cared for when they are >all privately owned by the corporate sector. He assured us that >economic growth leads the way to creating both the will and the >means to deal with the environment. In other words, he believes >that the more a person consumes the more careful that person will >be of the environment. And he noted that by attracting private >foreign capital to build bridges and roads on a fee for use >basis, the receiving countries will eliminate their need to use >scarce public funds for physical infrastructure. He might well >have noted as a further advantage that the private toll roads and >bridges will be less congested than open public facilities as >fees will exclude their use by the poor. > > Mr. Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the UN, gave the >corporate CEOs a warm welcome with his message that he sees >opportunities for the private sector and the UN cooperating at >many levels. He referred to the Rio meeting as an example of >where the private sector participated in setting the standards >rather than the UN or government imposing them. He of course made >no mention that corporate participation in Rio helped assure that >few standards were actually set and that even fewer have been >met. He called on the private sector to come up with alternative >energy sources for the poor so they "don't have to cut down every >tree in sight," while making no mention of the corporations that >are strip mining the world's forests. He praised UNDP for its >role in preparing the way for private investment to come into >Third World countries and called on governments to provide >incentives to move business in this directionin short he is >firmly committed to using UN and other public funds to subsidize >the corporate buy-out of Third World economies. > > Gus Speth, the Administration of UNDP, said that the best >hope for the 3 billion people in the world who live on less than >$2 a day is to bring them into the market by redirecting more >private investment flows to low income countries. UNDP is >apparently facilitating this process by giving priority to using >its limited funds to "leverage," read "subsidize," private >foreign investment. He mentioned that peace and justice will >require a particular kind of development, but did not elaborate >as to what kind that might be. > > Underlying the words of everyone who was allowed to >speak, with the sole exception of NGO spokesperson Chee Yoke >Ling, was an embrace of the neoliberal logic of market >deregulation and economic globalization. According to the >prevailing official wisdom, economic globalization and the >economic dominance of corporations are irreversible realities to >which we must simply adapt. Since global corporations have the >money and the power, any viable approach to dealing with poverty >and the environment must center on providing market incentives >(read public subsidies) that will make it profitable for them to >invest in job creation and environmentally friendly technologies. >Thus it follows, by the twisted official logic, that corporations >need to be brought in as partners in public decision process to >assure that the resulting policies will be responsive to their >needs. If any speaker other than Chee Yoke Ling saw any problem >in giving over ever more power to global corporations, they >revealed no hint of it at this power luncheon. > > The underlying commitment to the use of public resources >to advance unrestrained global corporate expansion brought to >mind the central message of a book that first appeared in 1980 >written by Bertram Gross titled FRIENDLY FASCISM: THE NEW FACE OF >POWER IN AMERICA. Gross looked beyond the familiar racism, hatred >and brutal authoritarian rule associated with the practice of >fascism to describe the institutional structure of fascist >regimes. Herein he revealed a nasty little secret. The defining >structure of fascist regimes is a corporate dominated alliance >between big business and big government to support the expansion >of corporate empires. > > Those of us who have been studying these issues have long >known of the strong alignment of the World Trade Organization >(WTO), the World Bank, and the IMF to the corporate agenda. By >contrast the United Nations has seemed a more open, democratic >and people friendly institution. What I found so shattering was >the strong evidence that the differences I have been attributing >to the United Nations are largely cosmetic. > > It seems that all our official forums function within the >culture of ideological dogmatism that international financier >George Soros denounced in his ATLANTIC MONTHLY article on "The >Capitalist Threat." With dissenting voices quickly silenced, >there is no challenge within the halls of power to flawed logic >and assumptions. > > >So long as official forums remain captive to this closed and >deeply flawed ideological culture, our governmental and corporate >institutions will almost surely lead our world ever deeper into >crisis. The burden of providing alternative leadership that falls >on those elements of civil society that are not captive to the >official culture is thus enormous. We must speak fearlessly with >force and clarity in an effort to penetrate the veil of silence >that shields our official and corporate institutions from >confronting the devastating consequences of their ideologically >driven leadership. > >David C. Korten PCDForum - Fax (1-212) 242-1901 > >Globalize Consciousness - Localize Economies > >Visit our web site: http://iisd1.iisd.ca/pcdf > > > > > > > ><< End of Forwarded message >> -- { brad brace } <<<< bbrace@netcom.com >>>> ~finger for pgp The_12hr-ISBN-JPEG_Project ftp.netcom.com/pub/bb/bbrace continuous hypermodern ftp.teleport.com/users/bbrace imagery online ftp.rdrop.com/pub/users/bbrace all-the-time ftp.pacifier.com/pub/users/bbrace -- Usenet-news: alt.binaries.pictures.12hr/ a.b.p.fine-art.misc Mailing-list: listserv@netcom.com / subscribe 12hr-isbn-jpeg Reverse Solidus: http://www.teleport.com/~bbrace/bbrace.html -- --simple boundary --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de