Neoliberal order needs new vision to thrive

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Now, over the last few years, the stagnation of the once dynamic centres of the global demand — the US, Europe, and the Brics — has made this model obsolete
Now, over the last few years, the stagnation of the once dynamic centres of the global demand - the US, Europe, and the Brics - has made this model obsolete

Growth has largely stagnated in countries that were once centres of global demand

By Walden Bello

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Published: Sun 23 Jul 2017, 9:00 PM

Last updated: Sun 23 Jul 2017, 11:37 PM

Free trade and the freedom of capital to move across borders have been the cutting edge of globalisation. They've also led to the succession of crises that have led to the widespread questioning of capitalism as a way of organising economic life - and of its paramount ideological expression, neoliberalism.
The protests against capitalism at the recent G20 meeting in Hamburg may seem superficially the same as those that marked similar meetings in the early 2000s. But there's one big difference now: Global capitalism is in a period of long-term stagnation following the global financial crisis. The newer protests represent a far broader disenchantment with capitalism than the protests of the 2000s.
Yet capitalism's resilience amidst crisis must not be underestimated. For trade activists, in particular, who've been on the forefront of the struggle against neoliberalism and globalisation over the last two decades, there are a number of key challenges posed by the conjuncture.
First is the surprising strength of neoliberalism.
The credibility of neoliberalism, to which free trade ideology is central, has been deeply damaged by a succession of events over the last two decades, among which were the collapse of the third ministerial of the World Trade Organisation in Seattle in 1999, the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98, and the Global financial crisis of 2008-2009, the effects of which continue to drag down the global economy.
Most of us in the field remember the time late in 2008, when after hearing accounts of the global financial crisis from an assembly of orthodox economists at the London School of Economics, Queen Elizabeth posed the question: "Why didn't anybody see this coming?" None of the dumbfounded economists could answer her then - and last I heard the queen is still waiting for the answer.
What one finds puzzling is despite this loss of credibility, neoliberalism continues to rule. Academic economists continue to teach it, and technocrats continue to prescribe it. The false assumptions of free trade theory underlie the free trade agreements or economic partnership agreements into which the big powers continue to try to rope developing countries.
To borrow an image from the old western films, the train engineer has been shot and killed, but his dead hand continues to push down on the throttle, with the train gathering more and more speed. The takeaway from this is that so long as there are interests that are served by an ideology, such as corporate interests and knowledge institutions that have invested in it, even a succession of devastating crises of credibility isn't enough to overthrow a paradigm.
Export-led growth is still on course
The second challenge is especially relevant to developing countries. It is the persistence of the model of export-oriented growth.
Now, this model of development through trade is shared both by neoliberals and non-neoliberals - the difference being that the former thinks it should be advanced by market forces alone and the latter with the vigorous help of the state. Now, over the last few years, the stagnation of the once dynamic centres of the global demand - the US, Europe, and the Brics - has made this model obsolete.
It was, in fact, the non-viability of this once successful model of rapid growth in current global circumstances that pushed China, under Hu Jintao and Wen Jiabao, to push the country away from an export-oriented path to a domestic demand-led strategy via a massive $585 billion stimulus programme. They failed, and the reason for their failure is instructive.
In fact, a set of powerful interests had congealed around the export-oriented model - the state banks, regional and local governments that had benefitted from the strategy, export-oriented state enterprises, foreign investors - and these prevented the model from being dislodged, even given its unsuitability in this period of global stagnation.
These same policy struggles are going on in other developing countries. In most cases, the outcome is the same: The export lobbies are winning, despite the fact that the global conditions sustaining their strategy are vanishing.
The alternative
The final challenge has to do with coming up with a credible alternative paradigm.
My points have stressed the importance of powerful interests in sustaining a paradigm despite its loss of intellectual credibility. But this isn't sufficient to explain the continuing powerful influence of neoliberalism. Our failure to move from a critique of neoliberal capitalism to a powerful alternative model - like socialism provided to so many marginalised classes, peoples and nations in the 20th century - is part of the problem.
The theoretical building blocks of an alternative economic model are there, the product of the work of so many progressives over the last 50 years. This includes the rich work that has been done around sustainable development, de-growth, and de-globalisation. The task is to integrate them not only into an intellectually coherent model but also into an inspiring narrative that combines vision, theory, programme, and action, and one that rests firmly on the values of justice, equity, and environmental sustainability.
Of course, the work towards this goal will be long and hard. But we must not only be convinced that it's necessary but also confident that it's possible to come up with an alternative that will rally most of the people behind us. Ideas matter. To borrow the old biblical saying, "Without vision, the people perish."
These are some of the central challenges confronting trade activists. We cannot leave the field to a neoliberalism that has failed or to an extremism that has appropriated some of our analysis and married them to hideous, reactionary values.
A progressive future is not guaranteed. We must work to bring it about, and we will. 
Walden Bello is an international adjunct professor of sociology at the State University of New York at Binghamton
 -The Wire


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