From
Finance&Development, June 2016, Vol. 53, No2, IMF
Neoliberalism: Oversold?
Ostry, J.D., Loungani, P. and Urceri, D.
However, there are aspects of the neoliberal agenda that have not delivered as expected. Our assessment of the agenda is confined to the effects of two policies: removing restrictions on the movement of capital across a country’s borders (so-called capital account liberalization); and fiscal consolidation, sometimes called “austerity,” which is shorthand for policies to reduce fiscal deficits and debt levels. An assessment of these specific policies (rather than the broad neoliberal agenda) reaches three disquieting conclusions:
•The benefits in terms of increased growth seem fairly difficult to establish when looking at a broad group of countries.
•The costs in terms of increased inequality are prominent. Such costs epitomize the trade-off between the growth and equity effects of some aspects of the neoliberal agenda.
•Increased inequality in turn hurts the level and sustainability of growth. Even if growth is the sole or main purpose of the neoliberal agenda, advocates of that agenda still need to pay attention to the distributional effects.
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Gender and Development - Programme Paper
Number 14 - February 2012
United
Nations Research
Institute for Social Development
Neoliberal Development Macroeconomics.
A Consideration of its Gendered Employment Effects
Elissa Braunstein
The term Washington consensus, used to
refer to a policy perspective that relies largely on markets to deliver
economic development, seems almost old-fashioned these days. However,
from a macroeconomic perspective at least, there is little that
differentiates today’s effective development policy menu from that
prescribed by the most orthodox characterizations of the Washington
consensus. In fact, so little has changed over the years that the
Washington consensus’ macroeconomic policy conventions—liberalization,
privatization and macro stability—are rarely critically singled out by
the academic and policy establishment as a failure in need of a new
macroeconomic paradigm.
This paper expands on this contention, reviewing the primarily
empirical research on the employment impacts of the macroeconomic
policy environment, with a particular focus on women’s employment
whenever extant research allows. It begins by briefly characterizing
the terrain of neoliberal development macroeconomic theory and policy,
both of which are at the heart of the opportunities and constraints
that emerging and developing economies face today. Though it focuses on
laying out general principles, this paper emphasizes those aspects that
are central to employment issues. It covers the following research
areas:
(i) the slowdown in economic growth and the decline in the
responsiveness of employment to growth;
(ii) trade and investment liberalization and its impact on employment;
(iii) informalization and its relationship to liberalization and
macroeconomic performance;
(iv) the impact of inflation targeting on employment;
(v) the impact of the increasing frequency of crisis and volatility on
growth and employment; and
(vi) the public sector.
These areas not represent an exhaustive list of the relevant employment
effects, but they also capture the main areas of research into the
employment effects of neoliberal macroeconomic development policy. A
lot remains to be done and understood about these relationships, as
demonstrated by the gaps in evidence and contentions covered in this
paper.
Series papers
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From Monthly Review:
Essays
on Globalization
and Neoliberalism
Beyond
Liberal Globalization: A Better or Worse World
Samir Amin
The CIA (together with its associated
intelligence organizations) gathers an unparalleled mass of information
of all kinds on all the world’s countries. However, its analysis of
this material is banal in the extreme. This is undoubtedly because its
leaders cannot see beyond their imperialist prejudices or their
Anglo-Saxon worldview and lack critical interest and imagination.
December 2006
The
Worldwide Class Struggle
Vincent Navarro
A trademark of our times is the dominance of neoliberalism
in the major economic, political, and social forums of the developed
capitalist countries and in the international agencies they
influence—including the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, and the technical
agencies of the United Nations such as the World Health Organization,
Food and Agricultural Organization, and UNICEF. Starting in the United
States during the Carter administration, neoliberalism expanded its
influence through the Reagan administration and, in the United Kingdom,
the Thatcher administration, to become an international ideology.
September 2006
Neoliberalism: Myths and Reality
Martin Hart-Landsberg
Agreements like the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) and the World Trade Organization (WTO) have enhanced
transnational capitalist power and profits at the cost of growing
economic instability and deteriorating working and living conditions.
Despite this reality, neoliberal claims that liberalization,
deregulation, and privatization produce unrivaled benefits have been
repeated so often that many working people accept them as
unchallengeable truths. Thus, business and political leaders in the
United States and other developed capitalist countries routinely defend
their efforts to expand the WTO and secure new agreements like the Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) as necessary to ensure a brighter
future for the world’s people, especially those living in poverty.
April 2006
Fixed,
Footloose, or Fractured: Work, Identity, and the Spatial Division of
Labor in the Twenty-First Century
Ursula Huws
The combination of technological change and
globalization is bringing about fundamental changes in who does what
work where, when, and how. This has implications which are profoundly
contradictory for the nature of jobs, for the people who carry them
out, and hence for the nature of cities.
March 2006
Ideology and
Economic Development
Michael A. Lebowitz
Economic theory is not neutral, and the
results when it is applied owe much to the implicit and explicit
assumptions embedded in a particular theory. That such assumptions
reflect specific ideologies is most obvious in the case of the
neoclassical economics that underlies neoliberal economic policies.
May 2004
After Neoliberalism:
Empire, Social Democracy, or Socialism?
Minqi Li
Since the early 1980s, the leading capitalist
states in North America and Western Europe have pursued neoliberal
policies and institutional changes. The peripheral and semiperipheral
states in Latin America, Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe, under the
pressure of the leading capitalist states (primarily the United States)
and international monetary institutions (IMF and the World Bank), have
adopted “structural adjustments,” “shock therapies,” or “economic
reforms,” to restructure their economies in accordance with the
requirements of neoliberal economics.
January 2004
After Neoliberalism?
William K. Tabb
What comes after neoliberalism? To answer
that question we must ask a more fundamental question: What do
neoliberalism and neoconservatism have in common with the
antiglobalization and antiwar movements? The answer is that all
ostensibly share a focus on redefining democracy in the contemporary
world system. “Spreading democracy” is the rallying cry of both the
Washington Consensus and the Bush Doctrine. The “Washington Consensus”
is the claim that global neoliberalism and core finance capital’s
economic control of the periphery and the entire world by means of the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Trade Organization
(WTO) is the only realistic alternative to misery and disaster. The
“Bush Doctrine” is the bald neoconservative justification of U.S.
global military domination and preemptive war—as part of a renewed
attempt to make the world safe for democracy. For the antiglobalization
and antiwar movements these establishment doctrines, insofar as they
profess to be “spreading democracy,” are nothing but window dressing
for the global dictatorship of the U.S. and core corporate governing
elites. While focusing their attack on the institutions that enforce
this dictatorship, these movements also strive to create an
alternative, a genuine participatory democracy.
June 2003
REVIEW OF
THE MONTH
Monopoly
Capital and the New Globalization
JOHN BELLAMY FOSTER
This Review of the Month was originally
written as a chapter (“Paul Sweezy and Monopoly Capital”) for
Douglas Dowd, ed., Understanding Capitalism: Critical Analysis
from Karl Marx to Amartya Sen, to be published by Pluto Press in
July 2002. It is printed here by permission. For more information on
Pluto Press see http://www.plutobooks.com.
We live at a time when capitalism has become
more extreme, and is more than ever presenting itself as a force of
nature, which demands such extremes. Globalization—the spread of the
self-regulating market to every niche and cranny of the globe—is
portrayed by its mainly establishment proponents as a process that is
unfolding from everywhere at once with no center and no discernible
power structure. As the New York Times claimed in its July
7, 2001 issue, repeating now fashionable notions, today’s global
reality is one of “a fluid, infinitely expanding and highly organized
system that encompasses the world’s entire population,” but which lacks
any privileged positions or “place of power.” *
January 2002
Imperialism and
“Empire”
JOHN BELLAMY FOSTER
This article is based on a talk on István
Mészáros’ Socialism
or Barbarism delivered to the Brecht Forum in New York on
October 14, 2001.
Only a little more than a month ago at this
writing, before September 11, the mass revolt against capitalist
globalization that began in Seattle in November 1999 and that was still
gathering force as recently as Genoa in July 2001 was exposing the
contradictions of the system in a way not seen for many years. Yet the
peculiar nature of this revolt was such that the concept of imperialism
had been all but effaced, even within the left, by the concept of
globalization, suggesting that some of the worst forms of international
exploitation and rivalry had somehow abated.
December 2001
Anarchism and the
Anti-Globalization Movement
BARBARA EPSTEIN
Many among today’s young radical activists,
especially those at the center of the anti-globalization and
anti-corporate movements, call themselves anarchists. But the
intellectual/philosophical perspective that holds sway in these circles
might be better described as an anarchist sensibility than as anarchism
per se. Unlike the Marxist radicals of the sixties, who devoured the
writings of Lenin and Mao, today’s anarchist activists are unlikely to
pore over the works of Bakunin. For contemporary young radical
activists, anarchism means a decentralized organizational structure,
based on affinity groups that work together on an ad hoc basis, and
decision-making by consensus. It also means egalitarianism; opposition
to all hierarchies; suspicion of authority, especially that of the
state; and commitment to living according to one’s values. Young
radical activists, who regard themselves as anarchists, are likely to
be hostile not only to corporations but to capitalism. Many envision a
stateless society based on small, egalitarian communities. For some,
however, the society of the future remains an open question. For them,
anarchism is important mainly as an organizational structure and as a
commitment to egalitarianism. It is a form of politics that revolves
around the exposure of the truth rather than strategy. It is a politics
decidedly in the moment.
September 2001
A Prizefighter for
Capitalism:
Paul Krugman vs. the Quebec Protesters
THE EDITORS
A few weeks ago, the New York Times
columnist on economics devoted his space to scolding the demonstrators
at the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City, (April 22, 2001, Op-Ed
page). The writer, Paul Krugman an MIT professor, is considered by many
to be a leading light of the profession, and a likely candidate for the
economics Nobel Prize.
June 2001
Imperialism and
Globalization
SAMIR AMIN
This article is a reconstruction from notes
of a talk delivered at the World Social Forum meeting in Porto Alegre,
Brazil in January 2001.
Imperialism is not a stage, not even the
highest stage, of capitalism: from the beginning, it is inherent in
capitalism’s expansion. The imperialist conquest of the planet by the
Europeans and their North American children was carried out in two
phases and is perhaps entering a third.
June 2001
The New Economy: Myth
and Reality
THE EDITORS
In the last few years the idea of a “New
Economy” has gained wide currency, almost rivaling “globalization” as a
neologism that characterizes our era. Thus The Economic Report of
the President, 2001, begins: “Over the last 8 years the American
economy has transformed itself so radically that many believe we have
witnessed the creation of a New Economy.” This New Economy is seen,
first and foremost, as consisting of those firms and economic sectors
most closely associated with the revolution in digital technology and
the growth of the Internet. The rapid convergence of information
technologies—including computers, software, satellites, fiber optics,
and the Internet—has, it is believed, fundamentally altered the
economic landscape. Since the mid-1990s, these revolutionary
technological developments have, it is argued, spilled over into the
wider economy, generating higher productivity growth, a sustained
acceleration of economic growth, lower unemployment, lower inflation,
and an attenuation of the business cycle.
April 2001
New Economy…Same
Irrational Economy
WILLIAM K. TABB
What can we say about the assertion that
there is a “New Economy”? That depends on what we mean by this term. It
is nonsense to claim, and few do any more, that the business cycle has
been eliminated or that the contradictions of capitalism have been
resolved. In 2000 we witnessed a massacre of technology and Internet
stocks ending what many considered the country’s biggest financial
mania of the past hundred years. The NASDAQ lost over half of its
value, a paper loss of 3.33 trillion dollars, the equivalent of a third
of the houses in the United States sliding into the ocean, as one Wall
Street wag tells us. While only a few months ago, all we heard about
was the magic of the market and that crises are the result of bad
government policies, whether “crony” capitalism or simply failure to
make information available to markets in a full and timely fashion, and
that the new information technology now makes markets even more
efficient; all of this talk is now shown to be the usual exaggeration
we find in the up stage of most long expansions. As in the past it
disappears as the economy weakens. Indeed as inventories pile up the
nature of capitalism becomes clear to even the financial press and the
politicians.
April 2001
Toward a New
Internationalism
THE EDITORS
Those on the left who have abandoned all hope
in social relations or who, in desperation, have turned to the idea
that only global (no longer national) struggle is now possible and that
we have to think and act in cosmopolitan terms—as a "global civil
society"—are simply the dialectical twins of those who preach that
globalization has ended all possibility of change. What has really
disappeared is the kind of middle-ground, mixed economy often lauded in
the Cold-War years. Social democratic and Keynesian strategies,
supposedly the result of a class accord, are no longer viable under
today's global neoliberalism. But all of this merely points to the need
for a much more radical, universal, internationalist strategy, rooted
in national realities and struggles as the only way forward for the
movement.
July/August 2000
The Language of
Globalization
PETER MARCUSE
The distinction between technological
globalization and the globalization of power is critical—not only
analytically but also politically. It raises the question, "What might
the other possibilities be if the two were separated?" We should speak
of the existing combination of technological globalization and the
globalization of power as really existing globalization; that would
highlight the possibilities of an alternative globalization. Opponents
of the damaging consequences of really existing globalization, from
left as well as from liberal perspectives, are divided on the
appropriate response to it. The slogan from Seattle in regard to the
World Trade Organization (WTO)—"fix it or nix it"—and the equivalent
suggested in the Washington demonstrations in April as to the World
Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF)—"shrink it or sink it"—and
the related questions about whether we want a seat at the table or a
different table or no table at all show an ambivalence about goals. The
issues are difficult indeed.
July/August 2000
More Form than
Substance:
Press Coverage of the WTO Protests in Seattle
WILLIAM S. SOLOMON
The mainstream U.S. news media have been
shifting rightward for at least two decades, as their corporate owners
enforce tighter ideological conformity. Oliver North and Pat Buchanan,
for example, are now regular commentators on television talk shows. And
all of the media now refer to people as "consumers," cogs in a
capitalist machine. But still, news is less than half as profitable as
entertainment, and media firms are intensifying pressures on their
"news properties" for higher profits, which means the pursuit of
upscale demographics. Owners are removing journalism's much-vaunted
separation of newsroom practices and business decisions, blurring the
line between news and entertainment, and forming partnerships with one
another to offer online news services. As William Glaberson said in the
New York Times in July 1995, "It is now common for
publishing executives to press journalists to cooperate with their
newspapers' `business side,' breaching separations that were said in
the past to be essential for journalistic integrity."
May 2000
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After Seattle:
Understanding the Politics of Globalization
WILLIAM K. TABB
The "Seattle Shock"—as Business Week called
it in an editorial that warned of a popular backlash against "our very
economic system"—reflects heartfelt indignation by the financial press
at the intrusion of mass democracy into an elite discourse. In the New
York Times, columnist Thomas Friedman raged at anti-World Trade
Organization (WTO) protesters, whom he presents as "flat-earth
advocates" duped by knaves like Pat Buchanan. Friedman, perhaps the
most obtuse of the big-time columnists, complains that "What's crazy is
that the protesters want the WTO to become precisely what they accuse
it of already being—a global government.
March 2000
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The World Trade
Organization? Stop World Takeover
WILLIAM K. TABB
On November 30, 1999, when the World Trade
Organization (WTO) opened its third round of ministerial meetings, the
three thousand official delegates, two thousand journalists, and other
registered observers were greatly outnumbered by the tens of thousands
of protesters who came from all over the world to denounce the
organization... The still-growing movement in opposition to efforts of
institutions such as the WTO to take over the management of the
international economy may well be larger than any popular protest
movement of the last twenty years or more.
January 2000
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Global Economic
Crisis, Neoliberal Solutions,
and the Philippines
KIM SCIPES
The economic crisis that has been affecting
the global economy for the last two and a half years started in East
Asia. We've heard story after story about the problems in Thailand,
South Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, China, and even Japan—but we've heard
almost nothing about the situation in the Philippines. Is there
something that the U.S. government, the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), and the World Bank don't want us to know about the situation
there?
December 1999
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Eras of Power
FRANCES FOX PIVEN and RICHARD A. CLOWARD
We agree with much of the empirical basis for
the MR challenge to the new catechisms about globalization
and technological change. We agree, for example, with the arguments,
made variously by Wood, Tabb, and Henwood in the pages of Monthly
Review, and by Gordon, Zevin, Hirst, and Thompson, and others
elsewhere, that the competitive pressures in domestic markets
attributed to increased global trade and capital movement have been
vastly overstated, especially with regard to the United States, which
remains less exposed to international trade and capital flight than
most other rich industrial countries.3 And we also agree
that much of this is not really new in any case, that international
integration characterized earlier periods of capitalist development,
particularly the years before the First World War.
But if the system is basically the same, why
is so much changing? In particular, why are class power relations
changing? The evidence is considerable.
January 1998
More (or Less) on
Globalization
PAUL M. SWEEZY
Globalization is not a condition or a
phenomenon: it is a process that has been going on for a long time, in
fact ever since capitalism came into the world as a viable form of
society four or five centuries ago; (dating the birth of capitalism is
an interesting problem but not relevant for present purposes). What is
relevant and important, is to understand that capitalism is in its
innermost essence an expanding system both internally and externally.
Once rooted, it both grows and spreads. The classic analysis of this
double movement is of course Marx's Capital.
September 1997
Globalization Is AnIssue,
The Power
of Capital Is The Issue
WILLIAM K. TABB
The globalization hypothesis asserts that
there has been a rapid and recent change in the nature of economic
relations among national economies which have lost much of their
distinct claim to separate internally driven development, and that
domestic economic management strategies have become ineffective to the
point of irrelevance. Internationalization is, in this view, seen as a
tide sweeping over borders in which technology and irresistible market
forces transform the global system in ways beyond the power of anyone
to do much to change. Transnational corporations (TNCs) and global
governance organizations, such as the World Bank and the IMF, enforce
conformity on all nations no matter their location or preferences. The
corollary to such thinking is that radical alternatives are not
possible, and that in Margaret Thatcher's memorable phrase, TINA,
"There is no alternative."
June 1997
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All
material © copyright 2008 by Monthly Review
|
E. Martinez/A. García (1997):
What is Neoliberalism?
"Neo-liberalism" is a set of economic policies that have become
widespread during the last 25 years or so. Although the word is rarely
heard in the United States, you can clearly see the effects of
neo-liberalism here as the rich grow richer and the poor grow poorer.
"Liberalism" can refer to political, economic, or even religious ideas.
In the U.S. political liberalism has been a strategy to prevent social
conflict. It is presented to poor and working people as progressive
compared to conservative or Rightwing. Economic liberalism is
different. Conservative politicians who say they hate "liberals" --
meaning the political type -- have no real problem with economic
liberalism, including neoliberalism. |
Economic development and
the anatomy of crisis
in Africa: from colonialism through structural adjustment
By H. Stein - 2000
Africa is mired in a developmental crisis, not the common narrow
monetary or financial crisis
portrayed in the standard literature but a crisis of a more profound
and protracted nature.
A developmental crisis refers to the generalized incapacity of an
economy to generate
the conditions necessary for a sustained improvement in the standard of
living.
The problem is basically structural in nature. The antecedents lay in
the colonial period
and in the inability of post-colonial governments to fundamentally
transform the economies
inherited at independence. While structural adjustment has exacerbated
the underlying
weaknesses of African economies, its greatest crime is located in its
inherent inability to
structurally and institutionally transform African economies. The major
reason can be
found in its roots that lie in neo-classical economic theory with its
misplaced emphasis on
balancing financial variables in a hypothetical axiomatic world.
Adjustment is simply incapable
of either assessing the nature of Africa’s problems or putting in place
the policies that
will put African countries on a trajectory of sustainable development.
1
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D. O'Hearn (2001):
Time to think global and
act local
Opening this year's Desmond Greaves Summer School, professor Denis
O'Hearn, of Queen's University, Belfast attempted to bring some clarity
to the debate about 'globalisation'. Describing it as the current
'buzzword' that few really understood, he stresses that, contrary to
popular opinion, globalisation is long-standing feature of capitalism.
What we are experiencing now could more appropriately be defined as the
"current neo-liberal phase of globalisation", he said. |
C. Rodríguez (1994):
The struggle of the
Zapatistas run clearly and directly against the policies of
Neo-liberalism
Neo-liberalism is a set of global economics re-hashed in the 70's by
Milton Friedman, the University of Chicago, and Friedrich Von Hayec and
are not well-known to North Americans as such. I want to describe them
to you, because I am sure each of you will recognize them, once I do
that. Neo-liberalism states that economic crises or problems, are the
fault of government intervention in the economy. Its fundamental
principle is "economic liberty". What does this mean? It means that an
economy must be free of impediments in order to operate. It therefore
views things like social programs and regulations as impediments (in
fact in GATT it calls them "barriers to the free flow of trade and
capital") and so requires the elimination of social security programs,
government housing programs, minimum wage laws, environmental
protection laws, labor legislation which protects workers, import
taxes, price controls, subsidies. Because the principal goal of
neo-liberalism is to maximize the profits of private enterprise it
dedicates itself to the privatization, and liberalization or
de-regularization of the economy, while carrying out so-called
stabilization programs. What does this mean?... |
D. Maheshvarananda (1999):
Amazon activists protest
neo-liberalism
Zapatistas with black masks and a message of armed resistance organized
the first conference in Chiapas, Mexico two years ago. Now Workers'
Party (PT) Mayor Edmilson Rodrigues of Belém on the on the mouth of the
Amazon River in the far north of Brazil was sponsoring the Second
Encounter of the Americas for Humanity and Against Neo-liberalism. More
than 3,000 delegates officially registered, and several thousand more
attended from 6-11 December, 1999. |
PROUT:
Progressive Utilization Theory
"The world needs new socioeconomic structures that are more just,
stronger and less self-centered like Prout; and we need to make
systematic changes that free us, too." Maria Dirlene Trindade
Marques, President of the Union of Brazilian Economists
"Prout is very important to all who yearn for a liberation which starts
from economics and opens to a totality of personal and social human
existence."Leonardo Boff, Founder of Liberation Theology
"Alternative visions are crucial at this moment in history. Prout’s
cooperative model of economic democracy, based on cardinal human values
and sharing the resources of the planet for the welfare of everyone,
deserves our serious consideration."Noam Chomsky, Critic of U.S
foreign policy, supporter of libertarian socialist objectives
"Sarkar's theory is far superior to Adam Smith's or that of Marx."Johan
Galtung, Founder UN Institute of Peace Studies
"P.R. Sarkar was one of the greatest modern philosophers of India." Giani
Zail Singh, former President of India
"Prout’s vision is both holistic and systemic, with a concrete way
of reorganizing society. It has the power to construct itself in a
post-capitalist project. Prout is transforming and profoundly
revolutionary, and I support all of its dimensions." Marcos Arruda,
leading Brazilian activist, economist and educationalist, expert on the
international financial institutions, and head of an influential NGO.
|
M. McKinley:
Mental
illness in neo-liberal economics and among neo-liberal economists: a
satire
This paper is an attempt to psycho-pathologize neo-liberal economics,
and neo-liberal economists through the literary device of satire. The
argument is quite simple: neo-liberalism is a proven danger to the
health - indeed, the lives - of the great majority of people who live
on this planet. Since mainstream political-economic, and strategic
discourse have proven themselves inadequate to the task of critique,
this paper, with a little inspiration from Lewis Lapham, suggests
another way -- to send "humour on a moral errand," to commit the crime
of intellectual arson with the object of achieving or promoting
"death-by-ridicule." |
P. Bourdieu (1998):
The essence
of neoliberalism
What is neoliberalism? A programme for destroying collective structures
which may impede the pure market logic. |
S. George (1999):
A short history of
Neo-liberalism
Twenty Years of Elite Economics and Emerging Opportunities for
Structural Change
The Conference organisers have asked me for a brief history of
neo-liberalism which they title "Twenty Years of Elite Economics". I'm
sorry to tell you that in order to make any sense, I have to start even
further back, some 50 years ago, just after the end of World War II.
In 1945 or 1950, if you had seriously proposed any of the ideas and
policies in today's standard neo-liberal toolkit, you would have been
laughed off the stage at or sent off to the insane asylum... |
Global Exchange
Global
Exchange is a membership-based international human rights organization
dedicated to promoting social, economic and environmental justice
around the world. |
P. Treanor (2005):
Neo-liberalism: origins,
theory, definitions
Since the 1990's activists use the word 'neoliberalism' for global
market-liberalism ('capitalism') and for free-trade policies. In this
sense, it is widely used in South America. 'Neoliberalism' is often
used interchangeably with 'globalisation'. But free markets and global
free trade are not new, and this use of the word ignores developments
in the advanced economies. The analysis here compares neoliberalism
with its historical predecessors. Neoliberalism is not just economics:
it is a social and moral philosophy, in some aspects qualitatively
different from liberalism. Last changes 02 December 2005. |
S. Kangas (2000)
The long FAQ on
liberalism
Entry-level workers do not usually agree to their wages; they take
whatever is offered. This is because there are more workers than jobs
in the economy, and workers are in competition for those jobs -- the
alternative is starvation. Employers often take advantage of this to
let wages fall as low as they can get away with and still meet their
needs. Allowing such a trend has historically resulted in greater
income inequality. (The top half of the labor market operates by
different dynamics from the bottom half.) Researchers have produced a
broad body of evidence that higher levels of inequality are correlated
with higher mortality rates. Thus, this sort of exploitation is deadly,
and a violation of the right to life. Democratic government can stop
this trend by regulating capitalism (through minimum wage laws, for
example) and creating progressive taxes. Labor unions are an even more
effective method in solving the destructive competition between
individuals seeking jobs. |
Compañía de Jesus:
A letter on
Neo-liberalism in Latin America
As Provincial Superiors of the Society of Jesus in Latin America and
the Caribbean, hearing the call of the 34th General
Congregation to deepen our mission: "to proclaim the faith which
seeks justice", we wish to share some reflections about the
so-called neoliberalism in our countries with all those who
participate in the apostolic mission of the Society of Jesus throughout
the continent and all those who make common cause with our people,
especially the poorest. To claim that the economic measures applied in
recent years in every Latin American and Caribbean country represent
the only possible way of shaping the economy, and that the
impoverishment of millions of Latin Americans is the inevitable price
for future growth, are claims we cannot accept with equanimity. These
economic measures are fruit of a culture. They propose a vision
of the human person and mark out a political strategy that we must
discern from the perspective of models of society to which we aspire
and for which we work along with many men and women motivated by the
hope of living in a more just and human society and of leaving it so
for future generations. |
T. Gounet (1998)
Workers Party of Belgium
Is neo-liberalism a "neo-reformism" theory?
Globalization, delocalisation and deregulation: all terms that indicate
the changes in the world-economy. Some even claims that all these
changes are expressions of a new stage of capitalism. They call it
neo-liberalism, liberalism adapted to the situation of the worldmarket.
They take it on themselves to fight against this neo-liberalism more
than to fight capitalism itself.
Never before there has been so much poverty in the world. Never before
wealth was so enormous. 225 multibillionairs, with Microsoft boss Bill
Gates in front, have a fortune at their disposal which is more
extensive than 47% of the yearly income of the rest of the planet.
Never before the gap between the richests and the poorests was so deep.
And the arrogance of the capitalists increases in keeping with it.
According to them there's no good except the unconditional agreement
with and even submission to the market-laws. An example of this is the
negotiation about the Multilateral Investment Agreement (MIA) within
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (O.E.C.D.),
which organises the 29 richest countries.
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.I. Wallerstein (1997)
Liberalism and
Democracy: Frères Ennemis?
Both liberalism and democracy have been sponge terms. Each has been
given multiple, often contradictory, definitions. Furthermore, the two
terms have had an ambiguous relationship to each other ever since the
first half of the nineteenth century when they first began to be used
in modern political discourse. In some usages, they have seemed
identical, or at least have seemed to overlap heavily. In other usages,
they have been considered virtually polar opposites. I shall argue that
they have in fact been frères ennemis. They have been members
in some sense of the same family, but they have represented pushes in
very different directions. And the sibling rivalry, so to speak, has
been very intense. I will go further. I would say that working out
today a reasonable relationship between the two thrusts, or concepts,
or values is an essential political task, the prerequisite for
resolving positively what I anticipate will be the very strong social
conflicts of the twenty-first century. |
J. Real (2001)
Feminist movements,
opposed to neo-liberal economics
Feminist movements are not against globalization, “we are against
neo-liberal economics”, said the speakers from the Mercosur Feminist
Network, Chilean Rosalba Todaro, Uruguayan Lilian Celiberti and
Argentinean Haydee Birgin.
Feminists “don’t want to return to the past”, they said on Saturday
during the workshop “Political and Economic Reorganization of the World
Order: Continuity and Change”, as part of the 9th International Forum
of the Association for the Rights of Women in Development (AWID).
Lilian Celiberty said there is an agenda pending which “women must
again raise”. She added that: “we women of the world don’t want to
return to the past and that is why we are a force to be reckoned with
today, a force with the ability to say that in this game (neo-liberal
economics) we are not only betting our lives but the planet’s future”. |
From Monthly Review
- 2008
Ecological civilization
Harry Magdoff |
The
Mexican Farmers' Movement: Exposing the Myths of Free Trade
by Laura
Carlsen- 2003
from Americas Program
Even long-time Mexico observers sat up and took notice on January 31.
The march that day by campesino organizations, which counted on the
support of unions, universities, and civil society groups, broke the
mold in a city accustomed to large demonstrations. By the time they
reached the Zócalo, they numbered nearly a hundred thousand. Not since
the late thirties had so many campesinos marched in the nation's
capital. And perhaps not since the revolution had such a diverse crowd
united behind such radical demands. The farmers no longer demanded
government programs to alleviate their poverty or help sell their
products. The central demands of the march—renegotiation of the
agricultural chapter of NAFTA and a far-reaching national agreement on
rural development-shot straight to the heart of the neoliberal model
and called for a new vision. . . . . |
World
Economic Outlook Reports
A Survey by the IMF Staff usually published twice a year.
It presents IMF staff economists' analyses of global economic
developments during the near and medium term. Chapters give an overview
as well as more detailed analysis of the world economy; consider issues
affecting industrial countries, developing countries, and economies in
transition to market; and address topics of pressing current interest.
Annexes, boxes, charts, and an extensive statistical appendix augment
the text.
See also, the World
Economic Databases. -- November 07, 2006
|
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO) -- Financial Systems and Economic Cycles,
September 2006
Description: World Economic Outlook (WEO) Table of Contents with links
to the full text in PDF format. While the central focus of World
Economic Outlook is a comprehensive review of recent global
developments, forecasts and risks, and current policy recommendations,
it also contains analytical chapters providing an in-depth analysis of
a variety of topical policy issues that help underpin the policy advice.
Date: September 14, 2006 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO) -- Globalization and Inflation, April 2006
Description: April 2006 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Table of Contents
with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 13, 2006 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO) -- Building Institutions, September 2005
Description: September 2005 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Table of
Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: September 14, 2005 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO) -- April 2005
Description: The April 2005 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Table of
Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 07, 2005 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO)-- September 2004
Description: The September 2004 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Table of
Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: September 29, 2004 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO)-- April 2004
Description: The April 2004 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 14, 2004 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO)-- September 2003
Description: The September 2003 World Economic
Outlook (WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF
format
Date: September 13, 2003 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO)-- April 2003
Description: The April 2003 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 09, 2003 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO)-- September 2002
Description: The September 2002 World Economic
Outlook (WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF
format
Date: September 25, 2002 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), April 2002--Contents
Description: The April 2002 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 18, 2002 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), The Global Economy After September 11,
December 2001--Contents
Description: The December 2001 World Economic
Outlook (WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF
format
Date: December 18, 2001 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), The Information Technology Revolution,
October 2001--Contents
Description: The October 2001 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: September 26, 2001 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Fiscal Policy and Macroeconomic
Stability, May 2001--Contents
Description: The May 2001 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: April 26, 2001 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Focus on Transition Economies, October
2000--Contents
Description: The October 2000 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: September 19, 2000 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Asset Prices and the Business Cycle, May
2000--Contents
Description: The May 2000 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: May 12, 2000 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Safeguarding Macroeconomic Stability at
Low Inflation, October 1999 -- Contents
Description: The October 1999 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: September 22, 1999 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), International Financial Contagion, May
1999--Contents
Description: The May 1999 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: May 01, 1999 |
World
Economic Outlook and International Capital Markets--Interim Assessment,
December 1998 -- Table of Contents
Description: The December 1998 World Economic
Outlook (WEO) and International Capital Markets Interim Assessment
Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: December 21, 1998 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Financial Turbulence and the World
Economy, October 1998--Contents
Description: The October 1998 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: October 01, 1998 |
IMF
World Economic Outlook (WEO), Financial Crises: Causes and Indicators,
May 1998--Contents
Description: The May 1998 World Economic Outlook
(WEO) Table of Contents with links to the full text in PDF format
Date: May 01, 1998 |
BBC World News: - 17 March 2005
Wolfowitz to spread neo-con
gospel
By Paul Reynolds World
Affairs correspondent, BBC News website
By nominating Paul Wolfowitz to be head of the World Bank, President
George Bush appears to be sending a message to the world that he
intends to spread into development policy the same neo-conservative
philosophy that has led his foreign policy.
--------------------------------------
Wolfowitz
seeks to calm critics
Dismay
at Wolfowitz's nomination
Bush
backs hawk for World Bank
Wolfensohn
quits World Bank
Profile:
Paul Wolfowitz
Wolf
at World Bank's door?
Head-to-Head:
The right choice?
In
quotes: Wolfowitz reaction
Q&A:
What the World Bank does IMF and World
Bank: reform underway?
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