It
is one of the odd things about economics, that the more the data -
and the actual reality - show a particular tendency, the more most
economists persist in believing the opposite. How else can one explain
the axiomatic belief among mainstream (and even not-so mainstream)
economists today, that neo-liberal marketist policies which give a
lot of freedom and power to large capital, generally encourage higher
economic growth and employment even if they do not necessarily deliver
in terms of reducing poverty and inequality ?
The actual experience across
the globe, in both developed and developing countries, is that the
1990s decade of globalisation, which experienced the most untrammelled
power of large capital for a century, is that this was a period of
lower economic growth and higher levels of unemployment. Yet, every
time such evidence comes to light for a particular country or region,
its economy is promptly declared to be an outlier, an exception which
is suffering because of its own inadequate policies or rigid domestic
institutions.
And whenever a whole region
is affected, attention is shifted to other regions which are supposedly
doing better. This was very evident in the late 1990s, when concern
over the impact of indiscriminate trade and financial liberalisation
in east Asia, leading to economic crisis there, was diverted by extolling
the virtues of Latin America, supposedly in the midst of a remarkable
and impressive recovery after its own slightly earlier crisis.
Indeed, in recent times
the international financial press as well as the representatives of
public and private international economic institutions have been lauding
Latin America, and especially certain countries such as Mexico, Chile
and now Brazil, as clear examples of the success of neoliberal economic
policies. The revival of growth in the region in the previous year
after another crisis scare in Brazil, has been seen as further proof
of the argument that free market and investor-friendly (especially
foreign investor-friendly) policies deliver higher output and employment
growth.
As it happens, the Latin
American region has effectively been turned into almost a laboratory
test case for various neoliberal marketist policy experiments of the
IMF "Washington consensus" variety. Most of the economies
in the region have been under direct IMF control for fairly extended
periods in the last two decades, their important economic and financial
policy makers are strongly influenced by mainstream US economic thinking,
and their continued dependence on external capital in any case means
that room for independent manoeuvre is severely limited.
This being the case, it
is worth examining how exactly these economies have fared over the
past decade, when the spread and intensity of application of these
policies was at its greatest. A new report from the UN Economic Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) provides some disturbing
insights into the actual effects of such economic policies.
Thus, the report brings
out the fact that inequality has worsened, that social insecurity
has increased, and that basic conditions of material existence have
deteriorated for a significant section of the population across the
region. This, by now, is hardly unexpected. It is now common knowledge
that such policies benefit typically a minority of the population;
even the proponents of such policies argue that the rest of the population
is really benefited only through "trickle-down" effects.
But what is much more significant
is the evidence that economic growth rates also are much lower than
they were in the bad old days of import substituting industrialisation
in the region. As pointed out by Jose Antonio Ocampo, the Secretary
general of ECLAC and a former Finance Minister of Colombia, in the
whole region economic growth in the period after neoliberal reforms
has stabilised at rather low levels of 3.5 to 4 per cent annually.
This is well below the average of 5.5 per cent per annum for the three
decades prior to the debt crisis, when the now much-maligned import-substituting
industrial policies were in place.
Not only that, but such
low rates of growth, especially given the composition of output that
they have implied, are clearly insufficient to
reduce poverty, unemployment or the income gap with respect to industrialised
countries at a reasonable pace. ECLAC estimates that annual growth
rates of more than 5 per cent per annum would be necessary for minimally
adequate employment generation. But even the latest recovery, which
is already running out of steam, has only delivered growth rates of
less than 4 per cent and in some countries less than 3 per cent.
Furthermore, even such
growth is occurring in the context of greater external vulnerability
and financial fragility. Even three and a half years after the Asian
crisis, international credit markets remain unstable, with high interest
rates and low average maturities for developing country borrowers.
In 2000, for the second year in succession , capital inflows were
not enough to offset interest payments and profit remittances, leading
to negative flows for Latin America as a whole.
This is surprising, given
that in 2000, several major countries in the region became once more
the "good boys" of international capital, due to rising
exports, lower government deficits and improved output performance.
But a closer look shows that much of the expansion was due mainly
to growth in exports, driven by the US import boom. Domestic consumption
has not recovered at the speed expected and investment levels are
still below those of 1998, while open unemployment remains at a level
described by the report as "almost a historic high".
This relates to another
problem identified by ECLAC, which is that throughout this period
the generation of employment has remained weak and biased towards
skilled labour, generating high unemployment and rising income gaps.
Unemployment in the region continues to stagnate at very high average
levels of 9 per cent of the labour force, compared to 6 per cent a
decade earlier.
This can no longer be seen
as a temporary tendency deriving from fierce stabilisation policies
designed to control inflation. Rather, these high levels of unemployment
are closely related to the very pattern of more open trade and industrial
restructuring that are commonly cited as the positive results of the
neoliberal policies.
This comes out very sharply
in another study from ECLAC. (Jorge Katz, "Structural Changes
in Latin American Industrial Productivity, 1970-1996", CEPAL
Review 2000) This shows that structural changes in Latin Americas
economies over the past twenty years have shifted manufacturing away
from shoe, textiles, machine tools, and other labour and engineering
intensive industries in favour of natural resource processing and
assembly maquiladora
industries.
Thus, there are two types
of production restructuring that have taken place. In Chile, Argentina
and, to a somewhat lesser extent, Brazil, structural reforms of the
past twenty years have favoured industries producing highly standardised
industrial commodities, such as vegetable oil, fishmeal, pulp and
paper, iron and steel, and aluminium. As a result, Latin American
firms have ended up as price takers in highly competitive world markets
in which they have very low unit profit margins.
Meanwhile, in order to
maintain quality and other competitiveness requirement, the manufacturing
plants for these products are highly capital intensive, automated,
and technologically advanced, creating little employment. In general,
most of their capital equipment comes from abroad) except to some
extent in Brazil) thus reinforcing the old pattern of technological
dependence.
The other type of production
restructuring has occurred in Mexico and some small Central American
countries. Here, the neoliberal reforms combined together with low
domestic wages and geographical proximity to the United States in
the context of a rapidly expanding US market, have encouraged assembly
plants known as "maquiladoras". These use modern technology
to produce state-of-the-art goods including computers, video and TV
sets, and garments. However, they use product design and just-in-time
technology, logistics and engineering almost entirely from the US,
Japanese or Korean companies, which own these assembly plants. There
is very little value added in the Latin American side of the operations.
Meanwhile, the associated
trade liberalisation and elimination of subsidies has meant that manufacturing
and competitive skills in leather goods, furniture, clothing and machine
tool manufacturing for the domestic market have contracted strongly,
with many small and medium-size firms being forced to close because
of import penetration. The degree of domestic vertical integration
has declined sharply, while outsourcing practices, mostly international,
have increased. Inevitably, the regions dependence on external
capital goods and technology has increased in consequence.
This worrying trend has
been reinforced by the privatisation of State-owned production facilities,
particularly in telecommunications, energy, transport or water sanitation.
Ownership of these sectors has effectively been transferred to large
mostly foreign enterprises whose R&D facilities and capital goods
suppliers are overseas. Not only has this been associated in some
scandalous cases (as in Brazil) with higher costs for consumers and
hugely increased foreign exchange outflow, it has also meant the loss
of related domestic manufacturing and service production and employment
which earlier benefited from linkage effects.
As a result, Katz concludes
that "in countries where public enterprises carried out most
local R&D and engineering efforts, recent structural reforms have
had a strong and rather negative impact on the national systems of
innovation. At the same time, the new production structure is finding
it increasingly difficult to generate new jobs, let alone well-paid
ones in high productivity sectors. Those created are precarious and
mostly in the area of low-productivity services. Moreover, and as
a result of the rapid increase in the demand for foreign machinery
and equipment as well as vehicles and parts, the trade balances of
many countries show a worrying, chronic tendency toward long-term
disequilibrium."
All this sounds strangely
familiar - this peculiar combination of worsening real conditions
amidst greatly increased hype and international celebration of another
success story for international capital. But what is also depressingly
familiar is the sense that even such examples need not nudge our own
policy makers into a more realistic and domestic citizen-oriented
approach to economic policy.
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