Few people realise the scale of money and civil service time
spent on international jamborees which focus on issues such as millennium
goals, migration
and debt relief – let alone
global
warming. It amounts to tens of billions of dollars and thousand of man-years.
In stark contrast, little
energy seems to be spent attempting to get consensus on the way forward for
the deficiencies which have been so visible over the past decade in the economic
system which we know, variously, as “globalization” or, increasingly, as “capitalism”.
· The UN had its fingers burned when, in 2009, it organized the first and only Conference on the World Financial and Economic Crisis. The G77 group of 130 developing countries tried to insert text that mandated a major role for the UN in dealing with the crisis and backed a comprehensive set of reforms, but northern countries including the US and the EU played a blocking game. Joseph Stiglitz was the author of what remained a Preliminary Report (which I wrote about in 2011)
· the OECD remains a fan club for unrestricted growth although it does occasionally allow agnostics to produce reports – see, for example, Stiglitz’s latest opus Beyond GDP Measuring what counts
· The World Bank’s latest World Development Report is as neo-liberal a document as you could imagine
So it has been left to The Club of Rome to
come up (a few weeks ago) with Come
On! Capitalism, short-termism, population and the destruction of the planet;
(Club of Rome 2018) - which is superbly summarized
in this article in the current issue of the fascinating Cadmus journal
There’s also a video of a recent introductory
presentation at Chatham House.
So the question I want to pose today is why there are so few such attempts to seek
consensus on the dominant question of our age – whether at a national or
international level; governmental or non-governmental??
I confess I didn’t pay much attention to Yannis Varoufakis’
recent Democracy in Europe initiative (however
fascinating his writing, the man is a
bit too domineering for my liking) – but I now see that it is a rare and
impressive attempt to bring people together to challenge at least one of the dominant
players in the economic/financial system. A short
3 page version of its manifesto is here – and the full nine
page version here
Few others, it seems, dare venture down such a path – presumably
because they know how easily and aggressively they would be accused of “leftism”,
“populism”… and even greater crimes….
I would like to seek
readers’ help in identifying other initiatives – however minor.
I am aware of The
Great Transition Initiative which encourages individuals to comment on a
monthly question and paper. Of course it can be criticized for catering only
for nerds – but at least it is reaching out to form a network…
The Next System is
also a good source of well-written material - project of the US Democracy Collaborative. It had an initial
report – The
Next System Report – political possibilities for the 21st Century
(2015) and references to good community practice in various parts of the
world. It has since followed up with a series of
worthwhile papers.