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Monterrey: Spinning the Washington Consensus All the Way to Johannesburg by Neville Gabriel

In recent years, unprecedented pressure, driven primarily by popular social movements and coalitions of civil society organisations, has been exerted on international political and economic policy institutions to break the cycle of increasing world poverty, inequality, and economic instability associated with the rapid drive towards globalisation. The form and ideological content of the globalisation enterprise called the Washington Consensus, due to the convergence of development dogmas between Washington-based institutions, emerged discredited as a dictatorship of nameless, faceless, and unaccountable technocrats obsessed with private market driven growth that sees the masses of impoverished people as incidental to the wealth creation project.

The United Nations (UN) conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey, Mexico, last week offered a unique opportunity for world leaders to spawn a new spirit of democracy, transparency, accountability, and justice in global political, economic, and social development thinking. For the first time, the UN succeeded to draw together the IMF, the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation (WTO), private business representatives, and a range of non-governmental organisations across social sectors into a representative international political process that uniquely included finance, foreign affairs, and social development ministers, to address the defining dilemma facing global human progress:

what is the right relationship between politics and economics in determining the future of half the world's population who live in poverty?

 

The Failure of Monterrey

Monterrey's results were uninspiring. Halfway through the conference, German government representatives and IMF and World Bank officials declared a new era in global development thinking marked by a shift from the Washington Consensus to a new Monterrey Consensus. The Monterrey Consensus, they said, provides hope that the IMF, World Bank, and WTO would become more accountable to international political processes such as those of the UN and puts poverty eradication and its financing squarely back on the global political agenda after twenty lost years. 

However, a close reading of the Monterrey Consensus and the dynamics of the conference reveals a different picture. Monterrey failed to deliver decisive action towards the internationally endorsed millennium development goals to halve world poverty by 2015. It resisted a breakthrough for debt cancellation as a prerequisite to sustainable development, merely rehashing the IMF's failed Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) debt relief initiative that places onerous economic and political conditions on debtor countries while leaving them paying unacceptable amounts of government revenues in debt servicing.  Well-developed proposals for a legal mechanism to break the political impasse in the debt cancellation debate were put forward by civil society organisations, but were ignored.

The Monterrey Consensus only half-heartedly expressed interest in a proposed International Currency Transaction Tax that would go a long way to control international currency speculation - the cause of recent economic havoc in developing countries. It could have been a source of sufficient income to fund the $50bn needed to meet the millennium development goals.

Monterrey bowed to the status quo in international power relations by glossing over the need for more representative global governance mechanisms in the UN, the IMF, and the World Bank by ignoring credible proposals for a Global Council in the UN and for the transformation of governance procedures in the IMF and World Bank towards democracy.

Private Capital Development Remains the Focus

Aware of this failure, some industrialised countries tried to put a spin on the failure of Monterrey by making grand announcements about increased official development aid (ODA) and the need to go beyond current development commitments.

The US pledged $15bn in ODA between 2004 and 2007. However, this is not real aid. The new US grants will in fact primarily be directed to "technical assistance" (i.e. policy advice), direct support to private businesses (presumably to support US multinationals through export credit agencies), the removal of exchange controls and trade tariffs, and privatised provision of health care and education - and only to those countries that follow a 'vigorous growth agenda' that 'encourages private enterprise through market-oriented mechanisms'.

The EU on the other hand, announced their intention to go further on debt cancellation, global governance, and trade issues. Yet, they were not prepared to argue for this in the Monterrey Consensus and still continue to play a major role in subsidising industrialised country agricultural products to the tune of $360bn annually in contradiction of their own free trade principles.

The Monterrey Consensus maintains the Washington Consensus focus on trade and foreign direct investment as the engines of growth to overcome poverty - despite the overwhelming evidence that this strategy is detrimental to the poor.

It fails to offer the poor a substantially new vision for a better world.  It represents an expansion of the Washington Consensus from the IMF, World Bank, WTO, and their political masters and multi-national corporations into UN processes, with the hope of legitimisation by civil society participation. That is why the non-governmental organisation  (NGO) caucus at the conference declared that Monterrey was not their consensus, and refused to endorse it. But Monterrey was not the last word and civil society organisations will continue to engage in the ongoing debate.

South Africa at the Forefront

President Thabo Mbeki's address to the plenary session was instructive about the ongoing process in which Monterrey is being sold as a turning point. The Millennium Summit set the goals by declaring millennium development targets, Monterrey provides the framework in which those goals would be achieved, and the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development would fill out the content of an action plan, he said. But Finance Minister Trevor Manuel made the significant point in a side event that the Johannesburg Summit should have preceded the Monterrey Conference if financing mechanisms were to conform to development needs rather than the other way around. In other words, now that the economic framework has been set in the Monterrey Consensus, political considerations and development needs raised in Johannesburg would have to be limited accordingly. Nonetheless, Mbeki declared that "we must accept the Monterrey Consensus".

The president's willingness to conform to Monterrey despite its shortcomings is self-evident: it accords well with the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD). NEPAD sees wealth creation as Africa's biggest challenge. More than that, it views private investment as the essential missing link in Africa's development. Indeed, contrary to local consternation that Mbeki's Zimbabwe position will derail the NEPAD express, NEPAD was given a very high profile in Monterrey with most industrialised countries and the G77 declaring their commitment to ensuring NEPAD's success.

Mbeki has clearly succeeded in positioning South Africa as a highly influential stakeholder in international development economics and politics. His is seen as a government without which Africa would have little hope. This was very evident in Monterrey, not least through the strong role played by Trevor Manuel in the plum position of special envoy of UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and chairperson of the World Bank's key policy body, the Development Committee. South Africa's position will be consolidated in Johannesburg, under the theme 'People, Planet, and Prosperity' - or more explicitly, a triple focus on social, environmental, and economic development.

Shrouded beneath that theme is the more apt problematic of 'power'. A revision of the international power relations that determine the constraints on environmentally responsible socio-economic development models is required if the Millennium Development Goals are to be met.  Without that, Africa and the South will remain in a race to the bottom of the poverty trap. Monterrey failed to adequately address that structural problem.

The Monterrey Consensus should at best be regarded as a carefully managed negotiation process in which the Washington Consensus prevailed, and which the spinners are now driving as a new model - all the way to Johannesburg.

But it is not the people's consensus. Ask the 20 million South Africans who live in absolute poverty, the 4.6 million South Africans who have no income at all, the 2.7 million South African families who have no shelter, the 40% of our population who cannot find employment, or the millions who were overjoyed to get tax cuts only to pay increased interest rates due to an unstable currency - even though, according to the Monterrey-Washington Consensus, our 'economic fundamentals are in place'. They will all declare together: a better world is possible!

Neville Gabriel
Director, Justice & Peace Department
Southern African Catholic Bishops' Conference (SACBC)
140 Visagie Street
PO Box 941
PRETORIA
0001
South Africa
 

Tel. +27 (0)12 323 6458
Fax. +27 (0)12 326 6218
Mobile. +27 (0)83 449 3934
 

E-mail: ngabriel@sacbc.org.za
http://www.sacbc.org.za

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