All--
Here
are notes I took on a video of an excellent Master Class speech given by Chilean economist
and environmentalist Manfred Max Neef. The talk was given at the
International University of Andalucía (Huelva, Spain), on December 1,
2009. Says Wikipedia,
Max Neef, in 1982, won the Right Livelihood Award, known as the Alternative Nobel Prize, for his work in poverty-stricken areas of developing countries. He has worked with the problem of development in the Third World, describing the inappropriateness of conventional models of development that have contributed to poverty, debt and ecological disasters for Third World communities.
Here’s
a link to the video of the conference http://cuva.uta.cl/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=1042:600-a%C3%B1os-de-un-mundo-sin-hambr
Below are
the notes I
jotted. (I apologize for any glaring errors – I was listening in Spanish and
jotting in English.)
Well worth reading.
Laurie
Kaniarz
THE
WORLD ON A COLLISION COURSE
Manfred
Max Neef
(Laurie’s
Notes)
When
FAO (Food & Agriculture Organization) announced in October [2009] that 1
billion people around the world are hungry, and it would take $30 billion in
aid annually to save these lives, at the same time, 6 Central Banks (US, EU,
Japan, Canada, England, Switzerland) injected $180 billion into financial
markets to save private banks, and have continued to do so, so that, as of
September 2009, they’ve injected $17 trillion into the private
banks. $17 trillion is enough to save the world from hunger for 600
years. Where is that money now?
(Regarding the law of supply
and demand: there’s much more demand for bread than plastic surgery, more need
for a cure for malaria than haute couture dresses. We need a referendum:
do we want to save lives or banks? There’s never enough for those who have
nothing. Always enough for those who have everything.)
This
is the most repugnant news I’ve ever heard.
There’s
a 4-way convergence:
1.
Exponential climate change
2.
The end of cheap fuel
3.
Diminishment of genetic natural resources: fresh water, energy, forests,
fishing, wildlife, subsoil, coral reefs
4.
Gigantic speculative bubble – 50 times greater than the real economy
(interchange of goods and services)
The
causes of this convergence:
1.
The predominant paradigm of present-day economics is that we tend toward
economic development at any cost, and this stimulates corporate greed.
2.
Devouring fossil fuels propels that economic greed
3.
Promotion of consumerism as the road to happiness
4.
Destruction of traditional cultures and values to improve the industrial
economic model
5.
Scorn for the planet with the production of waste
There
is danger in this for the environment and society. Global warming implies
the loss of productive soils, storms, hurricanes, desertification – all having
implications for the poorest people on the planet. All systems are dependent on
fuels. There will be a further diminishment of species by 50% in the next
decades.
We have to accept the limits of what the earth can handle.
We must move from
“efficiency” to “sufficiency,” and solve inequality, because without equality,
peaceful solutions are not possible. We must replace the dominant values
of greed, competition and accumulation with solidarity, cooperation and
compassion. Adjust ourselves to lower levels of production/consumption,
favoring local economies. LOOK WITHIN once again, rather than outward.
We’re
in the 21st century, trying to solve our
problems with 19th century economics, even though
we no longer use 19th century physics, biology,
anthropology, medicine, etc.
Economic “neo-liberalism” is a pseudo
religion. It conquered the world in a few decades, which religion
[Christianity, Laurie?] couldn’t do in 2000 years.
Myth
1: Globalization is the only way to development. Between
1960-1980, “don’t import what you can produce at home.” Between 1980-2000 this
was replaced by deregulation, privatization, elimination of international trade
barriers, and full openness to foreign investment. Between ’60-’80, the
poorest developing countries grew 2%. Between ’80-’00, they had declined
0.5%.
Myth
2: Greater integration in the global economy is good for the poor. But
it causes the poor countries to look outward rather than at their own people’s
needs. The 7 richest countries are 50 times richer now than the poorest
7.
Myth
3: Comparative advantage is the best way to ensure prosperity – “free world
trade.” Prices can be lower, but
costs to society &
environment are enormous.
Myth
4: More globalization + more jobs. There are fewer jobs in countries of
origin, more sub-employment in the outsourcing countries.
Myth
#5: Globalization is democratic and transparent. Decisions about world
commerce are made by unelected bureaucrats who work behind closed doors in
Geneva [World Monetary Fund - WMF]. Their decisions cannot be
appealed. If a country that receiving translational investment has an
inconvenient law, it must abolish the law. This affects the very idea of
democracy if it has to adapt to the interests of the corporation.
The
WMF has no rules about child labor or labor rights. All rules benefit the
corporations. Poor countries are prohibited from producing their own
generic drugs, for example: they’re obligated to buy from transnationals.
Africa has the resources, but can’t produce its own drugs. The WMF is
dedicated to ensuring that corporations govern the world. Imports and exports
are not between countries but between corporations.
Myth
#6: Globalization is unavoidable. ANYTHING arising from politics
is reversible. What needs to be done is to take back local decisions that bring
consumption back to the local market. A human-scale economy.
New
rules could be:
- Profits flow back as much as possible to their place of origin.
Unsustainable – taking up huge amounts of resources – is transport over huge
distances. In Chile, in the huge, state-of-the-art dairy producing region of
the country, I unwrapped a butter packet that came from New Zealand. It’s
cheaper if you look at it from the point of view of an economist, but prices
never tell the truth. The cost of the environmental impact of shipping,
to economists, has a value of “0.” Plus, the shipping was subsidized by New
Zealand – also a value of “0.” The fact that local producers will go bankrupt –
“0.” Same with energy: “This type of [alternative] energy is more expensive.”
End of story.
But
it’s only “more expensive” depending on how you make the calculation. If
you give value to the impacts, that which is deemed “more expensive” becomes
cheaper.
-
Bring back safeguards to local economies with tariffs and quotas to avoid
monopolies.
-
Ecological taxes.
Taxes on energy use that causes pollution and negative impacts. We’ve
created a “fun” society and we pay taxes on that. We should pay taxes on
the bad, too. They tax you for working, for investing, but not for dirtying,
polluting, destroying – you get to do that for free. You should be taxed for
how many kilowatts you use rather than on how much you earn. This would
have a formidable impact on world economy. They are doing this in
Scandinavian countries.
- In Sweden, eco-municipalities receive the benefits
of income tax, not the State. You pay your tax and immediately see – and
have influence on – how it’s used, in the place where you live.
I
propose this new economy for the 21st Century, with 5 principal postulates:
1.
The economy should serve the people – the people should not serve the economy.
2.
Development has to be with/for people, not objects
3.
Growth is not the same as development, and development does not necessarily
need growth.
4.
No economy is possible at the exclusion of the services provided by
ecosystems.
5.
Economy is a subsystem of a great system – the biosphere – and so permanent
growth is impossible.
A
fundamental principle value I propose to sustain the new economy:
No economic interest, under
any circumstance, should ever be held above the reverence for life on the
planet.
But what we have today is exactly the opposite of what I have
postulated:
-
We’re in a world in which each of us is at the service of economic interests,
not the opposite.
-
We identify economic development as who has the most cellphones, computers,
etc. The human being disappears in the process.
-
There is an obsession with growth as the only measure, but growth is a
quantitative measure, and development is a liberation of creative potentials.
All living systems grow until they stop growing, but they don’t stop
developing. We’ve all stopped growing, but we’re in this room [at the
conference] because we haven’t stopped developing – more ideas, more
information. Growth has limits, development doesn’t.
My
hero, a man I consider the greatest thinker, Kenneth Boulding, said, “Anyone
who thinks permanent growth is possible on a finite planet is either crazy or
an economist.” [Kenneth
Ewart Boulding (January 18, 1910 – March 18, 1993) was an economist, educator, peace
activist, poet, religious mystic, devoted Quaker, systems scientist,
and interdisciplinary philosopher. He was cofounder of General
Systems Theory and founder of numerous ongoing intellectual projects
in economics and social science. - Wikipedia]
No
economy is possible at the exclusion of the services provided by the
ecosystem. The economy is a closed system that doesn’t relate to families
or nature. Economists think they don’t need to know about pollination.
Growth can’t be infinite on a finite planet. If I want to blow up a big
balloon, I can’t blow it up bigger than the room I’m in.
There is a need for
reverence for life. Too many people say, “Life doesn’t mean anything … as long
as I can do business.” Millions of children are slaves. According to UNICEF and
other organizations, in the 21st
century, there are more slaves in the world than when slavery was abolished in
the 19th century. Tens of millions of
slaves, two-thirds of them children. It doesn’t show up in the
news. “With so many kids in the world, who cares?” Why doesn’t it
show up? SLAVERY IS GOOD BUSINESS – YOU CAN MAKE GOOD MONEY AT IT.
Don’t
expect the solution to come down from Mt. Sinai. It’s up to us. It
starts with each one acting according to his/her belief system and loves.
Don’t ask yourself, “But what can I do?” That’s defeatist.
ANY ONE OF US can do something at any moment that could change history.
Examples:
Gandhi got sick of being discriminated against as “colored.” He started out
being a nobody, a lawyer, but defeated the most powerful nation on earth. Rosa
Parks sat in the white section of a bus and said, “I’m too tired to move.” She
was [considered] less than nobody, but sparked the civil rights movement.
They both acted according to their beliefs.
This won’t happen to you if you
always adapt to what you don’t believe in. Don’t act according to what’s
best for you – advice we all get – but what’s best for all.
We all get this bad advice – I’ve given it myself, and I apologize to anyone
I’ve ever given it to: “You’ve got to see your goals clearly to know where you
want to go.” If you look toward one fixed goal, you won’t see the people you
trample on to get there. It’s a miserable life if you do what you
“should” rather than what you MUST do. The way you can have a happy life
is living according to your beliefs.
Here’s
some better advice: Drift and steer in a state of alert/attention. This
doesn’t mean you’re at the mercy of the current. Life is like surfing:
you can’t decide where you’re going to end up on the beach because you can’t
predict what the waves will do. But if you’ve got all your antennae up,
if you make judgments about what to do as each condition comes up, you’ll end
up somewhere along the beach.
Creativity encourages us to create
a world in which we are all relatively happy.
People
who know where they’re going never discover anything because they’re obsessed
with where they’re going. But “obstacles” are all the adventure.
Manfred
Max Neef’s bibliography includes:
0.Max-Neef, Manfred A (1992) (pdf). From the
Outside Looking In: Experiences in Barefoot Economics. Dag
Hammarskjöld Foundation. pp. 208. ISBN
1-85649-188-9.
http://www.max-neef.cl/download/Max_Neef_From_the_outside_looking_in.pdf.
Retrieved 2011-02-15.
0.Max-Neef, Manfred A; Antonio Elizalde, Martin Hopenhayn
(1991) (pdf). Human
Scale Development. The Apex Press. pp. 114. ISBN
0-945257-35-X.
http://www.max-neef.cl/download/Max neef_Human_Scale_development.pdf.
Retrieved 2011-02-15.
0.Max-Neef, Manfred A; Paul Ekins (1992). Real-Life
Economics: Understanding Wealth Creation. Routledge. pp. 432. ISBN
0-415-07976-4.
http://www.gettextbooks.co.uk/search/?isbn=9780415079761.
Retrieved 2011-02-15.
Laurie Kaniarz is a graduate of Kalamazoo College. She has lived and traveled in Spain and South America and is currently employed by Foods Resource Bank in Kalamazoo. FRB is not an emergency aid organization but works to move people in poor countries toward long-term, sustainable food security.
9 comments:
There's a lot of food for thought in this post. I'm glad to have made the acquaintance of Manfred Max-Neef (and I'm grateful for the notes).
Thanks for visiting, Gerry, and feel free to pass the word along.
Que bueno! Great talk, thanks Pamela and Laurie! Just finished teaching a class in Soc of food, and Neef would have fit in well with the folks I used (Marilyn Waring [www.nfb.ca/film/whos_counting] Michael Pollan, Vandana Shiva, and Raj Patel)! SO glad to have discovered him. Great notes. Naming these myths as myths is made of awesome.
Glad you will be able to add new information and ideas to your bibliography, Ginna.
A wonderful post. Thank you. "Drift and steer": what a beautiful piece of advice.
That IS good, isn't it? I like the focus on remaining alert and attentive, also--ready to revise and improvise. NO ONE has all the answers! Mistrust those who claim they do!
And I do so wish you could all know my friend Laurie. She is a peach!
I liked the drift and steer part too...and lately I'v been feeling that everything is 'all about the money' and even have a blog half written in my head about that that has been simmering as I drive back and forth to my job in rush hour traffic through the most exclusive part of our county. Excess here...nothing somewhere else. Just doesn't seem like we've gotten it right. And everyone just wants money. TV was off all day today...what a relief.
You know things are bad when you hear someone from the financial sector (not you, Dawn, although you might agree) speak disparagingly of greedy buyers making "offers" of less than half the asking price of a property, adding, "There's negotiation, and then there's gluttony and taking advantage."
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