Grand economic theories
rarely last more than a few decades. Some, if they are particularly
in tune with technological or political events, may make it
to half a century. Beyond that, little short of military force
can keep them in place.
The wild open-market theory that died in 1929
had a run of just over 30 years. Communism, a complete melding
of religious, economic and global theories, stretched to 70
years in Russia and 45 in central Europe, thanks precisely to
the intensive use of military and police force. Keynesianism,
if you add its flexible, muscular form during the Depression
to its more rigid postwar version, lasted 45 years. Our own
Globalisation, with its technocratic and technological determinism
and market idolatry, had 30 years. And now it, too, is dead.
Of course, grand ideologies rarely disappear overnight. Fashions,
whether in clothes or food or economics, tend to peter out.
Thousands of people have done well out of their belief in
Globalisation, and their professional survival is dependent
on our continued
shared devotion to the cause. So is their personal sense of
self-worth. They will be in positions of power for a few more
years, and so they will make their case for a little longer.
But the signs of decline are clear, and since 1995 those signs
have multiplied, building on one another, turning a confused
situation into a collapse.
We have scarcely noticed this collapse, however, because Globalisation
has been asserted by its believers to be inevitable - an
all-powerful god; a holy trinity of burgeoning markets,
unsleeping technology
and borderless managers. Opposition or criticism has been
treated as little more than romantic paganism. It was powerless
before
this surprisingly angry god, who would simply strike down
with thunderbolts those who faltered and reward his heroes
and champions
with golden wreaths. If Globalisation has seemed so seductive
to societies built upon Greek and Judeo-Christian mythologies,
perhaps the reason is this bizarre confusing of salvation,
fatalism and punishment. Transferred to economics, in however
jumbled
a manner, these belief systems are almost irresistible to
us.
The British and French empires had vaunted and defended
their power in similar ways from the late 19th century
on; that
is, just as they began to collapse. And as the various
19th-century nationalisms declined into ugliness, their
supporters increasingly
transformed them into a matter of race.
Inevitability is the traditional final justification
for failing ideologies. Less traditional - and a sign of inherent
weakness - is the extent to which Globalisation was conceived
as old-fashioned religiosity. Perhaps the economists and other
believers who launched Globalisation were instinctively concerned
that people would notice their new theories were oddly similar
to the trade theories of the mid-19th century or the unregulated
market models that had been discredited in 1929. And so treating
the intervening 40 years as an accidental interval, they began
where their predecessors left off: with religious certainty.
Despite that initial certainty, a growing vagueness
now surrounds the original promise of Globalisation; we seem
to have lost track of what was repeatedly declared 30 years
ago, even 10 years ago, to be inevitable.
That the power of the nation state was on its
way out, to be replaced by that of global markets. That in the
future, economics, not politics or arms, would determine the
course of human events. That freed markets would quickly establish
natural international balances, impervious to the old boom-and-bust
cycles. That the growth in international trade, as a result
of lowering barriers, would unleash an economic-social tide
that would raise all ships, whether of our Western poor or of
the developing world in general. That prosperous markets would
turn dictatorships into democracies. That all of this would
discourage irresponsible nationalism, racism and political violence.
That global economics would produce stability through the creation
of ever larger corporations impervious to bankruptcy. That these
transnational corporations would provide a new kind of international
leadership, free of local political prejudices.
That the rise of global marketplace leadership
and the decline of national politics, with its tendency to deform
healthy economic processes, would force the emergence of debt-free
governments. By then wedding our governments to a permanent
state of deficit-free public accounting, our societies would
be stabilised.
n summary, global economic forces, if left unfettered
by wilful man, would protect us against the errors of local
self-pride, while allowing individual self-interest to lead
each individual to a better life. Together these forces and
self-interest would produce prosperity and general happiness.
In a society where Christian dogma had been so dominant until
so recently, how could people of goodwill not be attracted by
this good news - by these promises of personal redemption? And
if you add to all of this a multitude of new, technocratic market
methods - well, then, the cycles of history would be broken,
setting us on a permanent, inevitable course. In the words of
a particularly naive believer, history would die. History was
already dead.
Globalisation materialised in the 1970s from the
sort of geopolitical vacuum or fog that appears whenever a civilisation
begins to change direction, to grope its way around a corner
from one era to another.
In geopolitics, a vacuum is not an option. It
is the period between options; an opportunity, providing you
can recognise it for what it is; a brief interregnum during
which individuals can maximise their influence on the direction
of their civilisation.
What caused that particular void? Perhaps a quarter
century of social reform had left the liberal elites exhausted.
The need to manage a multitude of enormous new social programs
that had been put in place in a democratic manner - an ad hoc
manner - made it difficult for political leaders to concentrate
on the main line; that is, to concentrate on a broad sense of
the public good. Instead, governments were caught up in the
endless and directionless details of management. Or perhaps
the cause of the vacuum was the resulting reliance of those
political elites on technocrats, who understood little of the
debate - in fact, distrusted it - and so drew the leaders into
isolation.
In either case, most Western leaders seemed confused
about what to do next. They had come to the end of a chapter
of social progress. And they could not have been less prepared
for a religious counterattack upon their ethical motivations,
particularly not one in which the classic Judeo-Christian ideas
of the sacred had been converted into economic inevitabilities.
These theoretically new economic ideas were now
scarcely recognisable as the simplistic economic arguments of
pre-1929. The religious fervour had been blended with sparkling
waves of new technology and with masses of microeconomic data,
all presented as fact. Relaunched in this way, as three in one,
one in three, the old ideas seemed new.
Caught up as the liberal elites were in the instrumental
rationality of program management, they responded to this attack
with superior, stolid and unimaginative rejection. Instead of
speaking out for the public good, they defended administrative
structures. The effect was to make tired and discredited market
arguments seem young, agile and modern.
One comic sign of the coming era was the creation,
in 1971, in a Swiss mountain village called Davos, of a club
for European corporate leaders. There they could examine civilisation
through the prism of business. Soon businessmen were coming
from around the world. Then government leaders and academics
flooded in, looking for investors. Business leaders, politicians
and academics alike seemed to accept without question the core
tenet of Davos: that the public good should be treated as a
secondary outcome of trade and competition and self-interest.
Davos was just a weather vane, a superficial and
self-important version of a royal court, but when the G6 - now
the G8 - was created in 1975, its aim mimicked that of Davos:
to bring the leaders of the biggest national economies together
to examine the world through the prism of economics. Never before
had the great nations so explicitly and single-mindedly organised
their core relationship around naked, commercial self-interest,
without the positive and negative counterweights of social standards,
human rights, political systems, dynasties, formal religions
and, at the negative extreme, supposed racial destinies. Valery
Giscard d'Estaing, the French president who organised the first
G6 meeting at his official country residence, Rambouillet, was
the very model of the European technocratic economist. And his
approach dominated.
But what actually opened the door to Globalisation
was the economic collapse of 1973 - the depression that never
was. The reigning technocratic obsession with management and
control meant that we all had to be reassured. So we were told
that this was just another recession. Then there was another
recession, then another, and on and on, always minimised, always
about to be resolved. The social reformers, who dominated within
almost all political parties and governments, denied themselves
the right to stand back and deal with the situation as a whole.
They had lost the intellectual breadth and the emotional balance
to do this. And so they gradually lost the right to lead.
As for the new force or ideology that came forward
to fill the vacuum, it involved an all-inclusive strategy called
Globalisation - an approach that contained the answer to every
one of our problems. It was delightfully seductive. It contained
simple, sweeping solutions and, as with all successful religions,
lodged ultimate responsibility in invisible untouchable hands.
Thus Globalisation required no one to take responsibility for
anything.
This transcendent vision quickly filled the vacuum.
I first heard the variety of personal passivity produced by
this belief system on French national television in a speech
by Giscard d'Estaing. He had been elected as a new-style political
leader - a brilliant economist. Modern. Almost postmodern. He
was to lead society via the economy. But he came in just after
the 1973 collapse, which included high inflation and unemployment.
After a year or so of struggling with the collapse, Giscard
went on television to tell people that great global, indeed
inevitable, forces were at work. There was therefore little
that he could do. Nation states were powerless.
This was the beginning of the mania for public
declarations of impotence by democratically elected leaders.
Globalisation became their excuse for not dealing with difficult
issues, for not using their levers of power and larger budgets
to effect. They made the force of inevitability credible.
Globalisation had brilliant proponents - Margaret Thatcher
first among them, and economists like Milton Friedman, but
also growing
waves of new-style managers and consultants. These people
had a multiplicity of roles. They briefed public and private
sector
leaders, organised the structures that implement policies,
and ran these structures on a day-to-day basis. And their
basic
theory was - is - that modern methodology is universal. What's
more, these methods are preferable to the untidy business
of democratic argument and personal will, whether that is
a matter
of personal opinion or personal choice. In other words, they
were engaged in the classic struggle to promote method over
opinion; that is, form over content.
And so, as always happens when form is dominant,
a variety of experiments were undertaken. Around the world,
civil services were shrunk, public and private sectors deregulated,
markets released, taxes cut, public budgets balanced. Corporations
began growing in size by merging and remerging. This gigantism
was considered necessary for success in the new world market.
Trade grew by an astonishing multiple of 20. European economic
integration accelerated. New Zealand, the original social democratic
model state, did a complete flip in the mid-1980s and attempted
to become the perfect Globalised nation state. The economies
of Canada and the US were rapidly integrated after the signing
of a free trade agreement in 1988, to which the integration
of the Mexican economy was added with the signing of NAFTA.
Social reformers, for their part, restructured their own arguments
until their basic assumptions were the same as those of their
opponents. Social democrats and liberals almost everywhere
became Globalists, but of a kindler, gentler sort.
Government after government, as if in a fit of moralism, legislated
away its right to take on debt or collect new taxes, even
though both of these were fundamental governmental powers,
central
to the construction and maintenance of democracies. In fact,
debt and taxes had played the same fundamental role in the
pre-democratic period. At the same time, the private sector
invented myriad
new debts and privatised taxes for itself. Everything from
junk bonds to credit cards was treated as an unregulated
privatised currency. And corporations used the old default
mechanism
more
than ever to clear their own decks whenever it was handy
to do so.
The sin of public debt was then broadened by attributing
it to public utilities. Running well or not, they had to be
privatised and deregulated into a global marketplace to cleanse
them of public sector inefficiencies. This led in turn to the
large utility-style private businesses, such as airlines, being
freed of regulatory restraints to satisfy a moral version of
individualism that promised, for example, the right to travel,
cheaper fares, greater choice, more destinations.
From the early 1970s to late in the century, multiple binding
international economic treaties were put in place, while almost
no counterbalancing binding treaties were negotiated for work
conditions, taxation, the environment or legal obligations.
For 250 years the painful job of building the modern nation
state had depended on a continual rebalancing of binding rules
for both the public good and self-interest.
Now this balance was tipped violently one way by simply shifting
much of our economic power out into the global marketplace. With economic power denationalised and transnationals using
the new unregulated debt and currency systems to accumulate
a financial worth greater than that of most nation states,
the next logical step was to think of those transnationals
as new
nations unto themselves - virtual nations, freed of the limitations
of geography and citizens, freed of local obligations, empowered
with the mobility of money and goods. Better in every way.
This quarter-century rise of Globalisation peaked
in 1995 when the old system of international trade agreements
- known collectively as the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade - was reconceived as a new powerful body, the World
Trade Organisation. It was the last triumph. There was nothing
remarkable about the creation of the WTO. It was just a centralised
body to deal with commercial trade issues - not a bad thing
in and of itself. The important point was the context. The
reconceptualisation of civilisation through the prism of economics
had reached a critical barrier. Beyond that barrier any international
exchange that involved a commercial element would be treated
as fundamentally commercial. Culture would be seen as a mere
matter of industrial regulation; food, as a secondary outcome
of agricultural industries.
What particularly caught public attention around the world
was the idea that national health and food rules would be
treated not as the expression of a people concerned about
what sorts of things it put in its collective stomach but
rather as mere protectionism - unless backed by the hardest
of hard scientific evidence. That sort of evidence was usually
decades in coming. The precautionary principle and the citizen's
opinion were thus to be thrown aside in favour of an absolutist
theory of commercial exchange. This determinist approach towards agriculture as an industry
rather than as a food source - towards the implications
of everything from fertilisers, herbicides and insecticides
to
genetics, hormones, antibiotics, labelling and sourcing
- became the flash point for a far broader concern among
citizens.
This was the context in which a growing percentage of people
judged the handling of key issues as different as mad cow
disease, the availability of pharmaceuticals in the developing
world and global warming. They were beginning to feel that
what was presented as an argument of Globalism versus protectionism
was often just a confused opposition of personal choice
and abstract corporate interests. So Globalisation, put
forward
as a metaphor for choice, was organising itself around not
consumers but corporate structures, structures that sought
profits by limiting personal choice.
Soon people began to notice other contradictions
in the Global orthodoxy. How could the same ideology promise
a planetary growth in democracy and yet a decline in the power
of the nation state? Democracy exists only inside countries.
Weaken the nation state and you weaken democracy.
Why did an unprecedented increase in money supply translate
into a dearth of money for public services? And why did
this growth in new moneys enrich mainly those who already
had money?
Why did it lead to a growth in the rich-versus-poor dichotomy
and a squeezing of the middle class? Why did many privatisations
of public utilities neither improve services nor lower costs
for consumers but instead guarantee revenues to the new
owners while leading to a collapse in infrastructure investment?
People noticed that the financial value of the great breakthroughs
in female employment had somehow been inflated away. Abruptly,
a middle class family required two incomes. They noticed
that in a mere 25 years CEO salaries in the US had gone
from 39
times the pay of an average worker to more than 1000 times.
Elsewhere the numbers were similar.
And the savings from the cuts in civil servants were more
than offset by the cost of new lobbyists and consultants.
There were three particularly obvious signs that Globalisation
would not deliver on its promises. First, the leadership
of a movement devoted to "real competition" was
made up largely of tenured professors, consultants, and
technocrats - private-sector bureaucrats - managing large
joint-stock companies. Most of the changes they sought were
aimed at reducing competition.
Second, the idea of transnationals as new virtual nation
states missed the obvious. Natural resources are fixed
in place,
inside nation states. And consumers live on real land in
real places. These are called countries. The managers
and professors
who waxed enthusiastic about the new virtual corporate nations
were themselves resident citizens and consumers in old-fashioned
nation states. It would be only a matter of time before
elected leaders noticed that their governments were far
stronger than
the large corporations. Finally, the new approach to debt - public versus private,
First World versus Third World - revealed a fatal confusion.
Those who preached Globalisation couldn't tell the difference
between ethics and morality. Ethics is the measurement of
the public good. Morality is the weapon of religious and
social righteousness. Political and economic ideologies
often decline
into religious-style morality towards the end. But Globalisation
had shoved ethics to the side from the beginning and insisted
upon a curious sort of moral righteousness that included
maximum trade, unrestrained self-interest and governments
alone respecting
their debts. These notions were curiously paired with something
often called family values, as well as an Old Testament
view of good and evil.
t somehow followed that if countries were in
financial trouble, they were moral transgressors. They had
to discipline themselves. Wear hair shirts. Embrace denial
and fasting.
This was the crucifixion theory of economics: you had to be
killed economically and socially in order to be reborn clean
and healthy. For a quarter century, under the severe hand
of the IMF, this moralising and emotionally charged approach
has been applied to the developing world with absolutely no
success. Oddly enough, it had been presented as a form of
cool, detached utilitarianism. Those who applied the theory
seemed to fail the basic philosophical test of functioning
intelligence and ethics - the ability to imagine the Other.
They simply insisted, as developing-world debts continued
to rise on a rollercoaster of instability, that those people
must learn to act in a more predictable manner.
Which brings to mind rather aged priests insisting that
young men should take cold showers and exercise more.
By the turn of the century, it had become clear
that nationalism and the nation states were stronger than
they had been when Globalisation began. Indeed, this was apparent
as early as 1991, when the Yugoslavian army tried to stop
Slovenia and Croatia from leaving their federation. The ensuing
massacre was a test for almost every international organisation.
All of them failed. As if in a black comedy, international
elites chattered away about how global economic forces made
nation states irrelevant, while thousands of real people were
being murdered and cleansed to facilitate the creation of
yet more nation states. The resulting horror shocked the Europeans
into the realisation that their economic and administrative
union was helpless in a political-military disaster.
Eventually Washington brokered the Dayton peace accords.
But Dayton accepted the model of the local nationalist
war criminals.
Jews in Bosnia don't exist as citizens unless they pretend
to belong to one of the three official races. Neither do
people of mixed blood. Dayton is all about racially based
nations
- the most appalling aspect of nationalism, but nationalism
nonetheless. And so Globalisation's triumph, with the creation
of the WTO in 1995, was paired with its humiliation at the
Dayton signing in the same year. In a depressing game of leapfrog, the Yugoslavian settlement
competed with a genocide in Rwanda, where half a million
to a million people were murdered. This is a remarkable
statistic.
n a global world of economic and social measurement,
we are bombarded daily by apparently exact statistics measuring
growth, efficiency, production, reproduction, sales, currency
fluctuations, comparative levels of obesity and orgasms, divorce,
salaries and incomes. Yet we don't know, or don't care to
know, whether it was a million or half a million Rwandans
who were massacred. And the genocide was facilitated by Paris
and Washington, using old-fashioned nation-state powers at
the UN security council to block a serious international intervention.
The Rwanda catastrophe then morphed into the Congo catastrophe,
involving 4.7 million deaths between 1998 and 2003. Or was
it 3 million? Or 5.5 million?
The point is that the inevitability of global economic leadership
has been irrelevant through all these crises. While the true
believers speak of Globalisation, we are in fact in the middle
of an accelerated political meltdown marked by astonishing
levels of nationalist violence.
Observant national leaders couldn't help but notice that the
theories of Globalisation were failing them. The most public
of these failures was the breakdown of international lending
and debt mechanisms. For a short period it looked as if the
IMF's punishing approach might actually work. For a dozen
years most Latin American governments tried to follow instructions
laid down by the IMF, Western governments and the private
banks. They endured crucifixion economics, and in many cases
this eventually produced apparently solid growth, even if
the parallel result was a greater rich/poor gap. But in each
case the recovery was followed, a few years later, by even
greater collapse. It turned out that such prolonged austerity
had weakened, not strengthened, the social-economic fabric.
So after all of the liberalisations, privatisations and inflation-stabilisation
programs, growth in Latin America in the late 1990s was a
little over half what it had been before the reforms.
True believers will tell you that it could have worked, if
only there had been less nepotism, weaker unions or less corruption.
But real economic policies in the real world don't require
perfect conditions. Perfect conditions don't exist in the
real world. Western growth over two centuries has come in
spite of our own shifting flaws.
Peru and Bolivia are on a precipice. Argentina is picking
itself up yet again, while its educated youth emigrate en
masse. Now, like Brazil, it is going to try something it believes
more suitable to its circumstances. Only Chile seems solid,
and that is because, since the departure of Pinochet, it has
carefully designed its own solutions.
In other words, Latin America no longer believes in Globalisation.
Neither does Africa. Nor does a good part of Asia. Globalisation
is no longer global. Indeed, most Western finance ministers
have been quietly working for some time on partial reregulation
of the markets. Why quietly? To avoid the ferocity of the
true believers.
In 1998 the governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, Ian
Macfarlane, began calling for reregulation. "More people
are asking whether the international financial system as it
has operated for most of the nineties is basically unstable.
By now, I think the majority of observers have come to the
conclusion that it is, and that some changes have to be made."
In the same year a combination of street demonstrators and
distrustful ministers of finance from around the developed
world killed the Multilateral Agreement on Investment negotiations,
which had been aimed at a further Globalisation of finance
and investment. They rejected the idea of yet more business-oriented
binding treaties, with no binding political or social counterweights.
At almost the same time, Malaysia responded to an economic
meltdown in Asia by refusing to follow the Global rules. The
government pulled its currency off the market, made it nonconvertible,
pegged it just low enough to favour exports, blocked the export
of foreign capital and raised tariffs. These measures were
met by an explosion of Western moral fervour. Malaysia could
not do this. Its economy would not survive. The leading international
emerging-markets index expelled them. Then everyone averted
their eyes from the inevitable collapse. In 1999, a short
year later, that same index sheepishly readmitted Malaysia.
Smarter merchant bankers began to praise the possible long-term
investment advantages of pegging certain currencies in certain
conditions.
By then the World Bank, under new leadership, had begun to
soften its monolithic Global view, even if the IMF has been
extremely slow to accept reality and follow. Late in the year
the WTO was humiliated in Seattle by unprecedented demonstrations.
By the end of the century it was not only national leaders
who were beginning to take a more nuanced view of Globalisation's
capitalist credentials.
A growing number of people, including the brighter business
leaders, were focusing on where deregulation had worked and
where it hadn't.
The airline industry, for example, had been growing since
World War II. The calls for deregulation in the mid-1970s
came from a successful, profitable growth sector, which continued
to grow until September 11, 2001. Even then, the drop was
only 5.7 per cent, which, given 60 years of solid growth,
should not have been a catastrophe. Yet it was. In any case,
those corporations that had called for deregulation a quarter
century before had pretty well all gone bankrupt, one by one
over the intervening years. The whole industry is now dependent
on cut-rate airlines. So a sector that provides essential
services is being run on dubious margins and institutional
instability.
Why? Because of devotion to a simplistic, monolithic model
of Global market forces. But a large aircraft is not a telephone
or a pair of running shoes. Planes that cost hundreds of millions
of dollars have to be paid for with $100 airfares - a daunting
business model. The secret to the industry's pre-1973 success
was its stability - produced by carefully maintained, long-term
public regulations.
As for the romance of gigantism - of corporate size as a criterion
for industrial success - it was beginning to look pretty silly.
Endless mergers had led to high levels of unserviceable debt
and bankruptcy. It was as if size had replaced thought. As
if it were a male thing.
It was all beginning to resemble the 17th- and 18th-century
speculation markets - the South Sea Bubble, John Law and the
French regency, the Dutch tulip-bulb frenzy. The larger the
corporations grew, the slower and more directionless they
became - enormous management structures frightened of serious
investment and risk. They resembled out-of-control bureaucracies.
Yet the whole argument in favour of Globalisation had been
the apparently desperate need to wrench power from the bureaucracies
and place it firmly in the hands of real owners capable of
taking real risks.
More perhaps than the genocides, the disorder in the streets,
or the debt crises, it was those simple recurring images of
corporate ineptitude, combined with an absence of self-criticism,
that first made clear the decline of Globalisation. How then
could any of us seriously believe that our redemption lay
in the reconceptualisation of civilisation so that we could
all view it through the prism of business and economics?
The larger the corporations became, the more deregulation
released them to be themselves, the faster they slipped out
of sync with their civilisation and even with their customers
and shareholders.
Of course most people in business were working away as best
they could, more or less as they always had, whatever the
ideology in place. The people who stumbled badly seemed to
be the insistent stars of the new-world methodology. And so,
in full public view, the value of the fabled merger of AOL
and TimeWarner slipped rapidly from $US284 billion to $US61
billion. And GE's Jack Welch, a model new leader, began stumbling
towards every last penny on the floor like a greedy little
boy. Arthur Andersen demonstrated that accountants can act
as badly as anyone else. Hollinger, whose newspapers on four
continents had trumpeted Globalisation, fell under multiple
financial and legal investigations, as did Parmalat, the great
Italian success story. And so on.
Ideology, like theatre, is dependent on the willing suspension
of disbelief. At the core of every ideology lies the worship
of a bright new future, with only failure in the immediate
past. But once the suspension goes, willingness converts into
suspicion - the suspicion of the betrayed. Our brilliant leaders
abruptly appear naive, even ridiculous.
And so, in the late 1990s, our disbelief came back, and with
it our memory. The years between 1945 and 1973 no longer seemed
such a failure. In fact, it had been one of the most successful
eras in history for both social reform and economic growth.
It was something to build on, to reform; not something to
dismiss.
The first clear hint of the end of the reigning ideology came
with Malaysia's successful rejection of the Globalisation
model. We, in our fervour, saw their crisis as one of economics,
and therefore subject to the rules of inevitability. The Malaysians
saw it as a national political crisis with economic implications.
And so they acted politically and nationally, and were proved
right. Abruptly it seemed possible that nation states were
not dying. And that economic certainty was naive.
Then, in late 1999, came the general election in New Zealand.
Fifteen years earlier this small country had become the model
for Globalisation. Now, overnight, its electors voted to change
direction, endorsing a strong interventionist government devoted
to a mix of national social policies, enforceable economic
regulations and a stable private sector. Why? Its national
industries had been sold off, its economy was in decline and
its standard of living had been stagnant for all 15 years
of its Globalisation experiment. Its young were emigrating
at alarming rates. This, the citizens now said, was not inevitable.
If a small country could flex its muscles, well, then, the
nation state was truly alive.
Then came the explosions of September 11, 2001. In the following
days, the world economy began plummeting into a depression.
Corporate leaders hunkered down to their businesses, forgot
about world leadership and, with a classic desire to reduce
risk, slashed their investment programs, thus accelerating
society's economic plunge.
As for the political leaders, ministers of finance, chairs
of reserve and national banks - the constituted elites of
the nation states - they rolled into action. They travelled
and talked, printed money and spent vast amounts of it. And
they managed to stabilise the situation. In other words, there
was a brutal, highly public and existential reversal of roles.
The governments of the nation states took back their full
power both to act and to lead. The CEOs retreated back into
their historic reactive role.
Once belief is gone, the churches begin to empty. You could
see this accelerating disbelief in bankruptcy court in December
2001, when, as if in the last scene of an old-fashioned bedroom
farce, the "inevitability" of Global corporate leadership
came face to face with Enron, filing for government protection
from its private debts.
You saw it again in the opening session of the frivolous court
of Davos. This was where, 33 years before, the theology of
Globalisation had been first put forward, all based on the
assumption that civilisation must be approached through a
single, monolithic economic prism. Yet here they were on their
opening day in January 2003 feting Mahathir Mohamad, then
prime minister of Malaysia, for his country's economic success.
It was clear to everyone that this success had come from political
leadership at the nation-state level and that it was based
on the rejection of Globalist economics. A few days later,
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the new president of Brazil, arrived
in the Swiss village to lay out an independent, straightforward
version of responsible nation-state populism.
What all of this meant became perfectly clear when US secretary
of state Colin Powell arrived to speak for the country that
had achieved more national power than any other in history.
Insofar as a possible war with Iraq was concerned, he declared, "we
will act even if others are not prepared to join us".
So the US would act unilaterally - that is, nationally.
Thus, in a single week, inside the emotional and mythological
home of Globalisation, three very different pivotal governments
turned their backs on Globalisation and acted as if the nation
state were the central international reality.
The war that followed in Iraq quite intentionally put an effective
end to the half-century-old Western alliance produced by World
War II. Washington had chosen in January 2003 not to take
the time to put together the traditional Western battlefield
coalition. The effect was to free a cast of nations to rethink
their relationships. This was as true for the old NATO players
as it was for the smaller, newly free, central European states,
which were able to flex their nation-state muscles by joining
in. Some of them had never had such an opportunity. For others
it was the first time since the 1930s.
Throughout the world, nations
began moving about like semi-free agents. Organisations such
as NATO are still solid. There
is no desire to storm out. But everyone is checking around
to see if there are other ways they might like to act. And
with whom.
What this might mean remains painfully unclear. Here we are,
rushing around one of those sharp corners with no idea of
where we are going. Perhaps back to the worst of old-style
negative nationalism. Or perhaps on towards a more complex
and interesting form of positive nationalism, based on the
public good.
What is certain is that nationalism of the best and the worst
sort has made a remarkable, unexpected recovery. We don't
yet know whether it will become the new dominant ideology.
What we do know is that there has been a return across Europe
of 19th-century-style negative nationalism. Although usually
the product of fear, it reappeared in countries that had nothing
to fear: Jorg Haider in Austria speaking out against immigrants,
while echoing race and monolithic national myths. Italy governed
by three nationalists, one of them the leader of Mussolini's
old party. Related phenomena in Belgium, Denmark, France,
the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland. A sudden revival of
sectarian nationalism in Northern Ireland. The defeat of a
compromise in Corsica. Everywhere these nationalists are now
in coalition governments or are leading oppositions.
Many mainstream parties have trimmed their sails to capture
some of this nationalist vote. Non-European immigrants, who
rarely account for more than 5 per cent of a country's population,
have become the focus for a sense of political and social
impotence, produced in part by a quarter century of continental
and Global inevitabilities. Today's growing fear of Muslims
is parallelled by a return of anti-Semitism. The last Australian
election was won by provoking a fear of immigrants.
The new president of the Czech Republic is thought to be an
old-fashioned nationalist, as is the governor of Tokyo. Because
the US is so powerful, people say its actions are all about
empire. But empires are mere extensions of nationalism. They
are not a phenomenon of either Globalisation or internationalism.
At the same time, positive forms of nationalism have surged
forward, with countries like South Africa and Brazil taking
on the pharmaceutical transnationals over the availability
of drugs to fight epidemics such as AIDS. And these nations
have been winning. A reasonable number of noneconomic and
internationally binding treaties based on the primacy of ethics
and the public good have begun to take form: the Ottawa treaty
against land mines, the International Criminal Court, the
Kyoto accord against global warming. They represent the beginnings
of an attempt at an international balance in which the prism
of civilisation is neither naive market economics nor national
selfishness.
The return of the idea of national power has also meant the
return of the idea of choice - choice for citizens and choice
for countries. But with choice comes uncertainty, which provokes
fear. The moment we entered the post-Globalisation vacuum,
you could feel that fear begin to rise. And curiously enough,
the greater a nation's power, the more intense the fear becomes.
Perhaps power produces an expectation of certainty. Perhaps
smaller countries find a certain freedom in uncertainty -
the freedom to choose without being bullied. Necessity, Pitt
the Younger said, is the excuse of every tyranny. For most
smaller countries, Globalisation has felt like an inevitability
and, so, like a tyranny.
History will eventually give
all of these contradictory signals a shape. But history is
neither for nor against. It just is. And
there is no such thing as a prolonged vacuum in geopolitics. It is always filled. This is what happens every few decades.
The world turns, shifts, takes a new tack, or retries an old
one. Civilisation rushes around one of those blind corners
filled with uncertainties.
Then, abruptly, the opportunities present themselves to those
who move with skill and commitment.
John Ralston Saul is the author of Voltaire's Bastards: The
Dictatorship of Reason in the West, Unconscious Civilisation
and, most recently, On Equilibrium: The Six Qualities of the
New Humanism. ©2004 Harper's Magazine. Distributed by
Tribune Media Services International.
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