| Globalisation
challenge
Globalisation
offers only disaster to Indonesia's poor. Student demonstrators should
extend their protest to the powers governing their economy.
Wim F Wertheim
During the 1990s the word 'globalisation'
has become a fashionable word. Literally it only means a worldwide spread,
which could pertain to many different things including the spread of ideas.
When the term 'globalisation' is used by politicians or the media it is
mostly about the spread of market influence in economic and political life
over the whole world.
However, when we speak of the Third
World (which was the most important area of work for Gerrit Huizer and
myself for the past 25 years) then globalisation has absolutely nothing
to do with that kind of world.
The so-called 'Asian flu' which broke
out in the financial world proves that whereas global players play at a
sort of hazardous game, it has very serious consequences for the still
poor peoples of East and Southeast Asia.
What has been happening in Indonesia
during the last year, affecting its economy and social cohesiveness, may
serve as a warning for the present near-religious belief in the benefits
of the market being promoted on a global scale.
IMF restructuring
In reality there has not been much
change under President Habibie. There are no massive protests against the
real causes of the economic crisis. Yet if one follows the process which
led irrefutably to the fall of Suharto, one should realise that it was
a direct consequence of a damaging requirement by the IMF to restructure
the economy.
One of these demands was the scrapping,
or at least gradual elimination, of the long-standing government subsidies
for energy, which existed to keep costs down for the population. The government
was thus responsible for the massive increase of 50%- 70% in prices by
withdrawing the subsidies.
Globalisation of the economy, introduced
by western business, had absolutely no concern for the interests of the
Asian population. The only purpose for Indonesian as well as foreign investors,
bankers and creditors, was to make sure they could realise the return of
their loans of millions that they had so carelessly advanced.
In this rage of western globalisation
the IMF and the World Bank play a crucial role. A 'free market' has nothing
to do with reaching a certain 'free economic trade' for the seriously impoverished
population of Indonesia and other countries affected by the 'Asian flu',
but has only the purpose of making investment in Asia advantageous for
western bankers and investors.
The important journal Derde Wereld
has devoted a special issue to the question: 'Are the World Bank and the
IMF ready for the 21st century?'. One citation from it is as follows: 'As
lender of last resort for countries with liquidity deficits, the IMF insures
the investors against financial losses, and demands from the poor that
they pay the price.'
The same issue of Derde Wereld says
frankly: 'The IMF has been making a true religion of its neo-liberal economic
policies. Consequently it is considered sacrilegious to ask questions about
the basic principles of this new religion.' Anyway, neither the IMF nor
the World Bank, established in the USA at the end of World War II, were
bodies which represented the whole world; they were only products of the
Cold War which had just started.
As far as Indonesia is concerned, the
Wall Street Journal has all of a sudden discovered what people who studied
the country already knew 20 years ago, namely that the usual praises of
Indonesia as being one of the young Asian tigers were based on pure wishful
thinking, and that the World Bank itself was not innocent of the creation
of this image.
We can now easily see that all the
misery which the population of Southeast Asia experience at the moment
is for a great part the result of the whole process of globalisation that
has been enforced by the western world - and that the IMF as well as the
World Bank also have to share in the creation of this world disaster.
I would like to pose the crucial question:
Is it possible for the Indonesian populace to expect something positive
from a new multi-billion dollar loan from the IMF? For let us realise,
it would only be a loan. And this will have to be paid back in the future,
with interest. There is no way that the IMF or the World Bank will just
cancel the debt of a Third World government from the 'goodness of their
heart'. Jan Breman has said the same thing: 'The World Bank's aim is to
protect its own outstanding capital and to have it returned with profit
if possible. It does not differ in the least from an ordinary bank.'
It is clear that the present Habibie
regime, supported by the military echelons, is again ready to adjust to
the IMF decisions. This brings the important question: Will the spirit
of this year's Indonesian opposition develop within the foreseeable future
into an all-embracing resistance that might be able to withstand the foreign
pressure and the demands of the IMF?
Students
We may certainly view the students'
actions, which were so instrumental in Suharto's resignation, as a form
of struggle for emancipation. What is still lacking is an ideological motive
for a resistance that goes further than 'reformasi' of the state apparatus
and which strives for a change on the political level.
It must be understood that in the first
place it is not a question of substituting people at the top of the government,
but of knowing what powers govern the economy. This must involve breaking
a taboo that during the years 1965-66 became the basis of the 'Orde Baru'
and that for 32 years has been considered inviolable.
In a very important doctoral thesis,
the Dutch sociologist Saskia Wieringa demonstrated in detail that from
the beginning of October 1965 the Indonesian military elite manipulated
public opinion by systematically accusing the PKI of being responsible
for the murder of the generals in which Suharto himself was closely involved.
In this media campaign, Gerwani - the left-wing movement for the emancipation
of women and closely linked with the communists - was portrayed as a group
of godless prostitutes who attended the murders and had participated in
all sorts of animal lusts. This was the signal for the terrible murder
of communists when more than half a million innocent people were butchered.
This reign of terror has resulted in
the fact that still very few people in Indonesia dare to state publicly
that communist or socialist ideas might be a basis for a final solution
of economic problems.
Under these circumstances it can not
be expected that all of a sudden a new Indonesian government will come
to power that can withstand the demands of the IMF on principle. At the
most one could hope for a stronger nationalist-oriented government, which
could emulate the Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, who is trying
to withstand the IMF's demands. But it is still too early for the development
of a truly 'globalised' struggle for emancipation by the peoples of the
Third World from the powers of Washington.
This article is extracted from the
last paper Professor Wertheim wrote. He died, aged nearly 91, on 2 November
1998. Chris Williams was the translator.
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