Please help Links stay afloat. Donate what you can!
Click on Links masthead to clear previous query from search box
Recent comments
- Revolutionary Nepal
16 hours 25 min ago - sraeli Communists Thank Hugo Chávez
17 hours 57 min ago - Calcutta News: Israeli army are cowards says Chavez
18 hours 43 sec ago - El Salvador: Take Action to Oppose Dirty Campaign!
21 hours 40 min ago - Norway: Unions strike over Gaza
21 hours 52 min ago - Africa takes to the streets on Israel massacres in Gaza
22 hours 33 min ago - Media disinformation on Hamas
22 hours 37 min ago - Nasrallah: Arabs have much to learn from Chavez
22 hours 43 min ago - Lessons for the NPA from the SSP/Solidarity experience
1 day 5 hours ago - Requesting list of Israeli & Palestinian attacks.
1 day 5 hours ago
The global financial crisis: implications for Asia
By Reihana Mohideen
The Wall Street crisis seems light years away from the side streets of Manila’s urban poor slums. For the labouring masses in the Philippines the capitalist system has been in crisis for some time now, unable to deliver life’s basic necessities: jobs and a living wage; affordable quality healthcare and education; and food security.
According to official National Statistics Office data poverty levels have increased between 2003 and 2006, and 2008 is expected to be the worst year since the 1998 Asian economic crisis. Between April 2007 and April 2008 the labour force grew by only 81,000, while the number of unemployed rose by 249,000, i.e. triple the increase in the labour force. In 2008 the number of employed persons fell by 168,000 and there was no employment generation in April of this year. Jobs were being lost at a time when prices and inflation were skyrocketing.
The global financial crisis, however, now threatens to affect the Philippines economy such that it impacts on the higher income families as well. It could threaten the employment of Filipino overseas workers whose remittances, amounting to a staggering US$14 billion-plus in 2007, have been the backbone of the economy at a time when foreign direct investment (FDI) has shrunk to almost nothing. According to Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas 2007 data, some $1.5 billion was remitted from Asia, $2 billion from the Middle East, $2.3 billion from Europe and more than 50% of all remittances, amounting to $7.5 billion, came from the US.
Rumours are also rife
that the state pension fund, the Government Service Insurance System, is
heavily exposed to the
Decoupling debunked
The wild swings in the
Asian financial markets in response to the events in the
The 70% decline
in the Shanghai composite index from its October 2007 peak, the recent failures
of Philippine and Indonesian bond auctions, the downward pressure on Asian currencies
as varied as the Indonesian rupiah, the Korean won, the Thai baht, the
Vietnamese dong and the Indian rupee are just some highlights of the collapse
of the "decoupling theory". And news of the bailout rejection by the
US congress sent many Asian sharemarkets plunging, with Japan's Nikkei 225
sinking more than 4 per cent,
When big
On September 24 worried
depositors lined up to withdraw their money outside East Asia Bank, Hong Kong’s
third largest bank with $51 billion in assets. The panic was triggered by text-message
rumours that the bank was in distress. Depositors who lined up said that after
the failure of Lehman Brothers they no longer fully trusted any financial
institution.
Standard &
Poor’s and Moody’s both lowered their credit outlooks for Bank of East Asia to
negative, from stable, after the bank was forced to restate its earnings for
the first half of this year and announce reduced first-half profit by $16.8
million. The bank attributed the loss to a rogue trader, not global credit
problems.1]
Reports in India
that depositors were beginning to pull out their money from the nation's
largest private bank, ICICI Bank Ltd promoted the Reserve Bank of India to
reassure the public about adequate cash reserves.
The Asian Development
Bank (ADB) -- which pushed hard for the elimination of capital controls thus
leaving Asian economies dangerously exposed and vulnerable to the massive
swings in capital flows during the 1998 Asian financial crisis -- in its usually
upbeat Asian Development Outlook updates for 2008, warns that due to the Asia’s heavy reliance on the US, Europe and Japan (G3) for its major export
markets, slower growth in the G3 will spill over into the Asian economies. According to the bank’s chief economist: “Uncoupling
is a myth. Our study shows that the region still depends on industrial
countries to fuel its growth. If the global slowdown extends beyond 2009, the
repercussions for the region could be severe.”
As for the
prospect of trade within
The report also assesses
that the risks of a second Asian crisis have “abated, but not disappeared”. If
the sub-prime crisis in the
The political implications
for the labouring masses
The instability in the global financial markets, the rise in
inflation and the rise in commodity prices such as food and oil indicate that
the main pillars of the neoliberal capitalist economic order are breaking up.
Some left-wing economists argue that the neoliberal economic order has
exhausted itself and that the capitalist system is unable to continue to
function in this manner. Economic policies based on low wages and stimulated
consumption (via easy credit) are no longer viable. This global crisis today also
has a crucial environmental dimension: that of climate change and global
warming.
As
Marxists we understand that economic crises are a consistent feature of the
capitalism system and are rooted in the major contradictions underlying
capitalism: the contradiction between imperialism and underdevelopment; of
capital and labour. A more recent phenomenon linked to post-WWII
industrialisation is the contradiction between capitalism and nature. This
global crisis also has a crucial environmental dimension: that of climate
change and global warming. Marxists have also predicted that in its attempt to
solve these periodic crisis, capitalism deepens these contradictions and raises
them to a higher level, thus paving the way for deeper and sharper crisis the
next time round.
Governments around the world have no clear strategies to
resolve the crisis. Even the partial solutions they
put forward to solve one aspect or a particular manifestation of the crisis,
exacerbates another aspect of the crisis. For example, industrialised countries
converted agricultural food production to producing biofuels to deal with the
potential shortages in oil resources. This has now contributed to a shortage in
food production and a huge increase in food prices. Attempts to intensify oil exploration
and conventional fuels such as coal will exacerbate the environmental crisis
that threatens the very survival of the planet.
Struggle for power
Despite the severity of
the problems facing
global capitalism today, there is no inevitability about the ``automatic’’ collapse
of the system. It would be a dangerous illusion to think that capitalism will
simply collapse and that a socialist alternative will take its place.
The capitalist system is
still extremely resilient. Previous forecasts of its inevitable collapse have
simply never materialised and have been proven to be wrong.
The system will struggle to survive and keep itself alive – at whatever cost.
The capitalist solutions to resolve the
crisis will be at the expense of the labouring masses and the consequences of the
``solutions’’ that it will impose on us will be truly horrendous. Social
movements alone, struggling around particular issues, are inadequate to face
the challenge and defend working people and the poor against their assaults. We need to build political
movements, which struggle for power and system change, such as the advanced
movements in
[Reihana
Mohideen is the chairperson of Transform Asia, a Philippines-based institute specialising
in labour and gender studies. She is a political activist and a founding member
of Laban ng Masa, a broad left political coalition in the Philippines. She is
also a board member of the Institute of Political Studies, which focuses on progressive political education and the training
of young activists in the Philippines.]
[1] “Anxious Depositors Withdraw
Cash from Asian Banks”, by Keith Bradsher and Heather Timmons, New York Times,



Comments
Post new comment