|
Human Rights
To successfully advocate life, liberty, and the pursuit of happinessall
God-given human rightsthe United States needs to lead by example. The
Acton Institute supports efforts to remove barriers to trade and to bring all
persons into the circle of exchange. Free global trade, the protection of property
rights under the rule of law, and the cultivation of democratic ideals are essential
to ensuring increased recognition of human rights and respect for human dignity
throughout the world.
FEATURED ARTICLE:
“Globalization, Social Justice
and the Plight of the Poor”
by Michael B. Barkey
Even in recent years it was thought that the poorest countries would develop
by isolating themselves from the world market and by depending only on their
own resources. Recent experience has shown that countries which did this have
suffered stagnation and recession, while the countries which experienced development
were those which succeeded in taking part in the general interrelated economic
activities at the international level.
-- Pope John Paul II, Centesimus Annus, No. 33
"The AFL-CIO and our affiliates believe the ultimate test is whether globalization
increases freedom, promotes democracy, and helps to lift the poor from poverty;
whether it is empowering the many, not just the few; whether its blessings are
widely shared; whether it works for working people. Clearly, the global market
that has been forged in the last decades fails this test." These words, spoken
by AFL-CIO president John Sweeney at the inauguration of the Campaign for Global
Fairness, cut to the heart of the opposition in many quarters to free trade
and "globalization." But does globalization truly fail to make the grade?
Trade, in itself, is a human right. The freedom to say "yes" or "no"
in an exchange is what enables each of us to seek out and realize opportunities
in keeping with our own values and needs. Freedom of the press means
very little if ownership of a printing press and the freedom to use it are curtailed.
Governmental restrictions on trade in pencils and paper or in computers and
a printing press restrict the freedom of writers to exercise and develop their
God-given talents. Private property and the freedom to contract are fundamental
human rights, as each person is entitled to enjoy the fruits of his labor. And
these rights do not stop at waters edge.
Trade barriers place limits upon the freedom to engage in mutually beneficial
exchange, and they are predicated upon the mistaken belief that people are unable
to judge what is best for themselves and their families. When the judgment of
politicians and a politicized process are elevated over the judgment of individuals,
governments prevent people from making decisions that are in their own best
interests. Diminished opportunities and increased prices are the result of limited
choice.
In a free economy, on the other hand, an organic system of production develops
among those interested in trade. Consumers and producers in one area of the
world seek out consumers and producers in another, and an international division
of labor permits greater efficiency in meeting human needs worldwide. Contrary
to Sweeneys claim, the effect of this is not diminishing opportunities
for the poor and working families, but greater opportunities to generate wealth
and achieve a higher standard of living.
There exists near unanimous agreement among economists that free trade serves
the interests of all people. On an aggregate level, countries open to international
trade grow at a much faster rate than countries less open to trade. A well-known
paper by Jeffrey Sachs and Andrew Warner of Harvard University reports that
developing countries with open economies grew by an average of 4.5 percent annually
during the 1970s and 1980s while closed economies grew by only 0.7 percent.
Developed countries with open economies grew during the same time period by
2.3 percent annually while those countries with closed economies grew by 0.7
percent.
The growth that results from international trade is directly felt in the wallets
of working families. The American Economic Review published a paper last
year that found trade exerts "a qualitatively large and robust
positive
effect on income." In fact, according to the 150 country analysis conducted
by economists Jeffrey Frankel and David Romer, an increase in the ratio of trade
to Gross Domestic Profit (GDP) by one percentage point raises real income per
person by between 0.5 and 2 percent.
The Development Research Group at the World Bank released a similar report
this year examining the macroeconomic policies of 125 different countries ("Growth
is Good for the Poor"). The report concludes that openness to trade is part
of a "core set of institutions and policies" necessary for improving living
standards, without concentrating wealth in the hands of the few.
The authors of the report explain their findings this way:
Openness to international trade raises incomes of the poor by raising overall
incomes. The effect on the distribution of income is tiny and not significantly
different from zero. The same is true for improved rule of law, which raises
overall per capita GDP but does not significantly influence the distribution
of income. Reducing government consumption and stabilizing inflation are examples
of policies that are "super pro-poor."
From this we conclude that the
basic policy package of private property rights, fiscal discipline, macro
stability, and openness of trade increases the income of the poor to the same
extent that it increases the income of the other households in society. This
is not some process of "trickle-down," which suggests a sequencing in which
the rich get richer first and eventually benefits trickle down to the poor.
The evidence, to the contrary, is that private property rights, stability,
and openness [to trade] directly create a good environment for poor households
to increase their production and income.
"Globalization is associated with improvements in overall human well-being,"
writes Jay Mandle, a liberal economist at Colgate University, in the June 2nd
issue of Commonweal. Mandles positive view of globalization is
founded, in part, upon his comparison of the level of exports and GDP per capita
for a country, with the countrys score on the United Nations Human Development
Index (HDI), which combines information on life expectancy, education, and material
well-being. "The countries with the lowest HDI are those that score lowest in
the other two measures; those with the highest human welfare scores export the
most and have the highest output levels."
Sweeney overlooks an additional benefit to trade between nations, outside the
purely material advantages that trade clearly brings. As goods and persons freely
flow across borders, so do ideas. Many countries only begin to encounter Christianity
and Western concepts of liberal democracy when they begin to trade with people
in other countries. Just as foreign goods enter a country and soon find their
way into the hands of willing consumers, foreign ideas also find their way into
willing hearts and minds.
As wealth grows in a country, typically so does the call for democratic reform.
Dictatorships or monarchies that permit some freedoms in the market have a tendency
to evolve into political democracies, evidenced in recent years in Greece, Portugal,
Spain, and other nations. Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico testified
on this point before the House Ways and Means Committee in the context of
permitting trade with China:
Economic exchange, within China and with the rest of the world, is helping
to strengthen the civil sector in countries, made up of churches, business
associations, and local governments, over against the state sector bureaucracy
still dominated by old ways of thinking
.It is creating pockets of independent
wealth that allow people to separate themselves from material dependence on
the state. This is especially important to churches, which have to depend,
to a great extent, on the charitable sector to flourish. The dissemination
of technologies like phone systems, computers, and the Internet allow dissident
religious groups to be in contact with each other and with other groups around
the world, and thereby draw attention to the plight of those persecuted for
their beliefs.
"Building a truly global economy," writes Bishop Diarmiud Martin, "means, above
all, building a system that permits the active participation of all persons
and nations in realizing the God-given potential with which they have been endowed,
an economy that is truly at the service of the entire human family."
Avoiding the temptation for nations to turn inward and choosing instead to
embrace the free economy and the entire human family is the only moral course
of action. When globalization is put to the test it passes with flying colors,
as people flourish in freedom internationally, as they do closer to home.
 
|