In the
global economy, the time is to exercise vigilance and courage
The global economy has witnessed unprecedented growth in the last
few years a truth that is particularly evident in developing economies.
In the last few years, the world witnessed almost unbelievable economic
growth. Best of all, it has been broadly and widely manifested despite
all sorts of political, security, financial or energy shocks.
It is particularly gratifying to see that emerging and developing
economies have been growing at an unprecedented rate nearly 8% in
2006. All indicators and all reports point to a strong continuing
fall in poverty rates, which is closely allied to the rapid growth
in the volume of world trade as well as strong capital flows to
emerging markets. This broad growth has been based on the integration
of economies, on a multilateral global market economy, on the open
flows of trade and investment and above all, on the exchange of
information, knowledge and technologies.
And yet, major challenges remain. Right now, we still see awful
and unacceptable gaps of poverty that are appalling and must urgently
be confronted. The world also currently face a possible future economic
downturn. To guard against the pitfalls, what is needed most is
a strong framework of rules, institutions, political courage and
cross-border cooperation.
This is also the time when we need most to be consistent and push
this multilateral integration and cooperation even further. People
all over the world have a very real stake in it. Unfortunately,
right now is also the time that we begin to sense the indicators
of emerging systemic threats. The temptations that we see worldwide
include resorting to short-sighted economic nationalism, mercantilism,
protectionism and a unilateralism that is, yes, immoral and destructive.
Facing those challenges, we need to rally, to mobilize collective
and individual commitment, as well as the vocal and active support
of all elements and all partners in this current prosperity particularly
from the rich countries that have benefited the most. We are definitely
not on automatic pilot, and among our responsibilities in the global
community is to be both vigilant in thought and analysis and fearless
in personal action. It won’t be enough to rely on individual
political willingness to drive further this openness that is at
the basis of the world’s economic and social progress.
International cooperation and, more important, multilateral agreement
should be intensifying and deepening integration, with worldwide
rules that keep governments honest in terms of markets opening and
investment barriers falling. And yet that cooperation is faltering
and weakening. There is certain coyness, even wariness or nervousness,
for actually doing anything in this direction. We see signs of retrenchment
by most of the important players across the globe from the United
States, Europe, Russia, China and Latin America.
It is as if we are afraid of the messy, meshed world we have launched.
People are worried and uneasy and rightly so about the monstrously
uneven benefits of world prosperity. Great poverty anywhere, and
increasingly within countries, is a blight on each of our lives.
But is the answer to revert to the very policies that exacerbate
this poverty, that close down possibilities? In this respect, we
are also not on automatic pilot.
The progress that we have seen these last years, in the world as
we know it, could very well change. We all know the sorry state
of that admittedly flawed system that is, however, the only bulwark
against economic bullying: the rules-based international trade system.
The international trade agenda is in tatters, with ever more temptation
to resort to preferential (or rather discriminatory) agreements.
So this is definitely the time to exercise vigilance and courage.
In recent years, according to the Human Security Report, we have
actually seen a lessening in the number of conflicts, which many
find astonishing. But that broad survey and its conclusions point
to the absolutely crucial role played by multilateral efforts. In
the world as we know it today, much is being done because of a relentless
insistence by people, civil groups and some governments on making
multilateral action count sometimes without all of us being aware
of the aggregate picture.
Despite some newsworthy failures, in this world as we know it, the
power of cooperative action has been significant. More and more
governments are being obliged by their publics to provide to them
the services the common goods of progress from stability to accountability
to respect for the rule of law, decent governance, openness and
freedom.
But this is never assured. Failure, failed states and terrible situations
easily proliferate without joint vigilance and pressure. We seem
to be squeezed between two commonly held and contradictory ideas.
First, “We are hopelessly trapped in national configurations.”
And second, “We are helplessly subject to relentless globalization.”
As Maria Livanos Cattaui, former Secretary General of the International
Chamber of Commerce perfectly argued we are neither! The world as
we know it is unfairly complicated. We have to live with this complexity
and learn to enjoy it, or at least to deal with it. We are neither
“trapped” nor “subject.” Each of us has
to decide in what kind of world we want to live and to make sure
that we have robust and cooperative ways and institutions that ensure
we do not wake up one day and wonder how we ended up living in a
world in which influence is exerted by something alien.
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