Posted by: zanshin, 2006-09-30 04:00

Story

A Short History of Neo-liberalism - Twenty Years of Elite Economics and Emerging Opportunities for Structural Change

Susan George, 1999-03-24 (Wednesday), Global Exchange
Conference on Economic Sovereignty in a Globalising World

The Conference organisers have asked me for a brief history of neo-liberalism which they title "Twenty Years of Elite Economics". I'm sorry to tell you that in order to make any sense, I have to start even further back, some 50 years ago, just after the end of World War II.


In 1945 or 1950, if you had seriously proposed any of the ideas and policies in today's standard neo-liberal toolkit, you would have been laughed off the stage at or sent off to the insane asylum. At least in the Western countries, at that time, everyone was a Keynesian, a social democrat or a social-Christian democrat or some shade of Marxist. The idea that the market should be allowed to make major social and political decisions; the idea that the State should voluntarily reduce its role in the economy, or that corporations should be given total freedom, that trade unions should be curbed and citizens given much less rather than more social protection--such ideas were utterly foreign to the spirit of the time. Even if someone actually agreed with these ideas, he or she would have hesitated to take such a position in public and would have had a hard time finding an audience.


However incredible it may sound today, particularly to the younger members of the audience, the IMF and the World Bank were seen as progressive institutions. They were sometimes called Keynes's twins because they were the brain-children of Keynes and Harry Dexter White, one of Franklin Roosevelt's closest advisors. When these institutions were created at Bretton Woods in 1944, their mandate was to help prevent future conflicts by lending for reconstruction and development and by smoothing out temporary balance of payments problems. They had no control over individual government's economic decisions nor did their mandate include a licence to intervene in national policy.


In the Western nations, the Welfare State and the New Deal had got underway in the 1930s but their spread had been interrupted by the war. The first order of business in the post-war world was to put them back in place. The other major item on the agenda was to get world trade moving--this was accomplished through the Marshall Plan which established Europe once again as the major trading partner for the US, the most powerful economy in the world. And it was at this time that the strong winds of decolonisation also began to blow, whether freedom was obtained by grant as in India or through armed struggle as in Kenya, Vietnam and other nations.


On the whole, the world had signed on for an extremely progressive agenda. The great scholar Karl Polanyi published his masterwork, The Great Transformation in 1944, a fierce critique of 19th century industrial, market-based society. Over 50 years ago Polanyi made this amazingly prophetic and modern statement: "To allow the market mechanism to be sole director of the fate of human beings and their natural environment...would result in the demolition of society" [p.73]. However, Polanyi was convinced that such a demolition could no longer happen in the post-war world because, as he said [p.251], "Within the nations we are witnessing a development under which the economic system ceases to lay down the law to society and the primacy of society over that system is secured".


Alas, Polanyi's optimism was misplaced--the whole point of neo-liberalism is that the market mechanism should be allowed to direct the fate of human beings. The economy should dictate its rules to society, not the other way around. And just as Polanyi foresaw, this doctrine is leading us directly towards the "demolition of society".


So what happened? Why have we reached this point half a century after the end of the Second World War? Or, as the organisers ask, "Why are we having this conference right now?" The short answer is "Because of the series of recent financial crises, especially in Asia". But this begs the question--the question they are really asking is "How did neo-liberalism ever emerge from its ultra-minoritarian ghetto to become the dominant doctrine in the world today?" Why can the IMF and the Bank intervene at will and force countries to participate in the world economy on basically unfavourable terms. Why is the Welfare State under threat in all the countries where it was established? Why is the environment on the edge of collapse and why are there so many poor people in both the rich and the poor countries at a time when there has never existed such great wealth? Those are the questions that need to be answered from an historical perspective.


As I've argued in detail in the US quarterly journal Dissent, one explanation for this triumph of neo-liberalism and the economic, political, social and ecological disasters that go with it is that neo-liberals have bought and paid for their own vicious and regressive "Great Transformation". They have understood, as progressives have not, that ideas have consequences. Starting from a tiny embryo at the University of Chicago with the philosopher-economist Friedrich von Hayek and his students like Milton Friedman at its nucleus, the neo-liberals and their funders have created a huge international network of foundations, institutes, research centers, publications, scholars, writers and public relations hacks to develop, package and push their ideas and doctrine relentlessly.


They have built this highly efficient ideological cadre because they understand what the Italian Marxist thinker Antonio Gramsci was talking about when he developed the concept of cultural hegemony. If you can occupy peoples' heads, their hearts and their hands will follow. I do not have time to give you details here, but believe me, the ideological and promotional work of the right has been absolutely brilliant. They have spent hundreds of millions of dollars, but the result has been worth every penny to them because they have made neo-liberalism seem as if it were the natural and normal condition of humankind. No matter how many disasters of all kinds the neo-liberal system has visibly created, no matter what financial crises it may engender, no matter how many losers and outcasts it may create, it is still made to seem inevitable, like an act of God, the only possible economic and social order available to us.


Let me stress how important it is to understand that this vast neo-liberal experiment we are all being forced to live under has been created by people with a purpose. Once you grasp this, once you understand that neo-liberalism is not a force like gravity but a totally artificial construct, you can also understand that what some people have created, other people can change. But they cannot change it without recognising the importance of ideas. I'm all for grassroots projects, but I also warn that these will collapse if the overall ideological climate is hostile to their goals.


So, from a small, unpopular sect with virtually no influence, neo-liberalism has become the major world religion with its dogmatic doctrine, its priesthood, its law-giving institutions and perhaps most important of all, its hell for heathen and sinners who dare to contest the revealed truth. Oskar Lafontaine, the ex-German Finance Minister who the Financial Times called an "unreconstructed Keynesian" has just been consigned to that hell because he dared to propose higher taxes on corporations and tax cuts for ordinary and less well-off families.


Having set the ideological stage and the context, now let me fast-forward so that we are back in the twenty year time frame. That means 1979, the year Margaret Thatcher came to power and undertook the neo-liberal revolution in Britain. The Iron Lady was herself a disciple of Friedrich von Hayek, she was a social Darwinist and had no qualms about expressing her convictions. She was well known for justifying her programme with the single word TINA, short for There Is No Alternative. The central value of Thatcher's doctrine and of neo-liberalism itself is the notion of competition--competition between nations, regions, firms and of course between individuals. Competition is central because it separates the sheep from the goats, the men from the boys, the fit from the unfit. It is supposed to allocate all resources, whether physical, natural, human or financial with the greatest possible efficiency.


In sharp contrast, the great Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu ended his Tao-te Ching with these words: "Above all, do not compete". The only actors in the neo-liberal world who seem to have taken his advice are the largest actors of all, the Transnational Corporations. The principle of competition scarcely applies to them; they prefer to practise what we could call Alliance Capitalism. It is no accident that, depending on the year, two-thirds to three-quarters of all the money labeled "Foreign Direct Investment" is not devoted to new, job-creating investment but to Mergers and Acquisitions which almost invariably result in job losses.


Because competition is always a virtue, its results cannot be bad. For the neo-liberal, the market is so wise and so good that like God, the Invisible Hand can bring good out of apparent evil. Thus Thatcher once said in a speech, "It is our job to glory in inequality and see that talents and abilities are given vent and expression for the benefit of us all." In other words, don't worry about those who might be left behind in the competitive struggle. People are unequal by nature, but this is good because the contributions of the well-born, the best-educated, the toughest, will eventually benefit everyone. Nothing in particular is owed to the weak, the poorly educated, what happens to them is their own fault, never the fault of society. If the competitive system is "given vent" as Margaret says, society will be the better for it. Unfortunately, the history of the past twenty years teaches us that exactly the opposite is the case.


In pre-Thatcher Britain, about one person in ten was classed as living below the poverty line, not a brilliant result but honourable as nations go and a lot better than in the pre-War period. Now one person in four, and one child in three is officially poor. This is the meaning of survival of the fittest: people who cannot heat their houses in winter, who must put a coin in the meter before they can have electricity or water, who do not own a warm waterproof coat, etc. I am taking these examples from the 1996 report of the British Child Poverty Action Group. I will illustrate the result of the Thatcher-Major "tax reforms" with a single example: During the 1980s, 1 percent of taxpayers received 29 percent of all the tax reduction benefits, such that a single person earning half the average salary found his or her taxes had gone up by 7 percent, whereas a single person earning 10 times the average salary got a reduction of 21%.


Another implication of competition as the central value of neo-liberalism is that the public sector must be brutally downsized because it does not and cannot obey the basic law of competing for profits or for market share. Privatisation is one of the major economic transformations of the past twenty years. The trend began in Britain and has spread throughout the world.


Let me start by asking why capitalist countries, particularly in Europe, had public services to begin with, and why many still do. In reality, nearly all public services constitute what economists call "natural monopolies". A natural monopoly exists when the minimum size to guarantee maximum economic efficiency is equal to the actual size of the market. In other words, a company has to be a certain size to realise economies of scale and thus provide the best possible service at the lowest possible cost to the consumer. Public services also require very large investment outlays at the beginning--like railroad tracks or power grids--which does not encourage competition either. That's why public monopolies were the obvious optimum solution. But neo-liberals define anything public as ipso facto "inefficient".


So what happens when a natural monopoly is privatised? Quite normally and naturally, the new capitalist owners tend to impose monopoly prices on the public, while richly remunerating themselves. Classical economists call this outcome "structural market failure" because prices are higher than they ought to be and service to the consumer is not necessarily good. In order to prevent structural market failures, up to the mid-1980s, the capitalist countries of Europe almost universally entrusted the post office, telecomms, electricity, gas, railways, metros, air transport and usually other services like water, rubbish collection, etc. to state-owned monopolies. The USA is the big exception, perhaps because it is too huge geographically to favour natural monopolies.


In any event, Margaret Thatcher set out to change all that. As an added bonus, she could also use privatisation to break the power of the trade unions. By destroying the public sector where unions were strongest, she was able to weaken them drastically. Thus between 1979 and 1994, the number of jobs in the public sector in Britain was reduced from over 7 million to 5 million, a drop of 29 percent. Virtually all the jobs eliminated were unionised jobs. Since private sector employment was stagnant during those fifteen years, the overall reduction in the number of British jobs came to 1.7 million, a drop of 7% compared to 1979. To neo-liberals, fewer workers is always better than more because workers impinge on shareholder value.


As for other effects of privatisation, they were predictable and predicted. The managers of the newly privatised enterprises, often exactly the same people as before, doubled or tripled their own salaries. The government used taxpayer money to wipe out debts and recapitalise firms before putting them on the market--for example, the water authority got 5 billion pounds of debt relief plus 1.6 billion pounds called the "green dowry" to make the bride more attractive to prospective buyers. A lot of Public Relations fuss was made about how small stockholders would have a stake in these companies--and in fact 9 million Brits did buy shares--but half of them invested less than a thousand pounds and most of them sold their shares rather quickly, as soon as they could cash in on the instant profits.


From the results, one can easily see that the whole point of privatisation is neither economic efficiency or improved services to the consumer but simply to transfer wealth from the public purse--which could redistribute it to even out social inequalities--to private hands. In Britain and elsewhere, the overwhelming majority of privatised company shares are now in the hands of financial institutions and very large investors. The employees of British Telecom bought only 1 percent of the shares, those of British Aerospace 1.3 percent, etc. Prior to Ms Thatcher's onslaught, a lot of the public sector in Britain was profitable. Consequently, in 1984, public companies contributed over 7 billion pounds to the treasury. All that money is now going to private shareholders. Service in the privatised industries is now often disastrous--the Financial Times reported an invasion of rats in the Yorkshire Water system and anyone who has survived taking Thames trains in Britain deserves a medal.


Exactly the same mechanisms have been at work throughout the world. In Britain, the Adam Smith Institute was the intellectual partner for creating the privatisation ideology. USAID and the World Bank have also used Adam Smith experts and have pushed the privatisation doctrine in the South. By 1991 the Bank had already made 114 loans to speed the process, and every year its Global Development Finance report lists hundreds of privatisations carried out in the Bank's borrowing countries.


I submit that we should stop talking about privatisation and use words that tell the truth: we are talking about alienation and surrender of the product of decades of work by thousands of people to a tiny minority of large investors. This is one of the greatest hold-ups of ours or any generation.


Another structural feature of neo-liberalism consists in remunerating capital to the detriment of labour and thus moving wealth from the bottom of society to the top. If you are, roughly, in the top 20 percent of the income scale, you are likely to gain something from neo-liberalism and the higher you are up the ladder, the more you gain. Conversely, the bottom 80 percent all lose and the lower they are to begin with, the more they lose proportionally.


Lest you thought I had forgotten Ronald Reagan, let me illustrate this point with the observations of Kevin Phillips, a Republican analyst and former aid to President Nixon, who published a book in 1990 called The Politics of Rich and Poor. He charted the way Reagan's neo-liberal doctrine and policies had changed American income distribution between 1977 and 1988. These policies were largely elaborated by the conservative Heritage Foundation, the principle think-tank of the Reagan administration and still an important force in American politics. Over the decade of the 1980s, the top 10 percent of American families increased their average family income by 16 percent, the top 5 percent increased theirs by 23 percent, but the extremely lucky top 1 percent of American families could thank Reagan for a 50 percent increase. Their revenues went from an affluent $270.000 to a heady $405.000. As for poorer Americans, the bottom 80 percent all lost something; true to the rule, the lower they were on the scale, the more they lost. The bottom 10 percent of Americans reached the nadir: according to Phillip's figures, they lost 15% of their already meagre incomes: from an already rock-bottom average of $4.113 annually, they dropped to an inhuman $3.504. In 1977, the top 1 percent of American families had average incomes 65 times as great as those of the bottom 10 percent. A decade later, the top 1 percent was 115 times as well off as the bottom decile.


America is one of the most unequal societies on earth, but virtually all countries have seen inequalities increase over the past twenty years because of neo-liberal policies. UNCTAD published some damning evidence to this effect in its 1997 Trade and Development Report based on some 2600 separate studies of income inequalities, impoverishment and the hollowing out of the middle classes. The UNCTAD team documents these trends in dozens of widely differing societies, including China, Russia and the other former Socialist countries.


There is nothing mysterious about this trend towards greater inequality. Policies are specifically designed to give the already rich more disposable income, particularly through tax cuts and by pushing down wages. The theory and ideological justification for such measures is that higher incomes for the rich and higher profits will lead to more investment, better allocation of resources and therefore more jobs and welfare for everyone. In reality, as was perfectly predictable, moving money up the economic ladder has led to stock market bubbles, untold paper wealth for the few, and the kind of financial crises we shall be hearing a lot about in the course of this conference. If income is redistributed towards the bottom 80 percent of society, it will be used for consumption and consequently benefit employment. If wealth is redistributed towards the top, where people already have most of the things they need, it will go not into the local or national economy but to international stockmarkets.


As you are all aware, the same policies have been carried out throughout the South and East under the guise of structural adjustment, which is merely another name for neo-liberalism. I've used Thatcher and Reagan to illustrate the policies at the national level. At the international level, neo-liberals have concentrated all their efforts on three fundamental points:



free trade in goods and services
free circulation of capital
freedom of investment

Over the past twenty years, the IMF has been strengthened enormously. Thanks to the debt crisis and the mechanism of conditionality, it has moved from balance of payments support to being quasi-universal dictator of so-called "sound" economic policies, meaning of course neo-liberal ones. The World Trade Organisation was finally put in place in January 1995 after long and laborious negotiations, often rammed through parliaments which had little idea what they were ratifying. Thankfully, the most recent effort to make binding and universal neo-liberal rules, the Multilateral Agreement on Investment, has failed, at least temporarily. It would have given all rights to corporations, all obligations to governments and no rights at all to citizens.


The common denominator of these institutions is their lack of transparency and democratic accountability. This is the essence of neo-liberalism. It claims that the economy should dictate its rules to society, not the other way around. Democracy is an encumbrance, neo-liberalism is designed for winners, not for voters who, necessarily encompass the categories of both winners and losers.


I'd like to conclude by asking you to take very seriously indeed the neo-liberal definition of the loser, to whom nothing in particular is owed. Anyone can be ejected from the system at any time--because of illness, age, pregnancy, perceived failure, or simply because economic circumstances and the relentless transfer of wealth from top to bottom demand it. Shareholder value is all. Recently the International Herald Tribune reported that foreign investors are "snapping up" Thai and Korean companies and Banks. Not surprisingly, these purchases are expected to result in "heavy layoffs".


In other words, the results of years of work by thousands of Thais and Koreans is being transferred into foreign corporate hands. Many of those who laboured to create that wealth have already been, or soon will be left on the pavement. Under the principles of competition and maximising shareholder value, such behaviour is seen not as criminally unjust but as normal and indeed virtuous.


I submit that neo-liberalism has changed the fundamental nature of politics. Politics used to be primarily about who ruled whom and who got what share of the pie. Aspects of both these central questions remain, of course, but the great new central question of politics is, in my view, "Who has a right to live and who does not". Radical exclusion is now the order of the day, I mean this deadly seriously.


I've given you rather a lot of bad news because the history of the past 20 years is full of it. But I don't want to end on such a depressing and pessimistic note. A lot is already happening to counter these life-threatening trends and there is enormous scope for further action.


This conference is going to help define much of that action which I believe must include an ideological offensive. It's time we set the agenda instead of letting the Masters of the Universe set it at Davos. I hope funders may also understand that they should not be funding just projects but also ideas. We can't count on the neo-liberals to do it, so we need to design workable and equitable international taxation systems, including a Tobin Tax on all monetary and financial market transactions and taxes on Transnational Corporation sales on a pro-rata basis. I expect we will go into detail on such questions in the workshops here. The proceeds of an international tax system should go to closing the North-South gap and to redistribution to all the people who have been robbed over the past twenty years.


Let me repeat what I said earlier: neo-liberalism is not the natural human condition, it is not supernatural, it can be challenged and replaced because its own failures will require this. We have to be ready with replacement policies which restore power to communities and democratic States while working to institute democracy, the rule of law and fair distribution at the international level. Business and the market have their place, but this place cannot occupy the entire sphere of human existence.


Further good news is that there is plenty of money sloshing around out there and a tiny fraction, a ridiculous, infinitesimal proportion of it would be enough to provide a decent life to every person on earth, to supply universal health and education, to clean up the environment and prevent further destruction to the planet, to close the North-South gap--at least according to the UNDP which calls for a paltry $40 billion a year. That, frankly, is peanuts.


Finally, please remember that neo-liberalism may be insatiable but it is not invulnerable. A coalition of international activists only yesterday obliged them to abandon, at least temporarily, their project to liberalise all investment through the MAI. The surprise victory of its opponents infuriated the supporters of corporate rule and demonstrates that well organised network guerillas can win battles. Now we have to regroup our forces and keep at them so that they cannot transfer the MAI to the WTO.


Look at it this way. We have the numbers on our side, because there are far more losers than winners in the neo-liberal game. We have the ideas, whereas theirs are finally coming into question because of repeated crisis. What we lack, so far, is the organisation and the unity which in this age of advanced technology we can overcome. The threat is clearly transnational so the response must also be transnational. Solidarity no longer means aid, or not just aid, but finding the hidden synergies in each other's struggles so that our numerical force and the power of our ideas become overwhelming. I'm convinced this conference will contribute mightily to this goal and I thank you all for your kind attention.

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Related statements

Date  
2006 / 2006-12-31 Neo-liberals define anything public as ipso facto "inefficient
2006 The IMF supplies member governments with money to overcome short-term credit crunches
2006 The World Bank manages a total portfolio of $200 billion
2006 The World Bank and the IMF are the world's largest public lenders
1944 Karl Polanyi: "Within the nations we are witnessing a development under which the economic system ceases to lay down the law to society and the primacy of society over that system is secured.", (The Great Transformation, p. 251)
1944 Karl Polanyi: "To allow the market mechanism to be sole director of the fate of human beings and their natural environment...would result in the demolition of society" {The Great Transformation, p. 73)
1944 Karl Polanyi published 'The Great Transformation', a fierce critique of 19th century industrial, market-based society.
1944 The World Bank and the IMF are created to help avoid Great Depression-like economic disasters
1944 The IMF and the World Bank were the brain-children of Keynes and Harry Dexter White
1944 The World Bank and the IMF are created at Bretton Woods
Harry Dexter White was one of Franklin Roosevelt's closest advisors
What some people have created, other people can change
Cultural hegemony: If you can occupy peoples' heads, their hearts and their hands will follow
Ideas have consequences
So what happens when a natural monopoly is privatised? Quite normally and naturally, the new capitalist owners tend to impose monopoly prices on the public, while richly remunerating themselves
A natural monopoly exists when the minimum size to guarantee maximum economic efficiency is equal to the actual size of the market. In other words, a company has to be a certain size to realise economies of scale and thus provide the best possible service at the lowest possible cost to the consumer.

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2007-11-16The Crisis Of Pakistan: A Dangerously Weak State
2007-10-24CNN Larry King Live -- Interview with Vicente Fox
2008-01-21More Instruments and Broader Goals: Moving Toward the Post-Washington Consensus
2008-06-18The Age of Nonpolarity -- What Will Follow U.S. Dominance
2008-06-19Turning the tide? -- Why development will not stop migration
2008-03-24Chalmers Johnson: “Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic”
2008-04-22A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy
2008-11-20Defining the “Post-Soviet Space”
2008-11-05Post cold war Indian foreign policy
2008-10-24Russia and the World in the 21st Century
2009-01-31The blame game starts at Davos -- Analysis
2009-02-17Shock Wave (Anti) Warrior
2009-06-10How the Chicago Boys Wrecked the Economy -- An Interview with Michael Hudson
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: East Asia and Pacific Overview
2009-05-10Country Reports on Terrorism 2008 -- Chapter 2. Country Reports: Europe and Eurasia Overview
2009-03-15Flushing the Parasites -- Reforming the Global Financial System
2009-06-20The Secret Wars Of The Cia -- Part 2
2006-11-09Why Export Democracy?: The 'Hidden Grand Strategy' of American Foreign Policy'
2006-11-18Globalization: The Long-Run Big Picture
2006-09-23IMF'S FOUR STEPS TO DAMNATION
2007-04-05"Promoting Democracy: A Progressive Foreign Policy Agenda".
2007-03-14Sweden: Restrictive Immigration Policy and Multiculturalism
2007-03-18Between Europe And The Middle East: The Transformation Of Turkish Policy
2007-03-24Is the American Empire on the Brink of Collapse?
2007-02-28Speech at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy
2007-02-18After Neoconservatism
2007-02-21IPOs Shun U.S. Exchanges While Wall Street Collects Record Fees
2007-02-26Which Will It Be America, Empire or Democracy?
2006-12-06Transcript - The Nomination Hearing for Robert M. Gates
2007-01-01Only renewed multilateralism can save America
2007-01-11RED SYMPHONY
2007-06-22Symposium: Strategies of Death
2007-07-04Renewing American Leadership
2007-06-06Contours Of The Putin Era
2007-04-23Boris Yeltsin, Russia’s First Post-Soviet Leader, Is Dead
2007-04-25Gravy Train: Feeding The Pentagon By Feeding Somalia
2007-05-10Six Nightmares: Real Threats in a Dangerous World and How America Can Meet Them
2008-04-16A Review of the Seminar ‘the Security of Energy Supplies: the Role of NATO and Other International Organisations’
2008-03-23Dissecting the Danish Cartoon Controversy
2008-04-01Miracle in the desert
2008-05-04Downsized Discourse: Classroom Management, Neoliberalism, and the Shaping of Correct Workplace Attitude
2008-05-16How to manufacture a global food crisis: lessons from the World Bank, IMF, and WTO
2008-06-04A Peaceful Resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
2008-07-28Rome Diary: Italy's Leap Into The Dark
2008-07-28Why the Dollar Bubble is about to Burst
2008-08-01The Democrats & National Security
2008-08-25The Worldwide Threat 2004: Challenges in a Changing Global Context
2008-09-02Can The War On Terror Be Won? -- How To Fight The Right War
2008-01-19A Political-Risk Outlook for 2008
2008-01-24Henry Kissinger -- Diplomacy in the Post-9/11 Era
2008-01-25Western donors wrestle with the contradictions of rising India
2008-02-24Strategy and the Limitation of War
2008-02-26Fitzgerald: Islam for Infidels, Part Two
2007-12-13Crisis of Faith in the Muslim World
2007-12-03Sudan: Humanitarian Crisis, Peace Talks, Terrorism, and U.S. Policy
2007-11-12Stabbed in the back! The past and future of a right-wing myth
2007-10-12'The Trouble Is the West'
2007-09-09Globalization's Mad Scientist: On Joseph Stiglitz
2009-07-22Beyond Dependence: How To Deal With Russian Gas -- Policy Brief
2009-02-11Renewing American Leadership
2009-02-02Cities or countries?
2009-01-08Progress Against Poverty: Sustaining Mexico's Progresa-Oportunidades Program
2008-10-29Sarkozy, France, and Nato -- Will Sarkozy’s Rapprochement To Nato Be Sustainable?
2008-11-01The End Of Arrogance -- America Loses Its Dominant Economic Role
2008-11-10The Eurabian Revolution
2008-11-17A World System in Collapse! -- Reply to Gen. Ivashov
2008-11-10Mackinder’s World
2008-11-23The Politics of Money
2008-11-21A Conversation with Vicente Fox Quesada
2008-11-21The New Geopolitics
2008-11-25A Secure Europe in a Better World -- European Security Strategy
2008-12-06Indonesia, Iceland and the IMF - Part I
2007-05-11Waning Chances for Stability -- Least Bad Options in a Failed, War-Torn State
2007-04-26The Crisis in Zimbabwe: How the U.S. Should Respond
2007-06-05'i Am A True Democrat' -- G-8 Interview With Vladimir Putin
2007-06-11Putin Plays Down I.M.F. and W.T.O.
2007-05-26The Power Elite's Use Of War And Debt
2007-07-04Grand Strategy for a Divided America
2007-07-09Interview transcript: David Miliband
2007-07-16Will Iran Be Next?
2007-06-17General Tommy Franks -- An exclusive interview with America's top general in the war on terrorism
2007-06-17More Smoke on the Horizon in the Middle East War Theater
2007-07-01Democratic Realism -- An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar World
2007-06-29Courting Politics: A Supreme Moment in American History
2007-06-29Reply to Dalrymple
2007-08-15President Delivers State of the Union Address
2007-08-25As China Roars, Pollution Reaches Deadly Extremes
2007-08-29President Bush Addresses the 89th Annual National Convention of the American Legion
2007-02-20Misplaying North Korea and Losing Friends and Influence in Northeast Asia
2007-01-25Make War Your Friend, Part I
2007-03-19Made in USA
2007-03-28America Plundered by the Global Elite
2007-04-17Human Rights Council Discusses Reports On Health, Right To Food And Human Rights Defenders
2007-04-15Europe's Future
2007-04-12Former Soviet Dissident Warns For EU Dictatorship
2006-09-12The Nation That Fell to Earth
2006-08-21Ask the experts: Urban planet
2006-10-30Protectionist backlash 'will derail world economy'
2006-10-30How to rule the world
2007-09-08Knowing the Enemy
2007-09-06Excerpts from an interview with Lee Kuan Yew
2007-09-25Distorting Desire
2007-10-31After the end of empire -- The sun sets early on the American Century
2007-11-01Noam Chomsky - Controlled Asset Of The New World Order
2007-11-01The End of National Currency
2007-12-10Bilderberg 2007: Welcome to the Lunatic Fringe
2007-12-22Bush/Gore Second Presidential Debate October 11
2007-12-22Iran - Nuclear Chronology - 2005
2008-01-02Turkish accession to the European union: challenges and opportunities
2008-01-04Why Iraq? Oil and U.S. Foreign Policy
2007-12-27A Conversation With Benazir Bhutto
2008-01-06Concern about 'sovereign wealth funds' spreads to Washington
2008-02-08Assessing the Islamist Threat, Circa 1946
2008-01-28APPEAL TO ALLIES
2008-01-29THE WAR ON TERROR: FOUR YEARS ON; Taking Stock Of the Forever War
2008-01-31The Power Elite's Use Of Wars And Crises
2008-02-02A Statesman Without Borders
2008-01-21Stabilization and Democratization: Renewing the Transatlantic Alliance
2008-01-14Belgo-British Conference 2005 -- 2020 – a new horizon for Europe
2008-09-01Realists unite
2008-09-02Stoking Tensions, Risking Confrontation: A High Stakes US Gamble with Russia
2008-08-25The changes in the fight against illegal immigration in the Euro-Mediterranean area and in Euro-Mediterranean relations
2008-08-14European Social Forum: Meeting of a Multitude
2008-09-13Western Migration to Eastern and Central Europe
2008-10-02The Statesman
2008-08-03Korea's No. 1 Money Manager Says Genghis Khan Model for Funds
2008-08-04Europe Grapples with Threat of Stagflation
2008-07-28The Proposed Iranian Oil Bourse
2008-07-20Living on the Ice Shelf -- Humanity's Meltdown
2008-07-24The U.S. Economy Is Socialism for the Rich
2008-06-10Impeach George W. Bush Resolution
2008-07-05Symposium: Israel's Test
2008-06-24Chomsky Speaks -- On Iraq, Iran and Norman Finkelstein
2008-06-27The Wrong War -- Why We Lost in Vietnam -- Chapter One
2008-06-03Some European Perspectives on Terrorism
2008-06-01Why NATO Troops Can't Deliver Peace in Afghanistan
2008-05-17Planned US Israeli Attack on Iran: Will there be a War against Iran?
2008-03-24Global Migration Patterns and Job Creation
2008-03-19The new liberal imperialism
2008-04-18Choosing War: The Decision to Invade Iraq and Its Aftermath
2008-04-07Timeline of Social Events Related to Social Cohesion
2008-04-04Interview: Lee Kuan Yew -- Part 1
2008-04-05The Coming of Eurabia
2008-11-12Bulgarian corruption troubling the European Union
2008-11-17Hooray for the Global Crisis!
2008-11-10The Global Grand Bargain
2008-11-07What Happens when Countries Go Bankrupt?
2009-01-11Fare well, free trade
2008-12-14Use of the Veto on United Nations Resolutions by the USA
2009-02-02The West’s selective reading of history -- From Thermopylae to the Twin towers
2009-02-09The Whole World Is Rioting as the Economic Crisis Worsens -- Why Aren't We?
2009-07-22Street Fighting Man
2009-03-21Man In The Black Hat: Who Is To Blame For The Subprime Crisis?
2006-10-26Vietnam’s Roaring Economy Is Set for World Stage
2006-09-30What is Neo-liberalism? - A Brief Definition
2006-10-10Russia Seeks Greater Economic Influence in Europe
2006-11-07TURKEY AND THE AZERBAIJANI OIL CONTROVERSIES: LOOKING FOR A LIGHT AT THE END OF THE PIPELINE
2006-11-07MAGHREB REGIME SCENARIOS
2006-11-16Bush is no lame duck for Moscow
2006-11-01India's economy, now with muscle
2007-04-17Human Rights Council Adopts Seven Resolutions And Two Decisions, Including Text On Darfur
2007-03-31The Second Lebanon War -- It probably won't be the last
2007-03-15Highbrow Tribalism
2007-03-15Mohammedanism
2007-03-05HOW BRITAIN'S ARMAMENTS FUEL WAR AND POVERTY
2007-03-10Regime change is the reason, disarmament the excuse: An interview with Scott Ritter
2007-02-20Transformational Diplomacy
2006-12-04Afghanistan: No blood for oil - this time
2006-12-03The Way Out of War - A blueprint for leaving Iraq now
2006-11-29Islamic Revolution
2007-08-15The Long Haul: Fighting and Funding America's Next Wars
2007-08-24The Challenge of Islam
2007-08-12How the ‘Good War’ in Afghanistan Went Bad
2007-08-07Transcript: Bush news conference
2007-06-13John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption"
2007-06-13The Muslim Marshall Plan
2007-06-15The Nobel Peace Prize 2005 - Nobel Lecture
2007-07-13Initial Benchmark Assessment Report
2007-07-17The Democracy Rising Interview: Antonia Juhasz -- The Corporate Invasion of Iraq
2007-06-08Leaving the Zionist ghetto
2007-06-13Press Conference by the President
2007-06-122006 Commencement -- Baccalaureate Address
2007-06-11Sarkozy’s old familiar song
2007-06-02'High priests of globalization' in Istanbul
2007-05-02Country Reports on Terrorism -- Chapter 2 -- Country Reports: South and Central Asia Overview
2007-05-02President Bush Meets with EU Leaders -- 2007 U.S.-EU Summit
2007-05-17Rehabilitating US Imperialism
2008-04-05The Turkish Experiment with Westernization
2008-04-12Understanding How The Hegelian Dialectic Is Transforming The World To Bring In The New World Order
2008-04-14IMF Press Briefing on the Spring 2008 World Economic Outlook
2008-03-24Alan Greenspan vs. Naomi Klein on the Iraq War, Bush’s Tax Cuts, Economic Populism, Crony Capitalism and More
2008-04-01Seattle Turning Point. Fixing or Nixing the WTO
2008-04-01The Big Guns Behind the Global War Machine -- The WTO and the Global War System
2008-05-14NATO at a Crossroads
2008-05-14Resisting the Empire
2008-04-29The Man Between War and Peace
2008-04-24A Dissenter’s Guide to Foreign Policy
2008-05-22The Building BRICs of a New International System?
2008-05-26The Failed States Index 2007
2008-05-31The Palestinian Refugee Issue: Rhetoric vs. Reality
2008-06-27President Delivers "State of the Union"
2008-06-27The Truthdig Interview With Naomi Klein
2008-06-13G8 set to warn oil, food price shock endangers world economy
2008-06-15THE GEOPOLITICS OF CHINA: A Great Power Enclosed
2008-07-16Kosovo, after donors’ conference ‘success’, asks to join IMF and World Bank
2008-07-28Reflections on Leadership
2008-07-31The Med’s moment comes
2008-10-02U.S. Not Winning War on Terror -- Special Report
2008-10-03A shattering moment in America's fall from power
2008-10-12Crisis marks out a new geopolitical order
2008-09-13TERRORISM, HUMAN RIGHTS, SOCIAL JUSTICE, FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY: SOME CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE LEGAL AND JUSTICE PROFESSIONALS OF THE ‘COALITION OF THE WILLING’
2008-08-16Seattle, Genoa ... and now Florence
2008-08-23Hyperinflation Special Report
2008-08-21The Breaking Point -- A New Age of Torture
2008-09-12The Worsening Debt Crisis: Who Got Us into This Mess and What are the Real Political Options?
2008-02-04Going bankrupt: The US's greatest threat
2008-02-05Banana Republic, Without the Bananas…or the Republic
2008-01-24The Three Rs: Rivalry, Russia, ’Ran
2008-02-08The Fallacy of Grievance-based Terrorism
2008-02-14The Much Exaggerated Death of Europe
2008-02-19It's Time to Build a New Economic Model
2008-02-21The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: More May Better
2008-02-22Conversations in International Relations: Interview with John J. Mearsheimer (Part I)
2008-02-23The Two Faces of Saudi Arabia
2008-03-03President Addresses Joint Armed Forces Officers' Wives' Luncheon
2008-03-04The Three Trillion Dollar War: Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard Economist Linda Bilmes on the True Cost of the US Invasion and Occupation of Iraq
2008-03-04Who Owns Water?
2008-03-11Citizenship in European Thought: An Overview
2008-03-14Aims and Methods of Europe's Muslim Brotherhood
2008-01-10Daughter of the West
2007-12-28How Pakistan Works
2007-12-22PRESIDENT WILLIAM J. CLINTON STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS
2007-12-20Press Conference by the President
2007-12-19What could put India@Risk?
2007-11-04The Coming Economic Collapse by Dr Stephen Leeb -- Book Review
2007-11-09HOW STUPID DO THEY THINK WE ARE?
2007-11-16The Threat of Maritime Terrorism to Israel
2007-12-02Follow the drugs: US shown the way
2007-09-28The Mega-Lie Called the "War on Terror": A Masterpiece of Propaganda
2007-09-02Remarks By The President At 2002 Graduation Exercise Of The United States Military Academy
2007-09-11Lessons from the Bloc
2007-09-21The shock doctrine
2009-05-12Walker's World: Is this a recovery?
2009-05-20The Toll Booth Economy -- The Latest in Junk Economics
2009-04-06Samuel Francis On Immigration And The Ruling Class
2009-04-15"We can be a benevolent superpower", interview with Jimmy Carter
2009-06-13Remarks By The President On A New Beginning
2009-07-17Natural Capitalism
2009-02-11The GNW Interview: Juan Enriquez, Director Life Sciences Program, Harvard University
2009-02-01Preventing and Resolving Deadly Conflict: What Have We Learned?,
2009-02-07IMF Says Advanced Economies Already in Depression
2009-01-28Confidence evaporates, currency row brews at Davos
2008-12-13Country for sale
2009-01-11Globaloney
2009-01-15The people crunch -- Global migration and the downturn
2009-01-18Will There be a Recovery? -- Somber Thoughts for the New Year
2008-11-05"The Nation-State Is Now Transcendent, You Are Now Global Slaves And Interdependent, The Rise Of Dominion, The Death Of The Nation, Welcome To The Global Plantation"
2008-11-08Finance chiefs eye first steps in revamping global system
2008-11-10The US's geopolitical nightmare
2008-10-31Preventing and Responding to Internal Conflict: When is it Right for Others to Intervene?
2008-10-24The Causes of Economic Growth
2008-11-14How the US can learn to survive and thrive -- Creative technology is the key
2008-12-07Obama’s Speech in Berlin -- Transcript
2008-12-06Beware of the return of gold standard
2008-11-25Some Points on Understanding China's International Environment
2008-11-26The centre won’t hold any more
2008-11-27Asia pushes, West resists -- Book Review
2007-05-17300: Proto-Fascism and Manufacturing of Complicity
2007-05-10A New World Political Architecture
2007-05-01A Land Without Patriots -- The Yasukuni Controversy and Japanese Nationalism
2007-05-01How Japan Imagines China and Sees Itself
2007-05-01Can Europe Age Gracefully? - Part I
2007-05-01Can Europe Age Gracefully? - Part II
2007-05-04The world in 2020
2007-06-05Interview: Putin Likely to Remain Powerful Figure After 2008
2007-06-05President Bush Visits Prague, Czech Republic, Discusses Freedom
2007-06-07US missiles hit Russia where it hurts
2007-06-12Building a New Consensus on China
2007-05-21German President Köhler Seeks Balance in Asia
2007-05-22We're Number One! America Leads the World in War Profits
2007-07-22Interview with Israel Shahak
2007-07-15Viewpoint: Russia's missile fears
2007-07-16The Lose-Lose War
2007-07-15“Two States Or One State” -- Debate by Uri Avnery & Ilan Pappe
2007-06-17Tough being a superpower
2007-06-22Rice Talks With Journal's Editorial Board
2007-06-19CNN LATE EDITION WITH WOLF BLITZER
2007-06-29Is “Old Europe” Doomed?
2007-07-02Zionist Plan for the Middle East
2007-08-07In Dusty Archives, a Theory of Affluence
2007-08-08Germany Left Out of Global Policy Loop
2007-08-20The Politics of God
2007-08-27Iran risks attack over atomic push, French president says
2006-12-02Oceans apart