Globalization must be harnessed to benefit rich and poor alike, UN labour agency says by UN News / IPS News United Nations / InterPress Service News 10:26am 25th Feb, 2004 24 February 2004 "Globalization must be harnessed to benefit rich and poor alike, UN labour agency says" (UN News) The world's interdependent economy benefits few and disenfranchises many, according to a new report presented today by the United Nations International Labour Organization (ILO) which calls for building an “inclusive” globalization. A Fair Globalization: Creating Opportunities for All acknowledges that globalization’s potential for good is “immense” but warns that current imbalances in the world economy are ethically unacceptable and politically unsustainable. The report was issued by the World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalization, which was co-chaired by President Tarja Halonen of Finland and President Benjamin William Mkapa of Tanzania. Their report “offers no miraculous or simple solutions, for there are none,” said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia, who originally proposed the panel. “But is an attempt to help break the current impasse by focusing on the concerns and aspirations of people and on the ways to better harness the potential of globalization itself,” he added. In New York, a spokesman for Secretary-General Kofi Annan praised the ILO for the initiative and hailed the report's release, voicing hope that the international community would heed its findings "on one of the most important issues of our time - the need to ensure that people throughout the world, and especially the poor, can benefit from globalization and have a voice wherever decisions about it are taken." Among its recommendations, the Commission calls for fairer rules for international trade, investment, finance and migration as well as measures to promote core labour standards and a minimum level of social protection in the global economy. In addition, the experts underscore the need to mobilize international resources to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), a set of time-bound targets for tackling global ills. The Commission calls for giving global priority to finding decent work for all – a goal that should be pursued through complementary national and international policies. “This would respond to a major political demand in all countries,” the experts observe, pointing out that accelerating jobs creation in all nations would help to reduce tensions within and among them. LONDON, Feb 24 (IPS) "Globalisation: UN asked to take Charge" by Sanjay Suri. The United Nations must be given charge of introducing fair globalisation, a major new report says. "The UN multilateral system constitutes the core of global governance and is uniquely equipped to spearhead the process of reform," says the report 'A Fair Globalisation: Creating Opportunities for All'. The report prepared by the World Commission on the Social Dimension of Globalisation set up by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) makes wide- ranging and specific proposals to turn globalisation "from sterile debate to positive action." The commission that prepared the 168-page report released in London Tuesday, represented a wide cross-section of players in the globalisation process. It was co-chaired by Finnish President Tarja Halonen and Tanzanian President Benjamin William Mkapa. The commission included members from rich and poor countries, trade unionists and corporate leaders, parliamentarians and presidents, leaders of indigenous people and corporate leaders, scholars and government advisors. That made the commission "a microcosm" of diverse views, Mkapa and Halonen say in the report. The wide representation gives weight to the recommendations in the report, which promises to become a turning point in the worldwide debate on globalisation. The report finds the idea of nations united a synonym for ideas of multilateralism and globalisation. And so it proposes that the United Nations become the body that could 'police' globalisation. "The multilateral system of the United Nations and its related organisations provide the basis for the global policies which are needed in the areas of development, trade, finance and international peace and security," the report says. The United Nations "provides a time-tested framework to guide the process of globalisation in accordance with the international rule of law." The report says there is "no durable alternative" to the UN, but that the world body would have to change radically if it must play a role in fair globalisation. "Globalisation is changing the underlying configurations of economic and political power, and the strains are being felt in the United Nations system." The report supports calls for a change to the composition of the UN Security Council, which it views as a hangover of the Second World War (1939-45). But it goes much further in recommending specific new roles the UN can play. The report says international organisations that include the UN and also other institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund should together launch "policy coherence initiatives" in which they work together "to progressively develop integrated policy proposals that appropriately balance economic, social and developmental concerns on specific issues." Priority issues that should be "immediately considered" include employment creation, empowerment of women, "integration of the informal economy into the economic mainstream", protection of core labour rights, education, health, food security and human settlements, the report says. The world commission proposes also the creation of a Globalisation Policy Forum by international organisations. This would be "a platform for regular dialogue between different points of view on the social impact of developments and policies in the global economy." Participants would produce a regular "state of globalisation report." It recommends that the ILO take the initiative in following up this recommendation. The report also calls for "serious consideration of existing proposals to create an economic and social security council, and a global council on global governance" with similar status to the UN Security Council, though without the authority to make legally binding decisions. A strengthened United Nations would make room also for stronger national governance, the commission says. "Policies, institutions and actions within nations are fundamental determinants of whether countries, and all people within them, benefit from globalisation." Efficient markets require effective states, the report says. But nations need to be more watchful of the multilateral system. "We propose the creation of a parliamentary group concerned with the coherence and consistency between global economic, social and environmental policies, which should develop an integrated oversight of major international organisations.." The report says developing countries must benefit from a "fairer system of voting rights" in multilateral institutions, where "radical reform" is needed. "The present system of governance is based on rules and policies that generate unbalanced and often unfair outcomes," the report says. It asks for unfair barriers to market access to be "substantially reduced, especially for goods in which developing countries have a strong comparative advantage." The difficulty is not with globalisation but "deficiencies in its governance." In agriculture, the report says that "new export credits and subsidies, and trade-distorting domestic measures should be prohibited and existing measures rapidly phased out." Immediate action is feasible on trade and financial issues that have been the subject of protracted multilateral negotiations, the report says. But it will take "continued advocacy and a stronger public opinion" to make that happen. The commission says global governance must mean "fair rules for trade, finance and investment, measures to strengthen respect for core labour standards, and a coherent framework for the cross-border movement of people.." Fair rules for intellectual property "must balance the interests of technology producers and technology users." Moves to capital account liberalisation may need to be "cautious and gradual." The report calls for rich countries to be prepared to pay for many of the changes needed. "The 0.7 percent target for ODA (official development assistance) must be met and new sources for funding over and above this target should be actively explored and developed," the report says. But change cannot be "the realisation of a Utopian blueprint in one swoop," the commission acknowledges. "We recognise the realities of power and inequality. But we draw our inspiration from the determination of men and women today to exercise greater control over their own destinies, and from the potential of a fairer and more inclusive globalisation to deliver on their needs." Halonen and Mkapa recalled a comment by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan that the United Nations had "come to a fork in the road." It is time now, they said, for the world "to take a correct turn." Visit the related web page |
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