Global Times

Socialist policies help countries

- By John Ross

An immense human catastroph­e is unfolding in parts of Africa and in Yemen. As the Washington Post wrote last month “The world is in the grip of an astonishin­g and acute crisis: More than 20 million people in South Sudan, Somalia, northern Nigeria and Yemen face starvation in the next six months, according to the United Nations. Nearly 1.4 million children are at ‘ imminent risk’ of death. The scale of the hunger epidemic was described last month by USbased researcher­s as ‘ unpreceden­ted in recent decades.’… ‘ The situation is dire,’ warned UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres earlier this week, in a desperate appeal for funds. ‘ We need $ 4.4 billion by the end of March to avert a catastroph­e.’ So far, his organizati­on has raised only $ 90 million, a drop in the bucket.”

Most urgently, flowing from this catastroph­e, all countries must mount an urgent relief effort coordinate­d through the UN. However, to deal with this disaster and prevent future ones, it is vital to realize this calamity is human made, not natural. New such catastroph­es can therefore be prevented by human action. As the Washington Post article mentions “The crises are in large part man- made, stoked by ruinous conflicts, collapsing governance and internatio­nal indifferen­ce. Only in one country, Somalia, which is recovering from years of war, is drought the main cause of the current food shortages.”

The underlying cause of this disaster is that 766 million people in the world, over 10 percent of the population, live in extreme poverty as defined by World Bank criteria: daily expenditur­e of $ 1.90. Such incomes are so low that if the situation is worsened by any further factor famine can unfold. South Sudan’s civil war, Yemen’s civil war and foreign interventi­on and actions by Nigeria’s terrorist Boko Haram have tipped already poor societies into the catastroph­ic threat of famine.

Alongside the urgent relief efforts, both the underlying causes and the immediate events producing these catastroph­es must be understood.

The underlying cause is global poverty. The facts on this demonstrat­e dramatical­ly the failure of the Western “Washington Consensus” and show that changes in economic policy away from this model can produce dramatic improvemen­ts.

Socialism has proved itself hugely more successful than capitalism in eliminatin­g global poverty. Above all, since 1981 socialist China lifted 853 million people out of internatio­nally defined poverty – 75 percent of the world’s total reduction. Socialist Vietnam lifted 31 million people out of similarly defined poverty. Together socialist countries account for 78 percent of world poverty reduction – lifting 887 million people out of poverty. In contrast, capitalist countries, dominated by the Washington Consensus, only achieved 250 million.

On the latest World Bank data only 92 million people live in internatio­nally defined poverty in socialist countries compared to 789 million in capitalist ones. Only 6 percent of the population of socialist countries live in poverty compared to 14 percent in capitalist ones.

The fundamenta­l backdrop to developing famine is that 388 million people live in poverty in sub- Saharan Africa and only 10 million people have been taken out of poverty since the peak year of 2010. Against such a fragile social background a new strain can produce a disaster.

In contrast, more correct economic policies produce great improvemen­t. From 1983 to 1985 Ethiopia suffered catastroph­ic famine. But from 1991, due to policies driven by state investment, in contradic- tion to the Washington Consensus, Ethiopia has achieved an annual average 7.3 percent economic growth – one of the world’s fastest.

Sub- Saharan Africa and the Middle East’s situation is worsened by US and EU policies. Both dump subsidized agricultur­al products into world markets. African farmers cannot compete, are driven out of business and national food self- sufficienc­y is undermined – further creating conditions for famine.

Superimpos­ed on this, the world economic slowdown caused by the internatio­nal financial crisis starting in the US in 2008 sharply increased political instabilit­y. An arc of military conflict has been created from Nigeria in West Africa, through Libya and Southern Sudan in North Africa, into Syria, Iraq and Yemen in the Middle East and extending north into Ukraine and eastward into Afghanista­n. Western military interventi­ons worsened this situation. The unilateral US Iraq invasion and bombing of Libya transforme­d “jihadist” organizati­ons from fairly powerless groups into those controllin­g large areas of Iraq, Syria, Libya and Nigeria. External military interventi­on in Yemen produced famine. The results rebounded on the EU, with refugee waves attempting to flee the Middle East and North African. Instead of learning the lessons, which now threatens to create catastroph­ic famine, Western government­s have attempted to ignore this disaster. The Washington Post article “The world is ignoring an ‘ unpreceden­ted’ starvation crisis” also notes that Trump has threatened to cut UN contributi­ons. What conclusion­s follow from this threat of catastroph­ic famine? First, whatever other difference­s, all countries must urgently cooperate on famine relief. Second, the economics of the neo- liberal Washington Consensus have to be abandoned and policies closer to China’s socialist developmen­t model adopted. Third, unilateral external military interventi­ons, which worsen the situation, must end.

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 ?? Illustrati­on: Peter C. Espina/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Peter C. Espina/ GT
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