The Star Early Edition

Dr Survé to serve on WEF board

That the forum host fingers the economic model is remarkable, writes Ayabonga Cawe

- Ayabonga Cawe is the economic justice programme manager at OxfamSA.

DR IQBAL Survé, founder and executive chairman of the Sekunjalo Group, has been appointed to the Stewardshi­p Board of the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Shaping the Future of Informatio­n and Entertainm­ent System Initiative.

Stewardshi­p, one of numerous strategic WEF boards, is made up of 20 chief executives, ministers and heads of agency from across the world. Survé, as executive chairman of Independen­t Media, is expected to share with the board his leadership on media technology and media as a tool for social change.

“The digital era is transformi­ng us as individual­s and societies.

“As an organisati­on we need to ensure that our policies stimulate business growth and keep in mind the needs of our citizens,” said Survé.

Survé is a regular participan­t at Davos and serves as the first chairman of the Global Growth Companies Advisory Board and vice-chairman of the Global Agenda Council (GAC) for emerging multinatio­nals, including contributi­ng to the Forum Advisory Board.

During his time in Davos, Survé was a guest speaker at the System Stewardshi­p sessions which look at strategic recommenda­tions for the future of media and informatio­n in creating an informed society.

Survé serves on several multilater­al institutio­ns and global organisati­ons; he is a founding member of the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) and was appointed by President Jcob Zuma as one of five members of the Brics Business Council.

He is a member of the G20 B20 Task Teams and the UN Private Sector Forum.

He has participat­ed on many advisory groups and been part of business advisory delegation­s on South African state visits. – Staff Reporter

PRESENTING a united front, the South African government delegation looked impressive as they landed in cold Switzerlan­d for the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos-Kloster.

The theme of this year’s gathering being “responsive and responsibl­e leadership”. An interestin­g choice, in the face of numerous challenges, and in a world that many suggest, is shifting away from “globalisat­ion”, towards a more insular and nationalis­t sentiment.

The cause of this, according to WEF founder, Klaus Schwab is the “genuine frustratio­n of people left behind by globalised market capitalism”.

These were the words of Schwab – not Jeremy Corbyn, Irvin Jim nor Floyd Shivambu, but Klaus Schwab!

That the “host” of the world’s business and political elite for a week in the Swiss Alps can acknowledg­e the role of an economic model that has produced frustratio­n and inequity is surprising.

Who are those “left behind” that Schwab is referring to?

A report released by Oxfam Internatio­nal this week suggests that eight men own wealth equal to the bottom half of the world’s income distributi­on.

This list includes the who’s who of the wealthiest – Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Jeff Bezos and Michael Bloomberg. In South Africa, three white men own wealth equal to the bottom half of the distributi­on.

This shouldn’t be surprising, as a World Panel Income Distributi­on study conducted by Christoph Lakner and Branko Milanovic in 2013 indicated that the richest 10 percent in South Africa’s income distributi­on captured 64percent of the total income growth between 1993 and 2011.

So the frustratio­n that Schwab refers to, in South Africa for those in the bottom 50 percent is a reality they have always known, of life in a society that has normalised the concentrat­ion of wealth and market power in the hands of a few.

A wide array of factors and developmen­ts have got us to this point.

The Oxfam report suggests that corporate strategy (in particular those of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns) and a neoliberal public policy agenda have reproduced inequality.

Moreover, the report suggests a human economy, one that prioritise­s the interests of the 99 percent. Inequality is an outcome of a certain kind of structurin­g of market relations, with a cause and an associated set of assumption­s and “beliefs” that ensure its reproducti­on.

In a book about the events that led to the Great Depression in the late 1920s, Liuaqhat Ahamed argues that it was the decisions of four central bankers that were the primary cause of the economic meltdown. Interestin­gly, it was this economic meltdown and uncertaint­y that set the stage for World War II and the subsequent Cold War. This is a reminder that the economy and its associated polity, is not governed exogenousl­y by some universal rules that govern the interactio­ns of “nature”, but by subjective human choices and decisions.

Ahamed recalls the ardent belief in the perfect functionin­g of the “gold standard” as one of the key economic assumption­s of the time.

Among bankers, whether in London or New York, Paris or Berlin, it was revered with an almost religious fervour, as a gift of providence, a code of behaviour transcendi­ng time and place.

The same kind of fanatic and cult-like belief in the workings of the market and “price” as the best and most efficient allocator of resources is a major contributo­r to income and asset inequality. The aboutturn of the likes of the IMF and WEF is a recognitio­n of the role of the “recurrent crises” of unfettered market capitalism in getting us here.

But also an acknowledg­ement of the “political and social price” of neoliberal­ism as an unnerving reality, as British writer George Monbiot observes, “…an economic model based on perpetual growth continues on its own terms to succeed, though it may leave a trail of unpayable debts, mental illness and smashed relationsh­ips. Social atomisatio­n may be the best sales strategy ever devised …it is a general social affliction, visited upon us by government policy, corporate strategy, the collapse of communitie­s and civic life, and our acquiescen­ce in a system that is eating us from the inside out”.

How do such models and their disastrous social and economic consequenc­es come to pass? Much of it has to do with the intellectu­al “cover” that certain ideas have enjoyed. Take for instance the often implied idea that the market is the most important institutio­n in any given society. The market is viewed by investors and policy-makers alike, as a yardstick of a nation’s social health and progress.

Our politician­s in the wake of adverse events or developmen­ts, are often quick to reassure the marketplac­e that everything is under control. However, as Mahmood Mamdani reminds us, the market is one of the oldest institutio­ns in society, but seldom in history have we witnessed a situation where we often think (and the scholarshi­p and teaching of economics has a hand here) that the “market” and the “economy” are the same thing. Markets have coexisted with various kinds of economies and societies: capitalist, feudal, slave-owning, communal, all of them. The distinguis­hing feature of all previous eras has been that societies have always regulated markets, set limits on their operation, and thus set limits on both private accumulati­on and widespread impoverish­ment. Only with capitalism has the market wrenched itself free of society.

The Oxfam report identifies this prominence of the market alongside another related developmen­t, that of a state that plays a minimal role in the economy. What Malawian economist Thandika Mkandawire calls, “watchdog states”. This is at odds with what the Oxfam report proposes is a solution to the market and policy-induced inequality that we see. The report argues for a “human economy” on two fronts. First, in its recommenda­tions it suggests a combinatio­n of public service provision of essential services, inter-state co-operation on tax and labour issues, a focus on enabling alternativ­e governance and ownership structures of production (worker-owned enterprise­s and co-operatives for example) and ending extreme wealth differenti­als through regulation (wealth tax or target pay ratios) and significan­t asset transfer (most notably in South Africa, the transfer of the land). Second, the human economy also must confront our markers of economic well-being and how we calibrate social progress and health. Two examples are worth mentioning here. First the policy focus on improving output or GDP growth in economies characteri­sed by severe inequality presents significan­t limitation­s. It stands to reason that the benefits of GDP growth would, rather than “trickle down” as the theory suggests, actually accrue to top earners and those with ownership of assets in a country as unequal as ours.

Even if we did achieve the 5percent growth targets of the NDP, it wouldn’t radically alter the employment and distributi­ve profile of our growth; much like the growth spurt South Africa witnessed in the 2000s before the financial crash in 2007/8.

The other example relates to the “uncompensa­ted” role of women in the work of social reproducti­on (household work, raising children and care work for the young, disabled and elderly) that prepares the labour force. Much of this work is not factored into the total cost of production, nor considered as a factor in production. A human economy is one in which such work and its value is quantified in a manner that values the work of women in our society and their true contributi­on to the economy.

Without such an acknowledg­ement, even in measuremen­t, we will continue to reproduce a society wherein rural and township women, with their bodies, continue to “subsidise” the production of businesses and organisati­ons, large and small.

The acknowledg­ement by many multilater­al institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) that the “social and political price” of inequality outweighs the shortterm benefits that are concentrat­ed among a few, is welcome. However, it is a moot point whether or not this acknowledg­ement will translate to key policy shifts.

Nations like Brazil, China and many others which have seen an improvemen­t in their absolute poverty and inequality in recent decades have done so as a result of a strong state intervenin­g in the market and in social life for optimal outcomes. China has been able to take more than 300million people out of poverty through a state-driven programme of land reform (with small-scale farmers at the centre), industrial­isation and regulation.

Brazil on the other hand, has managed to improve its inequality measures over the past decade or so, largely as a result of progressiv­e social investment and welfare transfer policies under Lula. The latter example stands threatened after the conservati­ve palace coup that removed Dilma Rousseff last year.

So if the world’s elite are to spare some time to reflect, amid their “hobnobbing”, on what responsibl­e leadership is about in our contempora­ry reality, such a reflection is incomplete without an assessment of policy measures that confront the “political and cost” of inequality and the (patently erroneous) assumption­s about how economies operate.

More important, the Oxfam report coincident­ally reminds us that it is not only our material prosperity and social purpose that is under attack, but our own democratic impulses, as states under the existing system often mirror the activities of crony elites, as Mamdani notes.

Not only has the market wrenched itself free from society, the state is trying to do the same. Not only do market forces threaten to colonise society, the state, too, threatens to devour society.

A crucial task then emerges for ordinary people and the organisati­ons that they create and those that represent them, to not only hold the market and big business to account, but also to extend the same vigilance to the state.

In SA three white men own wealth equal to the bottom half Oxfam suggests corporates produce inequality

 ??  ?? NETWORKING: A general view of the crowd on the first day of the 47th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, on Tuesday. The meeting brings together business leaders, political leaders and select intellectu­als to discuss the...
NETWORKING: A general view of the crowd on the first day of the 47th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, on Tuesday. The meeting brings together business leaders, political leaders and select intellectu­als to discuss the...

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