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                        <P><IMG SRC="../../images/editoria.gif" ALT=" Selected Editorial"> </P>
                        <P><B><FONT SIZE="6">Globalization's the Issue </FONT></B><BR>
                        </P>
                        <P>For the past decade, through both Republican and Democratic administrations,
                        Washington has promoted a model of free-market global capitalism
                        that it claimed would benefit the great majority of people both
                        at home and abroad. This model has failed. </P>
                        <P>The countries that were the showcase for globalization are now
                        an economic shambles. In the past two years South Korea's economy
                        has shrunk by 45 percent and Thailand's by 50 percent. Indonesia's
                        has shrunk by nearly 80 percent, and gross domestic product per
                        capita has fallen from $3,500 to under $750. The economic crisis
                        that began in Asia is now ricocheting around the world. Russia
                        is in default, Japan in recession and Africa and Latin America
                        in financial turmoil. The US &quot;bubble economy&quot; is showing puncture
                        wounds, with a decline in manufacturing, a sharp contraction in
                        agriculture, a fall in corporate profits and wild gyrations on
                        Wall Street. </P>
                        <P>While many Americans are deeply concerned about the speed and
                        direction of the global economy, the Clinton Administration and
                        the Republican leadership in Congress--both deeply beholden to
                        global corporations and financial institutions--seek to accelerate
                        the globalization juggernaut. This fall Congress faces two linked
                        struggles on the future of the global economy. </P>
                        <P><I>The Return of Fast Track</I>. Last fall, as a result of strong opposition from organized labor
                        and Democrats in the House, Congress blocked Clinton's fast-track
                        plan, which would have prevented Congress from amending trade
                        deals negotiated by the President. Fast track was designed to
                        clear the way for a NAFTA-style deal for the entire Western Hemisphere,
                        and the Multilateral Agreement on Investment, to prevent countries--including
                        the United States--from putting the brakes on the flow of global
                        capital. </P>
                        <P>The Administration, realizing that political support for its globalization
                        policy was waning, made a deal with the House Democratic leadership
                        early in 1998 not to bring fast track back this year if its opponents
                        would support an $18 billion expansion in funding for the International
                        Monetary Fund. Now, to embarrass the Administration and divide
                        it from its labor and progressive allies, Republican leaders in
                        the Senate are promoting an omnibus trade bill that tacks fast
                        track onto the African trade bill. </P>
                        <P><I>Expanding Funding for the IMF</I>. The International Monetary Fund, established to stabilize exchange
                        rates, has become the prime architect and enforcer of corporate
                        globalism. In exchange for rescue loans, it has imposed ruinous
                        structural adjustment plans that have virtually bled debtor countries
                        to death. Although the IMF's actual operations have been little
                        known to most Americans and even to many members of Congress,
                        the spectacular failures of its recent bailouts in Russia, Asia
                        and Mexico have finally brought its disastrous policies of imposed
                        austerity, corporate welfare and deregulation into question. </P>
                        <P>As the manic boom phase of globalization began to falter with
                        the outbreak of the Asian crisis a year ago, the Clinton Administration
                        decided that expanded funding for IMF bailouts was the best hope
                        for forestalling deflationary contagion--and for protecting the
                        speculative loans and investments made by its friends in the international
                        financial community. It therefore promoted the $18 billion &quot;replenishment&quot;--actually
                        a huge expansion of IMF funding. With strong lobbying from the
                        Clinton Administration and the House Democratic leadership, most
                        Democrats signed on, partly in exchange for the withdrawal of
                        fast track, partly from fear of global meltdown, partly as a sign
                        of support for an internationalist approach to solving economic
                        problems and partly because they were offered &quot;reforms&quot; that seemed
                        to fix some of the IMF's flaws but that turned out to be toothless.
                        Republicans were split: Corporate types like Newt Gingrich supported
                        IMF replenishment, while right-wingers like Dick Armey and &quot;Main
                        Street Republicans&quot; opposed it. </P>
                        <P>Meanwhile, right-wing populists like Pat Buchanan are lining up
                        to ride to power on public fear and anger about globalization.
                        If corporate globalism continues to result in deteriorating conditions
                        of life for ordinary Americans, we're likely to see a rise of
                        scapegoating demagogy and virulent right-wing economic nationalism.
                        </P>
                        <P>Fortunately, from the debates over NAFTA, fast track, the World
                        Trade Organization and the IMF--and from the growing links among
                        popular movements and progressive parliamentarians around the
                        world--a progressive alternative to corporate globalism and isolationist
                        xenophobia is emerging. Such a progressive alternative to corporate
                        globalism--based on global labor rights, environmental protections,
                        sustainable development, democratization and international institutions
                        to counter uncontrolled deflations and the race to the bottom--is
                        the key to blocking the rise of right-wing nationalism. </P>
                        <P>Elements of this agenda are already being implemented in civil
                        society--for example, by the antisweatshop campaigns that are
                        forcing companies like Gap and Nike to reconsider some of their
                        most reprehensible labor practices. Other elements--such as the
                        recently passed Sanders-Harkin amendment banning the import of
                        products made with child labor--have been written into law. Still
                        others have been introduced into legislation that would end US
                        financial support for IMF programs that degrade the environment
                        and undermine workers' rights, restrict the power of governments
                        to regulate &quot;hot money&quot; capital flows and give more bailouts to
                        international bankers and investors. </P>
                        <P>Progressives have rarely presented these elements as a coherent
                        alternative--a &quot;new architecture&quot; for the global economy. I and
                        other progressives in Congress will be introducing legislation
                        next session to begin laying out such an alternative. The upcoming
                        debates on fast track and the IMF provide an opportunity to consider
                        whether the global economy is going in the right direction and
                        to look at alternatives. If instead we rubber-stamp fast track
                        and IMF expansion, we will only increase the likelihood that meltdown
                        will go global.        </P>
                        <P><BR>
                        <B>Bernie Sanders
                        <HR SIZE="1">
                        </B>
                        <HR NOSHADE SIZE="1">
                        </P>
                        <P><I>Bernie Sanders is the Independent US Representative from Vermont.</I> 
                        <HR NOSHADE SIZE="1">
                        </P>
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