The Most Reverend Njongonkulu Ndungane, the Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town, delivered the following sermon at an interfaith service held at St. George's Cathedral, Cape Town, on 14 April to mark the Global Week of Action on Trade
Some years ago, a journalist asked me what sort of world I wanted to see. The answer came to me instantly: I wanted a world with a human face.
In a world with a human face, every individual would be
able to smile together in complete freedom, in unity, in peace, in prosperity.
It would be a world where every human being can fulfil their potential as God
created them to be.
In the Hebrew Scriptures, the prophet Isaiah paints a
picture of what this should mean:
'No more shall the sound of weeping be heard or the cry of distress ...
No more shall there be an infant that lives but a few days,
or an old person who does not live out a lifetime ...
They shall build houses and live in them,
they shall plant vineyards and eat of their fruit.
They shall not build and another inhabit,
they shall not plant and another eat.'
(Is 65:20-22, extracts)
These verses speak of an end to infant mortality; health
care for all and a dignified old age; secure housing and economic stability,
where everyone may safely enjoy the fruit of their labours, in peace and joy.
Yet as we look around, what do we see? We live in a
world where a few do indeed have such a life. But far too many others struggle
even for basic existence.
Perhaps you are aware of some of the statistics.
Around half of the world's population live on about 2
dollars a day - or less. Indeed, over 300 million people in sub-Saharan Africa
live on less than one dollar a day.
Extreme poverty is actually growing in sub-Saharan
Africa, having risen by 72 million in the last ten years. Global hunger is
also growing - the number who go to bed hungry is over 850 million.
The numbers float before our eyes - but the human impact
is beyond our imagining.
Of this we can be sure: poverty is evil.
In all its ramifications and consequences, poverty mars
the image of God within humanity:
- it mars the image of God in the poor as it deprives
them of opportunities for abundant life;
- and it mars the image of God within those of us who
have more than enough, but who, through greed, complacency or even ignorance,
fail to do the justice, to embrace the loving kindness, that our God asks of
us.
Poverty is the new global apartheid.
Racial apartheid was rooted in accidents of birth.
Economic apartheid is little different.
Far too many people experience poverty for no other
reason than that their parents lived in poverty. They are trapped in spirals
of poverty.
Inequality is growing between the richest and poorest -
not only between nations, but within most nations of the world.
The gulf is scandalous. The three richest people in the
world control more wealth than all 600 million people in the world's poorest
countries.
Trade - the subject of our global week of action - has
known unprecedented growth in recent decades. But almost all the benefits have
gone to the rich. Indeed, some of the poorest countries are worse off.
As I stand here talking to you, global trade is worth $10
million a minute. Poor countries account for a mere 0.4% of this. Worse,
their share has halved since 1980. Income per person in the poorest African
countries has fallen by a quarter in the last 20 years. The prices of many key
exports of poor countries are at a 150 year low.
Meanwhile, agricultural subsidies by rich nations run at
$1 billion a day. Poorer countries cannot compete. Worse still, evidence
abounds of subsidised surpluses, dumped to devastating effect in poor countries
which have been forced to open markets without protection: rice in Mexico,
onions in Senegal, cotton in Kenya ... the list goes on.
Intellectual property protection rules make life-saving
medicine unattainably expensive. Two-thirds of those with HIV/AIDS live in
sub-Saharan Africa - even though prices are falling, the necessary drugs are
beyond the reach of most.
International trade rules rob poor countries of $2.4
billion every day. This is 14 times what they receive in aid.
All of this is sanctioned by global institutions. It may
be argued that poorer countries, as members of these, are party to the
decisions that keep them in the poverty trap.
But when, for example, in the IMF, the poorest 50 nations
share less than three percent of the vote, what choice do they have?
Meanwhile, one country - guess which - has veto power.
Is that justice?
Recently the cartoonist Zapiro depicted personified
International Financial Institutions, presiding over a divided world, looking
down on Dr Hendrik Verwoerd, architect of South African racial separation, and
saying 'Apartheid? You're just an amateur!'
What are we to say today? It is easy enough to
criticise. It is far harder to offer constructive solutions.
Yet that is what we hope to do in this week of global
action on trade.
Our slogan is 'trade for people, not people for trade.'
We need global trading and financial arrangements that
benefit everyone - indeed, that make particular provision for the poorest and
weakest.
The answer does not lie in the abolition of the
international financial institutions. If there was one lesson from 9/11 or the
earthquakes and tsunami in South East Asia, it is that we are all one
vulnerable human family - inescapably interdependent. Globalisation is here to
stay, and we need strong institutions to manage it.
The answer lies in the reform the international financial
institutions - the IMF, the World Bank, the World Trade Organisation - so that
they may have a human face.
What do I mean by this?
Of themselves, they are neither intrinsically good nor
bad. It is how they are used that brings morality into the picture. For too
long they have allowed the rich to exploit the poor. 'Level playing fields'
and blind commitment to privatisation may help increase trade volumes, but in
the process they allow - even encourage - the strong to trample the weak.
Institutions with a human face would reverse this. They
would uphold the intrinsic dignity and worth of every human individual. They
would protect the vulnerable, strengthen the weak, empower the marginalised,
give a voice to the voiceless.
Listen to these words:
'Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate
for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food,
clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right
to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old
age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control.'
These words are over 50 years old - they come from the
Universal Declaration on Human Rights, Article 25. Yet, half a century on,
they remain a mocking dream for that half of the world's population who live on
two dollars a day or less.
If the world is serious in its commitment to human
rights, achievement of these minimum standards must be given a higher priority
in our international institutions.
Some may ask 'What does this have to do with an
organisation designed to facilitate world trade? Trade alone does not cause
these ills; nor can trade alone solve them.'
True. But trade is an inseparable part of interdependent
human living; and policies on subsidies, and on liberalisation of goods and
services, can make a great difference to the availability of food, water,
education, health services, in a clean, sustainable, environment - the
fundamentals of life.
Trade policies must make the human dimension a more
central priority, so that trade plays a fuller role within the greater goal of
poverty alleviation.
Trade has the potential to be one of our most effective
weapons in overcoming poverty. If Africa increased its share of world exports
by a mere 1%, it would generate $70 million. That is about five times what our
continent receives in aid.
To do this, we need a WTO that is more just, more
equitable, more transparent, more flexible. One size policies do not fit all -
we need more differentiation, that will allow the poorest countries to tailor
their policies to the needs of their populations. Blanket commitments to
liberalisation and privatisation must go. Consensus decision-making must also
be revised, since it stifles the varied needs of individual countries.
And alongside reform of the WTO, there must be reform of
the rest of the world's global financial and economic instruments.
Differentiation in South Africa
Let me make a few comments on our own situation in South
Africa.
Each country is different. Apartheid distorted our trade
patterns with the rest of the world. We need to manage the transition to
greater integration in global trading systems, even as we argue for their
reform. We are becoming internationally competitive - but to try to do this
too fast, without either interim protection or adequate support for
restructuring, loses us jobs, and puts downward pressure on wages and
conditions. This is part of the difficulty facing the textile and clothing
sector.
Of course there are other factors - a major one is the
strength of the rand, and the need to control inflation, alongside the impact
this has on both exports and imports.
More generally, I should also like to see greater
promotion of capital formation, and, at an international level, a brake put on
foreign currency speculation. 'Hot money' can have devastating effects on
fragile economies.
Then there is the need to strengthen our domestic
economy, build up the purchasing power of South Africans, and develop our rural
infrastructure. There is plenty of potential for a greater emphasis on the
encouragement of sustainable livelihoods.
And of course, as part of this, I must repeat my
long-standing commitment to the Basic Income Grant.
Achieving these goals
But for our own country, and for the good of those who
are far poorer than we are, the overriding need remains reform of the
international institutions and the systems they support.
How are we to achieve any of this?
Well, I must say that this year, 2005, I am particularly
optimistic.
I am optimistic because of the changing international
climate, and because of the growth of global public opinion in favour of
change.
The Changing International Climate
Five years ago, the international community agreed the
Millennium Development Goals. This year, alongside acknowledgement that we are
lagging behind our mid-term targets, there seems to be a growing commitment to
get the MDGs back on track through wide-ranging actions, including
differentiated trade measures.
This year, poverty is a key priority for both the G8 and
EU summits.
The Commission for Africa has also offered comprehensive
and realistic proposals, including the recommendation that 'liberalisation must
not be forced on Africa.'
These come at a time when broader discussion of the whole
UN system is on the table.
In all these areas, there is a growing momentum for the
sort of changes that will bring greater economic justice to the world.
Economists tell us - indeed, have been telling us for
decades - that the cost of defeating poverty is easily affordable. It is tiny
in comparison with the more than trillion dollars that will be spent on
armaments this year.
What is lacking is the will power.
Growing Public Opinion
This brings me to my second reason for optimism.
We can help generate that will power.
Politicians respond to public opinion. Businesses are
answerable to customers and shareholders.
And everywhere people are beginning to raise their voices
more loudly than ever before.
We saw this with the Jubilee 2000 campaign - an
unprecedented global coalition speaking up for the world's poorest. We made a
difference - though we still have some way to go.
Today we have wider, and still growing, coalitions, that
bring together faith communities, non-governmental organisations, and every
branch of civil society - across every nation of the world. All are committed
to 'Making Poverty History,' as one campaign puts it.
That is what this Global Week of Action on Trade is all
about.
Through the mobilisation of huge numbers on every
continent, we are declaring that no policy-maker, in politics or business,
should doubt that trade justice is the growing demand of world opinion.
This is how to create the necessary political will.
My prayer is that our voices will be heard, and that
justice will be done through the reform of the UN, IMF, the World Bank, and the
World Trade Organisation.
We need international institutions that are truly
accountable - not driven by accounting. We must learn to measure success in
quality of life, not just quantities of dollars. This must be our over-riding
goal - until Article 25 is a reality for every human person.
Joe Slovo once said, 'The real question is not whether a
system works, but for whom it works.'
For too long, these organisations have worked for the
rich. The time has come to say that the poor must stop paying the price.
Amen.
14 April 2005
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