Thursday, August 27, 2009

How 3,000,000-plus slave laborers underpin modern China

Modeled after the Soviet gulag, China’s system of forced labor camps is now more than a half-century old, but it remains as essential as ever to the modern Communist regime. That’s because the system – the laogai – is not just a large group of places where millions of men and women are confined to do forced labor and to endure other cruel punishment. More important, the laogai is a collective tool to maintain the Party/state partnership’s monopoly of power.

You would think that as China has modernized economically, the Beijing regime would have less need for such a cruel system. Indeed, the Party/state monopoly is eroding, gradually, but the rulers’ determination to retain it is not. Beijing is as dependent as ever on arbitrarily detaining and abusing those seen as a threat to that monopoly.

Changing the Term of the Debate

A powerful new book, “Laogai: The Machinery of Repression,” explains those political reasons for the durability of the laogai in the People’s Republic of China. It also illustrates the plight of the 3,000,000 or more slave laborers with never-before-published photographs smuggled out of the country, as well as with other disturbing photos.

The 160-page volume, of coffee-table size but not content, features a forward by Harry Wu, a survivor of 16 years in the laogai. He has dedicated – and risked – his life to oppose oppression in his native land. Thanks to his single-minded effort, he has succeeded in popularizing the term laogai as a gulag with Chinese characteristics.

“Laogai: The Machinery of Repression” deals candidly with the role that the laogai has played in China’s economic development. The book has pictures, some taken by Harry Wu, of a few laogai-made exports -- plastic flowers, tea, tea cups, dolls, rubber boots, chains, clasps – and of several prisons that double as factories.

Wu tells his own moving story as a prisoner and as a campaigner relentlessly exposing laogai-made products. During one of his secret trips to gather evidence, he landed in jail for 66 days. He was released only after intensive efforts spearheaded by Jeff Fiedler, an AFL-CIO leader and longtime friend.

Wu’s campaign against laogai imports, embraced by Congress, produced two U.S-China agreements designed to enforce a U.S. (and China) law against trade in prison-labor products. The results are zero or thereabouts. Whom to blame? Deception by Chinese officials. The difficulties of gathering evidence in China. An unenthusiastic U.S. bureaucracy. And above all, in my view, a high-level unwillingness to disturb a bilateral relationship that enriches the elite on both sides.

To be fair, there was one success. A prison-made Diesel engine was blocked from U.S. entry in 1992. But that apparently did nothing to make life more bearable for prisoners in the Golden Horse Diesel factory, also serving as Yunnan No. 1 prison, where the blocked engine originated. As late as February this year, women imprisoned in that factory were reportedly required to work 14 hours a day.
* * *

The People’s Republic of China is the second largest trading partner of the United States. Last year, we imported goods worth $337,772,628,000 from China, not counting $6,483,400,000 from Hong Kong.

How much of those “made-in-Chinas” goods were made in the laogai? Nobody knows. Who cares?

“Laogai: The Machinery of Repression” is published by Umbrage Books in Brooklyn, N.Y.


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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Rx: a new economic model that would value work and workers

Stripped down to its basics, the economic model to which we are addicted undervalues work and workers, a failing that is largely responsible for our sick economy. Thank God, some bright minds are working to free us from that addiction. They are shaping the outlines of a model – a paradigm -- that seriously values work and workers.

One of the few economists addressing that enormous challenge is Thomas Palley, with a Yale PhD and varied experience that now includes an assignment at the New America Foundation, a Washington-based think tank. In that role, he has written a policy paper released July 22 under the title “America’s Exhausted Paradigm: Macroeconomic Causes of the Financial Crisis and Great Recession.”

“Macroeconomics” is jargon for the big economic picture, and as Palley emphasizes in an email: “It’s critical that we get the big picture right. Without that, we will be pushed toward small picture reforms that do not solve the fundamental problems.”

Tracing Origins of Today's Flawed System

The big picture is very big indeed, and Palley’s report is itself only an overview. Here I present my highlights of only one part of that overview. I focus on his critique of the neo-liberal economic policies adopted after 1980 under Ronald Reagan as a “flawed growth model” that has continued to infect policies of subsequent administrations, Republican and Democratic alike, including the present one.

Palley, with well documented backup, contrasts the new model to the one that the United States followed in the four decades after World War II. Prior to 1980, the United States benefited from policies that led to what Palley calls a “virtuous circle of growth,” in which wages grew with productivity. “Rising wages meant robust aggregate demand, which contributed to full employment, [which] in turn provided an incentive to invest, which raised productivity, thereby supporting higher wages.”

The rejection of that model after 1980 – and to this very day -- put workers figuratively and literally in a box, a box with anti-worker policy pressures coming from four sides, which Palley designates as small government, labor market flexibility, retreat from full employment, and globalization.

Small government policies, advocated under the cover of liberating people from government interference, fundamentally undermine the legitimacy of government. The policies include deregulation, light-touch regulation, privatization, and outsourcing public services, all to the advantage of corporations and the disadvantage of workers.

Labor market flexibility
is the name of a program enabling employers to fight unions, minimum wages, unemployment benefits, and other worker rights. In neo-liberal economic theory, flexibility generates more employment, but in the real world has led to wage stagnation and widening inequality.

Abandonment of full employment
means the Federal Reserve’s actions that put a higher priority on low inflation than on the goal of full employment. The switch was facilitated by the economic profession’s embracing the theory of a “natural” rate of unemployment, thus providing political cover for higher actual unemployment, a condition that undermines the bargaining power of workers on wages.

Globalization, with a combination of free trade and the unfettered cross-border movement of capital, puts American workers into competition with a huge foreign labor force, in which workers have markedly lower wages and working conditions. At the same time, intergovernmental agencies, especially the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, promote global policies that put foreign workers into the same neo-liberal box as American workers. Thereby, the neo-liberal policies not only undermine demand in advanced countries. They also fail to compensate for this by creating adequate demand in developing countries. A prime example is China, with its rising income inequality.

Palley’s critique covers not only the flawed economic growth model but also the United States’ “flawed engagement with the global economy.” That and the concluding sections of his paper deal with critical issues such as the following:

-- Why concentrating on micro tales of villainy (Madoff’s massive Ponzi project, huge banker bonuses paid by taxpayers) can distract from addressing the fundamental economic problems.

-- How NAFTA established the global template that U.S. corporations wanted, to the detriment of the U.S. economy, most visibly to its manufacturing sector and its workers.

-- How the U.S. policy of encouraging and facilitating new investment abroad decreases U.S. jobs while withholding from foreign workers their rightful share of gains in increased productivity.

-- Why the significance of granting Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) to the People’s Republic of China in 2000 is not about trade.

-- Why economic stagnation is the logical next stage of the prevailing paradigm.

For reasons of space and time, this posting does not deal with those and other issues that Palley analyzes. I intend to do so in coming weeks. There is no way I can avoid them, since they are so intricately woven into current events affecting work and workers.

For a fuller understanding of Palley’s position, read the text of his paper on the New America Foundation Website. Click here.

And watch a You Tube video of Palley’s oral presentation of his critique, also available on New America Foundation Website.


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Sunday, August 23, 2009

3 MDs, 3 different diagnoses

You’re sick with a bad sore throat. You go to three different doctors. You get three different diagnoses of your illness.

That personalized analogy, as fleshed out in a Salon article, is a good way to understand the different basic approaches that today’s economists take in diagnosing the current economic sickness.

Michael Lind, director of the New America Foundation’s economic growth program, analyzes the parallel diagnoses in his April 7 Salon article titled “Rx for the Economy: Which Doctor Should We Believe?" Here’s my somewhat oversimplified summary of his enlightening MD/PhDecon analysis.

-- The first doctor says you have a sore throat and prescribes an aspirin.
-- The second says your sore throat is a symptom of pneumonia and prescribes antibiotics.
--The third doctor sees your condition as more complex. He prescribes aspirin for the sore throat and antibiotics for your pneumonia, but also a 12-step program for overcoming alcoholism, an addiction that has weakened your immune system and renders it vulnerable to infections like pneumonia.
Those three different diagnoses have their parallels in three different ways that economists see what went wrong to cause the greatest global economic collapse since the Depression of the 1930s.

-- Economic doctor No. 1 blames lax financial regulation for turning the U.S. housing bubble into the current crisis. So the cure is some new financial regulation and tougher enforcement, national and international.

-- That cure is fine, says Economic doctor No.2, but it does not go far enough. It fails to deal with a larger cause – global trade imbalances, created by American (household, corporate, and governmental) overspending and oversaving by China and several other Asian governments to steer more investment into export manufacturing. The cure is not only tougher regulation but also a global economic rebalancing that includes a curb on currency manipulation.

-- Enter Doctor No. 3, whose diagnosis includes but is not limited to the diagnoses of the other two physicians. The bubble-blowing system of unbalanced trade never would have arisen in the first place, had employers on both sides of the Pacific shared more of the gains from productivity growth with their workers.

So the present crisis is caused indirectly by poor regulation, proximately by global trade imbalances, and ultimately by the maldistribution of the gains from economic growth among employers and workers in major industrial countries. The basic idea, as explained in Lind’s own words:
“Rich people have a lower propensity to consume (the term was coined by Keynes) than middle-class and low-income people. It follows that if the gains from productivity growth go to workers, they are more likely to spend the money, stimulating further investment and further growth. But if the gains from productivity growth disproportionately go to the rich, they are less likely to spend the money on mass-produced goods and services than they are to save the money or use it to speculate in assets. The result? Either the economy chokes (too much savings) or explodes (asset bubbles).“

The cure? Lind ends his article without specifying one. No wonder. Even the economists who agree on the overall diagnosis – Robert Reich, James K. Galbraith, and Thomas Palley, among others -- have not reached a consensus on anything like a 12-point recovery program.

Lind’s closing sentences: “We had better hope that the first physician is right: the world economy’s sore throat is nothing more than a sore throat, and an aspirin in the form of more financial regulation will be sufficient as a cure. Otherwise, the patient is a serious trouble.”

(For my analysis of Thomas Palley’s ideas, keep tuned.)


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Friday, August 21, 2009

The plight of the super-super-rich

To be among the ultra-rich Americans – those in the top 1/10,000th (0.0001%) of income earners – your household had to have an inflation-adjusted income of at least $2,000,000 in the late 1970s. By 2007 your household income had to be at least $11,500,000 to qualify for membership in that select group.

“The trend has come to seem almost permanent,” the New York Times reported August 21.

But the page one headline on that story was: “After 30-Year Run, Rise of the Super-Rich Hits a Sobering Wall.” Those in the top one-ten-thousandth are still extraordinarily rich, but not quite as rich as before. Or so it seems.

The existence of the 30-year up-up-up trend is based on the most reliable data available -- Federal income tax returns, which were analyzed by two economists for the years up to 2007. The Census Bureau has not yet released IRS data for the 2008 or 2009 tax returns.

So how did the Times come to the conclusion that, as the title on a graphic put it, “For Decades, the Richest Pulled Away, But Since 2007, They Have Become Poorer”?

In the absence of IRS data, the Times relied on various indicators. An important one was the multi-billion dollar stock market losses suffered last year by the likes of John McAfee, founder of the anti-virus software company that bears his name.

Details on McAfee’s new circumstances served to personify the plight of the whole group at the pinnacle of the money pyramid. Poorer by $96,000,000, McAfee is now getting by on his remaining $4,000,000 by selling some of his valued possessions, including his 10-passenger jet and scenic real estate in Hawaii and New Mexico.

The chief executive of one of the country’s biggest bond traders, Mohammed Ar El-Erian, offered this analysis:

“We are coming from an abnormal period where a tremendous amount of wealth was created largely by selling assets back and forth….You had wealth creation that could not be tied to the underlying economy, and the benefits were very skewed; they went to the assets of the rich. It was financial engineering.”

Key question that the article did not answer: will the United States again stake its economic health on financial engineering?

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Who killed this American industry?

“Did the U.S. government kill the American circuit board industry?”

“Yes. U.S. government policies have killed many American industries. There is a march to free trade, which is okay so long as the rest of the world is playing by the same rules. But our government, our professors, and our geniuses like Robert Zoellick [former U.S. Trade Representative] … have been on a march to a free-trade utopia. They just killed us.”
In an interview, Douglas Bartlett, chairman and owner of Illinois-based Bartlett Manufacturing Company, was explaining why his firm, the oldest printed circuit board manufacturer in the United States, had recently closed its doors after 56 years in business here.

“People are not making the connection between the collapse of manufacturing and the collapse of the financial system,” Bartlett told Richard McCormack, editor of Manufacturing & Technology News. “It is not a sound bite, and therefore it doesn’t get the press he needs.”

Bartlett tried to organize a printed circuit board (PCB) trade association to promote the interests of American producers, as the larger trade association did for foreign producers. With the U.S PCB industry “on its last legs,” however, he could not find support for an American group.

Faced with dwindling PCB orders even as the global PCB industry was booming, he decided to hang on after the Obama victory last November, Bartlett said, in hopes that the new administration would bring a change in policy. By mid-March he felt there would be “more of the same.” In mid-July he auctioned off the company’s last piece of equipment.

Here are other points Bartlett made in the interview, published in the July 28 issue of Manufacturing & Technology News:

“When you have a situation of a weakening high-tech industry, you would think that the government would look at it [the PCB part] and say, This is a poster child of what’s going wrong. It needs to be saved. But in the last six months, the industry has been crippled beyond repair.

“Everyone says the future is high tech. But you can’t hold together high-tech pieces of equipment unless you have nuts and bolts, wires, circuit boards, and flat screens. If all you have are a few tech components, you’re screwed because you don’t have the mass of jobs and wealth to bring it all together. We had engineers working in our factories, but those factories are now in China. The knowledge dies off, and so we are going to die off.

“Our kids are going to be fluffing dogs and doing toenails while the Chinese are making leading-edge devices.”

At the end of the interview he sounded an up-beat note. “Does it mean that I’ve given up on Washington? No, because I’m talking to you. There are shining stars who are trying to get the story out, but the momentum is horrendously against them.”

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Why United States needs factories to assure its greatness as a nation

About 40,000 U.S. factories closed shop in the past seven years. At long last, a campaign is underway to reverse that huge decline in industrial power.

Promulgating the case for reindustrializing the U.S. economy is the purpose of a book, “Manufacturing a Better Future for America,” published by a new group, the Alliance for American Manufacturing. The book makes this prediction in its final paragraph:

“If we continue to outsource all aspects of manufacturing – manufacturing processes, jobs, and expertise – then we will wake up one morning to discover that our corresponding economic and military power has been exported as well.”
To prevent that from happening is the goal of the Alliance, a partnership that brings together a large union, the United Steelworkers of America, and a selected group of America’s leading manufacturing corporations, including U.S. Steel.

The United States “is broke because it has stopped producing what it consumes,” writes Richard McCormack, the editor of the 332-page volume, who is also editor and publisher of Manufacturing & Technology News. “The country must restart its industrial engine and produce products that America needs to buy and the world demands.”

A conventional view holds that government is not, and should not be involved in choosing winners and losers in the marketplace. That’s one of the myths punctured in nine chapters written by McCormack and ten other writers. But in fact the U.S. government has been – and is – mightily involved.

Most obvious is the current multi-billion dollar bailout of the investment and banking system to rescue losers from a collapse of their own making. Less recognized and understood is the U.S. government role
-- in establishing and enforcing the rules of global trade and investment for business, and
-- in permitting those rules to turn U.S. industries and their workers into losers.

McCormack identifies the “once dominant and important U.S. industries” – semiconductors, machine tools, printed circuit boards, consumer electronics, autos parts, appliances, furniture, clothing, telecommunications equipment, and home furnishings – as suffering from economic collapse as victims of a global economic system “stacked against U.S. based producers.”

U.S. labor is so productive that competing with low-wage labor is generally “the least of American companies’ worries,” McCormack writes. Instead, governments in Asian lure foreign firms with a wide range of other attractive advantages, such as the following.

“Foreign producers receive subsidies, tax abatements, free buildings, free energy. They don’t havc to pay Social Security, workers’ comp, disability, or health care. They don’t have to match a 401(k) contribution. They are able to avoid more than 100 years of government regulations put on American businesses. OSHA does not exist in most developing nations. They use electricity that would never be allowed to be generated in the United States because of pollution controls.”

I shudder when I hear politicians proclaim that the United States must become more competitive. How? By eliminating (say) Social Security?

Stay tuned for more on a “developing story" ignored by the mass media.


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Monday, August 17, 2009

Watch for toxic school supplies

A toxic plastic softener – polyvinyl chloride, or PVC -- is banned in children’s toys but is still legal in school supplies. So stick to plain metal paperclips, for example: the colored ones are coated with PVC.

That alert comes from the Center for Health, Environment, and Justice in a new report, Guide to PVC-Free School Supplies, which is being publicized by an NGO, MomsRising.

Among the school products that may be tainted with PVC are lunchboxes, binders, modeling clay, backpacks with shiny plastic designs, and notebooks with metal spirals encased in colored plastic, according to MomsRising.

That organization is circulating a petition to be sent to manufacturers and retailers of those products. Click here to sign a copy.

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Friday, August 14, 2009

GDP ‘Growth’: a tool to fool

Statistics on economic growth are misleading measures of a nation’s economic health, but they are widely used anyway.

The front page of today’s Washington Post hailed a “modest growth” in France and Germany as the “latest sign of a global comeback, and reported that “improving indicators” are pointing to an end of the recession in the United States, China, and even Japan.

Yet another story in today’s Post, this one on page 11, headlined: “Optimism Bypasses Consumers,” with this subhead “Retail Sales, Foreclosure Data Show Outlook Remains Bleak for Households.”

The difference between the two stories is that the optimistic one builds on a small climb in the Gross Domestic Product, the commonly used measure of how the economy is faring. But GDP is an unreliable indicator. It is one measure of the economy, but by itself “a deeply foolish one,” according to a long analysis in the August 10 New York Times.

The title, “GDP RIP,” overstates the article’s content and reality. GDP is not dead. In fact, the author, Professor Eric Zencey of Empire State College, bemoans “our habit of taking it as a measure of economic welfare,” and recommends that it be renamed “gross domestic transactions.”

Criticism of GDP is not new. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has analyzed its weaknesses, without dampening its use. (See “GDP = Grossly Distorted Picture” in the March 1, 2006, issue of my Website, Human Rights for Workers.)

In his analysis, Zencey has numerous examples of GDP’s basic flaw: it adds up all economic activities (for example, rebuilding New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina is a plus in GDP, but the $82,000,000,000 in damages is not an activity and thus not subtracted). Zencey offers this enlightening parallel:

“If you kept your checkbook the way GDP measures the national accounts, you’d record all the money deposited into your account, make entries for every check you write, and then add all the numbers together. The resulting bottom line might tell you something useful about the total cash flow of your household, but it’s not going to tell you whether you’re better off this month than last or, indeed, whether you’re solvent or going broke.”
A much better measure of the economy, to my mind, is the level of employment and unemployment. Using this measure is enlightening, and sobering. Take this U.S. “job picture” painted by the Economic Policy Institute on August 7:
“The 6,700,000 jobs lost since the start of the recession understates the magnitude of the hole in the labor market. To keep up with population growth, the economy needs to add approximately 127,000 jobs every month, or, across the full 19 months of recession, 2,400,000 jobs. This means the labor market is currently 9,100,000 jobs below pre-recession employment levels.”
Yet, as the EPI points out, without the boost added by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the job picture would be even worse. Thanks to the stimulus, the economy created or saved an estimated 720,000 jobs in the second quarter of this year alone.

Bottom line: effective recovery policies require restoring employment, not saving bankers’ bonusus.

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Monday, August 10, 2009

Deviating from free-trade model

“See, I just don’t want to just reduce our dependence on foreign oil and then end up being dependent on foreign technologies. I don’t want to have to import a hybrid car – I want to build a hybrid car here. I don’t want to have to import a hybrid truck…

“I don’t want to have to import a windmill from someplace else – l want to build a windmill right here in Indiana…And that’s just the beginning.”
Thus, on August 5, did President Obama announce $2,400,000,000 in grants to develop “the next generation of fuel-efficient cars and trucks powered by the next generation of battery technologies – all made right here in the U.S. of A.”

About two-thirds of the $2,400,000,000 in grants are to be used to develop and produce advanced vehicle batteries. At present even U.S.-made hybrids, such as the Ford Fusion, depend on imported batteries, primarily from Asia.

While the President was in Indiana, Vice President Biden was in Michigan and Commerce Secretary Locke in Missouri to deliver the good news to two other hard hit areas that will share the stimulus money. “After too many years of economic growth fueled by speculation and short-term thinking,” Locke said, “these types of investment will help recapture the spirit of innovation that has always moved us forward.”

This stimulus money, while much needed and welcomed, will fall far short in regaining the manufacturing jobs lost in recent years. Michigan is estimated to gain up to 30,000 jobs in manufacturing batteries by 2020 if all goes well. But the state has lost some 250,000 industrial jobs since 2005.

Nationally, we Americans continue to consume way more than we produce here. The U.S. trade deficit ballooned by $37,300,000,000 in May. Canada alone added $600,000,000 to that deficit.

Canada is complaining that the “made-in-the-USA” special electric car grants to cities and states violate free trade principles and free trade pacts. But, according to the Financial Post, Canadian provinces have long-standing “buy provincial” policies that apply to their spending for infrastructure and procurement.

As a result, the Obama administration is apparently free to deviate from its free trade model under those circumstances. But it will still have to cope, sooner rather than later, with modernizing a global trade and investment system designed for the past century.

In pursuing that reform, a focus only on the narrow interests of the United States would not just be a world-class blunder; it would be a loser in a World Trade Organization that has 153 members, most from the developing world.

The current system poses problems for people everywhere. Two glaring examples are the protections it gives to the rights of cross-border investors and owners of intellectual property rights without balancing those global rights with corresponding global responsibilities.

Unions here and abroad have long demanded that trade agreements protect labor rights as it does the rights of capital. Had these demands been met (say) three decades ago, it would have made a difference in how globalization evolved. Now those demands, still valid, will have to be part of a package that takes into account the rights of people in the developing world in regard to issues such as foreign investment and intellectual property.


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Saturday, August 01, 2009

Corporate social responsibility movement: Is it just a scam?

“What do we do when the entire economy becomes a Nigerian email scam?” That's the provocative question posed in an article on the Website of America magazine on August 3.

Well, one thing we should do is to recognize that the corporate social responsibility (CSR) movement is itself largely a scam. The Economist has a different word for it.

“For most companies. . . CSR is little more than a cosmetic treatment,” the Economist wrote in 2005. “The human face that CSR applies to capitalism goes on each morning, gets increasingly smeared by day, and washed off at night.”

Nothing substantive has happened since 2005 to change that searing indictment. Yes, CSR has great potential. Yes, some of its corporate supporters may indeed be serious reformers, not scam artists. Yes, religious and other groups use CSR principles to pressure companies like Nike to conduct themselves accordingly. It’s a lever against firms concerned about their brand-name reputation.

But the CSR lever is weak. Overrating it is a serious error. Why? Because it lends credence to the illusion that CSR is solving the global problems of the nature described by Pope Benedict in his new encyclical and by Maryann Cusimano Love in her summary of the encyclical published in the August 3 issue.

The world economy is in crisis today because it suffers from “governance gaps” where sweatshops and other grave social and moral evils thrive. Thanks to current international law, investors and business people are privileged to operate globally under rights without matching responsibilities.

So it should be no surprise that Pope Bendict praises “the strongly felt need, even in the midst of a global recession, for a reform” of the world’s inter-governmental institutions. He mentions only the United Nations by name but adds “economic institutions and finance,” a generic way of including other key inter-governmental organizations, especially those dealing with international trade and investment, with the World Trade Organization at the top of that pyramid.

The Pope repeatedly emphasizes, as a general principle, the need to balance rights and responsibilities. He gets very specific when it comes to two highly controversial subjects:

-- Responsibility of investors: The positive side of the reform movement already underway in the global financial system, he wrote, should be further developed, “highlighting the responsibility of the investor.”
-- Intellectual property protection: “On the part of rich countries, there is an excessive zeal for…an unduly rigid assertion of the right to protect intellectual property, especially in the field of health care.”

Just those two reforms, if adopted and implemented in international trade and investment pacts, would be major breakthroughs in globalization and in what the Pope calls “integral human development.” But both reforms are outside the stated CSR goals. Both are vigorously opposed by the business and financial community in the United States and beyond.

In fact, it so happens that rigid protection of intellectual property and investor rights are two key features of the three pending U.S. trade agreements signed by President Bush – and are also two major reasons for rejecting them. The media, Wall Street, and the Wall Streeters in the Obama administration all want the President to pressure Congress to ratify them.

Hopefully, he will have the backbone and good sense to say No we won't.

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