Under the darkening shadow
of capital's crisis hundreds of world capital bosses are meeting in
Davos, a snow covered Swiss mountain village. On the eve of this annual
meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF), capital's salvation-searching
convention, the Global Risk 2012 report “reveals a
constellation of fiscal, demographic and societal risks signalling a
dystopian future”, George Soros apprehends possibilities of riots and
violence in the center of the center of the world capitalist system, and
forecasters apprehend a lost decade for the UK . While about 1.1
billion people worldwide were either unemployed or living in poverty, as
the ILO's latest Global Employment Trends report claims,
capitalism is being questioned by its proponents. Prof Klaus Schwab, the
founder of the WEF, said: “Capitalism in its current form no longer
fits the world around us.” ( “ Davos 2012: Has capitalism got a
future?”, BBC , Jan. 24, 2012 ) All these developments and
pronouncements unerringly show capital's inherent incapacity in
resolving its own crises that are disproportionate to its capacity.
The Global Risk 2012, insight report ( GR )
identified five risks: economic, environmental, geopolitical, societal
and technological. Based on a survey of corporate leaders the most
frequently chosen Centres of Gravity, the risks of greatest systemic
importance, in today's world are: chronic fiscal imbalances, GHG
emissions, global governance failure, unsustainable population growth,
and critical systems failure.
“Analysis of the 2012 Global Risk Map”, the GR
said, “reveals four risks as playing significant roles in connecting
the Centres of Gravity to each other. These four Critical Connectors […]
are: severe income disparity; major systemic financial failure;
unforeseen negative consequences of regulation; extreme volatility in
energy and agriculture prices.” “The signs already exist that the world
is becoming more fragmented, inconsistent and mistrustful; the question
is the extent to which these developments could lead to a global
dystopia”, said the report.
Global governance failure, the GR mentioned,
is the most interconnected of the 50 global risks having a direct
connection with 75% of the risks covered in the report. The GR
said: “[D]ominant issues of concern emerged from the Arab Spring, the
‘Occupy' movements worldwide and recent similar incidents of civil
discontent: the growing frustration among citizens with the political
and economic establishment [….] In developed economies, such as those of
Western Europe, North America and Japan, the social contract that has
in recent decades been taken for granted is in danger of being
destroyed.”
Almost-similarly, the Edelman Trust Barometer ,
a global survey, suggests there has been a sharp decline in public
trust, not only in business, but in governments around the world also.
Experts, the GR said, anticipate that high unemployment rates will increasingly co-exist with employers' unmet demands for skilled labor.
There are, the GR said, important factors
of concern with unknown consequences that are emerging. It admits
combination of chronic labor market imbalances, chronic fiscal
imbalances and severe income disparity amplified by extreme demographic
pressures that could lead to “the emergence of a new type of critical
fragile states – formerly wealthy countries that descend into a spiral
of decay as they become increasingly unable to meet their social and
fiscal obligations.”
Young and old of the world, the report said, could
face an income gap and a skills gap so wide that threaten social and
political stability. “In the absence of viable alternatives, this could
precipitate a downward spiral of the global economy […]”, said the
report.
Significant questions for stakeholders were raised by the GR :
(1) How can countries collaborate more effectively to correct chronic
labor imbalances? (2) What will “social contracts” be like in 2022? (3)
What steps can be taken to reduce income disparity? (4) How can
fostering entrepreneurship prevent the seeds of dystopia from taking
root? (5) How can leaders break the pattern of crises? (6) How can
appropriate regulations be developed so that firms will undertake
effective safeguards? (7) How can businesses and governments prevent a
rapid breakdown in trust following the emergence of a new widespread
risk? (8) How can business, government and civil society work together
to improve resilience against unforeseen risks?
At the same time another warning came from the IMF:
The world's economy is “deeply into the danger zone” because of risks
from the euro zone. The escalating euro zone debt crisis could derail
the global economic recovery, the international lending agency said in
its latest World Economic Outlook report. The IMF hacked its
2012 global growth forecast warning the outlook had devolved in most
regions. With the same tone, the IMF chief warned: The global economy
could fall into an economic spiral reminiscent of the 1930s unless
action was taken on the euro zone crisis. She has called on Europe to
construct a wall against financial contagion. Echoing the warning, the
IMF chief economist said: “The world could be plunged into another
recession.”
The euro zone is set for a “mild recession” in 2012,
the IMF predicts. Italy and Spain could be the first cases. Growth
estimates have been reduced for the main euro zone countries including
Germany , the euro zone powerhouse, and France . Central and eastern
Europe and Asia could also be hit by the euro zone crisis. A sharp
slowdown in the pace of growth in emerging and developing countries has
been predicted by the IMF. It reduced Asia 's growth outlook for 2012.
The IMF cut its projection for Japan , and said: the
US and other advanced economies would likely not escape unharmed if
Europe 's crisis widened further. Moreover, the advanced economies “have
homegrown challenges [...] including overcoming political obstacles”,
the lending agency said. The EU economic affairs commissioner is also
apprehending a “moderate recession” across Europe in the first half of
this year.
News from the UK is not good. There are increasing
concerns that the credit crunch will ultimately result in a “Lost
Decade” for the UK . Many fear the UK is already experiencing the early
stages of a lost decade. (“Could Britain Be Facing A ‘Lost Decade'?”, Sky News , Jan. 22, 2012 )
The UK government debt, as BBC reported, has risen
to a record £1 trillion. The current net debt total is 64.2% of the UK
GDP, and number of its unemployed citizens rose to 2.69 million. The
unemployment rate rose to 8.4%, the highest since January 1996. The
number of persons claiming Jobseeker's Allowance in December rose by
1,200 to 1.6 million. The number of young persons looking for work
reached a record height: 1.043m. Citing the Office for National
Statistics BBC informed these figures on Jan. 18, 2012 .
The world unemployment reality is also
discouraging. The ILO report said: The number of “discouraged workers”,
persons stopped looking for work because they think they are unlikely to
find a job, is 29 million. With this number of discouraged workers, the
global unemployment rate jumps to 6.9% from 6%, and the number reaches
to about 225 million persons worldwide, the report said. “Judging by the
present course, there is little hope for a substantial improvement in
their near-term employment prospects”, said the ILO's Employment Trends report. The outlook for the world labor market has worsened from last year, the ILO said.
This capitalist reality does not make George Soros,
one of the most cunning investors in the world, hopeful. According to
two US media outlets including Newsweek , Soros perceives: “The euro must survive because the alternative — a breakup — would cause a meltdown that Europe , the world, can't afford.” “At
times like these, survival is the most important thing,” he said. Soros
doesn't just mean it's time to protect assets. Rather, he signals: it's
time to stave off disaster. The world, Soros feels, faces one of the
most dangerous periods of modern history — a period of “evil.” A strange
pronouncement indeed; as in Reaganspeak, “evil empire”, the Soviet
Union , is no more on the world map. It is capitalism only that now
dominates the globe. Soros has more perceptions: Europe is confronting a
descent into chaos and conflict. In the US , he apprehends riots
leading to a brutal clampdown and dramatic curtailment of civil
liberties. The global economic system could even collapse altogether as
Soros predicts. “The situation is about as serious and difficult as I've experienced in my career,” Soros tells Newsweek .
“We are facing an extremely difficult time, comparable in many ways to
the 1930s, the Great Depression. We are facing now a general
retrenchment in the developed world, which threatens to put us in a
decade of more stagnation, or worse. The best-case scenario is a
deflationary environment. The worst-case scenario is a collapse of the
financial system.” (“George Soros on the Coming U.S. Class War”, Jan. 23, 2012 )
The almost self-explanatory facts cited above and
conveyed by mainstream media tell some truths, bitter for it: (1)
crises-ridden condition of the world capitalism; (2) the way the system
has generated its crises, one after another, one gravitating the other,
one influencing another; (3) width, globe-wide, and magnitude of the
crises; (4) the system's worshippers' confused intellectual condition;
(5) its extent of power that cannot control itself; (6) its need for a
huge reserve army of labor to keep labor press down to dust, to bargain
favorably, and at the same time, it cannot escape the possibility of
facing force of labor pent up in reserve labor; (7) its ulterior motive:
preparing ground for an onslaught on labor. While capital continues
waging its class war against the working people it raises hue and cry as
if it is being targeted. The only salvation path capital can find is:
create havoc in social reality, in mass-mindset, burden down masses with
the pressure of hardship and hunger, name of which is “austerity”. Not
only is the system's economy facing danger. Its governing system,
capital's dictatorship, is losing credibility and coming under question.
The mainstream admits this, one of the primary condition for a retreat.
A significant admission, indeed!
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