EUROPE & AMERICA ON DOWNWARD
SLIDE TO 3RD WORLD ECONOMIES
Erle Frayne D. Argonza
Magandang
gabi! Good evening!
It’s
dusk time as I write, and this dusk at a time of intensifying monsoon rains
seems to bode images of a grim future for the West at large. The European Union
or EU members and the USA,
the gigantic pillars of the global economy, are particularly in dire straits as
they have entered the zone of flat growth and perpetual recession.
As
already tackled by me in diverse articles, the East is surging forward bringing
life to the global economy as a whole. In contrast, the West is spiraling
downwards, and the strategies their stakeholders are putting into place to
arrest the downslide are at best palliative. As the East continues to surge
upward, the West continues to stagnate and decay.
After
World War II, both Europe and America
embarked on massive infrastructures and heated industrialization that saw both
economies dominating the global economy’s wealth production. The result of that
was an OECD producing 60% of Gross World Product or GWP for some decades (today
that’s down to 40% of GWP and will still go down).
That
was the situation back then. By the 1990s, the situation had been badly
reversed as a result of liberal economic policies instituted in the previous
decade (80s). The rise of a ‘virtual economy’ dominated by predatory finance
was instrumental in the West’s massive de-industrialization, decay of
relatively unattended infrastructures, decline in science & technology
research, and neglect of the transport sector (only Japan & Germany were
actively pursuing maglev railways).
By
the early 1990s yet, certain experts among economists and sociologists in
America began echoing alarming notes about the possible downslide of the USA
into a 3rd world country should the economic decay, such as that of
relatively unattended infrastructures,
be allowed to continue till past 2010s.
In
the late 1990s, my own circle of political economists in Manila (Sunday Kapihan/Independent Review)
saw such a possibility ourselves as we consolidated the data made available to
us thanks to the internet. By 1998 all fellows of our circle were convinced of
the catastrophic direction that the USA
and Europe were plunging themselves into,
which could begin with a depression past 2005 and a thirdworldization by 2010s
(both have been hit by recession this decade as a matter of fact).
When
Katrina struck the USA and
when those floods struck Europe just a few
years back, and the same free market policies stubbornly remained in place, I
knew the downslide would turn out to be irreversible. The fate of New Orleans,
with its residents lining up for food akin to a depressed city, revealed an
appallingly decayed 3rd world city inside the USA which, to my mind,
is but a fractional tip of a gigantic iceberg that are America’s decaying
cities on the way to 3rd world infamy.
If,
for instance, just about 55% of the top 700 cities of the USA will be so badly
decayed by 2015 and be declared as 3rd world or ‘developing cities’,
then we know more or less that America had catastrophically seen its worst
state. With 97% of U.S.
population living in cities (urban), likewise will the whole of the USA be
declared as a ‘developing economy’ as early as 2015.
That
is, again, if the destructive ‘virtual economy’ policies will not be taken down
and reversed sweepingly. As I’ve declared in previous articles before (when
Obama was still campaigning for the presidency), America must quickly return to
a New Deal-type policy regime: interventionist, with great stress on
revivifying infrastructures, revitalizing transport R&D (railways,
shipping, etc), upscaling science & technology investments (including
rockets), returning heavy industries (revive steel and many dead manufactures),
and ensuring agricultural productivity.
Europe
is not far behind such near-catastrophic downslide of the USA, just to remind our friends in Europe and the globe. Decisively institute
interventionist policies in the continent, regulate the financial-banking
sectors (criminalize predatory finance), and revivify social policy that were
hallmarks of a once strong and mighty European economy.
And
there’s no better time to act then now. Failure to act soon, by stubbornly
instituting the palliatives (e.g. bailing out failing big banks,
semi-regulating stock exchange), will be the best sure-fire formula to see a
rapid thirdworldization of the West.
Before
long, some messianic mad leaders in both continents would be drum-beating their
being “stubbed behind the back” and generate new Hitlers and Bonapartes in their backyards.
Act now, Western peoples, to avoid this eventuality from ever taking place at
all.
[Philippines,
21 July 2010]
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