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Post 9-11 Challenges ....... Beyond the Rhetoric
amatullah
08/21/03 at 23:15:56
Worlds in Collision
Terror and the Future of Global Order
Edited by Ken Booth and Time Dunne
Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-99805-7

CHAPTER 28

Governance Hotspots: Challenges We Must Confront in the Post-September
11 World [1]

Saskia Sassen

Travelling around the world since September 11, I have found one theme
becoming louder and louder
in many places outside the US, both in the global north and global
south, by critics of the
attacks who share our horror and do not want to see such violence ever
again anywhere in the
world. The theme is, in a nutshell, that the attacks on the US and the
war against organized
terrorism should not keep us from seeing and remembering all the other
struggles going on and the
larger landscape of rage and hopelessness engulfing more and more
people. This theme is either not
welcome in the US, starting with the government, or is seen as being a
chance to re-run old
slogans. And yet, what one hears and reads outside the US should be
attended to and positioned as
a `decentred' view; not necessarily an opposite view, but one that does
not have the US suffering
and interests at its centre. As social scientists we should be able to
do this, even at a time
when this is not politically correct. In my research about
globalization, I have come to see that
decentring the production of knowledge about globalization is crucial
for a better analysis.

Moving on after September 11 will require more than just eliminating
organized terrorist networks
and providing humanitarian aid, crucial as these two interventions are.
There is a much larger set
of issues that needs to be addressed - by world and country leaders, by
the supranational system,
by NGOs, by global civil society, by corporate economic actors. Many of
these issues are specific
to each country and are inevitably centred in the internal dynamics and
struggles of each; others
concern the further development of global governance institutions. Most
of these issues precede
September 11: they involve often long-term trends and conditions.
September 11 has repositioned
them  in a more urgent landscape: the inexplicability of these
terrorist attacks on US soil has
had the effect of an incipient recoding of the miseries of the global
south as potential causes.
But this still leaves us very far from an acknowledgement of any
responsibility by the US
government and corporations for these miseries.

Here I address what have emerged as two difficult governance hotspots
in this larger context of
challenge. Examining them is a way of dissecting the nature of the
challenge and identifying
specific governance deficits. The two issues are, first, the debt trap
in which a growing number
of governments are caught and which leads to, among other things, a
sharp growth in illegal
trafficking of people; and, second, immigration, a process caught in a
whole series of new
contradictions. Both of these will require innovations in our
conceptions of governance. Both show
that as the world is more interconnected, we will need more
multilateralism and internationalism,
but that these will have to consist of multiple and often highly
specialized crossborder
governance regimes, and that simply relying on overarching institutions
will not do. While I
confine myself here to the role of governments, it is clear that new
forms of collaboration with
civil society and supranational institutions are part of this effort.

I examine these two governance hotspots from the perspective of the
countries of the global north
and their self-interest rather than broader issues of social justice
and humanitarian concern. The
latter are crucial, yet utilitarian arguments might be more persuasive
to many. The notion that
addressing debt and immigration is in the self-interest of the global
north, rather than simply a
matter of social justice vis-avis the global south, is the more
difficult argument to make.
Indeed, such an argument has not quite been developed and I do not
claim to succeed at it here. 2
What follows are some elements towards such an argument. 3 It is
important to emphasize that one's
positionality does make a difference. If I were to produce an account
from the perspective of a
country in the global south, the issues would not be exactly the same.
At the same time, examining
these particular issues as part of a larger discussion about September
11 and its meaning is one
way of decentring the discussion in that it is not exclusively centred
in the suffering and losses
experienced by the US. The policy position this leads to is one that
emphasizes the mutual
interests of the global south and north and hence the desirability of
multil teralism and
internationalism.

Interdependence

Among the many issues that September 11 brought to the fore is the fact
that globalization has not
only facilitated the global flows of capital, goods, information and
business people, as was the
intent of its `framers': it has also facilitated a variety of other
entanglements. The list is
long, and what follows are just some of the more dramatic instances, in
no particular order.
Global trade, tourism and migration have enabled diseases and pests
present in many parts of the
global south which we in the rich countries could forget about, to come
north: tuberculosis is
back in the US and typhoid fever is in the UK, the
encephalitis-producing Nile mosquito has made
its first appearance in the global north and so have a growing number
of others. As governments
become poorer they depend more and more on the remittances of
immigrants in the globah north and
hence have little interest in the management of emigration and illegal
trafficking of people. The
pressures to be competitive make governments in poor countries cut
their health, education and
social budgets, thereby further delaying development and stimulating
emigration and trafficking.
Powerful states cannot fully escape bricolage terrorism nor global
organized terrorism. In brief,
the interdependencies are many, they are multiplying and they bring the
socioeconomic devastation
of the global south closer to the global north.

Terrorism is a distinct and extreme act which requires a specific
ingredient, and is hence fed by
much more than socioeconomic devastation. The globally organized and
coordinated terrorism of
September 11 is an even more extreme act than much of the more
localized and more available forms
of terrorism we see around the world today. The added ingredient for
terrorism can take shape in
many different ways. Further, terrorism may not always be as purposeful
as in the case of its main
forms today, whether September 11, the earlier IRA actions in Northern
Ireland, or the ongoing
acts by Hamas and Jihad in Israel.

Against this context, socioeconomic devastation cannot be seen as a
cause for terrorism, but it
can be seen as a breeding ground for extreme responses, including
illegal trafficking in people
and the successful recruitment of young people for terrorist activity,
both random and organized.
An example of extreme response was what we now know was the case with
the militarized gangs in the
aftermath of the Bosnian conflict: there were no jobs and there was no
hope for these young men,
so the most exciting option was continuing warfare. This is also the
case with some of the gangs
in devastated inner cities in the US (though not all gangs, since now
we also know that many
inner-city gangs are actually contributing to social order and making
life more manageable in
devastated neighbourhoods). In the global south, the growth of poverty
and inequality and the
overwhelming indebtedness of governments which then have fewer and
fewer resources available for
development, are all part of the broader landscape within which rage
and hopelessness thrive. If
history is an indication, it is only miniscule numbers who will resort
to terrorism, even as rage
and hopelessness may engulf billions. But the growth of debt and
unemployment, and the decline of
traditional economic sectors, is feeding multiple forms of extreme
reactions, such as, for
example, an exploding illegal trade in people, largely directed to the
rich countries.

The Need for New, Specialized Multilateralisms

After a decade of believing that markets could take care of more and
more social domains, we must
now accept that markets cannot take care of everything. For instance,
use by organized terrorist
networks of the financial system comes on top of previous recognition
that money laundering, the
black net and tax evasion, for example, have all benefited from the
liberalization and
globalization of financial markets. These abuses of the system signal
the limits of liberalization
and private governance and call for a reinsertion of governments in the
global financial system
and in other cross-border domains.

However, this reinsertion of governments is of a very different sort
from the earlier
state-centred and largely domestic types. Today it calls for
multilateral and internationalist
measures. A good case in point is the recent announcement by the US,
the UK and the EU of
legislative and regulatory measures aimed at the financial transactions
of terror ists. They will
use the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the world's main anti-money
laundering body, to seek
agreement from its 31 member countries to join the effort to make a new
set of rules binding on
members and the rest of the world. 4 Governments are asked to take on
legal powers to freeze
terrorist assets, and to include in this effort not only mainstream
banking but also money-service
businesses such as the hawala system, Islam's version of the
correspondent banking of medieval
Europe's Lombards.

Part of the challenge is to recognize the interconnectedness of forms
of violence that we do not
always recognize as being connected (or, for that matter, as being
forms of violence). For
instance, the debt trap in the global south is far more significant
than many in the global north
recognize. The focus tends to be on the size of these debts, and these
are indeed a small fraction
of the overall global capital market estimated in 2000 at about $68
trillion (the value of
internationally traded derivatives, the leading financial instrument in
the global capital
market). There are at least two utilitarian reasons why rich countries
should worry. First, since
these debts do not simply concern a firm, but a country's government,
they destabilize global
order in multiple, often micro ways: more poverty and disease in the
global south, with all their
consequences, from illegal trafficking to further deterioration of our
increasingly fragile
ecosystem. Second, the debt trap is entangling more and more countries
and has now reached
middle-income countries, those with the best hopes for genuine
development. The Argentine
government's default - the largest such default ever in history - is,
perhaps, the most dramatic
instance, with its enormous instability and suffering. Together these
various negative trends keep
on reducing the portion of the globe in which it is `safe' for the
global north to pursue its
interests, whether it be those of its large firms, its investors or its
tourists.

Generally, it is becoming evident that even as we experienced a `decade
of unprecedented peace and
prosperity' in the 1990s, in the language of our leaders, a growing
number of countries in the
global south experienced accelerated indebtedness and unemployment, the
decay of health and social
services, and of infrastructure. There are two distinct issues that
matter for the argument here.
One is that even if the spread of misery will largely not touch the
global north directly and
hence, from a narrow utilitarian logic, can be seen as of little
concern to the global north, it
does destabilize global order and reduce the possibilities for future
operations. The other is
that the spread of misery can lead to extreme acts by a minority of
people and organizations in
these countries that may have direct or indirect impacts on the global
north, partly enabled by
the infrastructure for globalization largely developed by the global
north.

Perhaps one of the clearest indications of a direct effect in the last
few years is the exploding
illegal trade in people, largely directed to the rich countries. Using
the latest available data,
the United Nations estimates that 4 million people were trafficked in
1998, producing a profit of
$7 billion for criminal groups. 5 As the global north has put
increasing pressure on governments
in the global south to open up their economies to foreign firms, these
countries have become
poorer even as certain sectors within them have become very rich.
Governments and large sectors of
the population in many of these countries have come to depend more and
more on the remittances of
immigrants in the global north, which overall are estimated at an
annual $ 70 billion dollars over
each of the last few years. This has also meant that these governments
have little interest in the
management of emigration and illegal trafficking. Further, the
pressures to be competitive make
governments in poor countries cut their health, education and social
budgets, thereby hampering
development and stimulating emigration and trafficking.

The Debt Trap: Breeding Despair

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) formally recognizes 41 countries
as being hyper-indebted and
unable to redress the situation. This figure is rising. It is no longer
a matter of loan repayment
but a fundamental new structural condition which will require
innovation in order to get these
countries going. One consequence is that the debt cycle for poor
countries has changed and that
debt relief is not enough to address the situation. One of the few ways
out - perhaps the only one
- is for the governments of the rich countries to take a far more
active and innovative role.

It is always difficult to accept that an effort that mobilized enormous
institutional and
financial resources does not work, but we now know that what has been
done thus far about
government debt in the global south will not solve the problem. Even
full cancellation of the debt
will not necessarily put these countries on to a sustainable
development path. Had the jubilee
2000 campaign to cancel all existing debt of poor countries succeeded,
it would not necessarily
solve the basic structural trap. There is enough evidence now to
suggest that a new structural
condition has evolved from the combined effect of massive
transformations in the global capital
market and the so-called economic `liberalization' related to
globalization. Middle-income
countries are also susceptible, as the financial crises of 1997 and
1998 indicated.

If key features of the global capital market can have severe impacts on
what are some of the
richest economies in the world, such as South Korea, Brazil or Mexico,
one can imagine the impact
on poor countries. While all countries, including the US and the UK, h
act implemented versions of
structural adjustment programmes to lower expenditures by states on the
social agenda, the impact
on poor countries has been devastating. The bundle of new policies
imposed on states to
accommodate new conditions associated with globalization includes:
structural adjustment
programmes (SAPS), the opening up of economies to foreign firms, the
elimination of multiple state
subsidies and, it would seem almost inevitably, financial crises and
the prevailing types of
programmatic solutions put forth by the IMF. It is now clear that in
most of the countries
involved, whether Mexico and South Korea or the US and the UK, these
conditions have created
enormous costs for certain sectors of the economy and of the
population. In the poor countries
these costs have been overwhelming and have not fundamentally reduced
government debt but rather
have entrapped these countries in a syndrome of growing debt.
Re: Post 9-11 Challenges ....... Beyond the Rhetor
amatullah
08/21/03 at 23:16:12

In the 1990s we have seen a whole new set of countries become deeply
indebted. In addition, most
countries which became deeply indebted in the 1980s have not been able
to overcome that debt. Over
these two decades many innovations were launched, most importantly by
the IMF and the World Bank
through their structural adjustment programmes and structural
adjustment loans, respectively. SAPS
became a new norm for the World Bank and the IMF on the grounds that
they were a promising way of
securing long-term growth and sound government policy. The purpose of
much of this effort was and
is to make states more `competitive', which sounds fine - but it
typically means sharp cuts in
various social programmes in countries where these programmes are
already inadequate in their
coverage.

The actual structure of these debts, their servicing and how they fit
into debtor countries'
economies, suggest that most of these countries will not be able to pay
this debt in full under
current conditions. According to some estimates, from 1982 to 1998
indebted countries paid four
times their original debts, and at the same time their debt stocks
increased fourfold.6 Debt
service ratios to GNP in many of the heavily indebted poor countries
(HIPCs) exceed sustainable
limits. Many of these countries pay over 50 per cent of their
government revenues toward debt
service or 20-25 per cent of their export earnings. Africa's debt
service payments reached $5
billion in 1998, which means that for every $1 in aid, African
countries paid $1.4 in debt service
in 1998. What is often overlooked or little known is that many of these
ratios are far more
extreme than what were considered unmanageable levels in the Latin
American debt crisis of the
1980s. Debt to GNP ratios are especially high in Africa, where they
stood at 123 per cent,
compared with 42 per cent in Latin America and 28 per cent in Asia. The
IMF asks HIPCs to pay
20-25 per cent of their export earnings toward debt service. In
contrast, in 1953 the Allies
cancelled 80 per cent of Germany's war debt and only insisted on 3-5
per cent of export earnings
debt service. These are also the terms asked from Central Europe after
the collapse of communism.

There is considerable research showing the detrimental effects of such
debt on government
programmes for women and children, notably education and health care -
clearly investments
necessary to ensure a better future. Furthermore, the increased
unemployment typically associated
with the austerity and adjustment programmes implemented by
international agencies to address
government debt have also been found to have adverse effects on women.
Unemployment, both of women
themselves but also more generally of the men in their households, has
added to the pressure on
women to find ways to ensure household survival. Subsistence food
production, informal work,
emigration and prostitution have all grown as survival options for
women.

What can be done to pull these countries out of the debt trap? Poor
countries need to import goods
for basic needs and for development. Most are heavily dependent on
imports of oil, food and
manufactured goods. Few poor countries can avoid trade deficits - of 93
low- and moderate-income
countries, only 11 had trade surpluses in 2000. These countries would
like to export more, as is
evidenced by the setting up recently of a new African Trade Insurance
Agency supporting exports
to, from and within Africa. Such specialized and focused efforts hold
promise.

These countries need loans for these imports. Most exporters,
especially from the global north,
will only accept payment in dollars or other high-value currencies.
This further renders native
currencies valueless. Once they have debts, interest payments and other
debt servicing costs
escalate rapidly and their currencies are likely to devaluate further.
For these countries,
borrowing in the leading foreign currencies is a debt trap. Their
position is radically different
from that of the rich countries, for example the US has a $300 billion
trade deficit and no
problem getting loans at good rates, but foreign lenders are unlikely
to want to hold loans
denominated in the currencies of less developed countries. Furthermore,
lenders will ask for much
higher interest rates from poor countries. This produces a debt trap
that continues to reproduce
itself.

We do not need a lender of last resort to bail out rich investors. We
need a lender of first
resort to help the global south to pay for needed, development-linked
imports, in their own
currencies if at all possible and through reasonable loans. The logic
is that this would make poor
governments less dependent on private lenders who' demand leading
currencies, and who even then
charge these governments a premium and would never accept their weak
currencies. The government
debts

of poor countries, and perhaps increasingly of middle-income countries
as well, need to be taken
out of the global capital markets and placed in the domain of the
interstate system. Keynes
already proposed this in the 1940s when the IMF was created, and the
IMF has recently gone in this
direction with its plan to provide early financing before a crisis,
rather than bailing out rich
countries' investors.

Immigration: Unsustainable Contradictions

Immigration is at the intersection of a number of key dynamics that
have gained strength over the
last decade and in some cases after September 11. Among the most
prominent are the conditions
described above which are likely to function as inducements for
emigration and trafficking in
people, much of it directed to the global north. A second set of
conditions is the demographic
deficit forecast for much of the global north. A third is the
increasingly restrictive regulation
of immigration in the global North, to which we must now add new
restrictions after September 11
in a context of both growing interdependence and the strengthening of
civil liberties in the
global north.

What I want to extricate from this bundle of issues is the existence of
several serious tensions
among these different conditions. Let me focus, first, on the
increasingly restrictive immigration
policies in much of the global north along with the sharpening
demographic deficit in these same
countries which experts see as requiring rising immigration; and,
second, on the growing military,
economic and political interdependencies worldwide which will tend to
facilitate as well as
produce new migrations and refugee flows.

Even as the rich countries try harder and harder to keep would-be
immigrants and refugees out,
they face a growing demographic deficit and rapidly ageing populations.
According to a major study
(Austrian Institute of Demography, 2001), at the end of the
twenty-first century, the population
size in Western Europe will have shrunk by 75 million (under current
fertility and immigration
patterns) and almost 50 per cent will be over 60 years old - a first in
its history. Where will
they get the new young workers they need to support the growing elderly
population and to do the
unattractive jobs whose numbers are growing, some of which will involve
home and institutional
care for old people? The export of older people and of economic
activities is one option being
considered now, but there is a limit to how many old people and
low-wage jobs can be exported. It
looks as though immigration will be part of the solution.

However, the way in which the countries in the global north are
proceeding is not preparing them
to handle this. They are building walls to keep would-be immigrants
out, thereby feeding illegal
trafficking. At a time of growing refugee flows, the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees faces an
even greater shortage of funds than usual. This will also feed illegal
trafficking of people. And
anything that involves the development of infrastructures for illegal
trafficking will easily
bring about an expansion and diversification of illegal trafficking of
all sorts - not just
people, but also arms and drugs. The aftermath of September 11 has
further sharpened the will to
control immigration and resident immigrants, especially in the US but
also in several European
countries. The reduction in civil liberties will not facilitate the
need to learn how to
accommodate more immigration to respond to the future demographic turn.

Economic and politico-military globalization bring with them an
additional set of factors for
immigration policy. They intensify, multiply and diversify these
interaction effects. If we accept
that immigration flows are partly embedded in these larger dynamics,
then we may eventually
confront the necessity of a radical rethinking of what it means to
govern and regulate immigration
flows. Such a radical policy rethinking has been worked out with trade
through the Uruguay Round
of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the creation
of the World Trade
Organization. Such a policy rethinking is also becoming evident in
military operations, with the
growing weight of international cooperation, United Nations' consent
and multilateral
interventions; and it is being done for telecommunications policy and
other areas that require
compatible standards across the world. However, there has been little
innovation in immigration
policy, a fact often explained by invoking the complexity and
intractability of the issues.       In
this context it is important to emphasize that many of the policy areas
that have seen enormous
innovation are also extremely complex, that the policy reformulation
could not have been foreseen
even a decade ago, and, perhaps most importantly, that the actual
changes on the ground (for
example, globalization) in each of these domains forced the policy
changes. From where I look at
the immigration reality the changes brought about by the growing
interdependencies in the world
will sooner or later force a radical rethinking of how we handle  
migration. Taking seriously the
evidence about immigration /produced by vast numbers of scholars and
researchers all over the
world could actually help because it tends to show us that these flows
are bounded

in size, time and space, and are conditioned on other processes; they
are not mass invasions or
indiscriminate flows from poverty to wealth.?

We will need regionally focused multilateral approaches involving the
governments of both
emigration and immigration countries, as well as a range of
non-governmental actors, to develop
the capacity to manage migration flows. This means recognizing that
migration flows are part of
how an interconnected world functions. The challenge that lies ahead
will demand that all
countries involved move beyond current conceptions of immigration
policy in the receiving
countries and that the governments of sending countries, notorious for
their lack of involvement
and indifference, join in this effort.

Beyond the crucial objective of effective socioeconomic development
that makes it possible for
people to stay in their countries, there are specific migration-linked
issues. For instance, a
very particular and utilitarian beginning that might motivate rich
countries concerns precisely
the emerging demographic and labour force asymmetries. We have
recognized the emergence of a
global labour market for high-tech, financial and legal experts, and to
that end we have set up
multilateral systems and institutional protections and guarantees for
these workers (for example,
in the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and in the GATT);
now it is time to recognize
that there is an emerging global labour market for low-wage workers as
well (maids, nannies,
nurses, and so on) and that they deserve the institutional protections
and guarantees given to
professional workers.

Conclusion

The events of September 11 have produced a new set of constraints and
opportunities. Governments
have had to re-enter domains from which they had withdrawn. Forms of
openness that had come to be
considered crucial for a global economy - such as enabling
international business travel - are now
subject to new restrictions. We are seeing a renationalizing of
governments' efforts to control
their territory after a decade of liberalization. But we are also
seeing new types of crossborder
government coalitions, especially the US-led war on terrorism and the
legal, police and
surveillance actions this has entailed.

In an era of privatization and market rule we are facing the fact that
governments will have to
govern a bit more. But it cannot be a return to old forms - countries
surrounding themselves with
protective walls. It will take genuine multilateralism and
internationalism and some radical
innovations. The two cases I briefly examined here bring to the fore
the need for specialized
multilateral collaboration among specific sets of countries.

The world today faces new governance challenges. Growing
interconnectedness has given new meaning
to old asymmetries as well as creating new ones. Rising debt, poverty
and disease in the global
south are beginning to reach deep into the rich countries. Many of
these conditions need to be
addressed through fairly specialized and focused multilateral efforts.
National governments will
have to become involved, along with non-governmental actors and
supranational organizations.

Notes

1. An earlier version of this chapter was originally prepared for the
Social Science Research
Council (US), September 11 website, <http://www.ssrc.org/septll/>.

2. There are two important qualifications with which I agree but do not
address here. First, there
are moral arguments which could be read as demonstrating the utility of
the more moral policy
decision (see for example the work by Joseph H. Carens, `Membership and
Morality: Admission to
Citizenship in Liberal Democratic States, in Roger W. Brubaker (ed.)
Immigration and the Politics
of Citizenship (New York: University Press of America, 1989), pp.
31-49) and even some elements in
the jubilee 2000 campaign for debt cancellation. I see this as a
different type of logic from what
I try to present in this chapter. Second, there is a large literature
that shows the advantages of
immigration for highly developed economies (for example, Alejandro
Portes and Ruben G. Rumbaut,
Immigrant America: A Portrait (Berkeley, CA: University of California
Press, 2000)). I distinguish
this from the broader argument I present here about the utility of
developing specialized
multilateral and internationalist forms of governing cross-border
migration flows and of handling
the growing indebtedness of the global south.

3. I have developed some of this at greater length in my Guests and
Aliens (New York: New Press,
1999).

4. The UN passed a convention in 1999 aimed at suppressing and
criminalizing the financing of
terrorism and at the sharing of pertinent information. After September
11 this convention has
gained new importance.

5. These funds include remittances from prostitutes' earnings and
payments to organizers and
facilitators in these countries.

6. According to Susan George, the south has paid back the equivalent of
six Marshall Plans to the
north. See Asoka Bandarage, Women, Population and Crisis (London: Zed
Books, 1997). See also Eric
Toussaint, `Poor Countries Pay More Under Debt Reduction Scheme?',
<www.twnside.org.sg/souths/twn/title/1921-cn.htm>.

7. See John Isbister, The Immigration Debate: Remaking America (West
Harford, CN: Kumarian Books,
1996); Stephen Castles and Mark J. Miller, The Age o f Migration:
International Population
Movements in the Modern World (2nd edn) (New York: Macmillan, 1998);
Max Castro, Free Markets,
Open Societies, Closed Borders? (Berkeley, CA: University of California
Press, 2000).


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