Twenty-thousand
world bankers, economists and financiers
gathered in Prague this September for the
55th Annual Summit of the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group.
This prestigious meeting of the economic
elite -- the first of its kind in Central
and Eastern Europe -- continued to
conduct business as usual...until
thousands of international protesters
filled the streets of Prague to give them
a reality check.The IMF itself
has said that "in recent decades
nearly one-fifth of the world population
have regressed in relative and sometimes
even absolute terms." And that this
is "arguably one of the greatest
economic failures of the 20th century
1." Yet they
refuse to see their current lending
policies to poverty-ridden countries as
part of the problem. In 54 percent of
countries borrowing funds from the World
Bank, the people experienced stagnating
per capita income, rising poverty,
declining life expectancy, or a
combination of all of the above2.
Yet the World Bank continues to push
export economies and international
competitiveness, while sucking money away
from social services -- or else, no loan.
Rather than working to reduce poverty, as
both pledge to do3,
these institutions are contributing to
it, in the name of the free-market
economy.
This
past September, ten thousand concerned
citizens -- union members, teachers,
activists, academics, small business
owners, families, pro-democracy groups,
church groups -- made their way to Prague
to impress upon the IMF and World Bank
that they cant turn their backs on
the problems of borrowing nations once
the bucks have been distributed. Simply:
they are part of the problem, and
together, we must resolve it. An
alternative to economic globalization is
possible -- we just have to build it.
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