The intersecting crises of capitalism

The first meeting of Asian Social Movements took place against a background of what is shaping up as the worst crisis of global capitalism since the Great Depression 70 years ago. Charting our direction for the future is greatly dependent on understanding the nature and dynamics of this crisis. We are talking about a crisis that is actually an intersection of four crises.

The first of these involves the crisis of legitimacy and the increasing inability of the neo-liberal ideology that underpins today's global capitalism to persuade people of its necessity and viability as a system of production, exchange and distribution. The disaster wrought by structural adjustment in Africa and Latin America; the chain reaction of financial crises in Mexico, Asia, Brazil and Russia; the descent into chaos of free-market Argentina; and the combination of massive fraud and the spectacular wiping out of USD 7 trillion of investors' wealth – a sum that nearly equals the US' annual GDP – have all eaten away at the credibility of capitalism. The institutions that serve as global capitalism's system of global economic governance – the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the World Trade Organisation (WTO) – have been the most negatively affected by this crisis of legitimacy and thus stand exposed as the weak link in the system.

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