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Acronyms: EOP: The End of Poverty?... NIS: Nectar in a Sieve WST: World System Theory

Acronyms: EOP: The End of Poverty?... NIS: Nectar in a Sieve WST: World System Theory ODL/NDL: Old and New Division of Labour WMB: While Man’s Burden TWCs: Third World Countries SV: Structural Violence SAP: Structural Adjustment Programme WC: Washington Consensus

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Acronyms: EOP: The End of Poverty?... NIS: Nectar in a Sieve WST: World System Theory

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  1. Acronyms: EOP: The End of Poverty?... NIS: Nectar in a Sieve WST: World System Theory ODL/NDL: Old and New Division of Labour WMB: While Man’s Burden TWCs: Third World Countries SV: Structural Violence SAP: Structural Adjustment Programme WC: Washington Consensus MNC: Multinational Corporation

  2. Essay topic: Applying the World Systems Theory, compare the causes of Rukmani’s poverty in Nectar in a Sieve with the causes of poverty of those in the Third World countries presented in the DVD: The End of Poverty?Think Again. Illustrate your arguments with examples from the book and the DVD.

  3. Build a comparative framework using all of the following themes and concepts Power: Colonial vs. Neoliberalist Technology and Control: Factory vs. Structural Violence Labour & Unequal exchange: Subsistence vs. Export production ‘White Man’s Burden’ & religion: Missionary vs. the Bible/ Church

  4. Compare the impact of Core-Periphery integration through the World Market : • Power: Colonial vs. Neoliberal (P) • Technology: Factory vs. Structural Violence (T & Power of control) • Labour: Subsistence vs. Export production (DL & U) • Ideology of WMB: Missionary vs. The Bible/ Church (P of religion)

  5. Thesis: (1st example) WST explains that from colonial times, Core’s imperialism and corporate power have globally integrated their colonies as peripheries through the world market strategies of ODL/NDL, superior technologies and unequal exchange. In this context, Core’s missionary and the church blame the TWCs’ disregard for capitalist self- interest and neoliberalism, as the causes for their poverty, thus reinforcing the ideology of ‘the White Man’s Burden’. (WST: PUT-NDL)

  6. Thesis: (2nd example) WST argues that colonialism and neoliberalism intrude into the economies of the TWCs, maintain the core countries’ power over the peripheries. The core countries integrate the TWCs into the world-system through their control over the world market using DL, unequal exchange and superior technology. The core countries justify this process espousing the ideologies of WMB.

  7. Thesis (cont’d.) • Colonial power imposes capitalism on a subsistence economy. Intrusion of a factory commodifies the land and turns unemployed tenant farmers as cheap labour while inserting the superiority of the Western values on Rukmani’s village. • Neoliberalist policies of WB & IMF: SAP & WC, advance the Cores’ political and corporate interests. These policies advance core’s control of TWCs’ resources for export production. They ensure their profit accumulation by resorting to strategies of structural violence and religious manipulation to control the poor from rising against economic and social inequities.

  8. Integration into the world system: Power; Technology; Labour. • Core countries: • P: Hegemony by military power • T: Industrial mass production • U: Appropriate much of the surplus of the whole • world-economy • DL: Concentrate on higher-skill, capital-intensive • production • Peripheral countries: • P: powerless & poor economies • U: market-imposed low trading value & cheap labour • DL: focus on low-skill, labor-intensive production • and extraction of raw materials

  9. Integration into the world system: Power; Technology; Labour: (cont’d): • Power: (two periods: colonial, neoliberal) • Colonial: Core’s imperialism (total political control) • Neoliberal: Core’s market control of capital • Labour: ODL (colonial) and NDL (neoliberal) • A single division of labor within one world market: Core controls capital and Peripheries supply cheap labour and raw materials

  10. Hypothesis 1: Power: Differential impact of the Core’s world market hegemony on India & TWCs • Hypothesis 2: Technology: Cr controls the political and economic power & superior technologies to make decisions on Peri.’s land and resources. In Peri., control of resources shifts from the community to the market. • Hypothesis 3: Labour: Through ODL & NDL, Cr’scapital indebts and exploits Peri’s cheap labour to enhance its capital accumulation. • Hypothesis 4: The Ideology of the “Whiteman’s Burden” (a blend of colonial/neoliberal power & religious ideology) discredits the local values of TWCs as reasons for their poverty.

  11. Hypothesis 1: Power: Differential impact of the Core’s world market hegemony on India & TWCs

  12. Hypothesis 1

  13. Core’s (AICs’) poweradvances from colonial to corporate capitalism through the development of the world market : • 16th –mid 20th C: Colonial capitalism in Nectar in a sieve • Mid-20th C on: Corporate capitalism in End of Poverty?... (EOP)

  14. World Market according to WST: • A single division of labor within one world market • Core states - higher-skill, capital-intensive production and appropriate much of the economic surplus of the whole world-economy. • Peripheral areas focus on low-skill, labor-intensive production and extraction of raw materials • World Market transactions: • Commodity & financial instruments traded globally • International trade based on power bargaining • Global financial crisis since 1990s

  15. Two stages of capitalist market integration & control: • Colonial: (16th C -20th C): Imperial power of the colonizing states profit from selling colonial countries’ commodities in the world Market, e.g.: • Rukmani’s village becomes a target • for raw materials for the world market • 2. Post-colonial: Neoliberalist policies: SAP (BLeeDS) & WC (LAPDog), facilitate monopolistic corporate capital to acquire TWCs’ resources for Core’s capital accumulation e.g., http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFL3GY0RU88 • Core transfers surplus from unequal exchange of trade and thus create debt; Core supports MNCs monopolistic control over, and extraction of subterranean resources of TWCs

  16. Impact of the Core’s world market hegemony on India & TWCs • India: Colonial control • British colonial capital: market (factory: tannery) power intrudes into Rukmani’s village (26) • Disintegrates the community (46-47) • First stage of integration into the world system. • TWCs: Neoliberalist policies: SAP & WC: • Colonial land tax, MNCs’ appropriation of common land belonging to the rural poor, resource mining (Bolivia), Dutch in Asia. • MNC’s corporate capital: Export production, e.g., Bolivia’s drinkable water (Bechtel); Kenya's subsistence land & the Yala dam (Dominion); Subsistence land lost due to Venezuelan govts’(replace what was grown with imports), & Brazilian govts’ (South produces cheaper goods for the North) export policies: • Trade, debt & MNCs’ monopoly over resources tightens the TWCs’ integration into the global market

  17. Power of Colonial capital & Evolution of capitalism: (“Nectar …” ). • Colonial trade & Mercantile capital • (Merchantile capital) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Duxkrv4fSe4 (p1) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MlZEfRhTo8 (p2) • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-usgczvclNs&feature=endscreen p.3 • Peri.’sLabour moves to Cr’s capital • Rise of Industrial capital & factory system

  18. India: colonial core’s power (Britain’s) 1. Colonial trade in raw materials accumulates capital 2. Industrialization process Mechanical production replaces human energy Emergence of the factory system

  19. Power of the corporate capital & TWC’s (DVD): • Cr’sCorporate capital • Cr’s Finance capital moves to peri.s’ labour • Rise of Monopoly corporate capital in the Cr

  20. Corporate capital: MNCs • Economic power and ownership of capital is concentrated in the hands of a small number of powerful corporations. • Concentration of capital into large monopolistic or oligopolistic holdings by banks and financiers

  21. EOP (DVD): Neoliberalist policies: SAP & WC facilitate the power of Cores’ corporate capital/MNCs • MNCs are Direct Foreign Investments (DFI) • Rapid accumulation of Finance capital (Banks and short-term foreign investments) • Agents of Structural Violence (IMF asks the poor to pay for educ, health, common resources, e.g., land, water) • 4. Capital market liberalization & tax evasion

  22. H. 2: • Cr controls the political and economic power & superior Technologyto make decisions on Peri.’s land use; In Peri., control of land shifts from the community to the market. • India: • Cr’s industrial technology (factory) produces raw materials on village land that becomes a market commodity (47) • Rukmani loses her tenancy ( a customary right) to cultivate the land (75-76)

  23. Hypothesis 2

  24. India: • Impact of the technology – the factory - on village land and subsistence farming: • What happened to Rukmani’s land? • Colonial factory’s intrusion turns Rukmani’s land into a commodity for sale (p. 10, 13, 47, 48) • What happened to local food production? • Famine as a result of loss of arable land & common land rights, disintegration of village loyalties and mutual reliance & support (p. 31,72) • What happened to community’s survival? • Rent exacting middle-man, Loss of village networks & informal supports (p. 73, 75, 76)

  25. Poverty inevitable due to loss of subsistence land to factory • Colonialism changed the ownership of all landed property in India to private hands and eliminates the communal land in villages • These changes released a mass of landless workers (serfs) for international labour market • Throughout the 19th C, the poor lost their subsistence due to loss of land. • Millions faced famine every two years. • Desperate, starving, land-less Indian peasants - British rule bankrupted the Indian economy.

  26. DVD • Political and economic power : SV • In TWCs, importance of SV for the core and their MNCs: • Stages of SV: • Economic hit-men • CIA’s assassination team • CIA Jackals’ Direct intervention • Military • SV protects Cores’ flows of profit & MNCs :e.g., assassination of countries’ Presidents, CIA overthrow of govtin Iran to protect BP; direct intervention to execute of Iraq’s Qasim; assassination of Chile’s Allende for IT&T and copper MNCs; military war against Saddam H • MNC makes profit/capital from resource for exports produced on TWCs’ land

  27. TWCs (DVD) • Impact of the SV on the poor and land-deprived: • What happened to the land once owned by the natives and the poor? e.g.: 50 hectare of land for 1 head of cattle (Bolivia); land tax forced acquisition (Africa, L.Am, Asia); land for colonial mining; Agri MNCs appropriate land (with support of Kenya’s govt) in Kenya; • What was the corporate interest in TWCs? Unequal trade; monopoly control over resources; profitable exports (water, minerals, agri crops) • Why did food producing land become a commodity? • Privatization of land, profit motive & export production.

  28. DVD: • Poverty a result of arable land taken over for export • producing industries and SV suppression of the natives & • country’s leaders who are against MNCs’ land appropriation • Land ownership: concentrated in the hands of the richer classes & MNCs • Corporations resist land distribution as it would reduce their land that is used for export production & cut down their profit • United Fruit Co. in Central America & people’s demand for land reform led to overthrow of Guatemala’s govt. (1954), civil war, police repression and 200,000 civilian deaths

  29. How do businesses of export products view the needs of the poor in a subsistence economy? http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Development/PovertyEnv.asp

  30. http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Development/PovertyEnv.asphttp://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Development/PovertyEnv.asp

  31. Rukmani’s view: Factory as power that intrudes: • Overseer ordering villagers (26) • Leather worker’s plight (26) • Land was lost to the tannery (47) • Increasing officials with power (47) • New workers brought from outside (47) • Trouble: strike for better wages (64) • Firing of workers (65) • Son killed in factory (88-89)

  32. Owners’ and investors’ concept of factory production for the market : • Land is more valuable as a commodity (31, 72) • Moneylender: profit from pawn shop ( 73) • Foreigners: invest capital for extracting raw • material (26-28) • Zamindar: profits from increase in land value

  33. TWCs (DVD): Peasants’/small farmers’/tribes’ views of technology: • MNCs take the best land • Deprives the poor of land that produces food for subsistence • Land distribution to peasants is thwarted by the eviction of the poor. Tribal Massai were deprived of their traditional rights to the land for grazing livestock. Now, the land belongs to the ‘powerful people’ in the govt.

  34. Poor people’s view of their govts: • Support & protect MNCs (dictators of Chile, Central America, the Congo, Sudan) • Arrests farmers/ peasants for taking their own countries’ land back (Venezuela)

  35. TWCs (DVD): • Colonial theft of technology and destruction of local industries: • The colonial Dutch destroyed the Indonesian textile & (Java) ceramics industry to eliminate competition • The British destroyed the industry and trading of Indian textiles to build up their own industrialization. Led to famine & death - undermined the weavers social structure as they lost their livelihoods; destruction of craftsmen structures; peasant’s land tenure replaced by the British land tax

  36. H. 3: Labour: Through ODL & NDL, Cr’scapital indebts and exploits Peri’s cheap labour to improve its capital accumulation. Unequal exchange between Cr’scapital and Peripheries’ Labour, produces profit for Core’s capital accumulation. • India: • Labour on land to produce food for subsistence could not compete with market demands for land as a commodity. • Colonial : India’s colonial labour (wages) is unequal in value to British capital (fixed capital & profit). • TWCs: • Cheap, slave or forced labour for mining (colonial La Mita (Bolivia), worker as property (colonial Kenya’s Kipande system and plantations (e.g., today’s Brazil’s sugarcane)- the Core to accumulate corporate capital • Corporate (NDL): Poor wages for labour, contribute to greater corporate profits - (unequal exchange bet. cap and lab = profit)

  37. Hypothesis 3

  38. India: • Labour gets poor wages (64) • Colonial : India’s colonial ‘captive’ labour (67) • Profit from export goes to British factory owners • Profit from land goes to the landlord

  39. Rukmani’s subsistence manual labour is a way of life: • Grows pumpkin (10, 13) • She predicts market relations (28) • Tenancy & land ownership: (31, 132) • Seed (75) • Drought & water (76) • Working the land (48) • Labour supply to Ceylon (67) • Poverty in India watch the video • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCrI-KRqDnU

  40. TWCs (DVD): • Machines of mass production deskill the workers. • Cheap wages for surplus labour • Core’s consumers get goods at lower cost. MNCs accumulate corporate profit/capital from cheaper cost of production

  41. Crises of Capitalism Prof. David Harvey http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOP2V_np2c0

  42. H. 4: The Ideology of the “Whiteman’s Burden” (a blend of colonial/corporate power & religious ideology) discredits the local values to promote westernization • Superiority of the West and disintegration of the community • Commodification of peripheral countries’ land and resources lead to poverty & destitution.

  43. Hypothesis 4

  44. What do the missionary or church think of the poor countries and people? • Rukmani initially consider the missionary as helpful • Church considers the poor people as backward and therefore responsible for their poverty

  45. Why do the missionary & church not continue to help the village or the community? • Colonial or corporate interests • Belief in Whiteman's burden • blame the poor for not being ‘modern’ like the West

  46. Religion conceals the exploitive power of the West’s self interest: • Colonial extraction: • Market for raw materials (leather) • Import of technology (factory) • Instant urbanization (town) • Impoverishment of rural people • Corporate extraction: • Monopoly in the world market (e.g., raw materials) • Capital investment in poor countries (MNCs) • SV operations justified as fight against terrorism or socialism (against leaders who promote country’s economic interests against foreign domination • Impoverishment of the poor (peasants & tribes)

  47. Why do we use an ideological metaphor for understanding world problems? White Man’s burden: Eurocentric view of the world and global economy Missionary (Nectar …p111) The Bible and Church (DVD: Colonization of the mind – the worst of colonial control)

  48. What are the solutions? • Reject the historical White Man’s Burden • Reject the cultural superiority of the West • Acknowledge the uniqueness of each • country’s social and political culture • Foster a development path suitable to each • country (Easterly).

  49. Conclusion: • Integration of markets, technology, and labour into the world system through the ideology of the West’s superiority : • Core countries: (see, WST: PUT-NDL) • P: Militarily strong • U: Appropriate much of the surplus of the whole world-economy • DL: Concentrate on higher-skill, capital-intensive production • Peripheral countries: • P: powerlessness & poor economies • U: low trading value & cheap labour • DL: focus on low-skill, labor-intensive production and extraction of raw materials

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