Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byVivian Dixon Modified over 9 years ago
1
Global Capitalism 1980-2012 Underpins & maintains inequities Growth of large corporations especially financial sector making profits out of speculation with money De-regulation in the interests of greater market profitability Cut back to public services, Privatisation of essential services No signs of ecological responsibility in face of the hunt for profits maximisation
2
Global Capitalism 1980-2012 Environmental costs transferred to low income countries Creation of consumer demand (advertising) and unhealthy products Social safety nets dismantled Capture the total benefit of productivity gains for owners and managers Shift the tax burden from financial speculators to working people
3
Global Capitalism 1980-2012 Creation of consumer demand (advertising) for unhealthy products Big Pharma blocks access to essential drugs Exerts massive political power in international agencies and with national governments – lobbyists, donations, controlling media and agenda setting
4
Corporations are not accountable Need for more social, environmental and health equity impact assessments on activities of global corporations Tax avoidance is rife – in Australia from 1962-3 to 2002-3 the ration of revenue from individual and other withholding tax to company tax changed from 2:1 to 3.8:1 No global treaty to control their behaviour Their lobbying power is huge influence on governments around the world
5
Tobacco Shows us the complete immorality of some global corporations History of concealing evidence on link with lung cancer Fighting government action – e.g. sueing Australian measure to introduce plain paper packaging Moving business to low income countries
6
Youth smoking in Indonesia Over the last 20 years or so, the rate of children smoking in the US has halved and in Australia it's fallen even more but in Indonesia it’s tripled in less than 10 years. The national children's charity says big tobacco and the Government are equally to blame and it’s planning to sue both, using Ilam as one of its case studies.” ABC 7.30 Report 20/06/2012, Reporter: Matt Brown
7
Inter-related crises Ecological and climate crisis Financial crisis Social crisis – high mental illness, isolation. Lack of community and solidarity Health – inequities, chronic disease, Unfair global economic and political system: Excess wealth, Over-consumption
8
Manufacturing consent (Noam Chomsky) Idea there is no alternative to model of economic growth Notion that inequities are part of the natural order Socialism derided rather than learning lessons from past and developing better forms Media owned by large corporations and work to create a world safe for capitalism Alternative visions are subjugated and derided
9
Idea that inequities are part of the natural order and that people who do not do well are in some way deficient. This has been a constant theme in human history to justify inequities such as : Slavery Subjugation of women Colonialism (White man as superior) Excess wealthy – the deserving wealthy Social suffering, lateral violence Undermining solidarity
10
What’s to be done?
11
Will we be able to shift our political, economic and social systems and create democratic states not dominated by profits and which respond to people’s needs and are ecologically sustainable?
12
Role of PHM Critiquing the current order – we do this well – speaking truth to power Global health watch - analysis Using analysis to imagine a better world
13
People’s Charter for Health Sets out an alternative vision of a world not dominated by profit but by the needs of people and the environment Updated in Cape Town Call to Action
14
Increased civil society protest and questioning of global capitalism
15
Demanding corporate accountability Demand corporations pay fair tax and are held to account for environmental impact
16
Need to imagine alternative economic systems………. “Consume less and share better” (Kempf, 2008) Rooted to local communities and the peoples’ lives within them and a sense of obligation to local communities while being globally responsible Establish worker controlled enterprises That support and enhance people's mental and physical health and the natural environment Supports Marx’s vision of “the rich human being” which will undermine social suffering, lateral violence and build solidarity between people
17
Structures to regulate capital and protect people’s health and well-being Governments that regulate economic systems for health, equity and the environment & tax for health & well-being Global governance for human rights and public good – including global taxation regimes Create conditions for local democracy and exercise of citizenship, protection of rights of citizens to protest Support poor communities to develop skills, capacities and abilities Other means of measuring progress – Happy Planet Index & Gross National Happiness will lead to different things that are valued
18
If we succeed the key indicator is easy – the children of the world including Africa will live in environments that enable them to live healthy, sustainable and flourishing lives!
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.