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ALTERNATIVE ECONOMICS 
IN THE NEW WORLD ORDER

by Eugene Teselle

 

In the era of NAFTA and GATT, multi-national corporations seem intimidating in their power to dominate the world economy. But during the last fifteen years we have also see the growth of a counter movement which deserves supportCand whose success is already demonstrating that there are alternatives to "free trade" managed from the top for the benefit of wealthy investors. These are interventions in the world economy which build solidarity among grass-roots organizations in different countries.

I. Alternative Trading

Over forty years ago SelfHelp Crafts, a Mennonite organization, and SERRV, a project of the Church of the Brethren, began importing crafts to provide income opportunities for poor people abroad.

Shopping for the holiday season can be done through a number of these channels. SERRV distributes a catalog of craft items; contact them at P.O. Box 365, New Windsor, MD 21776-0365, 1-800- 723-3712. The Heifer Project lets you send livestock to people in the developing world. And Church World Service has a catalog called "Tools of Hope," everything from chicken coops, fishing nets, and sewing machines to protective garb for removing the minefields that infest many areas; contact them at P.O. Box 968, Elkhart, IN 46515, 1-800-297-1516.

There are many other such networks. One of the most persistent is Friends of the Third World, which imports coffee from cooperatives in Latin America and Tanzania, as well as other items like tea, chocolate, spices, and wild rice. Contact them at 611 West Wayne Street, Fort Wayne, IN 46802; (219) 422-6821, internet fotw@igc.apc.org

In 1983 Jim Goetsch and Marion Waltz of Friends of the Third World convened the first conference of Alternative Trading Organizations. Now there is the North American Alternative Trading Organization (NAATO), made up of many groups marketing crafts on a cooperative basis and bypassing the middleman. For information on this network, including a listing of fair trade retail stores, contact the Fair Trade Federation, P.O. Box 126, Barre, MA 01005; (508) 355-0284, fax 355-6542; www.fairtradefederation.com

Why should we engage in "alternative trading," when it represents only a small portion of global trade? Well, it's worth doing for a variety of reasons. First, it's a demonstration of solidarity and support with people in the Third World. And then it builds up networks of people with experience in non-exploitative forms of trade and shows that these are viable. Finally, let's remember that economists and policy makers take notice even of small differences in patterns of trade, especially when they indicate the preferences of both producers and consumers.                                    

Co-op America tries to keep track of alternative trading in the U.S. and globally. In addition to their regular periodical they have an annual National Green Pages ("a directory of products and services for people and the planet") and a Financial Planning Handbook with information on socially responsible funds and financial counselors who can be of help. Contact: Co-op America, 1612 K Street NW (#600), Washington, DC 20006; (202) 872-5307, fax 331-8166;  www.coopamerica.org  


Earth Trade works with cooperatives which return the profits to the workers themselves. The focus is on organic foods because of a special demand, a fast-growing market, and a higher market price for products certified through the Organic Crop Improvement Association. Earth-Trade is a for-profit with social and environmental goals; shares are priced at $4.50 per share (minimum purchase 200 shares or $800). For an "offering circular" contact Progressive Asset Management, 1814 Franklin Street (#710), Oakland, CA 95612; 1-800-786-2998.

Equal Exchange is a gourmet coffee company and an alternative trade organization, whose goal is to build a sustainable future for farmers in Latin America. They work with democratic organizations that share profits equitably. Their above-market price is $1.26 per pound, with additional premiums for certified organic coffees. Investors earn a maximum dividend of 5%, since the goal is to maximize benefits to producers and extend the activities of the company. Several hundred Lutheran congregations have arranged to buy coffee through Equal Exchange, and a similar policy is being encouraged among Presbyterians. Contact Equal Exchange, 251 Revere Street, Canton, MA 02021; (781) 830-0303; << www.equalexchange.com >>

Community-based economic development is a growing movement inside the U.S., too. In this era of "footloose factories," there are ways of developing and keeping jobs in local communities through cooperatives, worker-owned businesses, and community land trusts. Sustainable America is a coalition building networks among labor, farming, environmental, and urban organizations; they are at 350 Fifth Avenue (#3112), New York, NY 10018-3199; (212) 239-4221, sustamer@sanetwork.org. And the Grassroots Economic Organizing Newsletter has been drawing lessons from networks of cooperatives in the Basque country in Spain, Emilia Romagna in Italy, and the Maritime Provinces in Canada; their address is R.R. 1, Box 124A, Stillwater, PA 17878; 1-800-240-9721, e-mail wadew@epix.net

 

II. Loan Funds

You have doubtless heard about the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, developed thirty years ago by Dr. Muhammad Yunus. Small loansCenough to plant a crop or buy basic toolsCare made at a low rate of interest through peer lending groups which continue to share experiences offer each other advice. Check with the Grameen Foundation, 1709 New York Avenue NW (Suite 101), Washington, DC 20006; (202) 628-3560; www.grameenfoundation.org

Accion International is similar to Grameen but has a slightly different approach to decision making on loans. They can be reached at 120 Beacon Street, Somerville, MA 02143; (617) 492-4930;  www.accion.org

The Ecumenical Development Cooperation Society, now nicknamed Oikocredit, is related to the World Council of Churches and is based in Holland. Loans are offered to church-related cooperatives or other grass-roots organizations, not to individuals, for projects to which the borrowers have a long-term commitment and which will lead to sustainable, income-generating activities. Community investment notes can be purchased in amounts of at least $1000 for one, two, or five years, at below-market interest rates; investors may add amounts of $250 or more. (The fund is now managed by the Calvert Social Investment Foundation, one of the oldest socially responsible companies.) For information you can contact EDCS, 475 Riverside Drive (16th Floor), New York, NY 10115; (212) 870-2725; e-mail edcusa@erols.com, www.world-investments.org

The Nicaraguan Community Development Loan Fund was started in 1991 in cooperation with CEPAD, the Nicaraguan Council of Protestant Churches. Investors in the U.S.Creligious congregations, investment funds, or individualsCmake deposits (a minimum of $3000, at a chosen interest rate between 0 to 6%). In a country with overwhelming unemployment, loans are made by CEPAD to cooperatives, home-based businesses, and women's organizations. Many millions of dollars of loans have been made and paid back. Contact: Wisconsin Coordinating Council on Nicaragua, P.O. Box 1534, Madison, WI 53701; (608) 257-7230; fax 257-7904.

In the U.S., the closest parallel is the growth of programs to encourage Individual Development Accounts (IDAs). Their purpose is to help poor people build not only income but "assets" (a house, a small business, a savings account). After pilot projects in a number of states, it has become a federal "demonstration project" with the passage of the Assets for Independence Act, signed into law in October, 1998. IDAs are special savings accounts for low- income persons. Money deposited by individuals is often matched by a bank and by a religious congregation, potentially tripling in value. Withdrawals can be made only for "asset-building" investments such as home purchase, education, or a small business. Programs are administered by local non-profits, usually in a peer group setting. For information contact the Corporation for Enterprise Development, 777 North Capitol Street NE (#410), Washington, DC 20002; (202) 408-9788; www.cfed.org

We are also seeing the growth of community-based economic development organizations and "community development financial institutions" (CDFIs). They include non-profits, credit unions, and banks. Some are financed by their own members and depositors. But now there is a new generation of non-profits funded by "community development investments" from large banks, which get credit for meeting the credit needs of their communities as required by the Community Reinvestment Act. Contact the Coalition of Community Development Financial Institutions, 924 Cherry Street (Second Floor), Philadelphia, PA 19107; (215) 923-5363, fax 923- 4755, e-mail cdfi@cdfi.orgwww.cdfi.org.

III. Corporate Codes of Conduct

Fierce competition among retail chains encourages suppliers to cut costs in any way they can. In recent years we have seen the migration of factories from the SouthCwhich had been attractive to corporations for many decades because of its cheap labor and "disciplined work force"Cto Mexico and Central America and the Caribbean. And as the globalization of the economy continues, we find more and more companies buying garments and electronic goods from the Asian countries, too. It's bad enough when companies intentionally seek out the poorest countries with the lowest wage scales. It gets worse when their suppliers operate sweatshops with minimal concern for human rights, labor standards, or ordinary decency.

1. Sweatshops Abroad

Codes of conduct are not essentially new. Governmental trade and loan agreements often include "social clauses" which spell out the procedures that are to be followed and the groups which are to benefit. NAFTA, as we remember, was adopted only after the Clinton administration added "side agreements" with supposed protections for labor rights and the environment. Corporate codes of conduct are a private version of the same thingCcommitments made by corporations or a group of corporations in an industry, usually in response to consumer demands. Rugmark, for example, is generally recognized to be a reliable indication that hand-knotted carpets were not made with child labor.

Labor, environmental and religious organizations have insisted that U.S. companies take responsibility for working conditions at worksites that produce goods sold to U.S. consumers. The garment trades unions, while they have been unable to stop the shifting of work to cheaper areas in Latin America and Asia, have gained public support and persuaded many retail chains to adopt "sourcing codes"- -agreements to pay a living wage, abide by minimum health and safety standards, and respect workers' rights. STITCH (Support Team International for Textileras) defends the rights of working women in both North America and Central America; you can contact them at 4933 S. Dorchester St., Chicago, IL 60615; (773) 924-5057; e-mail HF52@aol.com

The problem, of course, is to enforce these codes. Unions in the U.S. maintain close contacts with independent unions in the Latin American countries, and unfortunately they must often give whatever support they can when labor leaders are killed or strikers are fired.

In 1997 President Bill Clinton stood in the Rose Garden with Kathie Lee Gifford to announce the formation of a White House Task Force to End Sweatshops. Soon renamed the Apparel Industry Partnership, it included major apparel companies, all under pressure to clean up abuses. Human rights, labor, and religious organizations were invited to the table. They wanted an agreement that covered forced labor, child labor, working conditions, wages and hours, environment, freedom of association, monitoring, and "country of origin" certifications. When the AIP announced its document in November 1998 it fell far short. Companies are not required to pay a living wage or support workers' rights to join unions. Companies can decide which workplaces will be monitored, and a five percent sample is regarded as sufficient. No labor or religious organization endorsed the agreement. Anti-sweatshop activists are not looking chiefly to the U.S. government, heavily influenced by lobbyists and campaign contributors, for significant help.

One major achievement came in the summer of 1998, when United Students Against Sweatshops forced a number of schools to adopt sourcing codes for sweatshirts, sneakers, and other equipment bearing the names of their athletic teams. If colleges can do it, the retail industry could do it, too.

The most visible organization in monitoring and publicizing sweatshops is the National Labor Committee. Along with its regular newsletter it publishes larger profiles on particular issues. The NLC is also distributing a model "procurement policy" which can be adopted by any public or private institution which purchases textiles or apparel products, declaring that it will not do business with companies that exploit their workers or refuse to disclose the names and addresses of factories which make their products. Contact: National Labor Committee, 275 Seventh Avenue (l5th Floor), New York, NY 10001; (212) 242-3002; fax 242-3821; www.nlcnet.org.

Each year the Holiday Season of Conscience to End Child Labor and Sweatshop Abuses is promoted by People of Faith. Human Rights Day, December 9, is a time for candlelight vigils and marches to demand corporate disclosure, a living wage, respect for human and worker rights. Contact People of Faith Network, Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church, 85 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, NY 11217; (718) 625-2819; fax 625-3491; e-mail pofnetwork@aol.com

To keep up with sweatshops, you can check the following web sites:
www.sweatshops.org
www.uniteunion.org
www.sweatshopwatch.org
www.verite.org
www.americanapparel.org
www.nlcnet.org

2. Sweatshops Here at Home

Sweatshops are not just a foreign problem. In the summer of 1995 Katie Quan, a leader in UNITE, the new garment workers' union, discovered that seventy illegal Thai workers were kept in virtual slavery in Los Angeles, forced to work 17-hour shifts for as long as seven years, and threatened with rape or murder if they tried to flee. They were supposedly paid $1.60 an hour, but most of this was taken back as payment to the employers who had smuggled them into the U.S.

Several times the Labor Department has taken legal action to require payment of back wages to workers, some of them children; if the subcontractors do not pay, large retail chains can be held responsible for back wages, under the "hot goods" provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act. California law also holds garment companies liable if their contractors are unregistered.

In the summer of 1999 four retail chains settled a federal lawsuit filed under the RICO act, claiming sweatshop abuses in the U.S. territory of Saipan. The suit said that 32 contractors ran shops with barbed wire and armed guards, where workers lived in vermin- infested quarters and were subjected to beatings and forced abortions. The lure of Saipan is that it is close to China, Thailand, and other sources of immigrant labor, while as a U.S. territory, clothing made there can be labeled "Made in the U.S.A." UNITE continues to put pressure on The Gap, the company doing the most business with the islands, and urging federal legislation to bring labor laws up to U.S. standards.

3. Sourcing Codes for Agricultural Products

Sourcing codes were pioneered in the needle trades, but there is a move to extend them to agricultural products, where monitoring can be even more complicated. For the time being, it's a much better bet to make use of "alternative trading" networks than to rely on the corporate world.

In October 1995 the Starbucks gourmet coffee chain was acclaimed for promising the first "code of conduct" in the coffee industry, setting minimum standards for the growers from whom it purchases coffee. The Council on Economic Priorities gave Starbucks a corporate responsibility award, and CARE gave the company its International Humanitarian Award. But a year later there was little indication that Starbucks was taking any steps toward implementing its code; it hadn't even translated the code into Spanish. The Catholic Church offered to develop a monitoring program, but Starbucks failed to respond. The question, then, is whether sourcing codes will be anything more than image-makers for U.S. corporations and balm for U.S. consumers. For updates contact: U.S./Labor Education in the Americas Project (US/LEAP), formerly U.S./Guatemala Labor Education Project, P.O. Box 268-290, Chicago, IL 60626; (773) 262-6502; fax 262-6602; usglep@igc.apc.org.

4. Stockholder Resolutions

Don't forget the work of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, which is supported by 275 Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish organizations. It monitors corporate performance and files stockholder resolutions at annual meetings. Assets under its influence total $90 billion. Offices are at 475 Riverside Drive (#566), New York, NY 10115; (212) 870-2293.

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) cooperates with the ICCR, since it is aware that the vast amounts of money in the pension fund and the Presbyterian Foundation need to be used in a responsible way, as an instrument of the church's mission, witness, and stewardship. Mission Responsibility Through Investment (MRTI) is the body which implements the policies set by the General AssemblyCchiefly peace, justice, environmental responsibility, and human rights. It constantly reviews the investments that have been made and makes specific recommendations about shareholder resolutions, voting of proxies, or initiation of litigation. For information contact the Rev. William Somplatsky-Jarman, 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, KY 40202-1396; (502) 569-5809.

IV. Economic Justice at Home

We have been considering the global marketplace, but there are many homegrown issues, too. Religious, community, and labor organizations have been working to fight factory closings, improve occupational health and safety, and prevent environmental degradation. Several years ago the National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice was formed; in addition to dealing with national issues it has several dozen local affiliates, and their number is growing. NICWJ has joined in a number of "living wage" campaigns and annual Memorial Days for workers killed on the job. It has devoted major attention to justice for poultry workers across the South and for strawberry workers in California. Contact Kim Bobo at NICWJ, 1607 West Howard (#218), Chicago, IL 60626; (773) 381- 2832, fax 381-3345, e-mail nicwj@igc.apc.org, on the web: www.igc.org/nicwj

Cities, counties, and states have often made strategic judgments about the investment of money in their pension funds. They also are beginning to establish their own policies about participating in the world market. There is even an International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, an international agency of local governments founded in 1990, with more than 330 members at present. The U.S. office of ICLEI is at 15 Shattuck Square (Suite 215), Berkeley, CA 94704, e-mail iclei_usa@iclei.org

For example, localities often formulate "procurement policies" which set restrictions on purchases using public funds; most recently the emphasis has been against purchasing any goods made in sweatshops, domestic or foreign. Multinational corporations don't like this, of course, and they got language in the Multilateral Agreement on Investments which declared any such regulations a "restraint on trade." Their strategy, in other words, is to "preempt" any local actions which run counter to their own interests. So much for "local responsibility" and the "new federalism"!

There is even a movement toward local currency in order to keep dollars from flowing to distant corporate headquartersCor to the worldwide network of stockholders. The generic term is Local Exchange Trading Systems (LETS). These operate like the babysitting cooperatives with which many of us are familiar, in which a secretary keeps track of hours worked. A further stage is the development of some kind of paper money, which is perfectly legal as long as it doesn't look like U.S. currency. You can get information on these many local projects from the E.F. Schumacher Society, 140 Jug End Road, Great Barrington, MA 01230; ()413) 528- 1737; e-mail efssociety@aol.com, www.schumachersociety.org. The most famous example is Ithaca Hours, which sells a "hometown money starter kit." Contact Paul Glover, P.O. Box 6578, Ithaca, NY 14851; (607) 272-4330.

 

The basic issue in the world economy is not "protectionism." It is not "cheap Third World labor" or "lack of environmental concern in the Third World." The global economy is a fact, and all nations must learn to deal with it. The basic issue is that many Third World governments, aided and abetted by multi-national corporations and the U.S. government, let trade interests take priority over human rights (we have seen this in recent controversies over China and Thailand and Indonesia and the Central American countries).

International wage competition is largely an economic matter. But when human rights are degraded in order to "steal a comparative advantage" in the world marketplace, it also becomes a political issue. The defense of human rights requires, therefore, a combination of international solidarity, strong labor legislation here at home, and opposition to any "delinking" of trade from human rights.

 


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Some blogs worth visiting

PVJ's Facebook page

Mitch Trigger, PVJ's Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!

You can post your own news and views, or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you.

 

Voices of Sophia blog

Heather Reichgott, who has created this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:

After fifteen years of scholarship and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy, students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and thoughtful community.

 

John Harris’ Summit to Shore blogspot

Theological and philosophical reflections on everything between summit to shore, including kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology, politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian Church in Flushing, NY.

 

John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive

A Presbyterian minister, currently serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton, Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and lightening up.

 

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