In the face of climate catastrophe and a rising risk of nuclear war, Greece’s former finance minister says the global ruling class are “doing their best to push humanity over both cliffs at once.”
By Kenny Stancil
Common Dreams
Humanity faces a grim fate because the global ruling class refuses to depart from the capitalist status quo even as their quest to maximize profits intensifies the climate crisis and the prospects of a nuclear war. But with enough solidarity, progressives around the world can build an egalitarian, democratic, peaceful, and sustainable society.
That’s the message shared by former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, who outlined his vision for how the left can work together to end the “global empire of capital” and forge a humane future — part of a Progressive International-led effort to chart a path toward a “New International Economic Order for the 21st century.”
Varoufakis began by noting that “we have never been closer to a nuclear holocaust than today,” as the Doomsday clock that scientists invented in the 1940s quickly approaches midnight. Meanwhile, there is another clock “counting down to the moment humanity will have passed the point of no return from climate catastrophe.”
“What is the global ruling class doing to avert these twin calamities?” asked Varoufakis. “Their best to push humanity over both cliffs at once.”
On 8 December, the @ProgIntl inaugurated a multi-year multilateral process toward the New International Economic Order. Today, we begin publishing perspectives from across the world: What is the NIEO? Why do we need it? And how can we win it? @YanisVaroufakis explains: pic.twitter.com/8N66EFBAF8
— Progressive International (@ProgIntl) December 12, 2022
“They have started a new Cold War,” said Varoufakis. “They are pursuing white-hot endless wars around the world — wars that help them sell more weapons than ever.”
“They are drilling with renewed gusto for oil and gas, while delivering speeches on environmental protection,” he continued. “They are turning the screws on workers everywhere, while waxing lyrical about social responsibility.”
“Enough of their hypocrisy, their war-mongering, their financialization of lives, and the privatization of our commons,” Varoufakis declared. “Progressives of the world refuse to take sides on this new ‘cold’ hot war. We are instead building a new non-aligned movement to fight for humanity’s survival by working for peace, solidarity, and cooperation,” he added, referring to the assemblage of Third World nations that refused in the wake of decolonization and throughout the Cold War to side with either the United States or the Soviet Union.
Reign of Capital & Debt Bondage
According to Varoufakis, the “one thing” that undercuts cooperation, solidarity, and peace is “the reign of capital over labor and the debt bondage it inflicts upon the majority everywhere — in the Global South, but also in the Global North.”
“They are turning the screws on workers everywhere, while waxing lyrical about social responsibility.”
As the 50th anniversary nears of the United Nations’ 1974 adoption of the original non-aligned movement’s proposals for a New International Economic Order (NIEO), Varoufakis argued that to turn progressives’ yearning for a NIEO into reality, a revived non-aligned movement must “direct large quantities of money into the things humanity craves, from plentiful green energy to public health to public education and poverty alleviation.”
Just imagine, said Varoufakis, if existing international financial institutions were restructured and invested “10% of global income into the green transition, especially in the developing world.”
“Of course,” he acknowledged, “this will remain a dream unless our movement manages to dismantle the global empire of capital.”
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To end “the tyranny of capital over people” and reclaim “plundered commons on land, in the oceans, in the air, and soon in outer space,” Varoufakis called for two key reforms.
The first is to ensure that “corporations belong to the people who work in them on the basis of one person, one share, one vote,” said Varoufakis. The second is to deny “banks a monopoly over peoples’ transactions.”
Once that happens, banks and profits will “wither as society’s main drivers,” the political economist argued, “because the banks will be defanged” and the distinction between profits and wages erased. “The simultaneous euthanasia of the labor markets and the share markets, along with the defanging of the banks, will automatically redistribute wealth and as a magnificent byproduct, remove the main incentives for waging war.”
Today, we commemorate the 50th anniversary of President Salvador Allende's historic speech at the United Nations ?? by convening representatives from across the Global South to chart a course toward the New International Economic Order. Join us: https://t.co/1Y5vKcA3zf pic.twitter.com/cxZeIKittO
— Progressive International (@ProgIntl) December 8, 2022
Moreover, “the end of capital’s power over society will allow communities collectively to decide health provision, education, [and] investment in saving the environment from our virus-like growth,” he continued. “Genuine democracy will at last be possible, to be practiced in the citizens’ and the workers’ assemblies — not behind the closed doors where oligarchs and bureaucrats gather.”
Varoufakis admitted that “the twin democratization of capital and of money sounds like an impossible dream.” However, he countered, “not more impossible than the principle of one person, one vote, or of the end of the divine right of kings once sounded.”
“Unless we bring down the global empire of increasingly concentrated capital, there is no chance we can end wars, eradicate poverty, or avert climate disaster,” said Varoufakis. “This twin democratization is nothing short of a precondition for our species’ survival.”
The former Greek finance minister concluded by calling on progressives everywhere “to unite in a common struggle not just for humanity’s survival but for a chance at giving every child that is born tomorrow and in the future a chance at a successful life … on a livable planet, where war has become extinct, along with poverty and fear.”
“Unless we bring down the global empire of increasingly concentrated capital, there is no chance we can end wars, eradicate poverty, or avert climate disaster.”
Varoufakis’ address is part of a campaign that Progressive International launched Dec. 8 at the People’s Forum in New York City, where scholars and policymakers from around the world met “to present, deliberate, and develop proposals for a New International Economic Order fit for the 21st century.”
The multipolar era is upon us. What will it look like? Who will lead it? Which institutions must we build, and which must we dismantle? Tomorrow at the @PeoplesForumNYC, reps from around the world will answer these questions. Join us: https://t.co/1Y5vKcScNn pic.twitter.com/Yije8Ma4as
— Progressive International (@ProgIntl) December 7, 2022
In a pair of videos shared Dec. 12, Jayati Ghosh, a professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and one of the thinkers who participated in the People’s Forum discussion, stressed the need to ditch neoliberal policies, to “claw back some of the rights that we have lost over the past 50 years, and to reinvent what we see as a just, equitable, sustainable, viable international economy.”
To start with, policymakers must “undo the major privatizations” of the past half-century, said Ghosh. Alluding to the ongoing refusal of wealthy countries and pharmaceutical corporations to share know-how and transfer technology that would enable the expanded production of Covid-19 vaccines, tests, and treatments, she also called for action to address “the concentration of knowledge, which has become something that is actually obscene and actively killing people.”
Last week, representatives from across the world came together to renovate the New International Economic Order. In her speech, @Jayati1609 called to dismantle the Washington Consensus. "We must rethink and undo the major privatizations of the past 50 years." pic.twitter.com/gszw101FHu
— Progressive International (@ProgIntl) December 12, 2022
As part of its campaign to win a fresh U.N. declaration on a NIEO by 2024, Progressive International has also launched The Internationalist, a subscription-based newsletter featuring exclusive interviews; accounts of struggle from trade union, social movement, and political leaders; academic research; translations; art; and more.
The latest edition includes an interview with Andrés Arauz, an economist and former minister of knowledge and human talent under ex-Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa. The conversation with Arauz, who narrowly lost the 2021 presidential election in Ecuador and was part of last week’s panel convened by Progressive International, focuses on the “political economy of under-development in the Global South.”
During last week’s event, Yusnier Romero Puentes, deputy permanent representative of Cuba to the U.N., announced that the Cuban government had invited Progressive International to host a NIEO-focused summit in Havana on January 25, 2023.
Progressive International general coordinator David Adler told the audience that “we are again in a moment of rapid geopolitical transformation with the end of the unipolar domination of the United States — but we lack a common vision of the multipolar world that is now in formation.”
“Next month in Havana, we will bring together governments, political representatives, popular movements, scholars, and policymakers to start the process of constructing that common vision and building the power to bring it about,” he added.
Kenny Stancil is a staff writer for Common Dreams.
This article is from Common Dreams.
The views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.
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Greed is a human trait. The opposite is nearly impossible. Happy New Year.
Ah, “nasty, brutish,” and greedy.
Tell me, Rudy, do you consider yourself to be greedy?
Would you say that the people closest to you are greedy?
Let us consider, if hate must be taught, as it must, then do we imagine that greed is simply “basic human nature,” or might it be seen as “natural” only in societies that reward greedy behavior regarding it as “normal” and healthy?
Do you consider violence to be the norm for human beings?
Are you violent, as a general rule?
How about those close to you, are they violent?
Or is violence also reflective of teaching, of a society which glorifies violence and prides itself on its capacity to kill, in ever greater numbers, human beings at huge distances?
Agreed….giving in to the myth that our species is inherently awful (in spite of the evidence that we are) is a cop-out. For every psycopath or sociopath there are 10 decent human beings. We outnumber them by far, but are not an organized counter-force. This has to change.
We also need to take out the financial pirates who are corrupting our banking system, our corporate media, and our corporate politicians. These are the people driving the plundering of natural resources around the world, the endless wars, the refugee crises, and the very profitable financial “crises”.
Superb article.
My great appreciation to Consortium News for publishing this vision of possibility and hope that it might present other well-considered visions of a sane, humane, and sustainable future.
I admit to my prejudice of suggesting that humanity needs many thousands of years yet to arrive at the point where our ignorance does not compare to our understanding as an ocean compares to a mud puddle.
Along with such visionary excursions substantial and substantive discussion must be encouraged.
That such discussion, which by its nature must be lengthy and deeply informed, must also be respectful and not become simply a forum for polemical partisan bashing.