A new manifesto calls for building "a sustainable social
pact for the 21st century" in which "our rights are guaranteed, not
based on our ability to pay, or on whether a system produces profit, but on
whether it enables all of us to live well together in peace and equality."
An international coalition made up of more than 200
trade unions and progressive advocacy groups on Thursday published the Santiago
Declaration, a manifesto for "a complete overhaul of our global
economic system."
The undeniably anti-neoliberal document proclaiming that
"our future is public" is the product of a meeting held in Chile—the
"laboratory of neoliberalism" where Milton Friedman and his
University of Chicago acolytes' upwardly redistributive economic model was
first imposed at gunpoint by Gen. Augusto Pinochet's military junta.
From November 29 to December 2, more than 1,000 organizers from
over 100 countries gathered in Santiago and virtually to germinate a left-wing
movement against "the dominant paradigm of growth, privatization, and
commodification."
"Who owns our resources and our services is fundamental.
A public future means ensuring that everything essential to dignified lives is
out of private control."
"We are at a critical juncture," the manifesto begins.
"At a time when the world faces a series of crises, from the environmental
emergency to hunger and deepening inequalities, increasing armed conflicts,
pandemics, rising extremism, and escalating inflation, a collective response is
growing."
"Hundreds of organizations across socioeconomic
justice and public services sectors—from education and health services, to
care, energy, food, housing, water, transportation, and social protection—are
coming together to address the harmful effects of commercializing public
services, to reclaim democratic public control, and to reimagine a truly equal
and human rights-oriented economy that works for people and the planet,"
reads the document. "We demand universal access to quality,
gender-transformative, and equitable public services as the foundation of a
fair and just society."
The Santiago Declaration continues:
“The
commercialization and privatization of public services and the commodification
of all aspects of life have driven growing inequalities and entrenched power
disparities, giving prominence to profit and corruption over people's rights
and ecological and social well-being. It adversely affects workers, service
users, and communities, with the costs and damages falling disproportionately
on those who have historically been exploited.
“The devaluation of public service workers' social
status, the worsening of their working conditions, and attacks against their
unions are some of the most worrying regressions of our times and a threat to
our collective spaces. This is deeply linked with the patriarchal organization
of society, where women as workers and carers are undervalued and absorb social
and economic shocks. They are the first to suffer from public sector cuts,
losing access to services and opportunities for decent work, and facing a
rising burden of unpaid care work.
“Austerity
cuts in public sector budgets and wage bills are driven by an ideological
mindset entrenched in the International Monetary Fund and many ministries of
finance that serve the interests of corporations over people, perpetuating
dependencies and unsustainable debts. Unfair tax rules, nationally and
internationally, enable vast inequalities in the accumulation and concentration
of income, wealth, and power within and between countries. The financialization
of a wide range of public actions and decisions hands over power to
shareholders and undermines democracy.”
Against the heavily privatized status quo, "we
commit to continue building an intersectional movement for a future that is
public," the document says. "One where our rights are guaranteed, not
based on our ability to pay, or on whether a system produces profit, but on
whether it enables all of us to live well together in peace and equality:
our buen
vivir."
According to Global Justice Now, the Transnational Institute,
and other signatories, the creation of an egalitarian and sustainable society
hinges on ensuring universal access to life-sustaining public goods delivered
by highly valued workers.
"We need to take back control of decision-making
processes and institutions from the current forms of corporate capture to be
able to decide for what, for whom, and how we provide."
"Who owns our resources and our services is
fundamental," the manifesto argues. "A public future means ensuring
that everything essential to dignified lives is out of private control, and
under decolonial forms of collective, transparent, and democratic
control."
As the Santiago Declaration explains:
“A
future that is public also means creating the conditions for enabling
alternative production systems, including the prioritization of agroecology as
an essential component of food sovereignty. To that end, we need to take back
control of decision-making processes and institutions from the current forms of
corporate capture to be able to decide for what, for whom, and how we provide,
manage, and collectively own resources and public services.
“The public future will not be possible without
taking bold collective national action for ambitious, gender-transformative,
and progressive fiscal and economic reforms, to massively expand financing of
universal public services. These reforms must be complemented by major shifts
in the international public finance architecture, including transformations in
tax, debt, and trade governance.
“Democratizing
economic governance towards truly multilateral processes is critical to
overhaul the power of dominant neoliberal organizations and reorient national
and international financial institutions away from the racial, patriarchal, and
colonial patterns of capitalism and towards socioeconomic justice, ecological
sustainability, human rights, and public services. It is equally essential to
enforce the climate and ecological debt of the Global North, to carry out an
expedited reduction of energy and material resource use by wealthy economies,
to hold big polluters liable for their generations-long infractions, to
accelerate the phasing-out of fossil fuels, and to prioritize finance system
change.”
The call to build "a sustainable social pact
for the 21st century," the coalition observes, "follows years of
growing mobilization around the world."
It also comes as a complimentary alliance convened by
Progressive International meets in
Havana, Cuba to map
out an emancipatory "new international economic
order."
During Friday's opening session, former Greek Finance Minister
Yanis Varoufakis called for the establishment of a movement capable of
dismantling "the existing, exploitative, catastrophically extractive imperialist
international economic order so as to build a new one in its place... in which
people and planet can breathe, live, and prosper together."
-Kenny
Stancil, Common Dreams
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