World Social Forum Conference on Transnational Corporations ,February 1st, 2002 |
This paper was circulated prior to the Second World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil in February 2002. It was used as a point of departure to spark debate during a panel on transnational corporations, that CorpWatch co-chaired with Global Exchange, another San Francisco-based group. Paper introduced by lead debaters, CorpWatch and Global Exchange* SUMMARY PROPOSAL: The current corporate-globalization paradigm, which prioritizes corporate profit maximization over human rights, labor rights and environmental rights, should be turned on its head to prioritize these universal life values. ISSUES AND PROPOSALS: Corporations have too much power... It is well documented and widely accepted among those attending the FSM that transnational corporations and big business in general have increased their power greatly in the last decade. To note just a few indicators of this power:
...governments and corporations are intimately intertwined Complicating any attempt to confront corporate power is the widespread support for the status quo among governments. There are few governments that deviate from accepting a basic dynamic of competition to attract investment to create jobs and wealth. At the United Nations, business' claim to represent "a part of the solution" to environment and development problems is accepted by the Secretary General and most delegations. The trend toward privatization is virtually worldwide. And political influence by corporations on governments is also widely accepted. The forms of this influence includes legal campaign contributions (e.g. US), direct representation in government (e.g. Italy) and corruption (e.g. Mexico). We are fighting corporate power to promote another, more democratic, world... At the same time, the "Seattle movement," which corresponds significantly to the World Social Forum, has identified "corporate-led globalization" and corporate power in general, as one of the main battlegrounds in our struggles. Therefore, the movement against excessive corporate power is also a movement to expose its corrupting influence on governments and intergovernmental bodies, in other words, a movement to strengthen democracy, locally, nationally and internationally. Many if not most of the groups represented at the FSM would agree on the need to reduce corporate power at local, national and international levels while increasing the power of the majority classes (eg. workers, family farmers and the small business sector). PROPOSAL: A key strategic goal of our movements should be the Separation of Corporations and the State. Just as the intertwinement of religion and the state can lead to a religious fundamentalist state antithetical to democracy, so can the intertwinement of corporations and the state lead to a corporate fundamentalist (or market fundamentalist) state-also antithetical to democracy. Separation of corporations and the state should also extend from local and national governance, to global governance institutions such as the WTO, World Bank, IMF, UN, etc.. ...but we have different approaches within our movements. Nevertheless, there are significant differences in approach between various sectors of our movements. This paper identifies some of those differences and makes proposals to better unify our efforts. So let's get together. *** Sectors, Individual Corporations, Structural Power A great deal of the anti-corporate movement is made up of campaigns against the reputations and actions of specific corporations, such as Nike, Shell, etc. Complementary efforts focus on sectors, such as apparel, oil, nuclear power, etc. Some of us focus on the structures of corporate power per se, regardless of whether the corporations in question are "good" or "bad" actors. Sometimes, the impression given to the press and public is that some corporations are good and some are bad, and it's just a matter of influencing the bad ones toward being better. As soon as the company does "better," the campaign is called off. It is difficult to convey the message that corporations in general are too powerful, or that an entire sector needs reform. PROPOSALS:
Dialogue versus Confrontation Multistakeholder Dialogues and similar processes are in vogue, as is the concept of satisfying stakeholders in general. Yet many groups at the community level are still "engaged" in confrontation and direct action on corporations. In reality, negotiation with adversaries, corporate or governmental, is inevitable. As Martin Luther King Jr. wrote in his letter from a Birmingham Jail, negotiation is the purpose of direct action, and confrontations aim to create enough power and tension to force the powerful to negotiate. PROPOSAL: Negotiations with companies should take place when we have enough power to force concessions, rather than before. Negotiations and dialogue must not "sell out" the communities and workers affected by a company's actions and policies. Direct action must be seen as an important aspect of "engagement" by the social movements confronting corporations. Corporate Responsibility v. Corporate Accountability v. Democratic Control over Corporations (NOTE to translators: "Accountability" in English doesn't seem to have a good translation in most other languages. In Spanish, it might be "exigibilidad"; accountability can also be taken to mean "enforcement.") In response to the pressure of public campaigns, transnational corporations have developed diverse programs of "corporate responsibility," that is, voluntary programs to improve their images and activities. These same corporations most often oppose measures for "corporate accountability," defined here as mechanisms for enforcing rules for companies. Social movements often endorse the promises of corporate responsibility, and the United Nations, is also promoting it. One popular approach to is encourage corporate responsibility by rewarding it in the marketplace, through shareholders and consumers. Another approach is to form partnerships with government and NGOs, so as to promote the "shared values" of these sectors. However, these approaches are also a source of frustration for some, because the very same corporations promoting their corporate responsibility, are actively working to prevent measures for corporate accountability, such as international treaties and conventions, transnational lawsuits, national legislation, personal liability, and so on. In fact, it is acknowledged by the corporations themselves that promotion of corporate responsibility in environment, human rights, poverty alleviation and community service is, in part at least, a tactic aimed at avoiding accountability measures -- legislation and regulation of corporate behavior. PROPOSALS:
Reform versus Banishment Some anti-corporate campaigners in the U.S. are promoting the idea of "de-chartering" corporations that are especially bad. (In the U.S., corporations are chartered by the state in which they are headquartered.) For environmental campaigners, for example, there is great appeal to the idea that a company can receive a corporate "death penalty" as a deterrent to other companies. But for workers, that ultimate punishment for a corporation would cause a loss of jobs without hope for a transition. On the other side of the coin, organized workers seek to engage corporations in a social dialogue to improve corporate commitments to worker rights, while environmental campaigners do not always have the leverage or access to influence corporations in a "dialogue" setting. The interests of workers and environmental campaigners are not always the same. PROPOSALS:
* CorpWatch is a US-based organization working to hold corporations accountable on issues of human rights, labor rights and environmental justice. We are secretariat for the international Alliance for a Corporate-Free United Nations and work as part of various other North-South networks. www.corpwatch.org |