What is WEF?
Published February 2002
Adapted from James Goodman
From Jan. 31-Feb. 4, the World Economic Forum (WEF) will be meeting at the Waldorf- Astoria in Manhattan for it's annual summit. The WEF is, in a way, a big cocktail party for the global corporate elite. As an organization,it has no power to actually set policy, but it creates a space in which international 'leaders' can hash out their vision for the rest of us. In their own words, 'they are fully engaged in the process of defining and advancing the global agenda.
More specifically, it's our globe, but it's their agenda. The Forum was born in 1971 as a yearly 'European Management Forum' of Euro- corporates. It was funded by the European Commission until 1987, when it became the WEF and started to claim global reach. Its membership reflects its class orientation, and includes the most prominent transnational corporations, 1000 of which make up the WEF 'Foundation Members'. In addition, there is a club of 'Global Growth Companies'; 300 'Industry Governors'; 300 'Global Leaders of Tomorrow'; 'World Economic Leaders' from both politics and business; 'World Media Leaders' from 100 media groups; 100 'World Cultural Leaders'; and 'Forum Fellows' from academia and the heads of national economic research organizations.
The WEF aspires to be an agenda-setting Forum. It is, in its own modest opinion, 'the foremost global partnership of business, political, intellectual and other leaders of society committed to improving the state of the world'. With the diffusion of neo-liberalism, and consequent advances in corporate globalization from the 1980s, the WEF has taken on an unprecedented role as a rallying point for global elites, and as a vehicle for class power.
This success has come at the price of built-in uncertainty and instability. Globalized neo-liberalism had led to a dramatic redrawing of the boundaries of capitalism (or rather, an unbounding of capitalism altogether). Temporal boundaries have melted away with the speeding up of circulation; spatial boundaries have been superceded with the growing transnational reach of corporations; even socio-psychological boundaries have lifted, with the increased commodification of life.
A newly empowered transnational capitalist class has emerged triumphant, presiding over the new landscapes of accumulation But class hegemony is by no means assured. Since at least the mid 1990s, neo-liberal prescriptions have been widely discredited (just look at the present crisis in Argentina). Exponential rises in executive salaries, and in corporate accumulation, along with a dramatic concentration of economic power across all sectors, offer clear evidence of the success of neo-liberalism as a class strategy.
But neo-liberal globalization has also brought unprecedented levels of global inequality, and undreamed-of degrees of financial instability, environmental exhaustion and social dislocation. The neo-liberal triumph has created new sources of opposition, the impacts and responses have been unrelenting, and advocates have been forced to go on the defensive. The high water mark was 1995, when the OECD declared it was marking out a 'global vision for the year 2020, a New Global Age'. But already a political revival, inspired by social democratic ideas, and expressed in a new form of social liberalism sometimes described as the 'Third Way', was sweeping the OECD.
As neo-liberal prescriptions have unraveled, there has been an urgent revision of the WEF's neo-liberal project. The WEF has left behind its market fundamentalism, and now is charting a new agenda for corporate globalism, one that embraces rather than rejects 'the social'. There are continuing efforts to enhance 'market discipline', to suppress the advancing crises, to institutionalize transnational class power, and render neo-liberal globalism irreversible. Yet there is also deepening dissent amongst policy-making groups.
There is a rethinking of neo-liberalism even amongst the most elite institutions: as Hans-Peter Martin and Herald Schuman demonstrate, many of the most powerful players in global capitalism are questioning the 'dictatorship of the market'. Primary advocates and beneficiaries of neo-liberal globalism, such as George Soros and Ted Turner, both of whom had embarked on paternalist interventions--the imaginatively branded 'Soros Foundation' and 'Turner Foundation'--began expressing sincere regrets at the social costs of neo-liberalism. Other elements, as van der Pijl highlights, went further and increasingly have been rethinking and explicitly 'mobilizing against yesterday's prescriptions'.
These have much wider ramifications, potentially enabling 'a deepening of democracy, a reappropriation of the public sphere by the population, and eventually a more fundamental transformation away from class society'. Recent developments have only strengthened the leverage of this dissenting segment. Institutional crises of legitimacy have accumulated, with the OECD shelving its 'Multilateral Agreement on Investment' in 1998, the temporary ditching of the World Trade Organization's 'Millenium Round' in 1999, and the advancing crisis in the International Monetary Fund's global regime of 'structural adjustment'.
Add into the equation the continuing crisis in 'transitional' post-communist societies, especially Russia, and the severe jolt delivered to the 'Newly Industrializing countries' of East Asia by financial 'contagion' in 1997-8, and the impending bursting of the infotainment bubble, then the challenges to neo-liberalism begin to seem irresistible.
Expressing this, there have been the dramatic public explosions against neo-liberal globalization: Geneva 1996, Cologne 1998, Seattle 1999, Washington 2000, Montreal and Genoa 2001. The WEF response is to deliberately avoid the appearance of backroom strategizing, and instead to seek a higher public profile, attempting to reground its legitimacy by being seen to engage with prominent advocates of the emerging alternatives. The WEF is thus placing itself at the center of debates about the revision of neo-liberalism, asserting that it can play 'an important role in forging the new geometry'.
Reflecting this, the WEF has reached out to those 'excluded' by neo-liberal globalization--notably non-OECD governments, such as Mexico and South Africa, and critical Non-Government Organizations, such as the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU). At Davos in 1998 Hillary Clinton argued the role of NGOs and other representatives of 'civil society' had to be enhanced, while John Sweeney, from the AFL-CIO, focused on issues of distribution, arguing markets had to 'work for the majority and not simply for the few'.
In 1999 Vice-President Al Gore appeared with Kofi Annan, who appealed for a 'global compact' between business and the UN founded on 'core values in the areas of human rights, labor standards, and environmental practices'. In 2000 President Clinton shared the Millennial limelight--somewhat blurred by Seattle--with Tony Blair. Davos policy debates are now couched in terms of 'institutional accommodation', 'corporate responsibility' and 'global dialogue', with sessions in 2000 on 'responsible globality', 'inclusive prosperity' and 'sustainable development'. Perhaps most cynically, the WEF's 'World Competitiveness Scorecard--a yearly league-table of 'how national environments are conducive or detrimental to the domestic and global competitiveness of enterprises'--was supplemented by an 'Environmental Sustainability Index' at Davos 2000.
The contest is on to establish a revised normative and institutional framework for the global economy. The WEF is claiming a central role in shaping the agenda, and some, such as the ICFTU, are participants in the process, taking heart in the WEF's apparent willingness to become an advocate of 'globalization with a human face'. But the key question is whether the WEF should be permitted to drive this agenda. Should a forum that is dominated by corporate interests be encouraged to take on the role of mapping out future frameworks for global governance? Should it be granted recognition and legitimacy in this agenda-setting process? Or, rather, should its role be challenged, and alternative sources of legitimacy be asserted?
Information on the anti-WEF protest is available at www.s11.org
James Goodman, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Technology Sydney Email <james.goodman@uts.edu.au>