The New Year's Day uprising of Indian peasants in Chiapas readily be understood
in this general context. The uprising coincided with the enactment of NAFTA, which the Zapatista army called a "death sentence"
for Indians, a gift to the rich that will deepen the divide between narrowly concentrated wealth and mass misery, and destroy
what remains of the indigenous society.
The NAFTA connection is partly symbolic; the problems are far deeper. "We are
the product of 500 years of struggle," the Zapatistas' declaration of war stated. The struggle today is "for work, land, housing,
food, health care, education, independence, freedom, democracy, justice, and peace." "The real background," the vicar-general
of the Chiapas diocese added, "is complete marginalization and poverty and the frustration of many years trying to improve
the situation."
The Indian peasants are the most aggrieved victims of Mexican government policies.
But their distress is widely shared. "Anyone who has the opportunity to be in contact with the millions of Mexicans who live
in extreme poverty knows that we are living with a time bomb," Mexican columnist Pilar Valdes observed.
In the past decade of economic reform, the number of people living in extreme
poverty in rural areas increased by almost a third. Half the total population lacks resources to meet basic needs, a dramatic
increase since 1980. Following International Monetary Fund (IMF)-World Bank prescriptions, agricultural production was shifted
to export and animal feeds, benefiting agribusiness, foreign consumers, and affluent sectors in Mexico while malnutrition
became a major health problem, agricultural employment declined, productive lands were abandoned, and Mexico began to import
massive amounts of food. Real wages in manufacturing fell sharply. Labor's share in gross domestic product, which had risen
until the mid- I 970s, has since declined by well over a third. These are standard concomitants of neoliberal reforms. IMF
studies show "a strong and consistent pattern of reduction of labor share of income" under the impact of its "stabilization
programs" in Latin America, economist Manuel Pastor observes.
The Mexican Secretary of Commerce hailed the fall in wages as an inducement to
foreign investors. So it is, along with repression of labor, lax enforcement of environmental restrictions, and the general
orientation of social policy to the desires of the privileged minority. Such policies are naturally welcomed by the manufacturing
and financial institutions that are extending their control over the global economy, with the assistance of mislabeled "free
trade" agreements.
NAFTA is expected to drive large numbers of farm workers off the land, contributing
to rural misery and surplus labor. Manufacturing employment, which declined under the reforms, is expected to fall more sharply.
A study by Mexico's leading business journal, El Financiero, predicted that Mexico would lose almost a quarter of its manufacturing
industry and 14 percent of its jobs in the first two years. "Economists predict that several million Mexicans will probably
lose their jobs in the first five years after the accord takes effect," Tim Golden reported in the New York Times. These processes
should depress wages still further while increasing profits and polarization, with predictable effects in the United States
and Canada.
A large part of the appeal of NAFTA, as its more forthright advocates regularly
stressed, is that it "locks in" the neoliberal reforms that have reversed years of progress in labor rights and economic development,
bringing mass impoverishment and suffering along with enrichment for the few and for foreign investors. To Mexico's economy
generally, this "economic virtue" has brought "little reward," the London Financial Times observes, reviewing "eight years
of textbook market economic policies" that produced little growth, most of it attributable to unparalleled financial assistance
from the World Bank and the United States. High interest rates have partially reversed the huge capital flight that was a
major factor in Mexico's debt crisis, though debt service is a growing burden, its largest component now being the internal
debt owed to the Mexican rich.
Not surprisingly, there was substantial opposition to the plan to "lock in" this
model of development. Historian Seth Fein, writing from Mexico City, described large demonstrations against NAFTA, "well articulated,
if too-little-noticed in the United States, cries of frustration against government policies-involving repeal of constitutional
labor, agrarian, and education rights stipulated in the nation's popularly revered 1917 constitution-that appear to many Mexicans
as the real meaning of NAFTA and U.S. foreign policy here." Los Angeles Times correspondent Juanita Darling reported the great
anxiety of Mexican workers about the erosion of their "hard-won labor rights," likely to "be sacrificed as companies, trying
to compete with foreign companies, look for ways to cut costs."
A "Communication of Mexican Bishops on NAFTA" condemned the agreement along with
the economic policies of which it is a part because of their deleterious social effects. The bishops reiterated the concern
of the 1992 conference of Latin American bishops that "the market economy does not become something absolute to which everything
is sacrificed, accentuating the inequality and the marginalization of a large portion of the population"-the likely impact
of NAFTA and similar investor rights agreements. The reaction of the Mexican business world was mixed the most powerful elements
favored the agreement, while mid-sized and small businesses, and their organizations, were dubious or hostile. The leading
Mexican journal Excelsior predicted that NAFTA would benefit only "those 'Mexicans' who are today the masters of almost the
entire country ( 15 percent receive more than half the GDP)," a "de-Mexicanized minority," and would be another stage of "the
history of the United States in our country," "one of unchecked abuses and looting." The agreement was also opposed by many
workers (including the largest nongovernmental union) and other groups, which warned of the impact on wages, workers' rights,
and the environment, the loss of sovereignty, the increased protection for corporate and investor rights, and the undermining
of options for sustainable growth. Homero Aridjis, president of Mexico's leading environmental organization, deplored "the
third conquest that Mexico has suffered. The first was by arms, the second was spiritual, the third is economic."
It did not take long for such fears to be realized. Shortly after the NAFTA vote
in Congress, workers were fired from Honeywell and GE plants for attempting to organize independent unions. The Ford Motor
Company had fired its entire work force in 1987, eliminating the union contract and rehiring workers at far lower salaries.
Forceful repression suppressed protests. Volkswagen followed suit in 1992, firing its 14,000 workers and rehiring only those
who renounced independent union leaders, with government backing. These are central components of the "economic miracle" that
is to be "locked in" by NAFTA.
A few days after the NAFTA vote, the U.S. Senate passed "the finest anti-crime
package in history" (Senator Orrin Hatch), calling for 100,000 new police, high-security regional prisons, boot camps for
young offenders, extension of the death penalty and harsher sentencing, and other onerous conditions. Law enforcement experts
interviewed by the press doubted that the legislation would have much effect on crime because it did not deal with the "causes
of social disintegration that produce violent criminals." Primary among these are the social and economic policies polarizing
American society, carried another step forward by NAFTA. The concepts of "efficiency" and "health of the economy" preferred
by wealth and privilege offer nothing to the growing sectors of the population that are useless for profit-making, driven
to poverty and despair. If they cannot be confined to urban slums, they will have to be controlled in some other way.
Like the timing of the Zapatista rebellion, the legislative coincidence was of
more than mere symbolic significance.
The NAFTA debate focused largely on job flows, about which little is understood.
But a more confident expectation is that wages will be held down rather broadly. "Many economists think NAFTA could drag down
pay," Steven Pearlstein reported in the Washington Post, expecting that "lower Mexican wages could have a gravitational effect
on the wages of Americans." That is expected even by NAFTA advocates, who recognize that less skilled workers-about 70 percent
of the work force-are likely to suffer wage loss.
The day after the congressional vote approving NAFTA, the New York Times ran
its first review of the expected effects of the treaty on the New York region. The review was upbeat, consistent with the
enthusiastic support throughout. It focused on the expected gainers sectors "based in and around finance," "the region's banking,
telecommunications, and service firms," insurance companies, investment houses, corporate law firms, the PR industry, management
consultants, and the like. It predicted that some manufacturers might gain, primarily in high tech industry, publishing, and
pharmaceuticals, which will benefit from the protectionist measures designed to ensure that major corporations control the
technology of the future. In passing, the review mentioned that there will also be losers, "predominantly women, blacks and
Hispanics," and "semi-skilled production workers" generally that is, most of the population of a city where 40 percent of
children already live below the poverty line, suffering health and educational disabilities that "lock them in" to a bitter
fate.
Noting that real wages have fallen to the level of the 1 960s for production
and non-supervisory workers, the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment, in its analysis of the planned (and implemented)
version of NAFTA, predicted that it "could further lock the United States into a low-wage, low-productivity future," though
revisions proposed by OTA, labor, and other critics-never admitted to the debate-could benefit the populations in all three
countries.
The version of NAFTA that was enacted is likely to accelerate a "welcome development
of transcendent importance" (Wall Street Journal) the reduction of U.S. Iabor costs to below any major industrial country
apart from England. In 1985, the U.S. ranked at the high end among the seven major state capitalist economies (G7), as one
would expect of the richest country in the world. In a more integrated economy, the impact is worldwide, as competitors must
accommodate. GM can move to Mexico, or now to Poland, where it can find workers at a fraction of the cost of Western labor
and be protected by high tariffs and other restrictions. Volkswagen can move to the Czech Republic to benefit from similar
protection, taking the profits and leaving the government with the costs. Daimler-Benz can make similar arrangements in Alabama.
Capital can move freely; workers and communities suffer the consequences. Meanwhile the huge growth of unregulated speculative
capital imposes powerful pressures against stimulative government policies.
There are many factors driving global society towards a low-wage, low-growth,
high-profit future, with increasing polarization and social disintegration. Another consequence is the fading of meaningful
democratic processes as decision making is vested in private institutions and the quasi-governmental structures that are coalescing
around them, what the Financial Times calls a "de facto world government" that operates in secret and without accountability.
These developments have little to do with economic liberalism, a concept of limited
significance in a world in which a vast component of "trade" consists of centrally-managed intra-firm transactions (half of
U.S. exports to Mexico pre-NAFTA, for example- "exports" that never enter the Mexican market). Meanwhile private power demands
and receives protection from market forces, as in the past.
"The Zapatistas really struck a chord with a large segment of the Mexican populace,"
Mexican political scientist Eduardo Gallardo commented shortly after the rebellion, predicting that the effects would be wide-ranging,
including steps toward breaking down the long-standing electoral dictatorship. Polls in Mexico backed that conclusion, reporting
majority support for the reasons given by the Zapatistas for their rebellion. A similar chord was struck worldwide, including
the rich industrial societies, where many people recognized the concerns of the Zapatistas to be not unlike their own, despite
their very different circumstances. Support was further stimulated by imaginative Zapatista initiatives to reach out to wider
sectors and to engage them in common or parallel efforts to take control of their lives and fate. The domestic and international
solidarity was doubtless a major factor in deterring the anticipated brutal military repression, and has had a dramatic energizing
effect on organizing and activism worldwide.
The protest of Indian peasants in Chiapas gives only a bare glimpse of "time
bombs" waiting to explode, not only in Mexico.
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