Title: Global Health Equity: The Challenge of a Just Globalisation
1Global Health Equity The Challenge of a Just
Globalisation
- Ronald Labonte
- Canada Research Chair
- Globalization/Health Equity
- Institute of Population Health
- University of Ottawa
2Four Global Contexts
- Slowing of health gains, reversal in Africa and
former Soviet Union - Major health determinants are now inherently
global (Labonte Spiegel, BMJ, 2003) - Retreat from social justice
- Development costs of global security
3The debate on globalization is fast becoming a
debate on democracy and social justice in a
global economy.World Commission on the Social
Dimensions of GlobalizationInternational Labour
Organization2003
4Deaths by Terror, Inequality, Invasion and
Occupation
5Millennium Development Goals, by 2015
- Cut poverty by half (1/day)
- Universal Primary Education
- Gender equality in education
- Cut IMR and lt5 MR 2/3rds
- Reduce maternal MR 75
- Reduce HIV/AIDS malaria
- Implement full sustainable development strategies
6Number of Heavily Indebted Poor Countries and
Selected MDG Targets
Source Pettifor and Greenhill, 2003
7A Quick Comparison
- Global anti-terrorist 2003 551 billion
- Millennium Development Goals 600 billion
- (one-time, health goals 1-5)
- One year Iraq pacification 87 billion
- Millennium Development Goals 70 billion
- (annual)
- Anti-terrorist, US, 2003 57 billion
- Anti-terrorist, Canada, 2003-07 7
billion - Development assistance 2003 69 billion
- Aid to AIDS, 2000 2002 annual
- average 2 billion
8Globalizationa process by which nations,
businesses and people are becoming more connected
and interdependent across the globe through
increased economic integration and communication
exchange, cultural diffusion and travel
9- A Global Village or
- A Global Market?
- increasing cross-border flow of capital, goods
and services - scale of such movement
- binding rules
- size of trans-national companies
- commitment of most countries to continue global
economic integration through increased
liberalization - no where to move displaced workers
10 Pro-Globalization ArgumentLiberalizatio
n ? Increases Growth Increased Growth ?
Increases WealthIncreased Wealth ? Decreases
PovertyDecreased Poverty ? Increases
HealthIncreased Health ? Increases Growth
11- Globalizations Counter-Arguments
- Rapid spread resistant diseases, pandemic of
Western lifestyles - Tariff reductions hardest on poor countries,
reducing revenues for health/social spending - Growth for some, not for others
- Poverty reduction not automatic and even
contentious - Inequalities on the rapid rise
12Some global food trends
- Growth in global food trade now 11 of all
trade - Consolidation in oligopoly of transnational
corporations - Overproduction by rich countries leading to
dumping into global markets, developing
countries and value-adding through addition of
sugar, salt, fats and oils - Global pandemic of obesity and diabetes
13- Globalizations Counter-Arguments
- Rapid spread resistant diseases, pandemic of
Western lifestyles - Tariff reductions hardest on poor countries,
reducing revenues for health/social spending - Growth for some, not for others
- Poverty reduction not automatic and even
contentious - Inequalities on the rapid rise
14- Globalizations Counter-Arguments
- Rapid spread resistant diseases, pandemic of
Western lifestyles - Tariff reductions hardest on poor countries,
reducing revenues for health/social spending - Growth for some, not for others
- Poverty reduction not automatic and even
contentious - Inequalities on the rapid rise
15Currently wealthy/healthy countries never grew
their economies using neo-liberal (free) trade
policies.They used state intervention/support,
infant industry protection and copied technology,
now WTO prohibited.Ha-Joon Chang, 2002
Kicking Away the Ladder?
16- Globalizations Counter-Arguments
- Rapid spread resistant diseases, pandemic of
Western lifestyles - Tariff reductions hardest on poor countries,
reducing revenues for health/social spending - Growth for some, not for others
- Poverty reduction not automatic and even
contentious - Inequalities on the rapid rise
17- Globalizations Counter-Arguments
- Rapid spread resistant diseases, pandemic of
Western lifestyles - Tariff reductions hardest on poor countries,
reducing revenues for health/social spending - Growth for some, not for others
- Poverty reduction not automatic and even
contentious - Inequalities on the rapid rise
18Growing Income Inequalities
- Inequalities decrease
- Poverty reduction
- Rate of economic growth
- And increase
- Rates of suicide homicide
- Conflict
- Costs of policing and security
- South Africa 2001
- Police budget - 1.96 billion
- Health budget - 1.56 billion
Sources Labonte Torgerson, 2004 Small Arms
Survey, 2003
Source UNDP 1999
19Liberalization and the Environment
- Indonesian de-regulated logging gt 1 million
hectares lost annually, burning leads to
respiratory disease (short term), ecosystem loss
(long term) - Argentina fisheries exports gt 5-fold increase in
catches 1985 - 95 foreign companies earned 1.6
billion, depletion of stocks cost locals over
500 million
- Uganda privatization fisheries over-fishing
Nile perch, degradation of Lake Victoria
ecosystem - Post NAFTA pull on Mexican forestry, illegal
logging increasingly widespread - Mauritania No fish for markets, factory fish
for the rich
Sources UNEP 2003, NAFTA CEC 2001,
20Greenhouse Gassing The Dirtiest Dozen
Italics indicate Kyoto ratifiers
21Globalization drivers/mitigators
- Macroeconomic policies structural adjustment
loan conditions - Debt overhang of developing countries, forcing
an economic subservience to the interests of
wealthier nations - Global, regional and bilateral free trade and
investment agreements - Development assistance
- Global public goods
22SAPs General Requirements (neo-liberal economic
assumptions)
- Liberalization Open markets work best
- Privatization States shouldnt own profitable
sectors - Enhance private sector States should open
programs/services to private competition - De-regulation Few rules on private sector
- State minimalism Reduce public spending
taxation, implement cost-recovery - adapted from Milward, 2000, What is structural
adjustment, In Mohan, G., Brown, E., Milward, B.
and Zack-Williams, A.B. Structural adjustment
Theory, practice and impacts, London and New
York Routledge.
23SAPs and Health Determinants
- Erode labour market institutions
- Financial market liberalization worsens income
inequalities - Shifts in taxation policies (less progressive)
- Reduced public spending (on education, health,
environmental protection)Â - Exacerbate inequalities between rural and urban
populations, indigenous and dominant cultural
groups - Cornia, A.C. 2001 (ed) Inequality, Growth and
Poverty in an era of - Liberalization and Globalization, UNW/WIDER.
24Globalization drivers/mitigators
- Macroeconomic policies structural adjustment
loan conditions - Debt overhang of developing countries, forcing
an economic subservience to the interests of
wealthier nations - Global, regional and bilateral free trade and
investment agreements - Development assistance
- Global public goods
25Debt relief HIPC and its limitations
- Initiative has demonstrably increased funds
available for health, education in many eligible
countries, but - Sustainable debt defined with reference to
(volatile) export earnings, rather than cost of
meeting basic needs and - Funds for HIPC were at the expense of development
assistance flows of other kinds and - Debt relief subject to neo-liberal
conditionalities and - Most of the worlds poor do not live in HIPC
countries
26Debt relief crucial to meeting basic needs
27Debt Cancellation/Relief Options
- Debt sustainability by need, not export earnings
- Debt cancellation not counted as development
assistance - Present multilateral debt proposals
- UK pay debt servicing 20 42 HIPCs to World
Bank for 10 years, sell IMF gold - US cancel World Bank debt outright, all new
disbursements lending as grants not loans - Canada pay debt servicing 20 HIPCs to World
Bank and principal servicing to IMF for 10 years - France institute global taxes, starting with
jet fuel - EURODAD
- sell IMF gold reserves to cancel all debt for 40
60 indebted countries - cancel World Bank debt by using loan reserves and
profits from its non-concessional branch that
lends at market rates to middle-income countries
28Globalization drivers/mitigators
- Macroeconomic policies structural adjustment
loan conditions - Debt overhang of developing countries, forcing
an economic subservience to the interests of
wealthier nations - Global, regional and bilateral free trade and
investment agreements - Development assistance
- Global public goods
29WTO Agreements and Loss of Health Equity Policy
Space
- TRIMS No equity requirements on foreign
investors - AGP Public contracts to lowest bidder
regardless of where in the world - TBT All domestic regulations must be least
trade restrictive - AoA Slow removal of rich world agricultural
subsidies cost millions on poor world export
earnings
30Trade policy Contrast betweenrhetoric and
reality
- Sustained economic growth world-wide requires a
renewed commitment to free trade (G8, 2001,
pledging commitment to a new round of
multilateral trade negotiations) - The worlds poor face tariffs that are, on
average, roughly twice as high as those imposed
on the non-poor (World Bank, 2002a 37)
31Would it be better to born a Japanese cow than
an African citizen?
32GATS private health care
- GATS does not cause privatization, but locks it
in and promotes it over time via progressive
liberalization. - Private health care is less efficient and always
more inequitable than public, risk-pooling
programs. - Parallel private systems erode public support for
universal public programs. - Private health care in developing countries is
less effective in monitoring, reporting and
treating infectious diseases such as tuberculosis.
33Public provision not a guarantee of equity, but a
potential for equity
Benefits or share of public health spending by
quintiles
Source Carr, 2004 Improving the Health of the
Worlds Poorest
34Impact of GATS liberalization
- Should a country ever be in a position to
adequately fund and administer its public system,
and so reverse the current trend away from
privatization, its GATS commitments would trigger
trade penalties. - Once a service sector has been liberalized under
GATS, there is no cost-free way of reversing it.
35Fair trade through
- End agricultural export and production subsidies,
high-income countries - Removal of tariffs, high-income countries to
developing world exports - Strengthen and extend special differential
treatment, developing countries (mandated by Doha
but not supported by high-income countries in
ongoing WTO negotiations) - Reduce the reach of intellectual property rights
- General exemption for purposes of human
rights/MDGs, and/or exemption for public services
essential to the right to health
36Globalization drivers/mitigators
- Macroeconomic policies structural adjustment
loan conditions - Debt overhang of developing countries, forcing
an economic subservience to the interests of
wealthier nations - Global, regional and bilateral free trade and
investment agreements - Development assistance
- Global public goods
37Development assistance as of Gross National
Income
Anglo-American
Source OECD/DAC Annual Report 2004
38Annual cost of meeting the 0.7 percent of GNI ODA
target, in Big Macs/capita
Based on 2002 ODA figures from OECD, Big Mac
prices from The Economist, April 25, 2002
39ODA policy options 1
- UK proposal
- International Finance Facility
- Bonds based on future ODA pledges
- Assumes future pledges
- Could be at expense of future aid
- Rewards bond holders with US220 billion in
interest of 780 billion raised - Achieve 0.7 target
- Would reach the MDG-based estimates of required
additional assistance (UN Millennium Project,
2005) - Almost half of all donor countries have already,
or have scheduled commitments to, reach this
objective - Includes France (2012) and the UK (2013) but not
other major donors (Canada, US, Australia,
Germany)
40ODA policy options 2
- Remove macroeconomic conditionalities
- Aid goes to where intended, makes a difference in
peoples lives - Adjust currency exchange mechanisms to avoid
Dutch disease - Eliminate IMF medium term expenditure ceilings on
public spending - Pool aid funds to strengthen budget support
- Multiple donors, accountability requirements and
top-down programs carry huge opportunity costs to
recipient countries - Aid as cash, not as kind
- And untied from purchases from donor countries
41Comparative costs, aid and tax cuts, Canada 2000
2005, millions of C
Source OECD Development Assistance Committee,
Development Co-operation 2004 Report, DAC Journal
20056(1)full issue and earlier years Canada
Department of Finance, The Budget Plan 2003,
Table A1.9
42The global context need vs. greed
43Alternative Global Taxes
- Arms trade up to 20 billion annually
- Carbon tax up to 125 billion annually
- Currency tax up to 170 billion annually
- Single tax number for MNEs and global citizens
- Withholding tax (40) on profits/capital flight
- Close tax havens (costing US 20 billion a year
in corporate taxes alone, UK up to 85 billion a
year)
44Globalization drivers/mitigators
- Macroeconomic policies structural adjustment
loan conditions - Debt overhang of developing countries, forcing
an economic subservience to the interests of
wealthier nations - Global, regional and bilateral free trade and
investment agreements - Development assistance
- Global public goods
45Global Public Goods for Health
- Public good Non-excludable and non-rivalrous
- Global public good A good which is inherently
global, rather than national or regional a good
in itself, or a means of preventing a global
public bad.
46Seven Basic GPGs for Health
- cure for disease
- new treatment regime for disease
- control of air and water pollution emissions
- uncovering basic research findings
- monitoring disease
- disseminating research findings
- curbing epidemics
- (Sandler and Arce, 2000)
47Estimates of Annual Need for Additional Donor
Funding (including Global Fund contributions
Labonte et al, 2004, web-site updates)
48Shift in rights discourse
- Potential of rights discourse as alternative to
market-based development? - From development as need and assistance as
charity to - Development as right (freedom/capacity) and
assistance as obligation
49The Human Right To Health
- Key sources
- The Universal Declaration (UDHR)
- The International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (Article 12) - Convention on Torture
- Convention on Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women - Convention on the Rights of the Child
50UN Commission on Human Rights Interim Report,
2003
-
- Right to health includes underlying health
determinants (specifically water/sanitation,
maternal/child programs, education) - Right is judiciable
- Right is superordinate to trade agreements but
presently lacks clarity on legal content (how to
enforce) - TRIPS/GATS (prevents health care access) cited as
actual, or potential, human rights violations - Progressive liberalization may contradict
progressive realization of right to health
51Right to Health Impact Assessment Methodology,
Trade Agreements
- Called for by Paul Hunt, UN Special Rapporteur on
the Right to Health, 2004 - Research proposal to Canadian government,
comprising 3 stages - Outcome indicators based on right to health
evaluation criteria (Article 12) - Pathways analyses linking liberalization to
outcomes based on narrative reviews - Field-testing of workshop methodology with CSOs
in India, Mexico, South Africa and Canada - Link with WHO trade and health group
52The prescriptions a short list of reforms for
global health
- Increased development assistance (0.7) untied,
in cash - Debt cancellation/meaningful reduction
- Global tax (carbon tax, Tobin tax) for wealth
redistribution - Fair trade (special differential treatment for
developing nations) - Development box in AoA for food security and
livelihood protection
53Right to health or right to trade?
- WTO preamble declares liberalization only a means
to the end of development and sustainability
prove it by - Subordinating WTO to right to health
- equitable access to health care, education,
water/sanitation, housing, food (ICESCR) - And, at very least, the Millennium Development
Goals - not, as the so-called Doha Development round
argues, take development dimensions into
account in trade agreements, but ensure that
agreements serve development goals
54Available now University of Cape Town Press/IDRC
Books
55Health for Some Death, Disease and Disparity in
a Globalizing EraRonald Labonte, Ted Schrecker,
Amit Sen Gupta
- March 20, 2005
- www.socialjustice.org
- E-mail justice_at_socialjustice.org
- C15 C5 shipping