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Financial Crisis Discussion

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i.e. Is Corporate Social Responsibility going to be a viable campaign in the finance downturn? ... Respond to finance, food and climate crisis collectively. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financial Crisis Discussion


1
Financial Crisis Discussion
2
What is the nature of the crisis and what caused
it?
  • Roots in the USA sub-prime mortgage system
    quickly spread to investment banks.
  • Started in the financial sector quickly
    affected the rest of the economy.
  • Caused by an imbalance between the capacity to
    expand production and a lack of capacity to
    distribute benefits.
  • Has produced a hypocritical response in times of
    growth, an absent (laissez-faire) State has
    allowed growth bubbles. These bubbles have burst
    and States have rescued big corporations from
    their own madness ignoring the principles of
    laissez-faire.
  • First systemic crisis of financialized
    capitalism. Shows that it is impossible to
    sustain, in the long term, the logic that assets
    will continue to increase value.

3
Is the crisis an opportunity?
  • The crisis is an opportunity to
  • Expose the damage caused by unregulated neo
    liberalism.
  • Catalyze an alternative approach, with regulation
    of both world markets and financial systems.
  • Move from free markets to sound policy (planning,
    targeting and regulating to create sound
    economies).
  • Show how relying solely on market driven growth
    has failed compared to more targeted structural
    and infrastructural driven growth.
  • Question Bretton Woods institutions. There is a
    need for a new Bretton Woods agreement and for
    the creation of a World Monetary Agency to
    exercise market control.
  • Build a new world through social justice as an
    alternative paradigm of development.

4
What is the impact on developing countries?
  • Economic and Financial
  • All economies are affected but the poor are the
    most affected.
  • Why?
  • 1. Knock on impact on stock market of emerging
    economies
  • 2. Impacts due to trade and trade prices,
    declining remittances, reduced FDI, reduced
    lending and reduced aid.
  • Likely to affect four different types of
    international resource flows
  • 1. private capital flows, such as FDI
  • 2. portfolio and international lending
  • 3. official flows, such as development finance
    institutions
  • 4. capital and current transfers, such as
    official development assitance and remittances.

5
What is the impact on developing countries?
  • Social
  • Unemployment due to falling demand for export and
    lower prices
  • Loss of market
  • Reduced incomes
  • Reduced social spending
  • Decline in government revenues and expenditure.

6
What is the impact on developing countries?
  • Policy Change
  • Potential for policy change at a national level
    (nationalisation).
  • Likely to bring different dynamics/power shifts.
  • Potential for civil society and social movements
    to revitalize work for economic justice
    (alternative paradigms for aid).

7
What is the relationship between the Financial
Crisis and the Food Crisis?
  • There will be an increased price volatility in
    agriculture in 2009-2010 with implications for
    food security due to
  • Value of the dollar, price of oil and
    inflationary effects, impacting the availabilty
    of affordable food and the production of small
    farmers
  • Insuficient global food stock
  • Slow down on demand, putting pressure on prices
  • Speculative non-comercial investment funds
    entering or leaving agricultural future markets
  • Lower profit margins and more non-performing and
    over-due loans.
  • Agriculture serves as a cushion to the worse
    effects of recessions
  • and should be seen as a key sector for budgetary
    support.

8
What should national governments be doing?
  • Implement substantial, sustainable,
    environmentally and socially just changes to
    their economic system.
  • These changes should contribute to
  • 1. break the dominance of finance over the real
    economy
  • 2. social equity, both nationally and between
    the North and South
  • 3. guarantee livelihoods and peoples human
    rights
  • 4. ecological justice.

9
What should national governments be doing?
  • Implementation of new policies.
  • Policies that work are those that
  • 1. increase job opportunities
  • 2. improve wealth distribution (through tax
    justice and cash transfer)
  • 3. promote access of poor people to land, other
    natural resources, credits, inputs and other
    productive factors
  • 4. guarantee universal policies (education,
    health, housing, etc.)
  • 5. expand transformative social protection.

10
What it the likely impact on ActionAid?
  • ActionAid will
  • See a decline in income with greatest impact in
    the second quarter 2009
  • Be operating in a context of increased poverty
    and decreased state capacity to fight poverty
  • Have to reconsider its relationships and
    projects. i.e. Is Corporate Social Responsibility
    going to be a viable campaign in the finance
    downturn?

11
What should ActionAid do? (1)
  • ActionAid should
  • Take the opportunity to influence the development
    debate and consider new models.
  • Respond to finance, food and climate crisis
    collectively.
  • Look at what policies can best contribute to
    mitigating the effects of the crisis.
  • Assess the impact of the financial crisis in a
    number of DAs, by asking all offices to monitor
    the impacts.
  • Use the opportunity to push for ideas related to
    land reforms, sustainable development, and
    organic farming along with small scale farming
    and cooperatives.
  • Look for opportunities for dialogue on food and a
    package of transformative social protection and
    sustainable agriculture responses.

12
What should ActionAid do? (2)
  • Put pressure on donors in appropriate forums to
    honour their aid commitments to ensure
    governments still receive support.
  • Keep an eye on global architecture and responses
    to the food, finance and climate crises.
  • Put pressure on donors, particularly Bretton
    Woods, who plan to reduce public spending.
  • Push for more engagement between states and civil
    society, and support national development
    strategies, to ensure that response is long term
    and sustainable and demand rather than donor
    driven.
  • Facilitate the role between states and partners
    to ensure understanding of macro economic and
    social policy issues.
  • Look for opportunities to develop new partners
    and maintain existing partner linkages and create
    space for these voices in the international
    debate.

13
What should ActionAid do? (3)
  • Consolidate instead of expanding, reviewing
    expenditure to ensure that it is efficient and
    not moving into other countries.
  • Consider how to make expenditure effective,
    efficient and resulting in value for money.
  • Ensure that our programmes and projects do not
    unduly suffer.
  • Pay special attention to Forex planning and
    implications.
  • Prioritise fundraising. This is an opportunity
    for us to improve our fundraising reporting to
    all donors, to ensure that donors are reminded
    how valuable their suppor is.
  • Embark on contingency planning, revisiting
    partnership income projections and considering
    what this would mean in light of reduced planned
    income.
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