Title: Financial Crisis Discussion
1 Financial Crisis Discussion
2What 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.
3Is 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.
4What 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.
5What 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.
6What 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).
7What 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.
8What 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.
9What 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.
10What 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?
11What 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.
12What 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.
13What 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.