The global recession has already plunged over 100 million people back into poverty and unemployment -- but
this week, we could turn the tide of economic destruction.
Right now, French President Sarkozy, the new chair of the G20 group of the world's largest economies, is deciding the group's agenda. Over 300 top economists have
urged the G20 to launch a coordinated global investment plan that saves millions from grinding hardship. But governments are doing the opposite - going it alone, slashing spending, and blaming each other.
President Sarkozy often seizes opportunities for dramatic popular action -- a massive outcry to him this week can persuade him to lead. Former UK PM
Gordon Brown has urgently appealed to Avaaz to act - click below to watch his appeal, forward this email, and sign the petition for a Jobs and Justice plan, to be personally delivered to Sarkozy when we reach 500,000 voices:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_economy_gb_video_2/?vl
The global recession has already put 34 million people out of work and thrown 60 million people back into poverty, but governments across the world are doing exactly the wrong thing: proposing deep cuts to public services, implementing protectionist policies and reducing global development assistance – plans that destroy still more livelihoods and threaten our social fabric.
This is a familiar story: in the 1930s, amidst the Great Depression, governments sought to "reassure the markets" by slashing services and balancing budgets. But this backfired entirely: the cuts shut more and more of their citizens out of the economy, which only made the economic crisis worse.
It's precisely when the markets are failing that governments must step in together to fill the gap.
We have already lost a great deal of ground, but it's not too late. The discredited economists who spurred the old bubble economy are giving way to a new wave of fresh thinkers -- including, surprisingly, the powerful International Monetary Fund, which is finally questioning its past insistence that countries in crisis cut their budgets. Brown and other prominent figures are making the rounds to world leaders to encourage this global plan. But they are the first to say that they need a mass movement to make it happen.
Let's raise our voices now for leadership to create jobs and protect citizens from poverty:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_economy_gb_video_2/?vl
Economic collapses can threaten everything we care about. When countries turn inwards, they abandon cooperation on issues like climate change, fighting global poverty and nuclear disarmament. They blame each other and groups of their own citizens -- leading to xenophobia, conflict and, as in the 1930s, the rise of awful political movements like fascism. But cooperation can build success upon success: as we recognize that our destinies are interlinked, a joint recovery can pave the way to the world we all believe in. Let's seize this moment to raise a cry for that greater vision -- of an economy that lifts us all towards a brighter future.
With hope,
Ben, Stephanie, Ricken, Alex, Paula, Maria Paz, Alice and the rest of the Avaaz team
P.S. Winning a global economic revival will take time. But this moment, when the G20 is deciding its priorities, is a pivotal chance to make a difference. Join the call for a global jobs recovery here:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/global_economy_gb_video_2/?vl
More information:
The Challenges of Growth, Employment and Social Cohesion - Joint ILO-IMF Conference in Cooperation with the Office of the Prime Minister of Norway:
http://www.osloconference2010.org/conference
Analysis: Sarkozy to press currencies role for G20:
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6850VN20100906
G20 urged to implement commitment to jobs, social protection:
http://finchannel.com/Main_News/Jobs/75493_G20_urged_to_implement_commitment_to_jobs,_
The wrong cure. What experts say:
http://falseeconomy.org.uk/cure/what-do-the-experts-say
The Economy: Why They Failed
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2010/dec/09/economy-why-they-failed/?pagination=false
The economies are gaining momentum, but unemployment stays the same. The rich in the west only get richer every second.
ReplyDeleteYou can feel the buzz in East Asia, it is completely booming. The "BRIC" nations are booming now. (Brasil-Russia-India-China)
The West is afraid to share their extreme wealth,
The Middle East religious fanatics feel being insulted and are taking measures.
The Asian are struggling and are on the fast lane to take over the west.
Some writer has written a book about the new division of this world after the fall of the iron curtain.
Look in Youtube for comments of Marc Faber or Jim Rogers, u will understand more or just a bit.
First: In Russia , China and India there are more riches now than in many of the west countries (including USA and Canada)...and you forgot the arabic lands. The problem is another one: the rich get richer all over the wordl ( independent from where they are comming from) and the poor get poorer.
ReplyDeleteSecond: This tendence is not new. Ten years ago the sociologists were talking about exactly this. Including the increment of unemployment. The differences between richests and poorest were going to be increased exponentially.... the sociologists predicted in the 90ties.
Third: You are seeing the wordl divided in parts and forget ( I just take the words from O.Wilde) that " we are all in the same guter".
The paradox is this: the world today is and means diversity ( and that is not new, it always was) but in the middle of this diversity are emerging new rules and values we all shared with each other ( remember just a little example the Human Rights Charta is not old at all).
As long as some politicians, economical elites and normal citizenships do not understand and asume this two facts we ( all of us) will be living in crisis. It is going to be a priority in the near future to cooperate with each other stead of only to see and making important the diferences. Now the new rules of the play ( the match may be better) are being reinvented....right now.
If you insist in talking and thinking about "division" ( old or new, does not matter) you miss an important fact... as I wrote in the beginning.
At this moment the petition has been signed by 127.350 people.....
ReplyDelete