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This Is What Bureaucracy Looks Like

vieuxcmaq, Vendredi, Février 15, 2002 - 12:00

Jim Davis (debonaire@mindspring.com)

This essay takes a critical look at the role Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) play in the growing movement against global capital.

This essay appears in a new book published by Softskull. The Battle of Seattle; The new Movement against global Capitalism. Eds. Eddie Yuen, Daniel Burton-Rose and George Katsiafikas.

"I’m aware that it’s a lot more glamorous to be on the barricade with a handkerchief around your nose than it is to
be at the meetings with a briefcase and a bowler hat, but I think that we’re getting more done this way" -- Bono

This essay takes a critical look at the role Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs) play in the growing
movement against global capital. The movement, which made its spectacular US debut in Seattle, has lent
NGOs unprecedented political influence. Leading thinkers and institutions of capitalist planning are desperate for
allies to appease their critics. As we will see the impulses of the NGOs and those of the movement are
politically at odds. While much discussion has concentrated on tactical differences, a more profound problem lies
beneath. Lacking in imagination and caught between the many-headed street movement and an impulse to
negotiate directly with power on its behalf, the specter of NGOs, as a device for the containment of political
dissent, arises.

The government’s friend

There is no doubt that NGOs do vital work in any number of places around the world . From famine relief to
bringing clean water to rural communities throughout the South many such groups are at the front line of people’s
struggles to survive and gain a modicum of political rights. NGOs have inherited a tradition of charity work that
has been around since the earliest days of colonialism. More and more of them have abandoned the sorry
history of proselytism and missionary work in favor of a human rights agenda and, more recently, a clear political
and economic critique. In this regard the contribution of NGOs to the creation and maintenance of a space for
political discourse in many places is inestimable. The experience of Chiapas is one example where NGOs,
among others, organized in support of the Zapatistas and made an overt military solution an untenable option
for the Mexican State. In Seattle and Quebec groups like Public Citizen and Global Exchange made enormous
organizing contributions, mobilized formidable resources and infiltrated the corporate media with articulate and
provocative spokespeople and sound bites. But it is precisely for groups like this that the contradictions of
institutionalized radicalism become most apparent. To understand why this is the case we must consider the
changes in the terrain of struggle that Zapatismo and Seattle have wrought.

After having been denounced in the South for decades as an incubus, the World Bank the IMF, and their even
more odious offspring the WTO, are now pilloried even in the business press which feels it must distance itself
from them or risk contagion. The WTO has effectively put the overdeveloped countries on notice that their turn
to be ‘structurally adjusted’ has come and hence expanded resistance to the ‘first world’ also. George Soros, the
swashbuckling knight-errant of speculative financial flows, has even criticized the institutions and neoliberal
ubereconomist Jeffrey Sachs is back-pedaling madly. A legitimation crisis is brewing for international capital The
only question is, who will save them and how? Recent demonstrations in Seattle, Prague, Davos, D.C.,
Melbourne, and Quebec City, escalating in fierceness, and increasingly articulate, have left the capitalist planned
coup du monde a shambles.

To the media it seems that NGOs and protestors are virtually interchangeable and synonymous. In reality elite
decision-makers evaluate the NGO world with a quick and pragmatic eye and see potential allies in the delicate
work of diffusing this new opposition. The Economist took note of this in pointing out that when "assaulted by
unruly protestors, firms and governments are suddenly eager to do business with the respectable face of
dissent." Legitimation strategies are everywhere. In Business Week, "A double backlash is generating
skepticism about the ability of globalism to do good". All of a sudden we witness the recruitment of a moral
philosophy absent from the economist’s dictionary since the nineteenth century and along with it a pantheon of
do gooders to show the way.

Among the re-imagers we find Bono, narcissistic Irish pop star, cultural carpetbagger, and supremely cynical
carer whose current promotions include a campaign to ‘forgive’ Third World debt. He has become a roving
ambassador for Jubilee 2000, an NGO which advocates debt relief as good business. Bono (born again) has
met the pope (a fan), Jesse Helms and ‘Jim’ Wolfensohn, the former World Bank boss. He has been coached
in the intricacies of global capitalism by Harvard’s Jeffrey Sachs. In recent years Sachs has changed his colors
and jumped ship from his hard line of the 1980s and early ‘90’s. Having factored in political crisis he is now the
liberal neoliberal barely recognizable as one of the primary architects of ‘shock therapy’. That policy succeeded
in prising the collective wealth of Russia away, laundering it through the Mafia and the banking system, and
recycling it as investment dollars in the US and Western Europe. The shock has contributed to a fall in the life
expectancy of Russian men by six years in the 1990’s, among other calamities.

Bono is an extreme example of those with whom the institutions would like to be associated. His naivete about
why he was at the Prague WTO meeting is almost endearing; at least other opportunists in the NGO industry
appreciate that without the demonstrations and the ensuing legitimacy deficit there would be no seats at the
table for any of them. Some of them will have read as much in The Economist who was in no doubt as to why
"groups such as Oxfam were all but co-opted into designing debt relief strategies".

The ideal for capitalism would be to create and co-opt a "responsible" leadership who could then negotiate on
behalf of the hordes and diffuse the movement while recuperating it. "Horst Kohler, the IMF’s new boss has
been courting NGOs. Jim Wolfensohn, the [World] Banks boss, has long fawned in their direction". Surely, they
imagine, there are some reasonable types who understand that we can’t go back to the stone age and that
progress will continue. Stephen Hellinger, president of Development Gap, one of the organizing NGOs of the
"Fifty Years is Enough" campaign, was successfully recruited by the World Bank. He works with them to review
the effects of Structural Adjustment and reflects on his experience in the Financial Times. "Wolfensohn has yet to
take the critique that is coming out around the world," he says and adds that, "It has been six years, the hopes
we had for him have yet to materialize." Incredibly Hellinger finds Wolfensohn to be the impediment to change,
a different boss and perhaps we could get somewhere. Ironic then that Wolfensohn got the chop for being too
reform minded.

Is it mere coincidence that the implementation of the neoliberal project in the form of privatization, trade feudalism
and the attempted elimination of the welfare state occurred simultaneously with the emergence of NGOs as
central to its explanation and narrative? While neoliberalism as conceived by the Chicago boys (Sachs among
them) Thatcher, Reagan et al, was a strictly conservative strategy, its execution and implementation is a
Clintonian liberal project. "The principle reason for the recent boom in NGOs", according to The Economist, "is
that Western governments finance them. This is not a matter of charity but of privatization." In Africa and
elsewhere Western governments routinely recruit NGOs to distribute aid and administer development projects.
Indeed The Economist claims that governments rely to a greater and greater degree on "useful information" that
NGOs can provide. By way of example they state: "the work of Global Witness is actually paid for by the
British Foreign Office".

Supply and Demand

More profoundly NGOs can often be found in control of services formerly provided by Third World
Governments until debt and restructuring eliminated them. Caroline Fetscher has written of the situation in
Bangladesh where up to 5,000 NGOs are involved in literacy programs. Alex Demirovic points out that due to
their mistrust of Southern governments, Northern NGOs can become shadow bureaucracies parallel to Southern
Nation State administrations. These NGOs "often work as public service contractors with headquarters in the
large cities, far removed from the problems of the population, sturdily professional and apolitical. The agenda for
the aid is, in fact, frequently determined by the self-interest of these organizations". As these relationships
become more institutionalized the implications for democracy among the recipients, i.e. the poor of the Global
South, are fairly clear.

If Bono’s elite power is exclusively to do with the image then the NGO’s can more powerfully claim to be the
real fake. As Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt describe it, "these NGOs conduct just wars without arms, without
violence, without borders. Like the Dominicans in the late medieval period and the Jesuits at the dawn of
modernity, these groups strive to identify universal needs and defend human rights." In the new framework of
legitimacy that Negri and Hardt describe as "Empire" (and which the Zapatistas, among others, recognize
loosely as neoliberalism), "new articulations of the exercise of legitimate force" are demanded. The pattern is a
familiar one with the shibboleth of morality wheeled out to underline the economics of war and intervention. As
such, Negri and Hardt point out that NGOs, in this case Oxfam, Medicins Sans Frontieres and Amnesty
International, are precursors and perpetuators of imperial intervention. Kosovo is the most recent example
where liberals cheered as German planes dropped American ordnance on defenseless Serbs. And this after
multiple fabrications announced by NATO and the CIA but dutifully reproduced, reported and spectacularised
by the media.

To simplify with a metaphor, NGOs are to imperialism what artist bohemians are to urban gentrification. For
NGOs authenticity is derived from their branding, or more accurately from the composite of their brand identity.
As is the case with the more traditional corporate brands authenticity remains a holy grail. Nike and Benetton
derive theirs from ‘Blackness’, diversity and the urban street credibility of their billion dollar illusions. NGOs
generate their authenticity from compassion extraction activities. For them cultural otherness and the mediation of
abject desperation is the foundation of moral authority. This is most obvious in the Fair Trade game, whereby
NGOs import, distribute and sell crafts and produce from the South. "Buy a basket from a typical crafts importer
and the peasant artisan receives a tiny fraction of what you pay. At the Global Exchange Fair Trade Craft
Stores, you know the producer got her or his fair share, around 15-30% of the retail price". Like World Bank and
IMF activities, the currency of fair trade is market rather than social relations.

As is the case with most valuable raw materials such extractions are located most often in the south. And like
gold and diamonds, ‘compassion’ and ‘authenticity’ mined in the South are most profitably consumed in the
North. And as with gold and diamonds the scarcity of compassion must be carefully managed owing to its natural
abundance. The compassion market is notoriously inelastic as was evidenced by the ‘compassion fatigue’ crisis
suffered by NGOs during the second Ethiopian famine of the 1980s. As brands go, the NGO sector has
succeeded in accumulating that most scarce of resources, compassionate capital. Like Lady Diana’s landmine
campaign, their moral appeal is absolute.

Movement(s)…

Elsewhere in this collection the notion of prefiguration in praxis is discussed. It is relevant to any discussion of
NGOs also. The movement against global capitalism is marked by political evolution from those movements
that have gone before. In its style it owes a debt to the women’s movement and its rejection of hierarchy and
charismatic oratory, to the peace movement of the seventies in its mass non-violent demeanor; to the European
black bloc of the eighties in its tactical probing for the weaknesses of a jack booted foe and to the radical
environmental movement for the joy with which it goes about its work and its emphasis on changing everyday
life for the better. The radically democratic nature of the movement is its strongest suit. Perhaps this is a lesson
that NGOs are incapable of learning if we consider that NGOs were granted a seat at the UN as consultants and
fundraisers when the charter was written at the dawn of the post colonial era. There is a political difference
between the movement described and the manner with which the majority of NGOs organize themselves,
particularly those with the profile and organizational ability to seize the moment.

And Miners

Hierarchical in structure and often led by careerist NGO celebrities, the industry is degenerate in its industrial
relations and, as is often the case with countercultural outfits, relies to an outrageous degree on volunteer labor. In
this arena too NGOs find ways to profitably invest political rhetoric. They exploit their workers using the
goodfight jargon just as sweatshops use motifs of ‘familia’ or nationalism to justify injustice or as IMF officers
argue for particular environmental or labor abuses by reference to general growth rates and so on.

NGOs might indeed operate in the moral economy ignoring the dictates of the surplus value theory of labor.
One can’t accumulate compassion in this manner without exploiting workers. Along these lines Ralph Nader,
Trojan corporation killer and the Elvis of reformism, has stated that the NGO business has no need of trade
unions. Back in the eighties at Multinational Monitor, a magazine he owned, he expressed the opinion that
workers at the magazine had no right to unionize. The editor, Tim Shorrock, was fired for attempting to organize.
The following is extracted from an essay by Nick Mamantas published by the Greenwich Village Gazzette
(New York). "Public interest groups are like crusades, Nader explains, you can’t have work rules, or 9 to 5."
Workers should be treated equitably, using the resources the "crusade" has, but anyone in a public interest firm
in Washington "can leave and double their income by going across the street. Shorrock, with his "union ploy,"
became an "adversary" according to Nader. "Anything that is commercial, is unionizable," but small public
interest organizations "would go broke in a month," Nader says, if they paid union wages, offered union benefits
and operated according to standard work rules, such as the eight-hour day.

No surprise then that the majority of NGOs and Unions are reluctant to embrace street demonstrations and risk
the contagion of radical democracy infecting their workers and members. The crucial moment in Seattle came
when Union leaders steered the rank and file away from sites where demonstrators confronted police and
succeeded in derailing the meetings, a tactic employed once more by Canadian Trade Union leaders at the
FTAA demonstrations in Quebec City in April, 2001.

While the street movement in Seattle drew together a wide range of issues into a generalized critique, many
NGOs seem fixated with specialization. Salaried professionals rely on teams of researchers, media spinners,
accountants, import/export consultants, tax lawyers and all the poorly paid but very committed staff one would
expect from a professional operation. And incredibly they actually refer to these people, the majority of whom
are motivated young idealists, as ‘our staff’. "The danger of yuppie-NGOs (a jet-set civil society) forming at the
global level is not insignificant." This leadership of professional reformers acts as if in the belief that the head and
the feet are separate. A morbidity pervades this division of labor where everyday is casual Friday.

In part because they organize as businesses in a manner determined by capitalism, this is all they can do. A
brand will suffer in the market place if it lacks focus; the specialized niche is life or death. What is generalized is
their moral appeal and that is packaged as pity, condescension, remorse and self-righteousness.

Shortly after Seattle, The Economist bemoaned that in France, where blockades were happening over fuel
prices, politics was again being conducted in the streets. The Economist was remembering the derailment of the
MAI, the ritual slaying of the WTO, the incineration of French plans to get rid of guaranteed pensions through
general strikes in 1996 and 1997 and a litany of other ‘setbacks’ due to people power. They recalled the chaos
of the sixties when it was impossible to make 5 year business plans, when social movements in France and
elsewhere were ‘out of control’ and the demands on capital were intolerable. The Economist was one of the first
to identify the NGOs as potential allies in the war for globalization. Open any page of Foreign Affairs, read the
output of the British Treasury Department, or even The World Bank’s own literature and it will be found now as
doctrine. Indeed on the World Bank’s homepage NGOs appear in the `partners’ window alongside business
and bond investors.

We are not without historical precedents, for it is the history of resistance and social movements which gives
capitalism many of its great ideas. A look back at the civil rights movement and the manner in which it was
co-opted and neutralized is indicative of the dangers the movement now faces. And few will need to be
reminded of the serial sell -outs in the chilling history of trade unionism, usually by its own leadership. The trouble
with trade unionism, remarked Winston Churchill at a cabinet meeting at the end of WW1, is that there is not
enough of it—that is, of the sound patriotic kind at least.

A further trait of the contemporary movement is that it levels its demands against capital in isolation rather than
against the state. Historically the state has mediated between the two, closeting its loyalty to employers behind
a rhetorical or legalistic impartiality. But the state has shored up its own position via a host of institutional
defenses, welfare and social work among them. In part globalization is the end of these as capital transcends its
perceived need for the state brokered compromise. Privatization was the answer to which a question had to be
found and simultaneously the discourse of entitlement was replaced by that of ‘responsibility’. In abandoning
any notion of social contract and by evacuating the space of ‘public good’, capital, via the state, has created a
subtle symbiosis whereby charity is the new welfare and NGOs are the new social workers. Structural
adjustment has achieved this in the South while Bush’s state sponsored religious volunteerism, combined with
the philanthropic experimentalism of Bill Gates, Ted Turner and George Soros, are its latest expressions in the
North. The market economy and the market society are indistinguishable…compassion in all things. "The
international institutions, which clearly recognize the problem of internationally controlling the financial and capital
markets…are also aware of the need for intermediary organizations. With NGOs they form complex political
networks and negotiation systems. The result can be described as global governance."

The implications for the movement are predictable. Those who most loudly condemned the militants of Prague
and Seattle are most likely to have their loyalty to the politics of the negotiating table rather than the street
rewarded. Indeed the more sober among them speak of ‘reforming’ the institutions rather than their abolition. Like
Bono’s generosity in ‘forgiving’ debt to those who never borrowed, not to mention reparations, among the
NGO’s the language of forgiveness is abject. Thus can Kevin Danaher, co-founder of Global Exchange and
prominent critic of the World Bank intone that "If we really care about the future of the planet, we must struggle to
transform the World Bank." What we would transform it into is left unsaid.

The Last Bureaucrat

This posture, assumed by most of the leading NGO’s concerned with trade in particular and globalization in
general, belies a fascination they share with a gamut of capitalist functionaries throughout the West. Mainstream
economics is in theory as imperialist as capitalism is in reality. It has in the last generation become a theology.
Academically the discipline is contained within a system of imposed ignorance, its most interesting challenges
are excluded as ‘externalities’ (famine, pollution) or more glaringly as ‘market failures’, "Land has no production
cost, it is a free and unreproducable gift of Nature" proclaims a basic introductory textbook. War, the great
engine of accumulation, is dismissed as outside its remit though without it there would be no property, or at least
no destruction and regeneration of it. The contemporary economist is a number cruncher obsessing over the
harmony of equations as the bodies pile up around him. Yet NGOs, particularly their intellectual elites, remain
under the spell of professional economics, convinced that more sensible theories will prevail and that the World
Bank needs to reorient itself towards ‘micro loans’ to better deliver the theology of the market to those as yet
‘underdeveloped’.

NGOs, however well intentioned many may be, are not a substitute for real social and political movements.
Above all, neither capital, the state, nor the NGOs should be allowed dictate who the movements leaders are. It
should be remembered that the Seattle victory was revised by many NGO and union leaders as the outcome
of a great collaboration between them. This clearly overstates the case and purposely overlooks the tensions
between them and the ‘street warriors’ who did the heavy lifting. But pragmatically many NGOs have valuable
research and mobilizing resources and, like the media, any serious political or social movement cannot ignore its
relationship with them. For the first time in 20 years real radical possibilities have opened up. Where once the
committed had few options but a professional NGO track there is now the inkling of a truly global anti capitalist
movement to work towards. Essentially the NGOs are a class of professional activists with whom the
movement has a relationship. They are often strong critics of the excesses of capitalism and are willing to commit
resources and considerable ability and talent to the creation of a just order. What is demanded of them will
determine whether their political choices have to do with the movement’s agenda or that of capital.

It can go either way. The following from Lori Wallach, a prominent researcher, writer and director of Public Citizen
in Washington DC, in a Foreign Policy interview, illustrates the contours of this political divide. She described
her work in Seattle; "[T]hese anarchist folks marched in there and started smashing things. And our people
actually picked up the anarchists. Because we had with us longshoremen and steelworkers who, by their sheer
bulk, were three or four times larger. So we had them just literally sort of, a teamster on either side, just pick up
an anarchist. We’d walk him over to the cops and say, this boy just broke a window. He doesn’t belong to us.
We hate the WTO, so does he, maybe, but we don’t break things. Please arrest him." This behavior is
premised on a tactical assumption that reassuring capital is "getting more done".

Wallach’s remarks underline a very important point. The conditions of negotiation between capital and the NGOs
are the unilateral disarmament of the movement’s tactics. This is the only thing the NGOs have to offer
neoliberalism; a special sort of police power and movement sabotage. In other words, the promise (articulated,
indicated or simply understood) that the politics of the street will be replaced by the politics of ‘heated’
negotiation. But the potential exists for a genuinely radical movement to grow in opposition to capital itself, which
has nothing to do with this sort of politics. The movement in the streets has made apparent capital’s inherent
irrationalism. In going on a new offensive without first seeing to it that a spurious opposition existed it has
overplayed its hand and its vulnerability is exposed. It is now fighting a rearguard action to create one. NGO’s,
who couldn’t get their calls returned even three years ago, can now write their own contracts and are privy, finally,
to policy making at the highest levels. For Lori Wallach and her crowd it is almost like being a real cop.

Postscript.

The shape of the tensions within the anti globalization movement outlined above were manifest quite clearly
here in New York City last weekend. At least 15 000 demonstrators turned out to greet the World Economic
Forum who had been driven from Davos, Switzerland by fierce opposition at last year’s gathering. The total
absence in NY of Public Citizen, Global Exchange and The Sierra Club, among others, represents their retreat
from both street confrontations as a tactic and popular opposition as a strategy. The demonstrations were
successfully organized by that part of the movement most feared by capital and most despised by the
movement’s careerists. While the protests here were peaceful and disciplined they were above all united and
radically democratic. Not only did the NGOs effectively boycott the demonstrations but they refused to endorse
or support them in any way. The cynicism of this gang is only matched by that of the WEF; the Forum invoking
the dead of September as the pretext for coming to NY and the NGOs as a pretext for staying away. Synergy
anyone?

Instead these organizations took their winter vacation in Porto Alegre Brazil where the "jet-set civil society" joined
with elements of the European ruling political class and all the candidates in France’s upcoming presidential
election. The specified absence of any armed groups but presence of the former Priista governor of Chiapas
illuminates the distinction being made between state violence and armed groups opposing the state. It reminds
us also of the antics of the NGOs and their absurd moral gymnastics in calling the cops on "bad" demonstrators.
Undoubtedly Porto Alegre increases the power of NGOs on the world stage and reinforces the likelihood that
some formal negotiations will be opened between the anti democratic organs of globalization and their crypto
democratic counterparts within civil society. Perhaps the WEF will consider Porto Alegre as the venue for next
years Summit.

Meanwhile at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York Bono joined up with Bill Gates to increase the peace as the
bombs continue to fall in Afghanistan.

jd feb 5, 2001



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