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A CALL TO GREATNESS
Chapter 11. Plan B: Rising to the Challenge
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
History judges political leaders by
whether they respond to the great issues of their time. For today's
leaders, that issue is how to deflate the world's bubble economy
before it bursts. This bubble threatens the future of everyone,
rich and poor alike. It challenges us to restructure the global
economy, to build an eco-economy.
Among national political leaders, none has articulated the new agenda
better than U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair. He believes that environmental
degradation is the issue for our generation, noting that climate
change is "unquestionably the most urgent environmental challenge."
Arguing that the Kyoto Protocol was not radical enough, he calls
for a 60-percent reduction in carbon emissions worldwide by 2050.
Summing up, he calls for a "new international consensus to protect
our environment and combat the devastating impacts of climate change."47
Following the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Towers and the
Pentagon on September 11, 2001, several world leaders suggested
a twenty-first century variation of the Marshall Plan to deal with
poverty and its symptoms, arguing that in an increasingly integrated
world, abject poverty and great wealth cannot coexist. Gordon Brown,
U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer, notes that "Like peace, prosperity
was indivisible and to be sustained, it had to be shared." Brown
sees a Marshall Plan-like initiative not as aid in the traditional
sense, but as an investment in the future.48
French President Jacques Chirac, a political conservative, told
the Earth Summit in Johannesburg in early September 2002 that "the
world needed an international tax to fight world poverty." He suggested
a tax on either airplane tickets, carbon emissions, or international
financial transactions. To illustrate his commitment, Chirac announced
that over the next five years France would double its development
aid, reaching the internationally agreed upon goal of devoting 0.7
percent of gross domestic product to aid. Going beyond economic
issues, he also suggested the creation of a world environment organization
to coordinate efforts to build an environmentally sustainable economy.49
Some corporate leaders are also beginning to urge efforts to deal
with global poverty. Juergen Schrempp, CEO of DaimlerChrysler, said
in a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that the world needed
a new Marshall Plan. The question for the industrial world, he said,
was not, Can we afford another Marshall Plan? The question is, Can
we afford not to have another Marshall Plan?50
There is a growing sense among the more thoughtful political and
opinion leaders worldwide that business as usual is no longer a
viable option, that unless we respond to the social and environmental
issues that are undermining our future, we may not be able to avoid
economic decline and social disintegration. The prospect of failing
states is growing as mega-threats such as the HIV epidemic, water
shortages, and land hunger threaten to overwhelm countries on the
lower rungs of the global economic ladder. Failed states are a matter
of concern not only because of the social costs to their people
but also because they serve as ideal bases for international terrorist
organizations.
We now have some idea of what needs to be done and how to do it.
The United Nations has set social goals for education, health, and
the reduction of hunger and poverty. The preceding chapters have
sketched out a restructuring of the energy economy to stabilize
atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, a plan to stabilize population,
a strategy for raising land productivity and restoring the earth's
vegetation, and a plan to raise water productivity worldwide. The
goals are essential and the technologies are available.51
We have the wealth to achieve these goals. What we do not yet have
is the leadership. And if the past is any guide to the future, that
leadership can only come from the United States. By far the wealthiest
society that has ever existed, the United States has the resources
to lead this effort. Economist Jeffrey Sachs sums it up well, "The
tragic irony of this moment is that the rich countries are so rich
and the poor so poor that a few added tenths of one percent of GNP
from the rich ones ramped up over the coming decades could do what
was never before possible in human history: ensure that the basic
needs of health and education are met for all impoverished children
in this world. How many more tragedies will we suffer in this country
before we wake up to our capacity to help make the world a safer
and more prosperous place not only through military might, but through
the gift of life itself?"52
Unfortunately, the United States continues to focus on building
an ever-stronger military as though that were the key to addressing
these threats. The $343-billion defense budget dwarfs those of other
countriesallies
and others alike. U.S. allies, most of them North Atlantic Treaty
Organization members, spend $205 billion a year on the military;
Russia spends $60 billion; China, $42 billion; and Iran, Iraq, and
North Korea combined spend $12 billion. (See Table 11-1.) The United
States is spending more than its allies and possible adversaries
combined. As retired admiral Eugene Carroll, Jr., astutely observed,
"For forty-five years of the Cold War we were in an arms race with
the Soviet Union. Now it appears we are in an arms race with ourselves."53
As discussed in Chapter 10, the additional external funding needed
to achieve universal primary education in the 88 developing countries
that require help is conservatively estimated by the World Bank
at $15 billion per year. Funding for an adult literacy program based
largely on volunteers is estimated at $4 billion. Providing for
the most basic health care is estimated at $21 billion by the World
Health Organization. The additional funding needed to provide reproductive
health and family planning services to all women in developing countries
is $10 billion a year.54
Closing the condom gap and providing the additional 9 billion condoms
needed to control the spread of HIV in the developing world and
Eastern Europe requires $2.2 billion$270
million for condoms and $1.9 billion for AIDS prevention education
and condom distribution. The cost per year of extending school lunch
programs to the 44 poorest countries is $6 billion per year. An
additional $4 billion per year would cover the cost of assistance
to preschool children and pregnant women in these countries.55
In total, this comes to $62 billion. If the United States offered
to cover one third of this additional funding, the other industrial
countries would almost certainly be willing to provide the remainder,
and the worldwide effort to eradicate hunger, illiteracy, disease,
and poverty would be under way.
This reordering of priorities means restructuring the U.S. foreign
policy budget. Stephan Richter, editor of The Globalist,
notes, "There is an emerging global standard set by industrialized
countries, which spend $1 on aid for every $7 they spend on defense....At
the core, the ratio between defense spending and foreign aid signals
whether a nation is guided more by charity and communityor
by defensiveness." And then the punch line: "If the United States
were to follow this standard, it would have to commit about $48
billion to foreign aid each year." This would be up from roughly
$10 billion in 2002.56
The challenge is not just to alleviate poverty, but in doing so
to build an economy that is compatible with the earth's natural
systemsan
eco-economy, an economy that can sustain progress. This means a
fundamental restructuring of the energy economy and a substantial
modification of the food economy. It also means raising the productivity
of energy and shifting from fossil fuels to renewables. It means
raising water productivity over the next half-century, much as we
did land productivity over the last one.
This economic restructuring depends on tax restructuring, on getting
the market to be ecologically honest. Hints of what might lie ahead
came from Tokyo in early 2003 when Environment Minister Shunichi
Suzuki announced that discussions were to begin on a carbon tax,
scheduled for adoption in 2005. The benchmark of political leadership
in all countries will be whether or not leaders succeed in restructuring
the tax system.57
It is easy to spend hundreds of billions in response to terrorist
threats, but the reality is that the resources needed to disrupt
a modern economy are small, and a Department of Homeland Security,
however heavily funded, provides only minimal protection from suicidal
terrorists. The challenge is not just to provide a high-tech military
response to terrorism, but to build a global society that is environmentally
sustainable, socially equitable, and democratically based-one where
there is hope for everyone. Such an effort would more effectively
undermine the spread of terrorism than a doubling of military expenditures.
We can build an economy that does not destroy its natural support
systems, a global community where the basic needs of all the earth's
people are satisfied, and a world that will allow us to think of
ourselves as civilized. This is entirely doable. To paraphrase Franklin
Roosevelt at another of those hinge points in history, let no one
say it cannot be done.
The choice is oursyours
and mine. We can stay with business as usual and preside over a
global bubble economy that keeps expanding until it bursts, leading
to economic decline. Or we can adopt Plan B and be the generation
that stabilizes population, eradicates poverty, and stabilizes climate.
Historians will record the choice, but it is ours to make.
| Table 11-1. Military Spending in Key Countries,
2002, and Additional Funding to Reach Social Goals |
| Country |
Expenditure
|
|
(billion
dollars)
|
| United States |
343
|
|
|
| U.S. allies |
205
|
| Russia |
60
|
| China |
42
|
| Iran, Iraq, and North
Korea |
12
|
|
|
| Total excluding U.S. |
319
|
|
|
| Additional annual funding
to reach global social goals |
62
|
|
| Source: See endnote 53. |
ENDNOTES
47. Tony Blair, "Concerted International Effort Necessary to Fight
Climate Change," at www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page3073.asp, 24
February 2003.
48. Gordon Brown, "Marshall Plan for the Next 50 Years," Washington
Post, 17 December 2001.
49. Gerard Bon, "France's Chirac Backs Tax to Fight World Poverty,"
Reuters, 4 September 2002.
50. Schrempp cited in Frank Swoboda, "Carmaker Shares Global Vision,"
Washington Post, 30 November 2001.
51. U.N. Development Programme, Millennium Development Goals, at
www.undp.org/mdg.
52. Jeffrey Sachs, "One Tenth of 1 Percent to Make the World Safer,"
Washington Post, 21 November 2001.
53. Table 11-1 from Christopher Hellman, "Last of the Big Time Spenders:
U.S. Military Budget Still the World's Largest and Growing," Center
for Defense Information, at www.cdi.org/issues/wme/ spendersFY03.html,
4 February 2002, based on data from the International Institute
for Strategic Studies and the U.S. Department of Defense; U.S. defense
budget includes monies for the Pentagon and for the defense functions
of the U.S. Department of Energy, for more detail see "Fiscal Year
2002 Budget," at www.cdi.org/issues/budget/ fy'02/ index.html.
54. See Table 10-2 and associated discussion for more information.
55. Ibid.
56. Stephan Richter, "The New Global Aid-Defense Standard," The
Globalist, on-line magazine, 19 March 2002.
57. Japan for Sustainability, "Carbon Tax to be Introduced in FY2005,"
14 February 2003, at www.japanfs.org.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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