People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 02 January 10, 2003 |
“Market And Religious Fundamentalisms Are Complementary”
Samir
Amin
is
one
of
the
best-known
political-economists
in
the
world,
especially
in
terms
of
developments
theory.
He
has
been
a
consistent
advocate
of
the
conscious
self
reliance
of
the
countries
of
the
Global
South.
Born
in
Egypt
and
educated
in
Paris,
some
of
his
major
works
include
Accumulation
on
World
Scale
(1970),
Delinking
(1985)
and
Eurocentrism
(1988).
Samir
Amin
was
in
Hyderabad
to
attend
the
Asian
Social
Forum
(ASF)
meetings.
Following
are
the
excerpts
of
his
interview
given
to
Prajasakti:
Q:
What
is
the
objective
of
ASF
and
WSF
in
the
present-day
context
of
globalisation?
Amin:
Neo-liberal
globalisation
is
based
on
deregulation
with
competitive
advantage.
Neither
it
has
economic
rationality
nor
social
rationality
except
the
rationality
which
benefits
the
MNCs’
dominant
capital.
It
is
not
even
useful
to
indigenous
or
national
capitalists.
Today,
national
bourgeoisie
is
compromising
with
international
capital.
The
myth
of
market
regulating
itself
is
being
shattered
in
recent
period.
The
history
of
capitalism
shows
that
market
self-regulation
only
leads
to
social-economic
inequality.
In
the
new
era
of
globalisation,
the
state,
which
has
been
till
now
the
backbone
of
the
national
bourgeoisie,
is
compromising
with
imperialist
capital.
It
is
nowhere
to
be
seen
to
articulate
effective
alternatives
either
in
G-77,
NAM
or
any
other
third
world
cooperation
forums.
The
ASF
meeting
in
India
will
contribute
a
lot
to
strengthen
the
movement
against
globalisation.
Q:
After
the
failure
of
socialist
bloc,
market
fundamentalism
and
religious
fundamentalism
are
emerging
in
a
big
way.
How
do
you
locate
them?
Amin:
Market
fundamentalism
and
religious
fundamentalism
are
not
negating
factors
but
complementing
each
other.
They
are
not
conflicting
agents.
These
two
will
lead
to
change
the
class
identity
into
community
identity,
which
is
baseless
in
a
class-ridden
society.
The
so-called
religious
movements,
either
Muslim
or
Hindu,
are
neither
religious
nor
movements.
These
are
only
used
for
political
mobilisation.
So,
these
are
only
pseudo-religious,
pseudo-ethnic
movements.
Q:
Some
of
the
G-7
countries
are
opposing
war
against
Iraq.
Is
it
a
reflection
of
contradictions
emerging
in
imperialist
camp?
Amin:
Basically,
there
is
a
contradiction
in
this
camp.
Neo-liberal
economy
is
not
a
sustainable
one.
It
is
always
crisis-ridden.
Imperialist
capital
wants
to
come
out
of
this
sluggishness
by
gaining
military
control
of
planet.
All
the
wars
fought
by
US
benefit
super
imperialist
capital,
with
US
getting
more
benefit
than
others.
This
is
the
contradiction
in
capitalist
appropriation.
Q:
What
is
the
role
of
democracy
in
the
era
of
neo-liberal
globalisation?
Amin:
Democracy
is
antagonistic
to
neo-liberal
globalisation.
They
are
propagating
de-politicisation
of
people
and
development,
thereby
degrading
the
democratic
values.
Now,
in
so
many
third
world
countries,
democracy
is
being
defeated.
The
relevance
of
the
legislature
is
in
question
today.
Even
though
some
States
had
free
electors,
while
making
the
policy,
the
legislatures
are
becoming
increasingly
incompetent.
Q:
What
is
your
message
to
ASF,
the
Left
movement
in
India
and
especially
to
the
CPI(M)?
Amin:
The
articulation
of
alternative
is
the
need
of
the
hour.
There
are
different
kinds
of
resistance
going
on
all
over
the
world.
But
the
market
fundamentalists
are
not
arguing
about
the
alternatives
and
are
bent
on
projecting
market
as
sole
option.
So,
it
is
for
us
to
consolidate
the
base
of
alternative.
Particularly,
India
has
to
play
a
useful
role
in
formulating
the
alternative.
So
there
are
many
struggles
continuing
in
India
in
a
fragmented
way.
Especially,
Left
parties
have
to
learn
lessons
from
their
past
experiences
in
order
to
articulate
an
effective
alternative.
I
hope
the
CPI(M),
having
a
long
history
of
leading
the
struggles
and
formulating
policies,
will
take
a
leading
role
in
articulating
the
interests
of
the
common
masses
and
formulate
an
alternative
to
neo-liberal
agenda.