There'll be nowhere to run from the new world government
By Janet Daley
Telegraph.co.uk
There is scope for debate – and innumerable newspaper quizzes – about who was
the most influential public figure of the year, or which the most significant
event. But there can be little doubt which word won the prize for most important
adjective. 2009 was the year in which "global" swept the rest of the political
lexicon into obscurity. There were "global crises" and "global challenges", the
only possible resolution to which lay in "global solutions" necessitating
"global agreements". Gordon Brown actually suggested something called a "global
alliance" in response to climate change. (Would this be an alliance against the
Axis of Extra-Terrestrials?)
Some of this was sheer hokum: when uttered by Gordon Brown, the word
"global", as in "global economic crisis", meant: "It's not my fault". To the
extent that the word had intelligible meaning, it also had political
ramifications that were scarcely examined by those who bandied it about with
such ponderous self-importance. The mere utterance of it was assumed to sweep
away any consideration of what was once assumed to be the most basic
principle of modern democracy: that elected national governments are responsible
to their own people – that the right to govern derives from the consent of the
electorate.
The dangerous idea that the democratic accountability of national governments
should simply be dispensed with in favour of "global agreements" reached after
closed negotiations between world leaders never, so far as I recall, entered
into the arena of public discussion. Except in the United States, where it
became a very contentious talking point, the US still holding firmly to the
18th-century idea that power should lie with the will of the people.
Nor was much consideration given to the logical conclusion of all this
grandiose talk of global consensus as unquestionably desirable: if there was no
popular choice about approving supranational "legally binding agreements", what
would happen to dissenters who did not accept their premises (on climate change,
for example) when there was no possibility of fleeing to another country in
protest? Was this to be regarded as the emergence of world government? And would
it have powers of policing and enforcement that would supersede the authority of
elected national governments? In effect, this was the infamous "democratic
deficit" of the European Union elevated on to a planetary scale. And if the EU
model is anything to go by, then the agencies of global authority will involve
vast tracts of power being handed to unelected officials. Forget the relatively
petty irritations of Euro‑bureaucracy: welcome to the era of Earth-bureaucracy,
when there will be literally nowhere to run.
But, you may say, however dire the political consequences, surely there is
something in this obsession with global dilemmas. Economics is now based on a
world market, and if the planet really is facing some sort of man-made climate
crisis, then that too is a problem that transcends national boundaries. Surely,
if our problems are universal the solutions must be as well.
Well, yes and no. Calling a problem "global" is meant to imply three
different things: that it is the result of the actions of people in different
countries; that those actions have impacted on the lives of everyone in the
world; and that the remedy must involve pretty much identical responses or
correctives to those actions. These are separate premises, any of which might be
true without the rest of them necessarily being so. The banking crisis certainly
had its roots in the international nature of finance, but the way it affected
countries and peoples varied considerably according to the differences in their
internal arrangements. Britain suffered particularly badly because of its
addiction to public and private debt, whereas Australia escaped
relatively unscathed.
That a problem is international in its roots does not necessarily imply that
the solution must involve the hammering out of a uniform global prescription: in
fact, given the differences in effects and consequences for individual
countries, the attempt to do such hammering might be a huge waste of time and
resources that could be put to better use devising national remedies. France and
Germany seem to have pulled themselves out of recession over the past year (and
the US may be about to do so) while Britain has not. These variations owe almost
nothing to the pompous, overblown attempts to find global solutions: they are
largely to do with individual countries, under the pressure of democratic
accountability, doing what they decide is best for their own people.
This is not what Mr Brown calls "narrow self-interest", or "beggar my
neighbour" ruthlessness. It is the proper business of elected national leaders
to make judgments that are appropriate for the conditions of their own
populations. It is also right that heads of nations refuse to sign up to
"legally binding" global agreements which would disadvantage their own people.
The resistance of the developing nations to a climate change pact that would
deny them the kind of economic growth and mass prosperity to which advanced
countries have become accustomed is not mindless selfishness: it is proper
regard for the welfare of their own citizens.
The word "global" has taken on sacred connotations. Any action taken in its
name must be inherently virtuous, whereas the decisions of individual countries
are necessarily "narrow" and self-serving. (Never mind that a "global agreement"
will almost certainly be disproportionately influenced by the most powerful
nations.) Nor is our era so utterly unlike previous ones, for all its
technological sophistication. We have always needed multilateral agreements,
whether about trade, organised crime, border controls, or mutual defence.
If the impact of our behaviour on humanity at large is much greater or more
rapid than ever before then we shall have to find ways of dealing with that
which do not involve sacrificing the most enlightened form of government ever
devised. There is a whiff of totalitarianism about this new theology, in which
the risks are described in such cosmic terms that everything else must give way.
"Globalism" is another form of the internationalism that has been a core belief
of the Left: a commitment to class rather than country seemed an admirable
antidote to the "blood and soil" nationalism that gave rise to fascism.
The nation-state has never quite recovered from the bad name it acquired in
the last century as the progenitor of world war. But if it is to be relegated to
the dustbin of history then we had better come up with new mechanisms for
allowing people to have a say in how they are governed. Maybe that could be next
year's global challenge.
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