By JEFF MACKLER
A July 17 New
York Times
article entitled “Japanese Consumers Reconsidering Rice Loyalty” attracted my
attention when it reported that “Japan’s agricultural ministry, for now, says
it is not considering an increase in rice imports, which are all but shut out
by a 778 percent tariff.”
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This enormous tariff led me to
wonder if The Times had not made a typographical
error. Perhaps the actual tariff figure was 7.78 percent or even 77.8 percent?
But an on-line Times correction 10 days later
indicated that the only “correction” was in the name of the multinational
corporation that actually did import rice into China, Seiyu Wal-Mart, which
appeared in the original article as just “Wal-Mart.”
The multi-billion-dollar
multi-national WalMart corporation was apparently able to pay this 778 percent
tariff and still make a profit by selling near slave-labor Chinese-grown rice
to Japan. But China is not the only country able to penetrate the Japanese
market and still make a profit. U.S. rice producers, using the most
sophisticated technology in the world—including aerial seeding, genetically
engineered low-water requirement strains, and super-modern harvesting and
processing equipment—are on the same road but with different methods. The
secret of Japan’s imperialist competitors’ success is the employment of near
slave labor on the one hand or the use of state of the art technology on the
other.
The Times article, reflecting the
concerns of U.S. business interests, continues: “‘We’d simply like to see
demand dictate where U.S. rice goes, not the [U.S.] government,’ said Robert
Cummings, chief operating officer at the U.S.A. Rice Federation.”
Japan’s present rice shortage
was a product of the government’s ban on the sale of rice from some 18,000
acres of contaminated Fukushima farmland following the March 2011 meltdown of
three tsunami-stricken nuclear reactors. Despite government guarantees that
Japanese rice outside the Fukushima region was “sufficiently” free from
radioactive cesium and related contaminants, Japanese consumers tend to mistrust
government assurances, especially given the long series of now refuted official
proclamations.
If we may put the horror of
the Fukushima disaster aside for a moment, including the resulting spread of
deadly radioactive material in the atmosphere and oceans, the economic
implications of a world driven by capitalism’s inexorable drive for profits at
the expense of human life are revealing and go far beyond the present squabbles
over rice tariffs.
World trade in the era of
neo-liberal or laissez-faire/free-trade capitalism is supposed to be regulated
by agreements between the world’s major contenders. International institutions
like the World Trade Organization (WTO) or treaties like the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) are supposedly aimed at restricting or eliminating
tariffs and all other barriers to “free trade.” The truth lies elsewhere.
As the U.S. Rice Federation
states, demand and demand only—the free market—“should” dictate the price of
rice and its destination. But the Rice Federation neglects to mention that all international trade agreements
and organizations are based on enforcement of negotiated agreements between
competing capitalists, agreements that include literally thousands of exceptions—as with Japan’s huge rice
tariff against foreign imports.
In the case of Japan, whose
highly efficient auto industry constantly undermines the profits of U.S. car
corporations, these tit for tat multi-billion-dollar agreements can have the
effect of protecting one or more of its weaker industries against powerful
competition from other nations. Japan’s high rice tariff, for example, might be
accompanied by an agreement to place a U.S. tariff or other such limitations on
the importation of another Japanese commodity. Treaties like NAFTA (North American
Free Trade Agreement) include innumerable protectionist exceptions of this
type.
One nation’s concession to
another with regard to Product A, for example, is given back in return for
similar dispensation to Product B, but almost always with a bonus to the most
economically powerful of the negotiators. The weaker the competing nation, the
more concessions it is forced to agree to in order to secure access to foreign
markets and/or protect its own. The major ruling-class representatives of the
world regularly meet to negotiate the benefits for each of their countries, and
then reduce these “government-approved” agreements to the status of
international law.
When treaties prove inadequate
to mitigate the ever-intensifying competition inherent in world capitalism, the
weaker nations and their peoples are driven to near bankruptcy, as is the case
with the present world economic crisis.
To increase their worldwide
competitive edge in auto production, for example, Japanese corporations have
shifted production to super-low-wage India. Last month workers at the New
Delhi-based Maruti Suzuki factory, which makes half of all cars sold in India
and is controlled by the Japanese automaker, were burned in a fire that
destroyed a portion of the plant during a confrontation with police and
management goons. One hundred workers were arrested while protesting Suzuki’s
contracting out thousands of jobs at sub-minimum wages and in violation of
Indian law. “Temporary contract” workers, with few rights, are paid a fraction
of the wages of permanent workers—about $126 monthly as compared with $324 a
month for permanent workers.
While there are numerous
international agreements to eliminate tariffs and other trade restrictions that
may temporarily mitigate this ongoing deadly competition, there are no such
international agreements regulating wages, hours, and working conditions. Here,
only capitalism’s law of the jungle applies—enforce the “race to the bottom” to
maximize profits at the expense of workers everywhere and the environment!
Economic warfare takes its
hardest toll on the workers of the weaker capitalist powers, as is the case
today with Greece, Ireland, Spain, and Italy—where the ruling rich seek to
mitigate their ever-declining profitability by imposing draconian austerity
programs that wipe out in a day gains won over decades. But the capitalist
behemoths are not immune, as we see in the U.S., where the bankers and
corporate rich are compelled to do the same at the expense of U.S. workers,
youth, and the poor and oppressed.
In the above equations,
countries of the underdeveloped world have virtually no influence and are
subjected to the rape of their economies, resources, and people as well as the
regular imperial installation of neo-colonial military regimes.
Economic warfare takes many
forms, some deceptively peaceful, and others overtly violent. The half-century
embargo/blockade imposed by the U.S. against revolutionary Cuba is every bit a
war, but by other means. Only Cuba’s socialist revolution has allowed the nation
to survive. Aimed at re-imposing the old colonialism, poverty, and exploitation
on the heroic Cuban workers and farmers, the embargo is aimed at regime
change—nothing less.
What applies to Japanese rice
applies with brute force to Cuban sugar production. With the demise of its
former USSR and Eastern European trading partners, Cuba lost some 85 percent of
its trade and close to all of the market for the sugar it produced as the
nation’s main cash crop. Cuba’s once state-of-the-art sugar industry,
which produced an average of seven millions tons yearly for decades—ranking
sixth in the world—saw its sugar exports drastically decline. Its access to
spare parts and replacement machinery, as well as oil to fuel its refineries
and harvesting equipment, reduced sugar production to below 1.2 millions tons
by 2005-6. Tractors and associated heavy equipment had to be replaced by oxen
to cultivate fields.
Equally horrific was the fact
that the world market price of sugar, a result of the corporate machinations of
the largest consumer nations, dropped by 50 percent, further exacerbating the
stresses on Cuba’s already beleaguered economy. The cost to Cuba of the U.S.
blockade exceeds $50 billion since 1960.
In a similar manner the
U.S.-led sanctions against Iran, cynically demonized as a “terrorist” nation by
the U.S. government and its captive media, are today enforced by threatening
U.S. warships in the Persian Gulf, costing OPEC’s third-largest producer $133
million a day in lost sales. In contrast to the U.S. empire, with 1100 military
bases around the world, Iran has never invaded another nation and has no bases
anywhere outside its borders.
“Oil shipments from Iran,”
according to the Aug. 2 San Francisco Chronicle, “have plunged to 1.2 million barrels a day, or 52 percent, since the
sanctions banning the purchase, transport, financing and insuring of Iranian
crude began July 1.” On an annualized basis Iran’s losses will be $48 billion,
or 10 percent of its economy.
When oppressed people anywhere
fight back and remove the dictators imposed by the U.S., they are punished, as
with the U.S.-financed 10-year war against Iran beginning in 1979-80, waged by
the then U.S. surrogate Saddam Hussein dictatorship in Iraq. That war, which
saw much of Iran’s oil facilities destroyed or idled, cost the lives of one
million Iranians and an equal number of Iraqis.
Similarly, the U.S.-sponsored
coup in Iran in 1953 replaced British oil contracts with American ones after
replacing the democratically elected president, Mohammad Mossadegh, with the
brutal Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Just who are the real terrorists?
The ever-intensifying U.S.
wars, sanctions, embargoes, blockades, drone bombings, mercenary death squads,
armed interventions, renditions, and torture are matched by the less obvious
but critical exercise of power in the economic arena. In both instances we are
witness to a social system, capitalism, driven to destruction by its inherent
contradictions rather than the conscious decisions of its leaders. Capitalist
competitors from each country, driven by the same mad logic, have no
alternative but to participate and retaliate to ensure their profits.
Working people have no interest in defending any aspect of this world
social system heading for disaster. Marx said it well in the closing admonition
of his famous “Communist Manifesto,” “Workers of the world unite! You have
nothing to lose but your chains.”
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