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Press Releases: Archives: Article 8
Health-Development: World Bank's Cures Hurting Nations
- Critics
By Ranjit Devraj
SAVAR, Bangladesh, Dec 7 (IPS) - The World Bank and its market- driven health
policies are getting the ire of health activists and experts here, who say the
Bank's cures are harming the developing- country patients they seek to help.
Criticism of the bank and health priorities driven by the market peaked has
been a key theme of the ongoing People's Health Assembly (PHA) here, but peaked
during a stormy face-off Wednesday.
At that session between the World Bank and health activists, Bank representative
Richard Lee Skolnik was treated to the display of a giant cloth montage with
brightly embroidered newspaper headlines, which told stories of the harmful
effects of the Bank's structural adjustment programme (SAP) in Zimbabwe.
The headlines spoke of rising food prices, increasing crime, and labour retrenchment.
These, presenter Mary Sandari said, are the direct result of the country's acceding
to SAP to pay back its debts as directed by the bank.
Skolnik responded by saying the Bank only asked Zimbabwe to manage its economy
soundly and did not tell it to cut funding to the social sectors.
Sandasi's presentation was followed by another by Hugo Icu, a doctor from Guatemala
who outlined the collapse of primary health care in his country as a direct
consequence of his government's following the Bank's prescriptions.
Skolnik said the World Bank's health policies were helping poor countries like
India fight leprosy, polio, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.
But at this remark, angry delegates to the health assembly shouted ''get out''
and chanted ''no, no,'' until PHA project coordinator Zafarullah Choudhury threatened
to call off the week- long PHA which ends Friday.
Skolnik was not allowed to finish his presentation, but instead heard activists
telling the Bank about the need to restore the primary health care approach
promoted since the 1978 ''Health for all Declaration'' at an global meeting
at Alma Ata, Kazakhstan.
Critics say the global pledge set at that meeting -- which included primary
health care for all by 2000 -- have now all but been scuttled by the Bank's
approach which deprives developing- country budgets of funds for social sectors.
''We don't want charity but justice,'' said Charles Mutasa, a panelist from
Zimbabwe, adding that the Bank's approach has driven many African countries
into a debt trap as a result of the new global economic system.
Mutasa spoke of ''exogenous'' factors that made debt repayment difficult, such
as floods, corruption and civil strife, the last of which ''the west was so
good at pioneering.''
To this, Skolnik explained that ''there was no substitute for good governance''
and that the Bank should indeed be ''hit hard'' for lending money to bad regimes.
But Antonio Tujan, an activist from the Philippines, disputed the assertion
that Bank funds went into social sectors. In his country, he said, less than
three percent of its loans actually went into public health.
''Most of the money goes into projects like the Subic freeport,'' he said, referring
to a vast infrastructure project for business at a former U.S. military bases,
north of the capital Manila.
Looking at the effects of economic 'reforms' on health, Tujan said there has
been ''progressive destruction of the people's health agenda'' by the private
corporatisation of health services, which has a curative rather than a preventive
approach.
As things stand, Tujan said, he wonders if ''no medicine is better than bad
medicine.''
A panelist from Australia, David Leggae, said that although the Bank's 'Wealth
through growth which would trickle down' approach provided the rationale for
neoliberalism and structural adjustment, it was also responsible for economic
polarisation and increased mortality.
There are too many fundamental flaws in the Bank's approach, he said, since
it is based on the idea that ''consumption could be maintained by increasing
debt'' and that an economic crisis could thus be deferred.
Basically, Leggae adds, the game is one of maintaining the stability and wealth
of the North at the cost of the well-being and health of the South.
He said this game is backed by the Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the
World Trade Organisation (WTO), news corporations, money markets and rating
agencies, among others.
Leggae adds that the only counteraction available to the ''unfair'' global trade
regime, which transfers wealth to the North at the cost of social sectors in
the South, is popular mobilisation like the recent ones seen at trade and economic
meetings in Seattle, Geneva, Melbourne and Paris.
He says also that people's understanding of regulatory regimes and governance
structures in the global system is ''essential to demand a global trading system
which discriminates positively in favour of poor countries.''
Leggae advised the Bank to ''apologise for deaths and suffering caused by structural
adjustment and stop claiming privileged access to divine truth, and acknowledge
that embedded in its recommendations were its core constituency -- the privileged
West.''
Interventions from the floor were even more biting. ''There is an easy way out
of all this -- the World Bank and IMF have enough resources to cancel debts,''
said Robert Weissman, co-director of the U.S.-based group Essential Action.
''The World Bank's own case studies showed that in the last 20 years it had
made no effect even on a single district in India,'' pointed out Ravi Narayan
from India, the Bank's biggest borrower.
Narayan said while the World Bank may not directly ask for cuts in social sectors,
its adjustment programmes inevitably led to governments to take on adverse fiscal
policies, including inadequate financial allocations for capital and recurrent
costs for the social sectors.
These same policies led to shortages in health equipment, drugs and facilities,
which happened in India, Narayan says. In turn, deteriorating conditions bring
down the performance of health personnel, said South African David Sanders.
Commenting on the discussion, Halfdan Mahler, the architect of the primary health
care approach as director general of the World Health Organisation (WHO) from
1973-1988, told IPS that the Bank was again ''postponing the coming explosion''
through its untenable positions.
Mahler blamed the World Bank's ''hijacking of health'' from the WHO in 1993
and the abandonment of the primary health approach for the crisis in public
health management, especially in developing countries. (END/IPS/ap-he-wd/rdr/js/00)
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