Employee ownership in the context of globalisation
A developing
country perspective
Ravi Naidoo*
National Labour and Economic Development Institute
(NALEDI)
July 2002
Introduction
1.
This note has been developed to stimulate a Capital Ownership Group (COG)
on-line discussion, to inform the final paper that will be presented to the COG
Conference in Ohio in October 2002.
2.
This note represents an initial set of ideas focused on employee
ownership within the developing country context. The central question being
explored is “To what extent can employee ownership support the broader goal of
poverty reduction in South Africa (and, by extension, in the developing country
context)?” This is a rather broad question, and as such this note sets out to
begin the discussion on this question, rather than seek to provide a definite
set of answers.
3.
The critical perspectives put forward in this note draw heavily on the
experiences and debates in South African, and particularly those within the
labour movement.
Globalisation’s impact on poverty, employment and
inequality in the developing world
4.
“Globalisation”, in this instance more accurately referred to as
neo-liberal globalisation[1],
is a multi-dimensional, ambiguous and policy-driven process. Globalisation
encompasses dimensions of economics, democracy, culture, technology and
communication, and military expansion - to name but a few. It is ambiguous in
that contradictions arise between these dimensions, for example the oft-debated
tension between processes of democratisation and economic liberalisation in
so-called transition economies. Moreover, as globalisation is a policy-driven
process the outcome of these contradictions is often dependent on the balance
of social forces within local, national and global policy environments.
5.
Within the multi-dimensional make-up of globalisation, the economic and
democratic dimensions are the most important for this discussion on employee
ownership. This is because the economic and democratic dimensions,
respectively, have the biggest impact on levels of poverty, and on the ability
of the poor to influence economic changes. Moreover, employee ownership
potentially addresses issues of economics (through distributing ownership) and
democracy (through promoting forms of economic democracy and participation).
6.
On the economic level, globalisation is a process that seeks to create a
single global market operating to universal rules driven primarily by the needs
of multinational corporations. This is globalisation’s most visible feature,
and is reflected in the trade-intensive focus of most globalisation debates. In
this regard, the behaviour of rich-country governments is to ensure that the
rules that govern global trade are “rigged in favour of the rich”. Developing
country exports, for example, face tariff barriers four times higher than those
encountered by rich countries. Yet should developing countries increase their
exports by just one percent, the resulting gains in income could lift 128
million people out of poverty. (Oxfam, 2002)
7.
Central to economic globalisation has been the increased power of
investors (essentially in the form of multinational corporations). The
dismantling of capital control mechanisms in much of the world has created a
“race to the bottom” environment whereby corporate tax rates are lowered on a
continual basis to attract investment. Due to increasing productivity from
rising work intensity and technological advances, the trajectory is one of only
20% of the world’s workforce being needed to produce 100% of the output for
which there is sufficient aggregate demand. The other 80% of the workforce
would, essentially, be surplus to the needs of the global capitalist economy.
(Martin and Schumann, 1997)
8.
This crisis of surplus capacity (or insufficient demand) has contributed
to a concentration at the centre of the global economy as multinational
corporations seek to consolidate profit rates and reduce costs through mergers
and acquisitions. Alongside this rising concentration, there is growing
competition at the periphery as multinational corporations seek to compress
labour costs mainly through contracting out and promoting the informalisation
of the labour market. In South Africa, for example, massive retrenchments
through industrial restructuring have resulted in a decline in the income of
the poorest 50%. The income of the richest 20%, on the other hand, has
increased. While formal employed has declined, informal employment has grown -
though three-quarters of the informally employed earn less than $3 a day, and
one-fifth earn no incomes at all. (Taylor Commission, 2002)
9.
It is no surprise, then, that there is persistent poverty and rising
inequality in developing countries. There are 1,1 billion people struggling to
survive on less than $1 a day (the same number as in 1980), and that
inequalities between rich and poor, both between and within countries, are
rising. (Oxfam, 2002)
10.
The growing labour informalisation and lower corporate taxes has
resulted in a rise in capital’s share of national income relative to that of labour
and government revenue (taxes). Thus, in this period of extensive poverty and
rising inequality, the fiscal capacity of States to alleviate poverty and
inequality (through taxation and redistributive means) is reduced. This is a
fundamentally important bind that States, particularly the social democracies,
have found themselves in. These States are now under pressure to revise
downwards their historic social compacts. States are seeking to cut their
social spending by channelling specially identified categories of the
“undeserving” poor through “workfare”. Further, States are redefining “employment” to include low-income informal
and survivalist activities, thus taking people engaged in such activities off
the social protection “in-need" list.
11.
On the democratic level, globalisation is driven by two somewhat
contradictory emphasises. The first is the emphasis on ensuring political
stability and some form of representative democracy. This emphasis is
functionally related to the need of investors to have secure property rights
and greater degrees of certainty over the repatriation of profits. Despite this
narrow functionalism, representative democracy is often an advance on the forms
of governance that many developing countries have. The second emphasis is the
pressure to insulate public policy (particularly macroeconomic policy) from
societal pressure. This is ostensibly motivated by the need to ensure policy
certainty for investors.
12.
Many conservative commentators argue that globalisation requires rapid
and unpopular decisions that democratic processes could not generate. This view
holds that experts, shielded from political pressures, are best suited to
making effective policy. They reject the claim that such technocratic processes
are undemocratic by noting that the government is ultimately accountable to the
public through electoral competition - essentially seeking shelter behind
“low-intensity democracy”. Thus globalisation is introducing a form of
representative democracy, but one that is functionally structured to meet the
needs of investors. The contradiction arises, however, as even processes of
"managed democracy" may create opportunities for truly democratic
forces to extend those democratic spaces even further.
13.
Another contradiction is the growing influence of pension funds,
investing approximately $4 trillion of worker savings. (AFL-CIO, 1993) These
funds own large proportions of stock markets around the world. In South Africa,
pension funds own approximately 50% of the shares listed on the JSE
(Johannesburg) Securities Exchange. (Taylor Commission, 2002) Yet the control
that workers exercise over these investments is highly intermediated by the
asset management industry, which directly manages the investments. Therefore it
is a common occurrence for these same savings to be invested against the
interests of workers as a class. A common example is the manner in which
investment strategies promote massive retrenchments in companies to increase
labour productivity, apparently to benefit their investors-- often the very
workers being retrenched!
14.
The question of where and how pension funds invest is therefore of great
importance to union movements. In developing countries such as South Africa,
where capital markets are relatively developed and where pension funds
represent a considerable share of the gross domestic product, such questions
are becoming particularly important. However, it should be noted that the
extent to which open scheme pension funds are "worker owned" is
unclear and needs to be further analysed, both quantitatively and
qualitatively.
15.
Another aspect that is becoming increasing prominent in policy debate is
the extent to which “developing” countries will follow a linear development
path, essentially going through similar stages of development as the now
developed countries. For example, while developed countries have historically
focused their policies on the assumption of formal sector employment being the
norm, there is every reason to question whether this will be the case in the development
path of the rest of the world. In the developed world it was assumed that most
people will find decent formal jobs, and that special measures (such as social
security) would assist with income replacement for those who (temporarily) lose
their income through frictional unemployment, illness, maternity or the like.
The International Labour Organisational (ILO) Convention on social security
(No.52) is based on just such an assumption.
16.
However the reality in the developing world is that most people are
unemployed, doing low-income or survivalist informal work, and living in
conditions of poverty. (Moody, 1997) The formal sector is often the smaller of
the productive sectors in the economy. With the trends even in the developed
world favouring growing informalisation of work, there is less likelihood that
we will see the opposite trend taking hold among most less developed countries.
Certainly the evidence points to an entrenchment of the predominance of
informal work in the developing countries. (Taylor, 2002)
17.
In short, strategies centred on the formal sector are unlikely to address the
development and poverty reduction needs of developing countries. This
conclusion implies that whatever the benefits of employee ownership, it would
probably be preferable not to hinge these too heavily on the potential to
reduce poverty in developing countries.
18.
The above conclusion, however, does not imply that employee ownership
has no role to play in promoting poverty reduction. Rather it implies that
employee ownership strategies should be seen in combination with a broader
poverty reduction, or alternate globalisation, approach. In particular, it is
argued below that employee ownership has an important role to play as part of a
broader asset distribution strategy. This role is discussed in the specific
context of South Africa.
The economics of ownership dispersion: what role for
employee ownership?
19.
In order to develop strategies and a vision of how the economic system
in South Africa can be transformed so as to reduce poverty, a theory of how the
current economy produces and replicates poverty must be developed. Such an
understanding must look at the distribution of human and material resources in
the workplace, in the household, and in the context of an accumulation of
assets and wealth.
20.
At the level of economic theory, the understanding of the relationship
between poverty and economics remains vehemently contested. Orthodox economics
- often called neo-classical economics - is the dominant theory of economics in
the developed countries (most notably Britain and the United States). Orthodox
economics connects poverty to productivity, economic growth, prices, and
individual choice. Such an approach embraces the status quo, in terms of institutions, patterns of ownership, gender
dynamics, and productive relationships. The acceptance of the status quo, in terms of the environment
in which people make choices, clearly risks entrenching and reproducing
conditions of poverty.
21.
The orthodox theory of income distribution links income received to the
“factor of production” - these include labour, land, capital equipment and
skills. Therefore the income that workers receive is a reflection of the
productivity of the workers themselves. In turn, the profits received by
capitalist firms, farms and enterprises would be simply a reflection of the
assumed productivity of the capital or land used in the production. Therefore
this theoretical approach would argue that if an individual receives an
extremely low income, it is because that person does not produce enough.
22.
Poverty, in the orthodox framework, is tied to low productivity - in an
economy, among a group of workers, or within an informal subsistence sector. In
order to eliminate poverty and achieve higher standards of living, productivity
must increase. Higher productivity, the theory goes, will spur economic growth,
which in turn will create more resources to reduce poverty.
23.
It is interesting to see how this theory explains, for example, gender
dynamics in the economy. According to this theory, women perform labour in the
household because they freely choose to do so. Since women earn less in the
formal sector than men do it is only rational that women should specialise in
reproductive work. Why do women earn less than men in the formal economy? The
disruptions of raising children and other reproductive duties means that women
are not able to accumulate skills as consistently as men, their productivity
suffers, and they are therefore paid a lower wage. Clearly, the realities of discrimination,
oppression, and power dynamics have no place in the orthodox world.
24.
The current macroeconomic strategy proposed by the World Bank,
International Monetary Fund and World Trade Organisation follows this orthodox
approach. The debate is clearly central to the politics of South Africa, too. A
recent economic policy discussion document of the ruling African National
Congress (ANC) claimed that “with growth, poverty decreases…(and therefore
that) growth sits at the centre of everything which can make the country
better”. (ANC, 2002) Also being debated in South Africa is a detailed report on
poverty strategies, which argues to the contrary, that due to South Africa’s
extremely high levels of inequality, very high levels of economic growth are
needed to make even a dent on poverty and therefore that redistributive
strategies are a pre-condition to growth actually reducing poverty. (Taylor,
2002)
25.
This focus on distribution mechanisms and redistributive strategies is
crucial, not only for developing countries. Highly concentrated ownership of
property - land, capital, financial holdings, and real estate - are a primary
source of inequality, of both income and wealth. Not only does the distribution
of assets deny the excluded access to economic resources, it also facilitates
the exploitation of the excluded by perpetuating unequal economic power
relations.
26.
A skewed distribution of asset ownership creates a socially constructed
scarcity that increases the economic power of the asset owners. This scarcity
allows the asset holders (for example, home owners) to generate a higher income
(such as rent). The same would apply to other forms of assets, such as credit
and financial assets, where if people had access to abundant credit, the
ability to charge high rates of interest would be compromised. Therefore
contrary to orthodox theory, the distribution of income is not related simply
to the productivity of the assets, but also to its scarcity.
27.
An unequal distribution of assets is an important determinant of the
economic attributes of poverty not only because it denies the poor access to
factors of production but because it allows a distribution of income away from
lower income (asset poor) households to other individuals and institutions.
This transfer of income away from poor households can place pressure on
household resources; in response these households (and particularly women)
compensate by diminishing their own consumption or increasing their workload.
Clearly, then, asset distribution must form part of a broader analysis of
poverty, and policies of asset redistribution must be considered as a core
element of a strategy to reduce poverty.
28. Flowing from
the above analysis, employee ownership can have an important poverty impact in
promoting greater economic inclusion and some degree of redistribution of
assets, directly benefiting formal sector employees and their direct
beneficiaries.
29. The full impact
of this gain is, however, related to the proportion and structure of formal
employment in the economy. In those developing countries where formal
employment is not the leading employment sector, or where formal employment is
highly casualised, the full benefit of employee ownership schemes may be
limited.
30.
Employee ownership could, theoretically, play a role in ameliorating the
redistributive conflict between profit share and wage share. Studies of
investment in South Africa found a significantly positive correlation between
firm investment and profit share. (Heintz, 1998) In the debate about increasing
firm investment and jobs, a dilemma arises: a shift from remuneration to
profits may increase firm investment (and possibly jobs), but will increase
inequalities in a society. However to the extent that these profits could be
more equitably shared (possibly through employee ownership), the effects of
redistribution towards profit share will have a less pronounced impact on
inequality.
Employee ownership share plan (ESOP) debates in South
Africa
31.
Increased remuneration to management - As in many
parts of the world, ESOPs in South Africa has been seen as a benefit for
management. Distributing company ownership through share options has been a
common strategy to increase management remuneration. The argument for this has
been to better align management interests with those of shareholders, and avoid
the principle-agent problem whereby management utilise their privileged
location to promote non-shareholder orientated strategies. A more basic
motivation for ESOPS for management has been that capital gains (unlike salary
incomes) was not taxed in South Africa, and therefore represented a very
lucrative remuneration strategy for management.
32.
While ESOPs for management are common in South Africa, ESOPs for low
graded employees are generally far less common. (Le Grange, 1999)
33.
Shifting remuneration from wages to shares - As mentioned
above, ESOPs could, theoretically, reduce the distributional conflict between
profits and wages. It has sometimes been suggested that workers could be given
shares instead of wage increases, or in exchange for a wage freeze in difficult
corporate periods - that is, giving workers shares as part of a “sweat equity”
deal with the company.
34. There is
clearly a limit, however, in terms of the extent to which workers could
exchange wage remuneration for share ownership. Share prices fluctuate
according to the vagrancies of the market. So a worker who sells shares at
retirement in one year may achieve a fairly high share price compared to the
worker who retires the following year, when the price may have fallen dramatically.
In a world where workers have alternate sources of income security such risks
may be acceptable. However, in any current reality a significant
remuneration-through-shares scheme would be too risky for most workers.
35. Apart from the
levels of risk, disposable incomes of workers are also generally too low to
support any thought of them sacrificing present incomes (to invest in ESOPs)
for future returns. Indeed the case in South Africa is generally one of
dis-saving, whereby workers take new loans to pay off other loans, thereby
getting caught in a cycle of debt and impoverishment.
36.
The recent spate of corporate collapses in the United States is a
further reminder of the dangers of workers investing their savings in the
company that employs them. Should the company fail, you have lost both your job
and your savings.
37.
Promoting forms of “popular capitalism” - ESOPs has
often featured in debates as a strategy to encourage South Africa’s
socialist-orientated trade union movement to “buy-into” a popular form of
capitalism. This view was relatively common in the early transition years when
there was considerable concern over the economic trajectory that South Africa
would take, with trade unions closely aligned to the ruling Tripartite Alliance
(including the ANC, Communist Party and Congress of South African Trade
Unions). However, to the extent that there has not been any attempt by the ANC
to develop an alternate to capitalism, this debate has largely become
redundant.
38.
There remains however some degree of worker resistance to ESOPs on the
basis that it would undermine the labour movement’s ideological foundations.
Internationally, however, there appears no evidence at this point to show that
ESOPs negatively affect the desire of workers to join unions. (Kruse, 2002)
39.
A sweetner to privatisation deals - ESOPs has
emerged as a strategic tool in getting public sector workers to accept
privatisation. Internationally, there is a fairly common association between
privatisation and employee ownership. (Galgoczi and Hovorka, 1999) In South
Africa, there has been a tendency to allocate a significant portion of shares
to employees (and particularly union members) as part of privatisation deals.
(Le Grange, 1999) However as privatisation has led to massive job losses, and
with alternate formal employment hard to come by, worker resistance to
privatisation has been intense.
40.
Not surprisingly, there is a positive correlation between shares offered
to workers and the degree of initial union resistance to the privatisation
initiatives. (DBSA, 2000) Not surprisingly trade unions have tended to brand
such ESOP strategies as forms of bribery to get workers to accept higher
unemployment. (COSATU, 2000)
41.
A strategy to increase company performance - Similar to
the argument regarding management, it is suggested that ESOPs will encourage
workers to share the interests of the firm in improving profitability and share
price, and stimulate greater worker co-operation with management and worker
productivity. Specifically, workers would adopt more self-regulatory systems
and effectively monitor each other, and encourage greater effort from other
employees to boost profitability. (DBSA, 2000)
42.
There is considerable evidence in the international literature that
firms with ESOPs have better survival rates and higher return on assets than
non-ESOP firms. (Kruse and Blasi, 2000) Several studies claim to have found a
“casual link” between employee ownership and corporate performance, both in
terms of sales growth and employment growth. This has been most prevalent where
employee ownership has been combined with forms of worker participation and
participatory management. (Beatty and Schacther, 2001)
43.
Due to the limited degree of ESOPs for low-graded workers in South
Africa, there is less clear evidence of these relationships within the country.
It is possibly an area of further study.
44.
Supporting better corporate governance -- More worker
participation, and the likelihood of greater corporate transparency that may go
with that, may lead to better corporate governance. Improvements in corporate
governance may lead to fewer instances of plundering of firms by management,
and hence less likelihood of bankruptcies and retrenchments.
45.
However the case for ESOPs necessarily ensuring good corporate governance
must surely be badly shaken following the extensive proof of corporate
plundering and fraud in the United States, which includes many firms (ranging
from Enron to Xerox) with extensive ESOP programmes. The conclusion, perhaps,
is that ESOPs create merely the potential
for better corporate governance within a particular corporate environment.
46.
Worker participation through employee ownership - ESOPs often
go hand in hand with a greater degree of worker participation within the firm.
Management has often regarded this as a negative relationship. At a technical
level, some management analysts tend to highlight the “collective action”
problems associated with worker participation, since, they claim, workers
acting in concert are not able to aggregate preferences across multiple
participants. (DBSA, 2000)
47.
The logical extension of this logic implies that employers would seek to
get workers to identify with the shareholders’ interests, but without having to
give up any control over production decision-making to workers. Therefore there
will be the temptation to restrict worker involvement to voting their shares
through the trustees of the ESOP trust, with a minimal amount of worker
participation within the workplace.
48.
As much of corporate strategy, including outsourcing and downsizing, is
to reduce workers’ claim to profits, strategies that purport to increase worker
participation often find resistance from management unless mitigated by other
elements of a broad strategy.
49. The dilemma for
management is that ESOPs, as mentioned earlier, appear to deliver greater
corporate performance gains when linked to worker participation. Indeed it
could well be worker participation more than employee share ownership that
unlocks improvements in the firm’s performance and productivity. In particular,
worker participation may bring into play the knowledge and information that
workers possess of the organisation and work processes, that would otherwise
not be available to management.
50. Worker buy-outs
of troubled firms - In view of the high rates of unemployment in South
Africa, and the limited chances of retrenched workers finding another formal
sector job, trade unions have tended to argue in favour of worker buyouts of
unprofitable firms rather allow these firms to close. (NUM, 2001)
51.
While a capitalist investor will require a competitive return of, say,
15 percent above cost, a worker-owned firm would require a lower return
sufficient to pay the costs and reinvest in necessary future productive
capacity. Therefore many firms that may be unviable to private investors may be
viable to workers who are interested most in keeping their jobs at that firm.
52.
Clearly, several issues are important here. First, there needs to be
some trustworthy analysis that establishes that the firm can indeed be saved --
and that workers are not being led into an greater calamity than the loss of
their jobs. Second, insolvency procedures need to allow for such options to be
considered; in reality the system is structured to promote stripping the assets
of the troubled firm to pay corporate creditors rather than allowing workers
options to keep their jobs. Third, workers still need to be able to raise the
capital to finance the worker buy-out, without putting too much of their
pension fund and other retirement savings at risk. Fourth, there needs to be a
sufficient level of worker capacity to manage or participate in the running of
the firms
53.
Promote forms of social capital - As part of
promoting a more equitable distribution of resources and facilitating democratic
forms of ownership, trade unions have tended to argue in favour of
co-operatives. Co-operatives are closer to the union movement’s ideological
preference for developing a powerful, self-reliant and self-managed movement of
productive enterprises - along the lines of the Mondragon worker complex in
Spain and the Italian “Red Belt” area of Emilia Romagna. (COSATU, 2001)
54.
ESOPs that introduce only partial worker ownership in a company are
likely to be seen as second best to co-operatives in the social capital stakes.
Nonetheless it would clearly be helpful to explore the ways in which ESOPs can
support the objectives of a broader social capital strategy.
55. Promoting
shareholder activism and corporate transparency -- A serious
difficulty facing workers, trade unions, communities and even governments is
that of getting adequate corporate disclosure. Only publicly listed companies
are required to make information publicly available, and even then the levels
of disclosure are far from adequate. Importantly, there is growing pressure in
South Africa and internationally for more effective corporate reporting -- in
response to corporate scandals and growing social pressure.
56. Therefore
employee ownership could enable workers, as shareholders, to demand and access
information that they could not as workers. In an era of growing investor and
corporate power, such shareholder activist strategies could have an important
role to play.
57.
With multinational corporations being the drivers of globalisation
processes, employee share ownership in multinational corporations could be an
especially useful corporate disclosure strategy.
58.
What role should the State play in promoting
appropriate forms of employee ownership? - Changing the distribution
mechanisms in a country, which has been argued here as crucial, clearly
requires a strong role for the State. The role of the State in furthering
appropriate forms of employee share ownership to address the social dimensions
of globalisation needs to be conceptualised further -- both in terms of
promoting better income distribution and participatory governance.
59.
In countries where worker share ownership is widespread, governments
offer significant tax incentives to employers to extend share schemes to a
wider group of workers than just management. (Le Grange, 1999) Currently in
South Africa there are no State incentives for employee ownership, or any
regulatory frameworks governing employee ownership either from a worker
protection or public policy standpoint.
60.
Moreover, as workers in developing countries are risk-averse and
liquidity constrained, the fate of ESOPs hinges heavily on a source of
affordable finance. The State could therefore play an important role in
developing appropriate financing options, probably as part of the overall strategy
to transform the financial sector to ensure a source of cheap and accessible
credit for low-income and poor people in the country.
Some preliminary conclusions
61.
Neo-liberal globalisation is increasing the power of private investors
over workers, governments and communities. This is leading to growing
inequality and the promotion of “low intensity” forms of democracy. Employee
ownership, to the extent that it is combined with worker participation, can
promote counter-veiling forms of ownership dispersion and participatory
democracy (“high-intensity” democracy).
62.
Nonetheless formal sector employment will not be the norm in developing
countries, and therefore employee ownership strategies will have an impact that
is limited to the proportion and structure of formal employment in the economy.
63.
Employee ownership can empower shareholder activism in these firms,
resulting in better corporate governance and information disclosure. Moreover,
better disclosure can also assist social movement organisations (including
trade unions and other organisations) to engage companies on a range of issues.
64.
In taking forward employee ownership, however, there are a number of
difficulties that need to be addressed:
q First, while
there are no legal restrictions on employee ownership, there are also no
specific incentives (such as tax incentives) for firms to go the route of
ESOPs. There is room for the introduction of regulations of ESOPs, covering
sourcing of finance, tax incentives, employer obligations, worker protection
and the building of worker capacity to participate in the participatory
management of companies.
q Second,
efforts
should be made to forge a partnership between the State and unions, possibly as
part of social capital/ social compact strategy. Such strategies may be
well suited to low-capital intensity industries where the possibility of job
creation spin-offs is higher. Aligned to this, of course, is the need to
specifically incorporate a role for co-operatives, which the labour movement is
historically committed to.
q Thirdly,
trade unions would have to devise education programmes to counter-act the ideological
assault that will follow ESOPs. More importantly, unions could set standards
regarding the appropriate types of ESOPs that their members could enter into
- essentially ESOPs that incorporate worker participation, relationship to
worker co-operatives, social responsibility and ethical firm behaviour as an
integral part of the overall formula.
References
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African National Congress (June 2002) From Mafikeng to Cape Town: Review of Economic Transformation for the
Purpose of Generating Conference Resolutions (draft). Economic
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2.
AFL-CIO (1993) Pensions in
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3.
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4.
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Cabinet of South Africa. Pretoria
* Ravi Naidoo is the Director of NALEDI, an autonomous policy research institute established by the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) in 1993. COSATU represents 35% of the formally employed in South Africa.
[1] The term "neo-liberal globalisation" refers to the profit-centred process to create a common capitalist market, rather than the process focused on creating a common humanity. The term is necessary to avoid the typical but false dichotomy that is often presented between the (allegedly realistic) "globalisers" and the (allegedly backward) "anti-globalisation" activists. The term therefore suggests that the debate is between two different types of globalisation, one focused on human development and the other on profit development. For the sake of brevity, however, only the term "globalisation" is used in the remainder of this note.