Close

FROM THE DESK OF THE CIVICUS SECRETARY-GENERAL

Financial meltdown or tipping point?
By Ingrid Srinath, CIVICUS Secretary General

Is
sued Date: e-CIVICUS 409, 03 October 2008

Dear friends and colleagues,

Did you, like me, watch the recent developments in the world’s financial markets with bemusement? Were you tempted to satirise Churchill and say, “Never in the field of human endeavour has so much pain been inflicted on so many by so few”? Did you yet again wonder what the prevalent exchange rate in human distress is – how many poor lives lost, or childhoods irreversibly stunted, does it take to generate the level of outrage and urgent action that are instantly mobilised to save a failing bank? Was your brain numbed by the staggering sums of money somehow found to bail out these citadels of power and privilege when minuscule fractions of those amounts have not been available to prevent starvation deaths, reduce maternal mortality, prevent conflict, treat disease or even to alleviate the pressures on the middle-classes? Were you struck by the thought that the remedies being prescribed sounded a lot like trying to cure obesity by buying bigger sized clothes?  

Did you find yourself hoping against the odds that some thought might finally be given to the fundamental dysfunction and injustice of an economic system designed to privatise gains and socialise losses? That once the immediate crisis is at bay, basic assumptions about the sanctity of unfettered markets, trickle-down theories and myths of self-regulation might finally be seriously challenged? That average citizens in the developed world might finally have had enough of being treated as if they’re too stupid or ignorant to know what’s in their best interests and feel some solidarity with the billions in the global South whose fates are determined in that manner every day?   

Did you wonder whether this crisis represents a tipping point in achieving some understanding of our fundamental connectedness as a species and the need to prioritise the greater common good over the interests of a few? And those technocratic approaches that presume to exclude those most impacted by policy decisions from their formulation might finally be forever discredited? Or that the media could now be held to account over the silencing of the voices that have been warning of the impending disaster while they’ve been celebrating the excesses and extolling the virtues of unlimited greed? That we might apply some learning from this tipping point to the looming planetary one the climate scientists have been crying themselves hoarse about?  

Did you lose sleep over the very real prospect that the chances we’re going to meet the long-overdue commitments on development assistance and the MDGs just got even slimmer? But that the many calls for statespersonship from leaders might prevail over narrow, short-term, partisan political interests?  

Are you too scouring the lowering clouds for silver linings?

With gratitude, faith and solidarity,

Ingrid Srinath,

For more information, on the Global Call to Action against Poverty (GCAP) statement on Un High-level event in New York, click here.  

To send your comments, suggestions or contributions of articles to e-CIVICUS, e-mail editor@civicus.org.

For previous articles from the Secretary General, see details below: 

  . A study in contrast: Reporting from the UN High Level Event on the MDGs

. Civil Society Challenges: 60 years on

. Human rights education at the UN DPI NGO conference in paris

. Citizens must be at the centre of effective aid

. Disabling by Design? - The Ethiopian Charities and Societies Proclamation

. China: Double double talk

. View from civil society: Key political challenges for social justice in Africa

. What now, Mr. Lamy?

. "If CIVICUS didn’t exist, we’d have to invent it"

. Beyond G-8: At the table? On the table? Whose table?

. Beyond G-8: Civil society challenges

. Recalling the Day of the African child

. CIVICUS 2008 World Assembly, a unique opportunity to effect real change

. CIVICUS new Secretary General appointed

Back to CIVICUS Home page.