8 December 2007
Coinciding with the signing on December 9, in Buenos Aires, of the South
Bank’s Founding Act, hundreds of social movements, networks, organizations and
personalities from throughout Latin America and the world are presenting to the
Presidents of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay, and
Venezuela, an Open Letter |1| expressing their expectation with regard to the
creation of the new financial institution together with proposals intended to
insure that the Bank can indeed contribute to the integration of the region’s
peoples and the full enjoyment of human and environmental rights and the right
to development.
The text manifests the movements’ conviction that this South-South entity
must break with the experience of existing multilateral organisms such as the
World Bank, the IMF, the IDB, and the Andean Development Corporation (CAF),
"which are widely recognized today for their non-democratic, non-transparent,
regressive, and disaccredited operations". The South Bank must also
contribute to overcoming "the negative experience of economic liberalization
suffered by the region, with its consequences of ever more indebtedness and the
constant draining of capital, deregulation, and the privatization of public
patrimony and basic services.
Among other key points, which build on the
proposals presented in June of this year, this Second Open Letter highlights the
importance of the South Bank forming an integral part of a new regional
financial architecture, which would also include the creation of a South Fund -
with the functions of a regional Central Bank, and a common monetary instrument.
It also underscores the need for transparency and participation of the social
movements in both the negotiating phase as well as the eventual operation of the
institution and calls on the Presidents to inform and consult with society and
incorporate clear mechanisms of citizen control in the Bank´s
establishment.
This Second Open Letter on the South Bank is signed, among
others, by representative networks, movements, and personalities in Latin
America such as the Hemispheric Social Alliance, the Andean Coordination of
Indigenous Orgnizations, Jubilee South/Americas, Committee for the Abolition of
the Third Wordl Bedb (CADTM), Latindadd, the Network of Women Transforming the
Economy Remte, Oid-LA, the Latin American Association of Political Economists
Sepla, the Lutheran World Federation’s Advocacy Program on Illegitimate Debt,
the Peace and Justice Service in Latin America, Nobel Peace Laureate Adolfo
Pérez Esquivel, and Nora Cortiñas and Mirta Baravalle of the Mothers of May
Square-Founder’s Line. Together with numerous other national, regional, and
global organizations, they manifest in this statement the importance they
attribute to the South Bank being a public entity; whose direction is exercised
on an equal basis among the participating countries; that it be capitalized in a
way that is proportionate to the capacity of each economy; that its operations
be transparent and austere; and that in essence, it promote the integration in
solidarity of the peoples and countries of the region on the basis of concrete
objectives such as full employment, food security and sovereignty, the guarantee
of healthcare and housing, the universalization of free and public basic
education, the redistribution of wealth, environmental protection, and the
overcoming of inequities such as those of gender and ethnicity. As in their
First Open Letter, endorsing movements and organizations specifically reject the
possibility that the South Bank reproduce the model and priorities of the
existing international financial institutions by providing financial backing for
megaprojects that are destructive of local communities, the environment, and
biodiversity or infrastructure schemes such as IIRSA, which responds to a logic
of "integration" designed by global capital interests and the huge TNCs.
Titled "For a South Bank Oriented to a Sovereign and Sustainable
Development Matrix for the Integration of the Continent in Solidarity", the
Open Letter further affirms the need for the new Bank to be an instrument "to
safeguard and channel savings within the region, interrupting the recurrent
cycles of exaction of national and regional efforts through manoeuvres and deals
on the basis of public indebtedness and securities, the subsidization of
privileged and/or corrupt local and international private economic and financial
groups, and constant backing for speculative transborder capital flows."
notes articles:
|1| http://www.cadtm.org/spip.php?article2974