Lead article
March 2000
Women shake up dominance of globalized capitalism
by Maya Jhansi
A new global women's movement seems to be teetering on the horizon. Women
from the U.S. and from all over the world played a central role in the
protests against the World Trade Organization that rocked Seattle last
November. They made their presence known, not only by organizing, marching
and participating in direct action, but by speaking their minds about the
destruction that capitalist expansion is wreaking everywhere.
On March 8, 2000, in commemoration of International Women's Day, feminist
organizations all over the world have called for a Global Women's Strike to
draw attention to women's unpaid labor. In addition, women from 138
countries are organizing national actions for a World March of Women 2000,
including a march on Washington in the U.S. on Oct. 15, 2000. Far from
withdrawing into the dustbin of "postfeminism," the international women's
movement is alive and strong.
None of this global activism should be surprising-women suffer the worst
that so-called globalization has to offer. Women make up fully 70% of the
world's poorest people. Although women produce 50% of the world's food,
they receive only 10% of the income. Add to that the fact that 50% of women
in Asia and Africa suffer from malnutrition and the irony becomes too raw
to bear. Cornered by the "liberalizing" effects of capital expansion and
the fundamentalism that it has spawned, women provide a unique lens on the
global crisis today.
WHAT KIND OF LABOR?
Capital's search for cheaper and more "flexible" labor has brought more and
more women into the global workforce. Women still earn 25%-50% less than
men, and are assumed by corporate managers to be more docile, less prone to
organize, and easier to fire for life choices like marriage and pregnancy.
Women, often teenage and younger, are supposedly more suited to repetitive,
monotonous and meticulous work requiring manual dexterity. In a global
economy in which contractual, part-time, seasonal and piece-rate labor is
replacing long-term jobs with benefits, women are especially vulnerable to
insecurity and greater exploitation because their labor is considered
secondary and therefore disposable.
Ninety four percent of women work in the informal or unorganized sector, so they have less social and legal protection and less access to labor rights orga
nizations. In the Philippines, women make up 70% to 73% of the work force
in the economic zones where workplace conditions have sunk to an all-time
low.
Likewise in the U.S. immigrant women make up the dominant workforce in such
labor-intensive industries as the garment industry. Recently, the fashion
designer DKNY was targeted for "creating conditions of forced labor" by the
Center for Economic and Social Rights.
Another important trend in the globalization process is outsourcing and
subcontracting which pushes more women workers into the unorganized sector,
in jobs at smaller workshops or even at home producing goods for
transnational companies. Working at home leaves women under the whip of
patriarchal family structures.
Greater numbers of women now make up the migrant labor pool. In the
Philippines, for example, over 60,000 women domestic workers are "exported"
to Hong Kong alone for over a billion dollars annually. Others leave the
country to join the burgeoning sex industry, an industry that is drawing
girls as young as eight years into prostitution due to men's fear of AIDS.
Many feminists have called the "feminization of employment" a "double-edged
sword." On the one hand, the ability to earn outside income and to move to
urban centers has provided opportunities for women's independence and
self-direction. However what has become reinforced in the last two years
since the Asian economic meltdown is that such independence is fleeting at
best, prey to the fickle, crisis-ridden nature of capitalism.
Women have been hardest hit by the Asian economic crisis. In Thailand, for
example, women workers in the export-oriented garment, furniture and
low-end plastics industries were the first to be laid off. In the
Philippines, the unemployment rate for women shot up from 12.3% in 1997 to
15.2% one year later (overall the rate is 13.3%). In South Korea, 5,000
workers are estimated to be losing their jobs daily, many from the service
sector which is dominated by women (Information from WOMEN IN ACTION, No.
2, 1999).
Large numbers of previously employed women have become a part of the
Indonesian landscape as well. Unemployed women who left rural areas for
work face great hardship. They cannot return to villages devasted by
globalization, and structural adjustment has destroyed what few safety nets
might have been available to them, like unemployment benefits or welfare.
UNWAGED LABOR
What accompanies "liberalization" are cuts in public sector spending, such
as in welfare, healthcare and education, release of price controls, and
reduction in food subsidies. This has shifted the burden of providing
social necessities almost completely onto the shoulders of women, resulting
in one overall gender specific trend: the growth of women's unwaged labor.
Far from technologically advanced capitalism reducing the amount of time
women spend on such things as housework, water and firewood gathering, it
has in many cases increased it. In northern India, for example, women are
spending more time gathering firewood because of the devastation of
surrounding forests due to "development." As one woman, Mohini Devi, told
ISIS INTERNATIONAL, "Getting fuelwood and grass just required a short walk.
Now we have to walk for an hour or more for fuelwood and we are usually
fatigued" (WOMEN IN ACTION, No. 2, 1999).
Because more women are working for outside income, girls are often forced
to perform unwaged labor at younger and younger ages, a reality not
reflected in child labor statistics which count only waged labor. This
leads to more young girls being kept out of school. In India, there are 54
million girls who are not in school, as compared to 21 million boys. The
overall literacy rate for women in India is 39.4%, whereas for men it is
63.8%. The literacy rate for women drops to an appalling 4% in the state of
Rajasthan and 9% in Andhra Pradesh.
In a world increasingly defined by the market, the unwaged work that women
do is further devalued and often goes unrecognized. That is why the Global
Strike for Women planned for March 8, 2000 and originally called by women
in Ireland has gained support from women in so many different countries,
including Spain, Australia, Chile, Peru, Mexico, Kurdistan, Netherlands,
Puerto Rico, the Philippines and others.
In Peru, indigenous women and domestic workers are using their radio
program "Soncco Warmi" (Heart of Woman in Quechua) to lobby for recognition
of their work. They state: "Women of the Andes contribute more than 50% of
the family income through agriculture-women sow, weed, harvest, take care
of the animals-but the state doesn't take into account that we grow and
prepare food. Our work is not included in the national budget. Women also
take care of the children and do the housework, but this is not valued. We
are the main producers and keepers of life and culture in the rural areas,
and our economic and social contribution is ignored."
Cross-border alliances and organizing between women's, labor and
environmental groups are exactly what global capital seeks to destroy
through "free market" and "free trade" agreements. It is the drive of
capitalism to extract greater and greater unpaid labor from workers. The
"costless" transfer of social services from the "productive" economy to
women in the "non-productive" economy is but another way of extracting more
unpaid labor from women.
That the horrible working conditions of waged labor are coupled with the
extension of women's traditional work, such as housework and care for
elderly, children, and the sick, shows that capital domination seeks to
undercut the potential for women's self-determination that inheres in the
"new" global economy.
The central position of women in the global economy has opened up space for
creative resistance. An important new element in the international women's
movement are Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs). Though many are funded
and controlled by the World Bank, others do important work organizing women
workers and fighting for reproductive and other women's rights that are
being eroded by structural adjustment policies enforced by the World Bank.
Outside of NGOs, women are taking the lead in important grassroots
movements around the world, from environmental to labor and indigenous
rights movements. In the U.S. women lead the fight against the draconian
welfare "deform." In New York recently, women from the Kensington Welfare
Rights Union and other grassroots organizations around the world joined
forces for the March of the Americas.
THE OTHER FACE OF GLOBALIZATION
It is precisely the potential for and struggles of women for
self-determination that are being targeted by religious fundamentalists
around the world. In reaction to the destabilizing trend of neo-liberalism,
especially in gender relations, fundamentalists promise to restore the
mythical order of tradition, often on the backs of women. Far from narrow
nationalism being superceded by the borderless world promised by
globalization, fundamentalism and right-wing nationalism are on the rise
and often merely the mask designed to obfuscate neoliberalist policies.
Nowhere is the violence of this more horrifying than in Afghanistan where
the Taliban regime has instituted an absolute gender apartheid on the 80%
of Afghanistan that it controls. Not only are women required to cover
themselves from head to toe in public, but they are forbidden to walk on
the streets unaccompanied by a male relative. Women are categorically
denied education, healthcare and the right to work.
The exiled women's group, the Revolutionary Association of the Women of
Afghanistan (RAWA) is planning a rally of about 1,000 women in Pakistan on
International Women's Day. Recently Women in Black wrote a letter of
support to RAWA, and women around the world, including the liberal Feminist
Majority in the U.S., have organized to bring the plight of Afghan women to
light. This is another example of the important cross-border feminist
organizing going on.
The importance of NGOs in the women's movement can be gauged in part by the
reaction against them by right-wing governments. Pakistan, for example,
de-registered close to 2,000 NGOs, including an important feminist group
called Shirkat Gah. The current military regime continues the attack on
women that deposed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had unleashed.
Recently, the parliament there refused to pass a resolution against "honor"
killings, the murder of women by family members accusing them of
"dishonor." Human rights groups say at least 286 women were killed last
year in the name of "honor." Such vicious acts of murder carry little or no
legal penalty.
In Austria, women's NGOs are calling for support because the newly formed
coalition government, which includes the fascist, Nazi-sympathizer Freedom
Party, has decided to abolish the Ministry for Women's Affairs that funds
many of the feminist NGOs. They write: "We urge you to support the women's
NGOs in their struggle to survive and all Austrians who are strictly
against allowing racists and neo-fascists to govern a country in the
European Union."
In India, fundamentalism attacks women in less obvious ways. Women around
the world are rallying around the feminist filmmaker, Deepa Mehta, whose
attempt to shoot her new film "Water" on the plight of widows in the holy
Hindu city of Varanasi (Kashi) was thwarted by fundamentalist thugs. The
government has kept an unprincipled silence on the issue, though the exiled
Bangladeshi feminist writer Taslima Nasreen wrote a ripping condemnation of
Indian politics in support of Mehta.
These are just a few examples of the growing force and reason of women
around the world who are in the vanguard of struggles against globalized
capital. Even under the threat of death and mutilation, women continue to
make their voices for a more human world heard. The question is: will these
new global acts of solidarity become an opening and starting point for a
global revolutionary movement?
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