From AWorldToWin NewsService;
To draw attention to a dire situation, UN
Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson recently pointed out that of the world's
seven billion people, six billion have mobile phones, while only 4.5 billion
have access to toilets or latrines.
While the news has been the occasion for
many jokes, it was not meant to be funny. It reveals the grim imbalances that
mark today's world, both between the countries whose capital gorges on global
exploitation and the countries they dominate, and in terms of the kind of
development that takes place in the dominated countries.
Sanitation – the proper treatment and/or
disposal of urine and excrement – could be considered "the most important medical
milestone" in modern history according to the British Medical Journal. Yet for at least 2.5 billion people, more than a
third of the world's people, this most basic human need is unmet.
Most cases of diarrhoea are caused by
water and food contaminated by faeces, and this disease kills 1,800 children
every day. "If 90 school buses filled with kindergarteners were to crash
every day, with no survivors, the world would take notice. But this is
precisely what happens every single day because of poor water, sanitation and
hygiene," explained Sanjay Wijesekera of UNICEF.
In fact, almost 9.7 million children under
five died in 2006, an average of more than 26,000 a day, mostly from
preventable causes. (UNICEF "State of the World's Children", 2008)
Diarrhoea is not the only or even the main killer – malaria is now the most
common direct cause of children's deaths. But the percentage of those children
killed by lack of proper sanitation is high, not only because of the numbers
who die directly from diarrhoea, but also because diarrhoea leads to other
diseases and can be a factor in malnutrition. Taking all this into account, UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said that 4,500 young children die of inadequate
sanitation every day. More people have died of diarrhoea than all the armed
conflicts since World War 2 writes Rose George in her book The Big Necessity. Citing UNICEF, she calls diarrhoea "the single
biggest hurdle a small child in a developing country has to overcome."
The number of deaths of children under
five is a key indicator of a population's health situation. It reveals lethal
inequalities between countries and within countries that income figures often
conceal. Diarrhoea due to faecal contamination is even more deeply rooted in
economic and social structures than some other diseases that can be reduced or
eliminated by vaccination campaigns. There is no vaccination against malaria,
but there are new preventive measures and it is the object of an insufficient
but real degree of medical research. Preventing faecal contamination does not
depend on any medical breakthroughs whatsoever. It can be prevented by
nineteenth century or even ancient technology – sewers.
Cholera, a disease spread by faecal
contamination, threatened to make central London unlivable in the
mid-nineteenth century. It was forced into retreat in England long before the
advent of vaccines and effective medical treatment, or even before the
existence of germs was known, simply by upgrading the sewage system. Later the
addition of chlorine to drinking water worked even greater wonders.
It's true, as UNICEF points out, that the
number of children dying from diarrhoea worldwide has come down over the last
decade. But the progress in sanitation indicated in the latest report is
excruciatingly – and murderously – slow. The UN'S Millennium Development Goal
in this regard was to half the proportion of people without sanitation in 2015
as compared to 1990. Even that modest target is almost certain to be missed.
Why is mobile phone ownership soaring in
comparison with sanitation? Forbes, an even more
unabashedly pro-big business media outlet than most, crows that this disjunct
demonstrates the "greater efficiency of the private sector". What it
really demonstrates is the way capitalism works.
Investors must seek the highest and
quickest returns on their investment. Setting up a mobile phone network takes
capital, but not nearly as much as heavy infrastructural projects like water
and sewage systems or even old-fashioned fixed phone lines, and the profits
come much thicker and faster. In countries like China and India, where almost a
third of the world's mobiles are to be found, dense population leads to
economies of scale and thus both cheap phone calls and high rates of profit.
Services such as water and sanitation, in contrast, require enormous amounts of
capital that can only be recouped over many years at best. The same factor that
makes mobile phone companies so attractive to foreign and domestic investors in
many third world countries, the conditions of profitability, also means that
water and sanitation attract little or no investment, even though they are
sorely needed by the people. (Providing water is cheaper than building and
maintaining sewage systems and can even be profitable, which is why sewage is
an even bigger problem than clean water in today's world).
The point is not that people don't need
mobile phones; it's that what people get is determined not by their needs or
even the development of technology itself but the workings of capital.
The UN argues that since the cost of
sanitation-related deaths and illnesses can be calculated in monetary terms
(the cost of lost production and increased medical and other expenses), funding
for sanitation should be considered an investment that will pay for itself many
times over. But in the capitalist world this is irrelevant because these costs
are born by individuals and society as a whole and not particular capitalists
who are in life and death competition with one another.
Universal sewage systems cannot be developed
privately. It is governments that brought these services into existence in
every country in the world, and everywhere they are subsidized. But government
spending is no less bound by the requirements of capitalism than the private
sector. While a capitalist state, as the political representative of a
country's ruling class as a whole, can take sanitation and other measures for
the public good when the political and economic interests of the ruling classes
require it, there are obstacles. The limits of government spending (the
so-called public sector) are set by the overall process of capital accumulation
and the country's place in that global process, both in terms of sources of
revenue (ultimately profits) and priorities.
In India today, for instance, when it
comes to public works, motorways and transport needed to move materials and
goods get priority over storm drainage and water systems and even public
electricity. This is part of what it means to be "business-friendly".
While the country has one of the world's fastest-growing economies, that growth
is concentrated in the production of services and goods linked to the
international market. That applies to mobile phones, because of both direct
foreign investment and fees paid for the use of technology, imported equipment
and so on. Globalization applied to mobile phones means that even small amounts
of money earned by the very poor can be quickly and efficiently concentrated to
make some people very rich.
Out of India's 1.1. billion population,
most people have access to a mobile phone. (There were 929 million subscribers
in May 2012, although many people have several phone numbers to take advantage
of tariff differences. This fact often exaggerates phone ownership statistics).
But a majority of people (626 million) do not have access to any kind of toilet
or latrine. Even many people working in hi-tech and globalized industries have
no sewer hookup and often no electricity in their homes either. The technology
is surrounded by darkness and excrement.
This disjunct is also related to
pre-capitalist oppressive relations that have been absorbed into globalized
capitalism. India's dalits (so-called "untouchables") remain assigned
to cleaning up after everyone else, emptying public latrines, removing
excrement from private homes, railroad tracks, etc., while higher caste people
want nothing to do with anything related to human sewage, even when there is no
health danger, because of the reactionary social hierarchy and beliefs.
The oppression of women is also involved,
since the shortcomings and burdens of sanitation fall especially hard on them.
And while it would be a slight exaggeration to say that you can tell the
difference between imperialist and oppressed countries by their sanitation
systems, the disparities often reflect the more general gaps in living
standards between the imperialist homelands and the countries they dominate.
A 2004 WHO report estimated that providing
healthy water and sanitation for the earth's entire population would cost
roughly 1.4 trillion dollars. That is less than what U.S. has already budgeted
for its occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. Here, too, capital sets the rules.
These wars are not a fight for profits, but the U.S. has to try to defend and
consolidate global political domination in order to ensure favourable economic
conditions for American capital. There is a complex interaction between
politics and economics, and politics, whether fighting imperialist wars or
building public works projects, cannot be reduced to economics. But in the end
a capitalist state has no choice but to adopt policies that suit the existing
economic system, with all its exploitation and oppression. That's what
ultimately determines its priorities.
The world's sanitation situation and its
lethal consequences are yet another example of how capitalism is a barrier to
the use of the world's wealth, technology and even knowledge to serve the needs
of the people. Horrific numbers of children and other people are dying
unnecessarily every day. This is not because humanity lacks the means to save
their lives but because the resources created by the labour of billions of
people working together in various ways and linked across the globe cannot be
deployed except insofar as it increases private wealth.
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