Poverty: March 2005 Archives

Global Capitalism Must Go

| | Comments (0)

PROUTIST UNIVERSAL, 30 March 2005: The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) has published a new report called Planting the Rights Seed: A Human Rights Perspective on Agriculture Trade and the WTO, which states clearly that the World Trade Organization (WTO) is promoting a trade agenda which supports globalization (global capitalism) and in the process will undermine the poor people as well as deny people their fundamental human rights. Seventy percent of the world’s poorest live in rural areas and sustain themselves on agriculture.

MULTI-PURPOSE DEVELOPMENT SCHEMES

| | Comments (0)
By Shrii P. R. Sarkar

Seer philosopher Shrii P. R. Sarkar The forward march of human beings requires an internal approach and an adjustment with external objectivities. That is, it requires an internal, spiritual approach, as well as an external approach which maintains balance, equilibrium and equipoise in the different arenas of our social, economic and cultural life.

Humanity is presently suffering from two problems - one is affluence or bountifulness, and the other is hortages of not only physical but also psychic pabula. Most of the developed countries suffer from bountifulness. If the flow of affluence is regulated, then an adjustment may be made so that physical shortages and psychic deficiencies can be minimized before they become chronic problems. In most countries of the world there is a tendency towards this type of adjustment. Everybody admits that there should be such an adjustment; consequently, you will find hardly any blind capitalism in the world today. Nevertheless, despite this tendency, there is still maladjustment and mis-utilization of resources in developed countries.

KOREAN IMMIGRANT ENTREPRENEURS: Network and Ethnic Resources, By Jin-Kyung Yoo, Garland Publishing, New York, 1998
Reviewed by Brian Hammer

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.1

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Poverty category from March 2005.

Poverty: December 2004 is the previous archive.

Poverty: April 2005 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.