menarik membaca artikel yang ditulis oleh jurnalis BBC Damian Kahya yang
mencoba men-summary dengan perspektif kritis terhadap Forum Ekonomi
Dunia (World Wconomic Forum) di Davos, Swiss, tanggal 25-29 Januari
2012. dan saya tidak memiliki kalimat yang pas untuk menulis ulang
karena setiap aspek dibahas dengan cukup baik oleh Kahya. jika anda
belum sempat membaca, silakan dinikmati.
Davos 2012: Alternative voices on how to fix the world economy
By Damian Kahya Business reporter, BBC News
In
a car park at one of the world's premier Swiss ski resorts a small
number of "occupiers" have erected seven igloos and two yurts.
They
are protesting against the World Economic Forum (WEF) at Davos, where
the rich, powerful and influential go every year to discuss the world
economy.
This year's theme is The Great Transformation, with
sessions on rethinking capitalism, reducing inequality and solving
Europe's financial crisis.
But the occupiers are not convinced and
despite the event's apparent enthusiasm for change, they say their ideas
have been left out in the proverbial (Alpine) cold.
An attempt
by the conference's organiser, Klaus Schwab, to arrange a meeting on
Saturday apparently failed after the two sides could not agree a
location.
Instead a group of topless women from Ukrainian protest
group, Femen, tried to scale the Davos gates accusing those inside of
being "gangsters," who had caused the financial crisis.
Conventional
The conference did invite some sympathetic to the protesters, including Greenpeace's executive director, Kumi Naidoo.
But he didn't accept the summit's "transformational" rhetoric.
"It's more about system recovery than system redesign," he said.
"Of
course it's total conventional wisdom. It's like reading the Op Ed
columns of the New York Times for five days," says Professor Anya
Schiffirn, an academic at Columbia University who attended the summit
and is also editing a book about the Occupy movement.
It is also a wisdom which is propagated largely by men.
This year, Davos set itself a target of achieving 25% female participation. It managed 17%.
"I do blame them," says Prof Schiffrin.
"We
all know if you want to diversify you have to make an effort. I
understand there are not a lot of women running hedge funds. But in that
case change your category, maybe don't only have CEOs."
Blame game
For some, there are other reasons to change the guest list.
"They
are responsible, as individuals, as a group, for this crisis and yet
nothing at all has happened to them," says Susan George, a left-wing
political scientist and president of Attac France.
The group
campaigns for an international financial transaction tax, a measure
designed to limit short-term bets on the financial markets.
"What one has to do if you want to get out of this is socialise [nationalise] the banks partially or totally," she says.
Small businesses
And the invite list of big company executives also means other business models are relatively light on the ground.
"The
point isn't to call for equal representation up in the snow and
mountains. But actually the economy needs different models of business
to succeed," said Ed Mayo, secretary general of Co-operatives UK.
Small businesses and co-operatives make up much of the global economy, but lack a strong voice at the summit, he argues.
Mr Mayo claims co-operative models of ownership are better at tackling inequality - a major theme of this year's event.
Inequality
He
also urges the construction of new financial models, promoting mutuals
which are as less risk-taking than shareholder-owned banks.
Not
everyone agrees with that analysis, but Davos attendee Stewart Wallace
says radical financial reform didn't get the focus it deserved.
"[You
need to] change the incentive structure so you are taxing very
different things and reform the financial system in a much more
fundamental way than Vickers [the UK report on banking] is looking at,"
said Mr Wallace, executive director of the New Economics Foundation.
Without this, Mr Wallace warns, it will be impossible to tackle global inequality.
"People
are still talking as if all that is needed is equality of opportunity,
free education for all, whereas we have massive structural problems. The
richest 400 Americans have the same wealth as the poorest 155 million
people in the world."
Green growth
A big theme of previous
Davos summits has been the green economy, but this year such talk has
been overshadowed by the European economic downturn and debt crisis.
For Greenpeace's Mr Naidoo, delegates missed the connection between the two topics.
"Energy efficiency measures could create a huge amount of jobs in the construction sector.
"We show that the job creation potential of an emerging green economy is significantly more than the old system."
Other delegates disagree, saying progress was made, albeit mostly amongst business leaders.
"Some
companies' CEOs genuinely get it, they get that we're running out of
planet and running out of scarce resources," says Mr Wallace, citing
Unilever, M&S and Nike as companies adopting more long term or
sustainable strategies.
Democracy
In their defence, the
summit organisers point to the range of guests invited and topics
covered, from food security to climate change and international trade.
"We're trying to represent diversity within a programme that takes months to put together," says WEF spokesman Adrian Monck.
"There's plenty of criticism of capitalism going on."
But for protesters the main issue is one of democratic accountability.
"These
people are gathering together and see themselves as global leaders and
they want to take decisions for 7bn people, but nobody has given them
any mandate," says Jannick Boehm, though he accepts elected politicians
are there.
Previous Davos summits, he says, have tackled issues such as food security, only to see food prices continue to increase.
"Either
they are incapable and stupid or they just don't do what they say they
do. There are these two possibilities and both are not very satisfying."
One of the Occupy campers outside in the snow recognises that there is no easy answer.
"The
media are complaining that the Occupy movement hasn't a clear message
on what they want to change," says David Roth, a young Swiss Social
Democratic politician, and a member of his regional assembly.
"The
clearest thing we want to change is the structure, the process of how
you get to a solution, that is difficult to understand."
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