Human Rights in The Global Economy - Colloquium Report 2010
Human Rights in The Global Economy - Colloquium Report 2010
Human Rights in The Global Economy - Colloquium Report 2010
Jelena Pejic (Serbia) Fouad Abdelmoumni (Morocco) Juan Mendez (Argentina) Chidi Anselm Odinkalu* (Nigeria) Maggie Beirne* (United Kingdom) Usha Ramanathan (India) Cynthia Brown (United States) Ghanim Al-Najjar (Kuwait) Emma Playfair* (United Kingdom)
*Board Member
ISBN: 2-940259-95-X 2010 International Council on Human Rights Policy. All rights reserved. This material may be freely copied and distributed subject to inclusion of this copyright notice and our World Wide Web URL www.ichrp.org. Cover illustration: iStockphoto LP. adapted from Abacus. Design and layout by Benjamin D. Peltier at the International Council on Human Rights Policy.
iii.. humAn.rights.And.globAl.eConomiC.governAnCe.......................................................................................................................... 9
Coherence and Primacy Legitimacy and Accountability
iv.. opportunities.And.ChAllenges.for.humAn.rights.AdvoCACy......................................................................................................... 12
Human Rights as an Ethical Lens The Issue of Unequal Power More Self-Reflection A New Relationship with Communities on the Margins Build a New Consciousness Within and an Epistemic Community Outside
acknowledgments
The ICHRP and Realizing Rights are grateful to all the participants of the Colloquium who gave their invaluable time and energy to make a rich discussion possible. The advice and guidance provided by Diane Elson, Hamish Jenkins, Ignacio Saiz, Mac Darrow, Margot Salomon, Nicholas Lusiani, Radhika Balakrishnan, Sally-Anne Way, Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Stephen Marks helped shape the structure and agenda of the Colloquium. George DeMartino and Sally Anne-Way provided helpful guidance in further shaping this report, which has also benefitted from detailed comments by John Southalan, Hamish Jenkins, Margot Salomon, Mary Dowell-Jones, Sedat Aybar and Virginia Bras-Gomes. Alison Graham led a team of rapporteurs (Adil Hassan Khan, Kasia Snyder, and Magdalena Piskunowicz) whose work was vital in pulling together the complex and wide-ranging discussions. The Colloquium itself would not have been possible without the commitment and hard work of staff from both organisations, in particular, Tom Sanderson and Steve Ako Tanga at the ICHRP. Madame Francisco Ruiz and staff at the Centre International de Confrences, Geneva provided valuable support to facilitate the conduct of the Colloquium. This report was prepared by David Petrasek and Vijay K Nagaraj, with support from Alison Graham, Scott Jerbi and Robert Archer. The International Council and Realizing Rights thank the Ford Foundation, United States; an anonymous donor; the Swiss Federal Department for Foreign Affairs (FDFA); the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC); the Canton of Geneva, Switzerland; the City of Geneva, Switzerland; the Department for International Development (DFID), United Kingdom; the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs; and the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development (CAFOD), for their financial contributions to this project.
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intRoduction
This report captures key questions, ideas and issues generated during a Colloquium on Human Rights in the Global Economy. The meeting was co-convened from 1113 January 2010, in Geneva, by the International Council on Human Rights Policy (ICHRP) and Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative. It brought together experts in human rights, economics and development and included scholars, researchers and representatives from human rights and inter-governmental organisations as well as social movements and international networks.1 The Colloquiums primary objective was to facilitate a constructive debate about the relevance of human rights to national and global economic policymaking. It was convened against the backdrop of the Global Recession of 200809. The financial and economic crisis caused tens of millions of people to lose their jobs and, combined with ongoing food and fuel crises, pushed millions more into poverty.2 While evidence of economic recovery in some countries is now apparent, though fragile, the impacts of the crisis continue. Growth remains sluggish; high levels of unemployment persist; and ballooning government debt in many countries is casting a shadow on the sustainability of programmes that fund universal entitlements to health services, education and social protection, especially programmes that protect the most disadvantaged and vulnerable. When the Colloquium was convened, many governments had taken initial steps to address these consequences and prevent future crises. However, the efficacy of these steps has yet to be determined. Moreover, the extent to which such measures adequately address the structural factors that contributed to the crisis, including the imbalance between the real and financial economies, the excessive power of financial interests, and biased regulation (all further explored below), remains open to question.
hile the influence of human rights has spread, so have disparities in global and national income and wealth. This raises important questions regarding the relevance of human rights to global and national economic policy, an issue especially important to consider at a time when a significant shift in economic thinking is underway.
The scale of the economic crisis has prompted renewed interest in deepening understanding of the relationship between human rights and economic policy-making. Important efforts have already been made to disentangle the links between ethics, human rights, development and economics.3 The Colloquium and this report is a contribution to these efforts, furthering understanding of the possibilities and the challenges of collaboration. The report is intended to support human rights actors and economics and development experts as they engage in dialogue and joint action around how to most effectively influence economic policy-making. Many of those taking part in the Colloquium underlined the value of bringing together different communities of practice. At the same time, the discussion did not satisfy everyone. While many participants explicitly recorded their appreciation or welcomed the fact that they were not constrained by a rigid agenda, some felt that the exchanges were at times too abstract, and others felt that the discussion lacked clear direction. Some considered that arguments were not taken far enough, and others thought that the meeting attempted to cover too much ground. In short, the Colloquium highlighted both the importance and the challenges of bringing together discourses on human rights, development and economics, especially in the uncertain environment created by the recent economic crisis. This report attempts to capture succinctly and in a forward-looking manner some of this complexity. Like the Colloquium, it is best viewed as a basis for further discussion and reflection. We hope nevertheless that it identifies some key opportunities for further work, as well as questions and dilemmas that will need to be addressed if human rights concerns are to influence economic policy-making in the future.
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To what extent should internationally agreed human rights principles and standards influence economic policy formulation? The global recession of 200809 has been overwhelmingly viewed as a national and global failure of economic policy and regulation that undermined a range of fundamental rights for people in many countries. However, despite some attempts, international human rights standards and obligations have hardly been considered in the design, implementation and evaluation of policy measures to bring the crisis under control.4 Was this because human rights were not perceived to be relevant? Are advocates of human rights simply not effectively explaining the pertinence of human rights to economic and financial governance? Precisely what arguments should be made?
human rights International havemeasures tostandardstoand obligations not received adequate attention in policy respond the economic and financial crisis.
wary of Human rights advocates areand futuretradeoffs (between present pain gain) and criticise economic analyses that calculate the benefits of long-term aggregate outcomes and discount violations of individual rights as short-term losses and collateral.
These questions lie at the core of a policy gap that pre-dates the recent recession. For many millions of people in poverty there has long been a crisis of economic opportunity and social protection. The global recession arguably heightened the risk for many of them and also put many others at risk, including those in relatively wealthier countries that had less than robust financial regulation coupled with a high degree of global market integration. When considering these issues, it is important to begin by noting that economics and human rights are distinct and largely self-contained fields. Equally important, both are markedly heterogeneous. As many participants at the Colloquium highlighted, several schools of thought in economics, often referred to as heterodox (or progressive), do not share the assumptions, methods, normative foundations or policy conclusions of mainstream economic theory.5 Equally, though human rights is used throughout this report to refer to the international body of human rights standards and instruments that embrace civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights, human rights advocates, working in many different kinds of organisations and political environments, do not practice or invoke human rights in an identical manner.
Yet long-term structural interventions of the kind necessary to build effective and inclusive education, health and social protection systems, reduce endemic poverty or sustain modern economies, cannot be designed solely on the basis of monitoring compliance with individual rights. Some trade-offs are inevitable. Many economists criticise advocates of human rights for avoiding tough choices, and regard human rights principles as unspecific and unenforceable policy tools. From their perspective, human rights advocates appear to affirm broad principles over specific policy choices, especially when the latter seem likely to compromise them. Underlying these difficulties may be a deeper problem. For many, particularly those coming from an activist perspective, the realisation of human rights is an end in itself. States, in particular, are expected to guarantee and fulfil rights. In contrast, mainstream economics has a largely consequentialist normative framework.7 Human welfare is generally viewed in terms of utility levels, preference satisfaction, etc.8 Therefore, like some development experts, some economists consider human rights to be a means (i.e., a tool) that can be instrumentalised to achieve less distorted or corrupt markets or more equitable development. These are two very different conceptions of human rights. For one group, they are an additional tool or method, to be adopted where they have practical value; for the other, human rights are a goal representing intrinsic values that should not be compromised. Because they perceive the fulfilment of human rights as primary, human rights advocates generally affirm a hierarchy in international law, which others may not.
schools of thought in economics, often Several thetoassumptions, methods, normative referred as heterodox (or progressive), do not share foundations or policy conclusions of mainstream economic theory.
As many argued in the Colloquium, understanding the different and sometimes conflicting worldviews of those working in mainstream
4 See, for example, Balakrishnan and Elson, 2008b; Fukuda-Parr and Salomon, 2009; CESR, 2009; ESCR-Net et al, 2010; The Human Rights Council, 10th special session, The impact of the global economic and financial crises on the universal realization and effective enjoyment of human rights, S-10/1, 20 February 2009; UN Human Rights Council, Note by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, 2009. Mainstream or dominant economics, often referred to as the New Classical Economics, is traced back to the work of theorists like Milton Friedman and Robert Lucas. Its theorists advance three inter-related hypotheses, concerning rational expectations, the real business cycle, and efficient markets. Its period of dominance is typically dated to the mid- and late 1970s, when it received a huge impetus from the governments of Reagan in the United States and Thatcher in the United Kingdom. For more on the rise of New Classical Economics see, for example, Skidelsky, 2009. Unless specified otherwise, terms such as economics, economic theory or economic thinking in the report refer only to mainstream economic thinking.
criticise advocates of Many economists avoidingrights advocates human rights for tough choices. From their perspective, human appear to affirm broad principles over specific policy choices.
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The idea of core obligations in economic and social rights is an example of a certain approach to prioritising rights. Consequentalism bases moral evaluation (of policy, for example) primarily on its consequences rather than considering the context or the intrinsic value. For a fuller discussion see, for example, Sen, 1987. GDP per capita becomes a primary target only because it can be measured in ways that other subjective states of well-being cannot.
Moreover, because equality is the mainstay of human rights (whereas for the most part mainstream economic thinking prioritises efficiency) and the achievement of formal and substantive equality demands an active state, the human rights framework endows government with many positive and negative duties. It has focused on constructing the public domain while current economic thinking, which for decades has been dominated by an emphasis on the market as the most efficient distributive mechanism, has enhanced the private.9
framework has focused The human rightsthethinking, domain while on constructing public neoliberal economic for decades, dominated by an emphasis on the market as the most efficient distributive mechanism, has enhanced the private.
The point is to understand the value of the human rights framework, not necessarily to substitute it as a new and overarching paradigm that has all the answers. It has some distinct strengths. It requires rights to be recognised and protected by law, anchored in international commitments that can be independently monitored, at least in theory. International human rights standards are comprehensive, deal with all categories of rights, and provide special protection to marginalised groups (such as women and girls, children, persons with disabilities, minorities and indigenous people) that too often benefit last and least from economic growth and suffer first and most in economic downturns. Many economists, especially those who have long pressed for change in dominant modes of economic thinking, recognise these strengths and are potential allies of human rights. Some suggest that human rights principles like non-discrimination and non-retrogression (and its framework of obligations to respect, protect and fulfil) can provide a normative framework against which economic policy can be evaluated.11 When rights-based approaches stress participation and empowerment they reflect many elements of human rights. Possible elements of congruence can be found too in the UN Declaration on the right to development (and in work within and outside the UN human rights system that applies this framework to health, education and poverty reduction) as well as wider efforts to integrate human rights principles in development policy.12 In addition, certain other streams of thought within economic philosophy affirm many of the principles put forward by rights advocates, and offer real possibilities for intellectual and policy congruence.13 They include, for example, the capabilities approach, which affirms human rights principles such as participation and indivisibility14; and pro-poor approaches to economic growth, advocated by many economists, that place poverty and equity at the centre of economic policy-making. Therefore, it can be said that, although there are certainly disagreements about which policy prescriptions are most effective, many economists are not averse to taking rights seriously, especially in the context of addressing poverty.15
At the same time, nothing intrinsic to economic policy or economic ways of thinking rules out human rights. In fact, many human rights advocates argue precisely that a rights-based approach will bring better economic and developmental results, thereby themselves partially instrumentalising human rights values and concepts. One ought, therefore, to be wary of generalisations. It is too simplistic to assume that economists are insensitive to human dignity or that advocates of human rights are uninterested in economic progress. Many economists aim (through taxation and redistribution strategies) to reduce inequities in access to food, education and health care (all basic rights). Equally, though much human rights advocacy (especially in the global North) has concentrated on civil and political rights, a growing number of experts and organisations have developed human rights approaches that address broad questions of development and growth and more specific issues relating to poverty reduction programmes, budget analysis, social protection, and corporate accountability.10
towards congruence?
Looking forward, certain obstacles to achieving congruence between human rights and economics principles and approaches need to be recognised. Just as economic thinking can appear disengaged from ethics, rights-based language can be open to manipulation. For instance, some participants at the Colloquium warned of the need to guard against rights-based approaches that valorise property rights or promote a narrow understanding of the rule of law or contract-based regimes. Others noted that many social movements have relied on more open-ended and accessible ideas, such as social justice rather than human rights law, to mobilise people to question unjust economic policies and models. Nor is the dialogue between human rights and economics the only one that is possible or to be desired. Human rights are unlikely to provide answers to all economic questions. This reminds us also that both the economics and human rights traditions are prone to claim intellectual sovereignty, which does not encourage open-mindedness.
there are certainly Althoughwhich economists aredisagreements about policy prescriptions are most effective, many not averse to
uman rights principles are not necessarily neutral; when applied inappropriately or in ways that do not take account of power dynamics, they may do little good (and much harm).
9 For an analysis of these tensions see Salomon, 2010. 10 See for example Marks 2004, 2008; See too the work of the Centre for Economic and Social Rights and also Beyond Voluntarism: Human Rights and the Developing International Legal Obligations of Companies, ICHRP, 2002, and Duties sans Frontires Human Rights and Global Social Justice, ICHRP, 2003.
that human rights advocates, no less than economists, need to be careful to explain their terminology. Human rights can also provide an ethical lens so conspicuously absent from a dominant economic framework that overly focuses on aggregate outcomes. Of course, human rights principles are not necessarily neutral; when applied inappropriately or in ways that do not take account of power dynamics, they may do little good (and much harm). Nevertheless, the economic crisis and
its aftermath have presented a clear opportunity to articulate the ways in which human rights principles, as an ethical and legal framework, might shape and improve economic policy both nationally and globally. This is a major undertaking. In terms of approaching such a task, several broad pointers emerged from the Colloquiums discussions, which could guide human rights advocates, and allies in other fields, as they work towards new approaches to economic policy (see Pointers, below).
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Both human rights and many schools of economic thinking emphasise the central role of the state as a guarantor of rights and as an enabler of economic activity. Advocates of human rights have a complex attitude towards the state: the issue is not whether the state is strong or weak but whether it fulfils rights.16 On one hand, they are cautious and suspicious of strong states, often perceiving them as authoritarian (associated with repression and oppression). On the other, it is increasingly recognised that a well-organised and active state is needed to establish and maintain the rule of law, and support an independent and fully functioning judiciary. The generation and redistribution of wealth also require the state to coordinate the large social and economic investments that must be deployed to establish transport and communications systems, protect the environment, and provide universal access to basic rights, including social protection, employment, and health and education. Under international human rights law, states are responsible for respecting, protecting and fulfilling human rights, but also for creating the broader social, political and economic conditions in which citizens can exercise human rights freely.
of human rights have a Advocatestowardsstrong or weak butcomplex attitude the state: the issue is not whether the state is whether it fulfils rights.
The role of the state sits at the centre of social and economic policy and human rights objectives. More than any other institution, by implementing effective policies, states determine whether people prosper, exercise freedom, become skilled, overcome poverty and enjoy consensual governance. Neo-liberal economic theories, which have dominated policy-making in recent decades, affirm that almost all forms of government intervention distort free markets. Under their influence, states across the world reduced the range of services they provided, privatised public institutions and services, sold public assets and lowered taxes. Yet, while aggregate wealth increased under this policy regime, it did so more slowly than during the immediate post-war period, and growth in many countries has been associated with sharp, sometimes grotesque increases in inequality. The wealth of those at the apex has increased vertiginously in the majority of societies, while large numbers of people living in poverty have been excluded from the benefits of growth, and in many countries even middle class incomes have stagnated or been relatively depressed.17 The political shock generated by the recent economic crisis has challenged the hypothesis of efficient markets of neo-liberal thinkers: that markets not only regulate themselves but over time allocate resources in the most efficient and equitable manner.18 While the old arguments between socialism and capitalism have not been revived, there appears no serious interest in reverting to command economies. However, for the first time in a generation, many economists and economic institutions are reviewing certain dominant doctrines and assumptions and, in particular, the role of the state in mediating economic flows and outcomes.
Neo-liberal economists have sought to restrict the states role in order to release the energy in markets that can potentially generate social good. However, other economic theories have emphasised the states responsibility to maintain prices, curb inflation, levy taxes, equalise the balance of payments, and in other ways create conditions in which economies can operate efficiently and generate outcomes that are socially as well as economically sustainable. While these concerns are not entirely congruent with those of human rights, when the states role in generating and distributing individual and aggregate wealth is considered, they come much closer.
16 Centre for Economic and Social Rights, 2009.
17 See, for instance, From Poverty To Power, Oxfam, 2008. 18 See, for instance, Colander et al., 2009; Krugman, 2009. 19 This way of framing the issues emerged from discussions with Sally-Anne Way.
foreign investors and donors, and other elites, be offset when trade-offs occur? Put differently, how can conditions be created that ensure consideration of a broader range of valid interests, including the views of people who are vulnerable or marginalised? The realities of power, international as well as national, and the fact that privileges are not readily surrendered, severely restrict not only access to decision-making on economic policy but also the autonomy of many states. A discussion about trade-offs is essentially a discussion about priorities and the processes by which decisions are made. As such, it engages key human rights principles and concepts. The human rights framework holds that everyone has the right to effectively participate in decision-making, express opinions, have access to information, and freely associate and act. International human rights standards also require states to ensure that civil society organisations are able to operate freely. This implies that states should not only refrain from interfering unduly in their activities but also take steps to ensure third parties do not do so and create conditions favourable to citizen participation. As highlighted at the Colloquium, this also speaks to the principle of indivisibility (e.g., freedom of expression, association and a free media are vital to ensure accountability in governance). International human rights law further requires states to be accountable for their actions: applied skilfully, human rights principles can expose abuses of power, including malpractice by state officials and the improper influence of private interests on official decisions.23
re human rights binding constraints against which economic policy and the goal of maximising human welfare must be assessed? Or, since they impose opportunity costs can they be optimised?
As stressed more than once during the Colloquium, a classic understanding of human rights provides a good point of departure for evaluating such trade-offs; the right of all to participate equally in the governance of a country is particularly relevant. Too often, those who are not powerful (who have limited resources or influence) are not able to influence economic policy or ensure that it takes account of their interests.22 To what extent can policy proposals grounded in human rights (and therefore committed to inclusion and participation) gain traction in the formation of economic policy? How can the power and influence of the private sector, major financial institutions,
20 Some argue that the problem is not with costbenefit analysis but how it is used. Hansjrgens (2004, p.248), for example, holds that because effects on human health and the environment can only be made in the form of soft qualitative information and because hard numbers in which financial benefits are expressed do indeed often have a greater weight in political discussion [...] a certain momentum develops in favour of evidence which is backed up by hard numbers to the detriment of soft ones. Arguably, however, this is precisely why costbenefit analysis is considered problematic. 21 Nothing highlights this better than the infamous note that Lawrence Summers wrote in December 1991 when he was Chief Economist at the World Bank. When he observed that the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that, Brazils then-Secretary of the Environment Jose Lutzenburger replied: Your reasoning is perfectly logical but totally insane... Your thoughts [provide] a concrete example of the unbelievable alienation, reductionist thinking, social ruthlessness and the arrogant ignorance of many conventional economists concerning the nature of the world we live in.... At: www.whirledbank.org/ourwords/summers.html. 22 This is relevant to another concern raised at the Colloquium (discussed below): the space available for individual governments to influence tradeoffs and policy priorities.
about trade-offs is Adiscussion which decisions are essentially a discussion about priorities and the processes by taken. As such it engages key human rights principles and concepts.
advocates of the decent work agenda is how these obligations might be implemented more effectively and how the relevance of such commitments could be highlighted in related policy areas.28 The creation of employment is broadly recognised as central to ending poverty. However, there is still little evidence of consensus around how to generate decent work opportunities in practice, particularly in developing countries. For many years, neo-liberal policies allowed the market to determine the rate at which jobs were generated, believing that free-market competition would produce the most efficient and sustainable outcome. Over the last two decades, deregulated employment markets and market-led processes of production have created conditions in which labour has become both more flexible and more informal. Work in the informal sector often means inadequate working conditions, low wages and lack of effective bargaining power. It is often dominated by women, who are also more likely to be exploited on account of other variables that contribute to existing gender inequalities that disadvantage women. In addition, the growth in informal work hinders poverty reduction efforts and has serious effects on social and economic development. In such a context, human rights principles that require states to support the creation of decent jobs that provide adequate pay and social protection are clearly relevant. As the Colloquium highlighted, it is vital to consider the human rights impact of macro-economic policy decisions that Central Banks and other economic actors make. Macro-economic policy decisions that target inflation, or reduce state expenditure to cut deficits, while ignoring employment effects, are governed by policy objectives that reflect political interests and priorities. This demonstrates the need to create conditions in which policy formation is transparent and participatory, as well as the need for human rights organisations to monitor economic institutions such as Central Banks as well as Ministries of Finance. Monitoring should track not only the impact of their policy interventions, especially on vulnerable groups, but also the interests that drive and shape their decisions.29
occurred before and during the recent financial crisis, this was not a surprise. However, it did give added resonance to the claim of human rights advocates that states are the primary duty bearer and guarantor of rights. The human rights notion of a rights-fulfilling state focuses not so much on the states scale (i.e., whether it is minimalist or maximalist) or the question of how much regulation is required but on the degree to which a given regulatory regime favours certain interests or purposes over others and responds to the needs of the most disadvantaged.
organisations need monitor Human rightsinstitutions such Thistomust go economic as Central Banks and Ministries of Finance.
beyond monitoring the impact of their policy interventions (especially on vulnerable groups) to examine the interests that drive and shape their decisions.
The policy autonomy of economic institutions raises parallel issues. Individual Central Banks (and their governments) may be constrained in running an independent monetary policy if their policy clashes with international monetary policy norms. A new international consensus is required that balances the requirements of monetary policy and the need to create sustainable and decent employment.
have the of market Citizens with thepaid favourcostrepresenting failure, large bailouts wealth redistribution in of the richa socialisation of private failures.
The quality of regulation rarely outpaces innovation, and this perpetually creates opportunities for new and ungoverned forms of speculation. A key question then is how to approach financial
30 See Balakrishnan, Heintz and Seguino, 2008; and Dowell-Jones, 2010. 31 See for instance Dowell-Jones, 2004; Caliari, 2009; Caliari and Yu, 2009; UNCTAD, 2009b and 2009c.
regulation. A human rights approach would likely support an ex ante rather than an ex post approach. In other words, regulation must be designed to approve every financial innovation after a transparent evaluation of risks involved, thus preventing toxic financial products from entering the markets.32 Private financial actors have preferred an ex post approach, largely on the grounds that an ex ante approach slows down financial innovation. This, however, also appears to be a way of keeping innovation one step ahead of regulation. Besides, as the recent crisis made clear, there is often a thin line between financial innovation and speculation.
Fiscal policies (that address public expenditure and revenues) possibly have the biggest impact on distributive justice and the attainment of economic and social rights. As underlined in Colloquium discussions, advocates of economic and social rights could benefit from the insights that economic researchers have gathered about the generation and management of public revenues and expenditure, in particular policy instruments relating to social security transfers and taxation. International human rights law already affirms the right to social security, and social security systems play a critical role in poverty reduction.36 The fact that social security programmes are relatively uncontroversial and that a wide range of diverse actors (both North and South) support them, at least in principle, means they provide significant opportunities for policy negotiation and advocacy. A number of well-argued human rights perspectives and approaches to social security and protection have been developed.37 Especially relevant is the concept of minimum core obligations that can guide fiscal policy to guarantee all citizens access to minimum levels of essential food, education, healthcare, housing, etc., which they require to live a life of dignity.38 In addition, applying the principle of indivisibility clarifies the content of entitlement to social protection and associates it with principles of participation, transparency and accountability, which are central to its realization. In many ways, therefore, this is an area with evident potential for effective human rights advocacy. To make a significant impact, however, advocates will need to engage with more difficult issues, including universal versus targeted provision; the definition of beneficiaries and entitlements; and issues of process, access and accountability. The long-term sustainability of social security schemes also poses significant challenges, especially in view of the growing public debt. Moreover, some of the apparent solutions (such as exposing social protection funds, especially pension funds, to financial markets) present their own risks. In short, human rights advocates are challenged to go beyond broad guidelines or the parsing of human rights standards and to demonstrate the operational relevance of human rights. For instance, under human rights law, states are obliged to use the maximum of their available resources to progressively achieve economic and social rights. This suggests that an effective taxation system is indispensable in fulfilling all human rights. Neo-liberal economists traditionally hold that taxation distorts markets and obstructs their ability to allocate resources efficiently. It has become evident, however, that markets do not always or naturally allocate resources fairly. The persistent rise in inequality in recent years, both within and between countries, illustrates this and demonstrates the inadequacy of existing tax systems to correct the bias that market-led economic policies have created. Increasing tax competition to attract foreign direct investment has caused a dramatic change in the structure of tax systems. Many governments have tended to increase indirect taxes such as Value Added Tax while reducing progressive income tax rates. As a result, the tax burden on the wealthiest has fallen and in many countries so have tax revenues that should be used for funding basic services. The recent crisis presents an opportunity to strengthen the case for considering new ideas and tax reform.39
36 See Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment No. 19, The right to social security, E/C.12/GC/19. 37 See Riedel, 2007; and the Reports of the Independent Expert on the Question of Human Rights and Extreme Poverty. 38 This echoes ideas of a social protection floor or minimum income advanced by development thinkers. 39 For an analysis of the relevance of tax advocacy in the context of development and rights, see Christian Aid, 2009a and 2009b. The work of the Tax Justice Network is another example.
it [regulation] on the Shouldeverything is be basedunless principle that allowed explicitly forbidden (the preferred approach in financial circles)? or should the guiding principle be that everything is forbidden unless explicitly approved (the approach used for example to prevent the marketing of toxic foods and medicines)?33
Improved regulation alone is, however, unlikely to avoid a recurrence of crises within financial markets. Several Colloquium participants pointed out other specific structural problems in the financial sector that need addressing, including the use of mathematical models that obscure risk, risk models that do not account for social behaviour in the real world and the failure of central bank policy frameworks to give adequate attention to social concerns. Would a financial transaction tax bring benefit? Could governments devise arrangements that would force the finance industry to take more responsibility for its impact on marginalised people? At present, such questions lack definitive answers, and human rights practitioners and economic policy-makers would need to move from naming problems to finding solutions. Human rights principles cannot simply be grafted onto existing regulatory frameworks. One possible approach is to expand the terms of the regulation debate to take account of broader socio-economic linkages and impacts.34 Advocates of human rights might then be able to show that a particular initiative would assist regulators to predict market behaviour accurately and better understand the markets social impacts, which in turn might shift assumptions about financial costs and risks. To do this, however, human rights advocates will need to enhance their own knowledge and find ways to build dialogue and collaboration with experts in relevant fields. Experience gained from applying human rights principles to project finance and ethical investment may be of some relevance in this context.35
redistributing iMpoverishMent
to
ensure
equity
and
to
prevent
Redistribution has been a central question for several economic schools, even if neo-liberals, Marxists, Keynesians and others have argued the subject differently. The human rights framework recognises that states have a responsibility to fulfil human rights, which requires them to redistribute available resources for the purpose of achieving the universal and progressive fulfilment of economic, social and cultural rights. It is important to recognise at the outset that redistribution is necessary because patterns of distribution of social goods and opportunities are skewed in the first place. For instance, widening differences in income across the world reflect a weakening of labour protection and labour unions as well as unequal access to resources and opportunities such as (quality) education.
32 33 34 35 See UN-NGLS, 2010. Ibid. See Dowell-Jones, 2010. Ibid.
Several questions demand attention. What would be the basis of a human rights approach to taxation? Although the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) requires governments to raise revenue to fund economic and social rights, it does not specify the characteristics that tax systems should have. How might the notion of maximum available resources condition a states taxation and borrowing policy? What does the duty to meet minimum core obligations imply? How does the sustainability of tax regimes relate to the question of employment (see above)? In complex economies, what links should be made between corporate taxation, productivity and wealth generation, and the fulfilment of state obligations, including human rights obligations? What would a taxation system consistent with human rights look like? Human rights principles of equality, fairness, due process, and transparency are relevant to all these questions; however, it should
be pointed out that such principles can be invoked by the rich as well as those in poverty and might not make the collection of additional resources (or the challenging of vested interests) easier or speedier. Again, these questions would all benefit from further dialogue and collaboration between human rights experts and experts from economics, development and other relevant fields.
hat taxation consistent Wnotionwould a rights looksystem How might with human like? the of maximum available resources
condition a states taxation and borrowing policy? What does the duty to meet minimum core obligations imply?
iii.
In the last two decades, as the influence of human rights has spread, so have disparities in global and national income and wealth. Over the same period, rapid economic globalisation has increased interdependence, a trend mediated and institutionalised by global regimes that organise and oversee trade, finance and development relations. Questions of global economic governance must be considered in this context. These trends not only shape the evolution of contemporary poverty, but also global responses to it, including the development and application of international human rights law.40 Contemporary capitalism is another issue that merits attention in the context of these global interdependencies and imbalances.41 The recent crisis has often been characterised as a crisis of the global capitalist system. It has been suggested, for instance, that underlying this crisis are three imbalances, between: the real and the financial economies (reflected also in the imbalance between returns to capital and labour); different macro-economies; and the economy and the environment, which sets a material limit on economic expansion.42 Consideration of these three constraints cannot be disentangled from, and therefore forms a key part of, discussion of contemporary global economic governance. In such a context, states (particularly less powerful states) are unable to determine or pursue all their economic objectives through domestic policy alone. Their policy options and political autonomy are increasingly subject to international norms and constraints, both formal and informal, inter-governmental and private. Some of these may actually restrict the ability of states to meet certain human rights obligations. As pointed out during the Colloquium, many experts (including economists) have recommended expanding the policy space or autonomy of governments, especially those in developing countries.43 A principal critique of the Washington Consensus and global economic institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB), and the World Trade Organisation (WTO), is that they shape monetary and fiscal policies by imposing policy conditionalities and also by empowering private actors in global markets. In parallel, human rights advocates call on states to take account of human rights standards and obligations when they formulate policy. Many economists also support global standard setting, for example, with respect to labour rights. Important questions, therefore, arise concerning both the value of policy space and ethical criteria that should apply when policy is formed. On the other hand, it is evident that international cooperation is necessary to successfully manage large global problems (financial markets, trade relations, debt, poverty, climate change), because their scale and complexity are such that no single state can deal with them on its own. International institutions like the IMF, WB and WTO, and a range of UN institutions, have emerged in the last 60 years to address this need, complemented by numerous institutions that fill similar functions at regional and sub-regional levels. This development has been accompanied by a very considerable expansion in the global regimes of law and policy that cover trade, banking, finance, debt, crime, human rights, and climate change, among others. Many Colloquium participants observed that, despite these developments, international cooperation remains highly imperfect
40 See, for instance, Salomon, 2007. 41 Such analyses predate the recent crisis. See, for example, Li and Zhu, 2005. 42 Jayati Ghosh, speaking at the Guardian Forum on the Economic Crisis in London, 2009. 43 For example, see Rodrik, 2001, or Chang and Grabel, 2004.
a human rights point view, there are From of the global economicofarchitecture:any at least two important challenges facing reform the question of primacy and coherence; and, that of legitimacy and accountability.
have historically been, and remain, unwilling to accept that they bear human rights obligations, and have only selectively adopted elements of international human rights law.47
rights have been Though human notthree apillars, itsdeclared one of the UNs human rights system has been significant player in UN responses to the recent economic crisis or on economic affairs in general.
policies.49 The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights noted that human rights norms must shape the process of international economic policy formulation so that the benefits for human development of the evolving international trading regime will be shared equitably by all, in particular the most vulnerable sectors.50 However, the legal case for primacy is not clear-cut. Notwithstanding the resolutions cited, it is far from being accepted by all governments or international actors. The Director-General of the WTO (speaking at the Colloquium) argued, for example, that states assume a horizontal relationship between the different international legal regimes, including international human rights law. Viewed this way, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) or the ICESCR are not of higher legal significance than treaties covering trade, the environment or nuclear non-proliferation. Unless explicitly directed to do so by Member States, why should the WTO work to uphold human rights provisions when leading negotiations on trade agreements?51 A political consensus on the primacy of human rights has therefore still to be achieved and their relevance to global economic governance is even less accepted. When the UN Human Rights Council adopted two resolutions that affirmed the importance of human rights in the context of the global financial and economic crisis, the discussion and the vote revealed significant differences of opinion on the question. Despite interventions by several UN human rights bodies, the final report of the Commission of Experts of the President of the UN General Assembly on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System (the Stiglitz Commission) contained no specific reference to human rights. This is essentially a political rather than a legal issue: new norms are not likely to provide the answer.52 Advocates of human rights need to build new alliances and intensify efforts to mobilise public and political opinion in favour of human rights principles and standards, even while continuing to fight legal battles. In this context, the headway made by social movements and campaigns in contesting international trade, finance and investment regimes on grounds of legitimacy, social justice and equitable development offers lessons.53 To secure acceptance of the primacy of human rights, human rights advocates will no doubt have to show that human rights principles are relevant to the solution of economic and social problems, engage with broader concerns around economic and social justice, and build alliances with social movements and other like-minded networks and organisations. Such alliances have shown themselves to be effective, for example, with respect to certain investment issues, cases of corporate corruption or complicity in abuse, and in addressing labour exploitation and labour standards.
49 Sub-Commission Resolution 1999/30, adopted on 26 August 1999, UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/RES/1999/9 (1999); and UN Sub-Commission resolution 1998/12, adopted without vote on 20 August 1998, UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/ RES/1998/12 (1998). 50 Para 5, UN Doc. E/C.12/1999/9 (26 November 1999). 51 The international legal position would hold that no international treaty could abrogate jus cogens norms directly or indirectly. Some human rights are so absolute as to have achieved this status: they include prohibitions on torture, disappearances, slavery, or genocide. However, disputes regarding trade or financial policy usually concern rights that are more qualified, and often raise difficult issues of causality. 52 The Director-General of the WTO, for instance, called for a political consensus (Geneva Consensus) that deregulation and opening of markets must be accompanied by solid social policies to redistribute wealth or provide safeguards to the men and women whose living conditions have been disrupted by evolving trade rules and trade patterns. See: www.wto. org/english/news_e/sppl_e/sppl146_e.htm for the full text of his remarks. 53 See, for instance, the work of Focus on the Global South, the Third World Network, and coalitions like Jubilee South, etc.
It is no doubt beneficial to the interests of some powerful international institutions and actors to have a disjointed global legal, regulatory and policy framework. Politically speaking, too, it is often convenient for states if dysfunctional international processes prevent them from addressing global issues that are politically or financially costly. Reform is made infinitely harder because, while states are discredited and frustrated by failures of international governance, an improved system of governance would also disadvantage their political interests in other respects.
legal, regulatory and policy Adisjointed globalallow justify notinternational framework may powerful institutions and states to addressing important global issues that are politically or financially costly.
Some say this is simply the nature of messy multilateralism. At the same time, the global environment is not static. Underlying institutional and normative change continues to occur. The emergence of the Washington Consensus, and more recently the G-20, signalled attempts to impose a more coherent international agenda. Neither agenda put protection of human rights at the forefront of its concerns. In this regard, coherence, cannot be an end in itself: what counts is who determines the content of coherence and what ends it serves.48
cannot be an end in Coherence, who determines the itself: what counts is content of coherence and what ends it serves
Human rights advocates affirm the primacy of international human rights rules. They argue that constitutionally guaranteed rights supersede other domestic legislation and that, on the same grounds, international human rights standards should overrule conflicting standards that are set in other areas of international policy (from trade to environment). Support for this position can be found in the first paragraph of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted at the Vienna World Conference on Human Rights in June 1993, which affirms that: Human rights and fundamental freedoms are the birthright of all human beings; their protection and promotion is the first responsibility of Governments. Resolutions of expert bodies, such as the former UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights, have also upheld the primacy of human rights in relation to international trade and investment
47 For an analysis of the WB and the IMF and international human rights law, see Darrow, 2006. 48 See, for example, Dommen, Human rights and trade; two practical suggestions for promoting coordination and coherence, chapter in Cottier, Pauwelyn and Brgi (ed.), Human Rights and International Trade, Oxford University Press, November 2006; and Dommen The WTO, International trade and Human Rights, chapter in Windfuhr (ed.) Beyond the nation State Human Rights in Times of Globalisation, the Global Publications Foundation, June 2005.
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The crisis in global economic governance is essentially a crisis of legitimacy and accountability. The recommendations of the Stiglitz Commission for a new Global Economic Coordination Council within the auspices of the UN, mirroring the UN Security Council, do not seem to have gained the necessary traction.54 However, rising economic powers such as India, Brazil and South Africa appear to have made some progress in claiming a greater role in global decision-making. The G-20, which has quickly risen in its influence on global economic matters, also includes in its membership Argentina, Mexico and Indonesia. The G-20 regards itself as representative and legitimate because of its geographical composition (members are drawn from all continents), its share of the global population (two-thirds) and its share of world gross national product (around 90 percent). However, does this entitle the G-20 to discuss and resolve issues that affect the large number of smaller and poorer states? As some Colloquium participants observed, the G-20 represents a politically expedient realignment of global and regional power in a multi-polar world rather than a fundamental shift in underlying values of global economic governance. This is evidenced by the groups lack of willingness to set or monitor clear normative standards, especially ones respectful of human rights. So far, the G-20 has acted primarily to coordinate emergency responses to the collapse of banks and financial markets rather than on longterm reflection of the systemic flaws of the global economy. To effectively address issues of legitimacy, issues like the rise of the G-20 and the excessive tilt of UN Security Council in favour of the global North (which feeds the case to reform it) must be addressed. Reform of the IMF and the WB has also been widely discussed, notably their decision-making processes, conditionality basedlending, and democratisation. Accountability is a key issue in this context. A large accountability gap separates those who make decisions concerning the global economy and those who are affected by those decisions. Several Colloquium participants argued that it is nevertheless important to continue to focus on the accountability of national governments, though views differed about the extent to which international action could help to accomplish this objective. To restore public trust in international institutions, it is critical that inter-governmental and international institutions, as well as non-state economic actors (notably corporations), are held accountable for their actions and decisions.55
What does accountability imply? Traditionally, the human rights community tends to focus on judicial accountability, which has limited purchase on issues of economic policy in the international context. Those seeking to make institutions and structures more responsive and accountable may have to consider the proper balance between judicialising and politicising accountability. For example, though it will be important to strengthen ongoing work on the notion of transnational or extraterritorial legal obligations regarding human rights (since this might offer additional levers for influencing global economic and financial decision-making), it is important to look beyond this. New approaches to accountability may be needed that build on ideas such as shared responsibility and solidarity, and on effective public advocacy strategies, to achieve change. In widening the normative underpinnings of accountability, it is pertinent to consider how ideas like shared responsibility and solidarity, not new in themselves, offer consensual frameworks of action around shared concerns.56
to Is it time the reconsider the balance between judicialising and politicising accountability? What are possibilities of new approaches
uman resist the Hhuman rights advocates should approach instrumentalisation and tactical adoption of rights language an often employed by international economic and financial institutions.
accountability gap separates those Alargemake those whoconcerning the global who decisions economy and are affected by those decisions.
54 Report of the Commission of Experts of the President of the United Nations General Assembly on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial System, September 2009. 55 US and EU cotton production and export policies and their impact on West and Central Africa coming to grips with international human rights obligations, 3D and EGI, May 2004; and Ovett, Making Trade Policies More Accountable and Human Rights Consistent: A NGO Perspective of Using Human rights instruments in the Case of access to Medicines, 3D, 2006.
56 See, for instance, the Report of the Independent Expert on human rights and international solidarity, A/HRC/12/27, 22 July 2009.
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iv.
Preceding sections have already highlighted questions, challenges and opportunities that face human rights advocates when they consider economic policy-making. This section captures some of the more general conclusions that emerged from the Colloquium. Despite the complexity of applying the human rights framework in this area, much work has already been done to illustrate the relevance of human rights to social policy.57 A large body of literature addresses various dimensions of global economic and financial governance and related issues (e.g., climate change, debt, aid) from a human rights perspective. In addition, various UN human rights mechanisms, especially the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and a growing number of Special Procedures, have produced analyses of foreign debt, extreme poverty, food security, water, social security programmes, education, etc. that help substantiate the links between protection of human rights and economic policy-making.
not sufficient highlight individual violations Itofisquestion thetosocial rights:structuresneeds economic and analysis to underlying and relationshipsand the collective responsibility of States in perpetuating themthat generate violations.
More self-reflection
The economic and also the environmental crisis have made it clear that a range of actors needs to give more substantial attention to the ethical underpinnings of the global economy and global governance issues. It is widely acknowledged that human rights advocates generally lag behind other sectors of civil society in giving attention to economic policy matters, and need to take a more visible role in debates on poverty reduction. Questions raised at the Colloquium included: Do human rights organisations need to change or adapt human rights norms to engage more effectively on economic matters? What are the implications of the focus on poverty and economic justice for human rights organisations and their work? In particular, how should human rights organisations adapt their institutional culture and practices to respond to these new realities? How can differences between approaches to the challenge of poverty and inequality (both within the economics profession and human rights organisations and their potential allies, such as social movements) be mediated? How can social movements, trade unions, development experts and other actors be encouraged to adopt and apply the human rights framework in their work? How can the terminology of human rights be made more accessible, so that its concepts are useful to people engaged in local struggles for economic and social justice?
he current economic crisis has created opportunities to advance the idea that national and global economic and financial regimes must have social content and reflect a foundation of values. Human rights principles can meet this expectation.
57 This received considerable impetus in the 1990s, not only within the UN Sub-commission through resolutions and studies, some of which have been referred to earlier, but also through civil society groups such as INCHRITI (International NGO Committee on Human Rights in Trade and Investment. 58 See, for example, Balakrishnan and Elson, 2008a. 59 See, for example, the work of the OHCHR. The Committee for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights is also developing a framework on Indicators, Benchmarks, Scoping and Assessment for future dialogue with State parties.
Human rights actors need to avoid becoming complicit in efforts to appropriate the rights discourse. As some participants pointed out, the language and discourse of human rights have been appropriated to other political ends, such as promoting tradeable property rights or human rights conditionalities in good governance regimes and rule of law programmes. The spread of rights language creates risks of co-option and misuse that need a clear, politically informed response.
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development experts, encouraging collective, inter-disciplinary and transnational approaches. Human rights advocates should engage more substantively with the UNs economic policy institutions (such as the ILO, UNCTAD, UNDESA and UNRISD). They will benefit from these institutions expertise in social and economic policy, while promoting a wider understanding of human rights principles and their relevance within these institutions. Human rights organisations should consider creating opportunities for economists to work more closely with them, and within them, so helping to integrate economic policy analysis in their work. Joint approaches to case studies, examples of successful cooperation by human rights advocates and economists, and successful human rights advocacy on economic matters, should be documented as well as encouraged, and resources should be made available to replicate them.
and an
episteMic
Human rights advocates and economists working on development and other relevant issues should take the initiative to pursue joint research and action and seek to build closer ties with social movement activists campaigning on economic rights. This will require greater efforts by human rights organisations to improve their understanding of economics and economic institutions. Similarly, it will require reaching out to economists and development experts as they seek to move beyond Washington Consensus policy prescriptions, take account of the involvement and insights of human rights actors and attempt to identify more closely with human rights claims. To be successful, new approaches will need to move beyond general human rights principles towards more specific policy prescriptions. It will be necessary to ask difficult questions concerning costs, prioritisation and choice. The following were some of the recommendations that emerged from discussions at the Colloquium: Advocates and professionals working in this area should engage in more inter-disciplinary research, building on economic and human rights concepts: they should identify differences and common ground; values that both disciplines share; and the characteristics of a rights-fulfilling state. More effort should be devoted to strengthening networking and exchange between human rights and economic policy research organisations and think-tanks, and economists and
Donors that support work on the interface between human rights and development must: Support initiatives that enhance the capacity of human rights advocates to engage with economic analysis and policymaking; Invest resources in inter-disciplinary research on human rights and macro-economic policy, by human rights experts, economists and others; Strengthen national and transnational advocacy networks that seek to link social movements with human rights and development organisations.
v.
conclusion
As this report is finalised, debates continue about the economic crisis and the responses to it, while the full impact of the crisis still remains far from clear. The scale of cuts in public spending, the impacts on access to universal entitlements, the efficacy of new regulations, particularly in regard to financial markets, the most appropriate architecture for global financial institutions: the need for an effective policy response to these and many other economic issues remains pressing. Each demonstrating the urgent need for a more inclusive and broad based debate. Discussions at the Colloquium confirmed the potential for collaboration between economists and those who work to promote human rights. The economic crisis has opened disciplinary and policy circles to alternative approaches and solutions. Human rights advocates thus have a real opportunity to help reconfigure economic thinking and practice. The crisis has also triggered self-reflection among human rights advocates. If human rights are to be relevant in this field, human rights organisations will need to understand and monitor national and global economic policies more closely and deepen their engagement with economic institutions. By doing so, both sides can together continue the important process of understanding how human rights principles might be applied to govern and shape the powerful forces that drive and influence national and global economic behaviour and policy.
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stephen pursey, Director, Policy Integration Dept. and Senior Adviser to the Director-General, International Labour Organisation balakrishnan Rajagopal, Ford International Associate Professor of Law and Development, MIT shahrashroub Razavi, Senior Research Coordinator, UNRISD, Geneva mary Robinson, President, Realizing Rights, and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights nils Rosemann, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, Switzerland violette Ruppanner, Director, 3D Trade Human Rights Equitable Economy ignacio saiz, Executive Director, Center for Economic and Social Rights margot salomon, Senior Lecturer in Law, London School of Economics marco sassoli, Board Member, ICHRP gita sen, Professor, Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore magdalena seplveda Research Director, ICHRP, and UN Independent Expert on Extreme Poverty
daniel seymour, Head, Gender and Rights Division, UNICEF mehdi shafaeddin, IRENE, Universit de Neuchtel John southalan, Rio Tinto Research/Teaching Fellow, University of Dundee Jomo sundaram, Assistant Secretary General, UNDESA lee swepston, Human Rights at Work wilder tayler, Board Member, ICHRP salil tripathi, Director of Policy, Institute for Human Rights and Business, UK ibrahim wani, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Geneva sally-anne way, Research Director, Center for Economic and Social Rights michael windfuhr, Brot fr die Welt lisa wong, Standards Sector, International Labour Organisation andong zhu, Professor of Economics, Tsinghua University, Beijing
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the crisis in financial markets in 2008 that triggered the most serious economic crisis since the 1930s has been overwhelmingly viewed as a failure of policy and regulation. yet international human rights standards and obligations were scarcely mentioned by analysts and policy-makers as they developed a response. were human rights not perceived to be relevant? are advocates of rights simply not explaining themselves effectively? where, precisely, are internationally agreed human rights principles pertinent to economic policy? what should advocates focus on? this report presents some of the key points, controversies, dilemmas, and possible ways forward that emerged from a colloquium, convened in January 2010, which brought together economists, human rights advocates, development professionals, and social activists to discuss these questions. the report notes the potential congruence of human rights with approaches in economics that recognise the states central role in underpinning core functions on which societies depend, especially policies to manage public resources and redistribute wealth. since states have a duty to respect, protect and fulfill human rights, it argues that their policies should: revisit trade-offs in economic policy to ensure they respect rights, regulate markets in a manner that will protect rights, and, redistribute resources in ways that are equitable and prevent impoverishment. the report indicates how human rights advocates might engage more effectively with economic policy-making and create wider agreement about what human rights can contribute to it. in particular, it suggests that human rights actors need to reflect on questions of social justice and structural inequity, and economic theory and policy, while expanding their links and alliances with economists and experts in monetary and fiscal policy, and with social movements.
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