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SPECIAL
REPORT: G8
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Click here for the Executive Summary PDF
The G8 is ostensibly an informal meeting, not a policy making body. However, in reality, its summits and ministerial meetings are very much part of the architecture of current global governance. The G7 nations (the G8 minus Russia), also known as the 'Quad', have historically co-ordinated their trading positions at the World Trade Organisation (WTO), and the G8 control half the votes at the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Discussions at the various G8 meetings help these major economic powers to iron out differences and align their positions. In all the G8 countries, corporate control over the democratic process has reached unprecedented levels. Corporations, however, still have a tangible influence on the G8 process itself: Diageo – drinking at the G8's table UK drinks multinational, Diageo, owns Gleneagles hotel, where the G8 Summit will be taking place. Corporate Watch believes that this company will not only benefit materially from the Summit taking place at its hotel, but also from the agenda being set by the G8 on economic and structural support for Africa. Diageo is the 11th largest corporation in the UK, owning many well-known branded drinks, such as Guinness, Smirnoff, Red Stripe, Johnny Walker and Gordon's gin. Scotland is a major production base for the company which has a presence in almost every country worldwide. Diageo is one of Africa's most powerful corporations who can only benefit from proposals to open up Africa further to trade liberalisation and 'foreign direct investment'. Diageo has increased its market access across the continent through aggressive marketing and by attacking traditionally brewed alcohol as posing severe health hazards. Attacking homebrew directly means attacking a small scale industry, mostly carried out by women, that brings much needed income into the household. Diageo's breweries in Uganda and Tanzania have been responsible for large scale pollution. Defining a 'Scottish' corporation is a problematic exercise. Just because a company is registered or headquartered in Scotland, or even has the word 'Scotland' in its title, does not mean to say that it is actively contributing to the Scottish economy. In most cases, the biggest 'Scottish' companies are actually sucking wealth out to parent companies and shareholders elsewhere, being listed on the London or US stock exchanges. Scottish companies, as we will see, only owe their allegiance to the international money system. The companies commonly held to be Scotland's biggest corporations, have predominantly grown in two ways. First, through external acquisitions, with the big banks, the Royal Bank of Scotland and Halifax Bank of Scotland being a good example. This also means that a large proportion of the employees of these companies are based outside Scotland. Second, through one of the major features of corporate-led globalisation - the privatisation of public services. This is especially true for companies in the transport and electricity sectors such as ScottishPower and Stagecoach. Privatising ScotlandThe Scottish Executive is strong promoter of privatisation, and in particular the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) where public works are built and managed by a private company, then rented back to the government. The first PFI scheme in the UK was the Skye Toll Bridge (between the Scottish mainland and the Isle of Skye) which was owned by the Bank of America for nine years until determined protests forced the Scottish Executive to buy it back at great expense. PFI schemes in Scotland include hospitals, schools, a prison (Kilmarnock), parts of the immigration service and major road building projects. Large amounts of public money have been handed to major multinational corporations such as Sodexho (Scotland's largest provider of food and management services), Serco, Reliance, Balfour Beatty and Jacobs Babtie. The scheme has proved controversial in Scotland, especially with an investigation by the Sunday Herald (June 2004) revealing that Scotland is mortgaged up to the hilt to pay for PFI schemes, owing debts to private consortia of at least £25bn over the next 25-30 years. The pro-corporate Scottish political eliteThe corporate agenda and corporate lobbying are welcomed as enthusiastically by the Scottish Executive as by the G8. Devolution in 1999 allowed Scotland a limited amount of self-rule, though not over international issues, such as defence and trade. Despite not having a lot of power and the clearly pro-business outlook of First Minister, Jack MacConnell, a former PR executive, corporations still concentrate their lobbying efforts on the Scottish Parliament and the Scottish Executive, not the least, to keep politicians sweet so they can continue polluting at will. The Executive's pro-business stance can also be witnessed by the numerous staff exchanges that have taken place between the Executive and industry, and the funding that the Executive has given to corporate lobby groups, such as the Scottish steering committee of the World Business Council on Sustainable Development. Corporate lobbyists also swarm around the Scottish Parliament, Holyrood House, wining and dining MSPs. The 'Scottish Parliament Business Exchange' scheme has also allowed corporate lobbyists unprecedented access to policy makers. The controversy around the building of the Scottish Parliament sums up the atmosphere of corporate corruption that could be said to characterise the positive relationship between Scotland's political elite and big business. A warm welcome to corporations: Hi-tech and biotechnologyWith traditional Scottish industries such as steel and shipbuilding in decline due to cheaper labour forces elsewhere, the UK government and the Scottish Executive have pushed high tech industries and new technologies as the way forward for Scottish economic development. During the 1980's, major global electronics companies were tempted to Scotland with the offer of financial subsidies. In recent years, these companies have scaled back their Scottish operations, relocating to countries with lower labour costs. The Scottish Executive has also backed biotechnology in Scotland, which has proved to be a similar burst bubble. PPL Therapeutics, the commercial wing of the Roslin Insitute that brought us Dolly the sheep, faced bankruptcy and was bought out last summer. The corporate front group, the Institute of Nanotechnology, is based at Stirling University. Edinburgh's financial sectorSome of the biggest companies operating in Scotland are in the financial sector. Edinburgh is a major European financial centre, home to many banks, investment houses and insurance companies. In recent years, many of the life insurance and assurance companies have changed their structure from mutual companies, owned by their policy holders, to become corporations owned by their shareholders. These companies' investments follow the pattern of the global financial sector as a whole – predominantly in oil and drugs companies and the big other big international banks. Royal Bank of Scotland is the 6th largest bank in the world, and a major financier of development projects such as the Baku Ceyhan oil pipeline; Standard Life is Europe's largest mutual life assurance company; Scottish Widows is among Europe's largest fund management companies and 3i, according to its website, is Europe's most active investor in the oil and gas sector, and has shares in the Glensanda quarry, near Argyll, one of the world's largest and most secretive, granite super quarries. Environmental destructionApart from funding unsustainable industries, Scotland itself is home to many environmentally destructive industries. Peat extraction, mainly by English and US corporations, has also decimated Scotland's rare and protected peat bogs, with only 9% remaining pristine. Oil and gas extraction, besides being a major contributor to climate change, has also devastated the North Sea marine ecology over the last 45 years. Shell and others are now moving into the ecologically pristine and little understood ecology of the Atlantic Frontier, off the Shetland Islands. The Scottish economy is reliant on the oil industry, with Aberdeen known as Europe's oil capital. However with North Sea oil reserves having peaked in 1999, oil companies are giving mixed messages about the future of the region, with BP mostly selling off its concerns in the North Sea. Numerous international oil companies and oil service companies are still based in Aberdeen, including Shell, Total, AMEC and Halliburton. Scotland has its own oil exploration companies and oil service companies, including Cairn Energy, who rocketed into the FTSE 100 last year after it struck oil in the Rajasthan desert and is now exploring in ecologically sensitive regions in Nepal and Bangladesh. Besides the impact on the environment, the oil industry is hugely destructive on communities living around BP's Grangemouth oil refinery, one of two refineries in Scotland. The oil refinery is surrounded by a petrochemicals complex including Syngenta and Avicia. Meanwhile, Scotland has one of the most unequal and secretive systems of landownership in the world. 1250 landowners own around 2/3 of Scotland – this is mostly the aristocracy, but also rich businessmen who see land as a good investment, reaping subsidies for monoculture farming and forestry, as well as for corporate entertainment, in the form of hunting and shooting. The co-option of traditional industriesBesides plundering Scotland's environment, corporations have plundered Scotland's culture. The co-option of traditional industries by multinationals is especially evident in the alcohol sector, where Diageo now owns many of the traditional single malt whisky distilleries including Talisker and Oban. This trend is also evident in the tourism industry, where major international hotel chains, such as Best Western and the Hilton Group, increasingly await tourists wanting a taste of 'traditional' Scotland. Scotland's fishing industry, which traditionally supported many small coastal communities in the North and North East of Scotland, both through economic pressures and the disastrous Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) is now controlled by a handful of Scottish millionaires. Meanwhile, overfishing has forced various species to the brink of extinction. The corporate assault on labour rights in ScotlandFinally, labour rights in Scotland, as elsewhere, are being eroded as a consequence of corporate globalisation. This is very evident in the oil industry where the erosion of union power by the oil corporations has led to a lowering in health and safety standards. Privatisation is also bringing in aggressively anti-union multinationals, such as Sodexho, who in recent years, tried underhand tactics to try and break a strike at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary. Casualisation is becoming a feature of the Scottish labour force, epitomised by the Scotland becoming known as a 'nation of call-centres', with many international companies having call and contact centres in Scotland. Many of these are now offshoring to India in search of cheaper labour.
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