<div class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername"></b><span dir="ltr"><a href="mailto:baum0015@flinders.edu.au">baum0015@flinders.edu.au</a></span><br><br>We need a new world health order, post-G20<br>Fran Baum, David Woodward and Dave McCoy, People's Halth Movement write:<br>
<br>In recent weeks, there has been magic in the air, and the previously impossible<br>seemed possible. Following the election of Obama, in the wake of the financial<br>crisis, some 400 international health academics, activists and officials<br>
recognised the possibility of a new economic order in which social justice is<br>taken seriously.<br><br>The group had gathered at a meeting in London (hosted by the UK Department of<br>Health) to discuss how to realise the recommendations from the recent report<br>
from the Commission on the Social Determinants of Health (CSDH).<br><br>Opening the conference, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown impressed the audience<br>with his stated commitment to global health equity, emphasising the need to<br>
strengthen, not weaken, our ambitions on global health in light of the current<br>financial crisis.<br><br>This message, together with those of the CSDH report, offer clear directions for<br>other G20 global leaders, including Kevin Rudd.<br>
<br>Participants at the conference were clear that the current review of the global<br>financial system must go beyond mere financial damage limitation to encompass a<br>fundamental reorientation of the entire system, to allow us to achieve health<br>
equity and genuine poverty reduction, whilst controlling global warming.<br><br>This requires a new economic order. But this can only be achieved with a broad<br>agenda, and a genuinely global and participatory process, including ALL<br>
countries on an equal basis, and not just the G20.<br><br>The CSDH report identifies a number of structural drivers in the global economy<br>which undermine health and health equity, particularly in the developing<br>world.<br>
<br>It demonstrates that developing countries have suffered far more from the<br>failings of the international financial system for the last 30 years than are<br>the developed countries now through the credit crunch and looming recession.<br>
<br>On-going debt and financial crises, coupled with now discredited "structural<br>adjustment" and "health sector reform" programmes have seriously undermined<br>health and health equity. The CSDH concluded that health equity requires a<br>
system of global governance which places "fairness in health at the heart of<br>the development agenda and genuine equality of influence at the heart of its<br>decision-making".<br><br>We are now at a critical moment in human history. We are faced with the<br>
possibility of transforming the dysfunctional, corrupt and unfair global<br>economic system so we can tackle the extraordinary global challenges of the<br>21st century. The danger is that our leaders will betray billions of our fellow<br>
global citizens, as well as our children and grandchildren, by opting merely to<br>paper over the cracks.<br><br>We can only achieve the changes required if civil society and community groups<br>engage with these issues and demand that our governments take account of the<br>
long-standing grievances of the developing world and pay serious attention to<br>the profound and urgent global challenges of health, poverty and climate<br>change.<br><br>Failure to do so would bring the whole system of global economic governance into<br>
even greater disrepute, further threatening political and economic stability at<br>the global level.<br><br>*Fran Baum (professor of public health, Flinders University), David Woodward<br>(consultant in the UK) and Dave McCoy (University College London) are members<br>
of the People's Health Movement<br><br><a href="http://www.crikey.com.au/Politics/20081117-We-need-a-new-world-order-post-G20.html" target="_blank">http://www.crikey.com.au/Politics/20081117-We-need-a-new-world-order-post-G20.html</a><br>
(<a href="http://www.crikey.com.au/Politics/20081117-We-need-a-new-world-order-post-G20.html" target="_blank">http://www.crikey.com.au/Politics/20081117-We-need-a-new-world-order-post-G20.html</a>)<br><br><br><br><br></div>
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