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Freedom
of expression and economic prosperity
Christopher
W. Dell, U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe
May 03, 2006
http://www.newzimbabwe.com/pages/powell43.14096.html
This is the full
text of an address by U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe Christopher W. Dell
to the School of Journalism at the National University of Science and
Technology, Bulawayo to mark World Press Freedom Day, May 3, 2006
THANK you very much
for this opportunity to address you all in the beautiful City of Kings
on this occasion of World Press Freedom Day. I am especially pleased to
be addressing the School of Journalism today, given that so much of our
world's future rests on the shoulders of an ever more influential media.
The Journalist's
Power and Responsibility
Today's
media has command over a greater breadth and depth of information than
ever. It enjoys unprecedented levels of technology and capital and reaches
billions of people. With the ideological wars of the Cold War behind most
of the world, it is less politically or legally fettered than ever in
most places. If Francis Bacon's dictum "knowledge is power" remains true
- and it certainly does - then the media today is surely more powerful
than ever.
But with Bacon's dictum
I would charge the future journalists among us here to always keep close
a second, more recent dictum. It is the lesson of the great American comic
book superhero, Spiderman: "With great power comes great responsibility."
For those not familiar with Peter Parker's web-slinging alter ego, Spiderman
repeatedly sees his super-powered attempts to do good produce unintended,
often unhappy consequences.
Disillusioned, he
often tries to walk away from the super-hero business of trying to help
people and make the world a better place. Each time, however, Spiderman
- whose alter ego is a photojournalist - returns to the inescapable conclusion
that those with power have an obligation to use it, and to use it responsibly
to the best of their ability.
But what exactly is
the journalist's responsibility? There are no doubt many formulations,
but let me share with you one advanced by Mahatma Gandhi - a man who very
effectively used newspapers over the span of his life to improve governance
in his own country, change attitudes around the globe, and make the world
a better place. He cast the journalist's responsibility as "(1) to understand
the popular feeling and give expression to it, (2) to arouse among the
people certain desirable sentiments, and (3) fearlessly to expose defects."
To be sure, each of these objectives sometimes conflicts with another,
testifying to the complexity of the journalist's task. But it is hard
to imagine any proper journalistic effort that does not draw on one or
more of these objectives.
Global Acceptance
of Free Speech
Ladies
and gentlemen, that freedom of expression is a fundamental right is axiomatic
in the modern world. Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights declares:
Everyone has the right
to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold
opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information
and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
Unifying diverse,
even conflicting political regimes, the Declaration was ratified in 1948
by proclamation of the UN General Assembly with no opposing votes.
In my country, this
right is enshrined in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In
pertinent part, it provides simply that "Congress shall make no law abridging
the freedom of speech or of the press." The great American Supreme Court
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes expressed its rationale and centrality to
the Constitution in a famous opinion in 1919. He concluded that "the ultimate
good" was best reached by "a free trade in ideas ... that the best test
of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition
of the market."
The Zimbabwean Constitution
describes freedom of expression some length in its Article 20. In the
case of In Re Munhumeso in 1992, the Zimbabwean Supreme Court cast freedom
of expression as a "vitally important right" that lies "at the foundation
of a democratic society" and is a "basic condition for the progress of
society and the development of persons." According to the Court, freedom
of expression serves four broad purposes:
(1) it helps an
individual to obtain self-fulfillment;
(2) it assists
in the discovery of truth;
(3) it strengthens
the capacity of an individual to participate in decision making; and
(4) it provides
a mechanism for establishing a reasonable balance between stability
and social change.
Relationship
Between Free Speech and Economic Prosperity
I will
not today belabor freedom of expression's intrinsic value, which is now
almost universally accepted. Instead, I would like to elaborate on one
aspect of free speech that has been perhaps under-appreciated.
I'm talking about
the relationship between free speech and economic prosperity. Indeed,
most of the four purposes of free speech defined by your Supreme Court
apply directly to the foundations of economic development.
The logic of the connection
is not hard to understand. In a society where freedom of expression is
tolerated, open debate can flourish. In a competitive marketplace of ideas,
all ideas - in large part by and through an energetic media - can be aired
and the best rise to the top.
Here I'm simply echoing
Justice Holmes' rationale and the second purpose articulated in the Zimbabwean
Court's formula. For governments, this dynamic process yields policies
that best account for conflicting variables, policies that balance the
interests of all groups. Such policies maximize the effectiveness of economic
players - buyers and sellers, producers and consumers, regulators and
the regulated, individuals and corporations. The result instills confidence
in domestic and international investors to act in such a climate. The
whole open process drives growth, builds prosperity, and - advancing the
Zimbabwean Court's first purpose - fosters individual self-fulfillment.
Of course, in today's
complicated, interconnected global economy, even open societies can still
get policies wrong. But freedom of expression is a central self-correcting
mechanism in such societies. When the consequences of bad policies emerge,
a free press covers the outcry from affected groups. The party in power
learns to adjust its policies. If the party doesn't and conditions deteriorate
sufficiently, democratic systems allow informed citizens to vote that
party out, and a new government comes to power with the chance to try
different ideas. (Recall the Zimbabwean Court's third purpose: to strengthen
the capacity of an individual to participate in decision-making.) In this
way, an open society gives its leadership a chance to learn and to adapt
to a constantly changing and ever more competitive world at a pace that
suits the people. (This is consistent with the Zimbabwean court's fourth
purpose: to provide a mechanism for establishing a reasonable balance
between stability and social change.)
Beyond the policy
front, freedom of expression is also a crucial element in a functioning
market economy on the microeconomic level. Indeed, "free flow of information"
is an essential element of definitions of "perfect competition" and "market
economy" in classic economic theory.
Investors, companies,
and individuals can't make informed economic decisions in their interest
without free access to information. Thus, an important political right
is also a pivotal economic mechanism.
Again, as in the case
of economic policy, the logic of free speech's underpinning of economic
prosperity on the micro level is not complicated. If producers and consumers
do not operate in a transparent system with information flowing freely
between and among them, pricing mechanisms will always be distorted to
the detriment of society as a whole. In some cases, prices will be "too
high", resulting in consumers spending more of their disposable income
- at the expense of other consumption - and getting less. If you have
to spend all your available money to buy petrol at black market prices,
you will have to forego something else - sadza, school fees, chibuku,
whatever. In some cases prices will be "too low", resulting in wide shortages
and disinvestment by producers.
When the price of
sugar is frozen by regulation below its cost to the shopkeeper, for example,
sugar disappears from the shelves and consumers must do without.
Innumerable distortions
emerge in this environment: shortages of basic commodities such as food,
fuel, and foreign exchange; unfair two-tiered pricing, with artificially
cheap prices for elites and steep black market prices for those not politically
favored; diversion of increasingly scarce private resources from productive
investment to basic consumption; diversion of increasingly scarce public
and private resources to import what the economy can no longer produce;
resistance by elites with a stake in an inefficient and unfair system
to any efforts to change that system.
Without a free flow
of information, the privileged few who have access to and control of information
can manipulate information flows to benefit themselves at the expense
of the majority. While such a system enriches a very few, it impoverishes
the vast majority and undermines a society's overall economic prosperity.
In nearly all cases, the system of restricted access to information serves
as a foundation for corruption on a massive scale that misallocates societal
resources and widens the gulf between the haves and the have-nots.
In all cases, efficiency
and productivity suffer. While it is today fashionable in some quarters
to declare that the laws of supply and demand can be suspended at will,
you don't need a PhD in economics to understand that this flaunts human
nature - people understand their interests and act accordingly. Those
who pretend otherwise should remember King Canute and his doomed effort
to tell the tide it should not rise.
Joseph Stiglitz, a
former chief economist of the World Bank and Nobel Prize winner in economics
for his work on asymmetries of information, concludes that corruption
is more of an economic issue than a political one. Noting that economists
- and really, all of us - oppose "artificially created scarcities", he
calls secrecy in the economy an artificially created scarcity of knowledge.
Artificially created scarcities - in this case of knowledge - give rise
to rent-seeking opportunities.
These in turn give
rise to corruption, as it becomes easier and less risky to make a fast
dollar by exploiting your access to information than to produce goods
or services.
Stiglitz's work has
been instrumental in moving transparency and the vital economic function
of a free press to the center of international financial institutions'
agenda for poverty reduction in the developing world. I note that the
World Bank, for example, is now training some 1,000 journalists in investigative
reporting, precisely because of the media's crucial role in advancing
prospects for improved governance and poverty reduction in their countries.
Years ago, World Bank training for journalists would have been considered
off-limits as "too political".
Our evolving understanding
of free speech's pivotal role in development has changed all this, and
we now realize journalism training is not too political at all, but appropriately
economic.
Lessons of
History
Friends,
history has shown time and again that an environment that fosters freedom
of expression is an essential pillar to support the economic development
of any people. The contrasting experiences of East and West during the
Cold War offer compelling evidence of the centrality of free speech to
economic prosperity. In the 1950s, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev famously
told the Free World: "we will bury you." But the ensuing decades saw the
Free World achieve unprecedented levels of prosperity while the Communist
Bloc suffered technological backwardness, declining health standards,
and failure even to maintain food self-sufficiency. Standing before the
Brandenburg Gate in 1987 on the eve of the final collapse of Stalinism,
President Reagan underscored the one great and inescapable conclusion
of that era: "Freedom leads to prosperity. Freedom replaces the ancient
hatreds among the nations with comity and peace. Freedom is the victor."
Six years ago, then
Georgian President and ex-Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
eloquently punctuated this point on the occasion of World Press Freedom
Day. He wrote: "The greatest achievement of humanity - freedom of speech
- has served [as] both the source and the incentive of progress... Today...
hardly any nation can call itself civilized unless its citizens enjoy
genuine freedom of speech... I firmly believe that the moral and political
failure of the communist system was largely due to the suppression of
this natural right, for it is no overstatement to say that free access
to information is as crucial to human happiness and development as are
water and bread for the physical survival of humankind. Suppression of
free thought inevitably results in an accumulation of colossal amounts
of negative energy that will ultimately smash every wall erected by a
totalitarian system or dictatorship."
I'm sure you'd find
agreement on Shevardnadze's analysis throughout much of Eastern Europe,
where the citizens of Poland, Hungary, the Baltics and other nations are
enjoying job creation, rising incomes and economic abundance at levels
undreamed of before the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact. Ladies and gentleman,
this is not the result of development assistance or balance of payment
supports. For the most part, their turnaround was the product of a citizenry
exploiting political and economic freedoms not previously enjoyed. For
sure, international assistance can aid development, but the growing wealth
of Eastern European nations is primarily the result of expanding freedom
- including freedom of speech and unfettered access to information - unleashing
the potential of the citizens of these countries. In other words, government
got out of the way of its public and let real markets develop. Equally
importantly, the political process became more inclusive so government
became more responsive and accountable.
The experience of
the East Asian tigers over the last two decades buttresses the lesson
that building a strong policy framework on freedom of expression, among
other freedoms, will drive impressive economic growth. Tellingly, glaring
exceptions to that pattern in East Asia are countries that suffer the
lowest levels of political and economic free speech in East Asia. Burma
is a country as rich as any in natural resources but handicapped by a
government that brooks no dissent and imposes a heavy hand in economic
affairs. Another exception is North Korea, which by trying to enforce
uniformity of thought has guaranteed a food-insecure and impoverished
people. Not coincidentally, Burma and North Korea are two of just a handful
of countries publicly described by U.S. Secretary of State Rice as the
world's remaining "outposts of tyranny".
Freedom and
Famine
The
Nobel Prize-winning Indian economist Amartya Sen offers a noteworthy historical
truth that drives home the relationship between freedom and prosperity,
especially in the developing world: Of all humankind's terrible famines,
none has ever occurred in a functioning democracy with regular credible
elections, healthy opposition parties, and an unfettered media. Famines
historically have been associated with one- party states such as the Soviet
Union in the 1930s, China in the 1950s, Cambodia in the 1970s, and North
Korea this past decade; military dictatorships such as in Ethiopia and
Somalia; or colonial arrangements such as in pre-independence Ireland
and India. Notably, not just rich countries avoid famines; poor societies
that are open and democratic have never experienced famine either.
Newly independent
but democratic India underscores the point. Colonial India experienced
a devastating famine just four years before independence. Desperately
poor on achieving independence in 1947, India had a huge population, suffered
erratic monsoon rains and regional droughts, and relied heavily on traditional
agricultural methods. You would have thought the nation was ripe for famine.
Yet it never happened. Sure, times remained difficult but there was no
collapse. I submit to you that a key reason was the openness of India's
society and adequate market mechanisms based on a free flow of information.
Accordingly, surpluses found areas of deficit, and basic food was available
throughout the country.
In stark contrast,
the horrific three-year famine suffered in China beginning in 1958 tragically
demonstrates the other side of the point. An estimated 30 million people
died during that period in the wake of the Chinese government's "great
leap forward". Statist economic policies were disastrous, but the Chinese
government refused to face facts. The famine unfolded and the government
did not adjust its disastrous policies for three more years. Intolerance
of dissent inside and outside the party ensured the party could not adjust.
Steered by its own propaganda and reports from local officials hoping
for credit with senior authorities, many even believed that the country
had millions of metric tons of food that in reality never existed.
In elaborating on
this tragedy, Amartya Sen noted that no less a personage than Chairman
Mao himself later spotlighted the insidious role played by the suppression
of information in the famine. In a 1962 speech, Mao told party cadres
that "without democracy you have no understanding of what's happening
down below. The situation will be unclear. You will be unable to collect
sufficient opinion from all sides. There can be no communication between
top and bottom. Top-level organs of leadership will depend on one-sided
and incorrect material to decide issues. You will find it difficult to
avoid being subjective."
Press Freedom
and Growth in Southern Africa
Not
surprisingly, World Bank studies in recent years bear out a strong causal
relationship between the degree of a country's civil liberties and media
independence and its development outcomes. Daniel Kaufmann, writing last
year for the World Bank on "Myths and Realities of Governance and Corruption",
pointed out that even popular lore subscribes to the importance of transparency,
as illustrated by the old adage "sunlight is the best disinfectant." He
found a strong positive correlation between transparency and better socioeconomic
and human development indicators, as well as higher competitiveness and
lower corruption. He also suggested that much progress could be achieved
without investing inordinate resources. In fact, he noted that transparency
reforms were substantial net savers of public resources, and could obviate
the necessity for excessive regulations or rules. His paper put forth
numerous examples of concrete and effective transparency reforms such
as freedom of the media and effective implementation of freedom of information
laws, public disclosure of assets and incomes of public officials, and
effective implementation of conflict of interest laws.
One does not have
to look beyond the SADC region, indeed anywhere beyond Zimbabwe's immediate
borders, to find evidence of the correlation between freedom of expression
and economic growth. With one glaring exception, countries in this region
are beginning to exploit the relationships between civil liberties and
economic development established in World Bank studies. In short, those
countries of the SADC region that have become more participatory, democratic,
and tolerant of free expression, are becoming more responsive, more accountable
- and prosperous.
As a whole, the region
shows positive trends on freedom of speech. Freedom House, a respected
NGO, ranks the medias of three of the five countries neighboring Zimbabwe
as "free" and ranks none lower than 90th in the larger community of nations.
Sadly, Zimbabwe ranks 153d. Most nations in the region reflected improvement
in press freedoms, according to another NGO, Reporters Without Borders.
Zimbabwe was the only nation in the region to be placed by that NGO in
the bottom tiers of its press freedom index -- not surprising, in view
of the continued closure of independent dailies, harassment and growing
legal controls on journalists, and a strictly enforced government monopoly
on broadcast media.
With growing freedom
of the press and the advance of other civil liberties, the rest of the
region is growing faster economically. Every one of Zimbabwe's neighbors,
for example, registered real per capita GDP growth in 2005, led by Mozambique's
5.2% - the highest growth rate on the continent among non-oil-exporting
countries. Ethnically diverse South Africa registered 4.0% per capita
GDP growth in 2005 - the third straight year in which its growth rate
increased. With a natural resource base similar to Zimbabwe's, Zambia's
per capita GDP grew 2.6% in 2005 and is forecast to grow even more in
2006. With a per capita GDP growth rate of 4.2% in 2005, Botswana has
averaged annual growth rates exceeding 4.0% per annum for the last ten
years.
Sadly, Zimbabwe is
the exception that in this case proves the rule.
According to IMF estimates,
in 2005 - a year which saw good rains but no meaningful reform -- Zimbabwe
registered a per capita GDP "growth" rate of minus 6.5%, the sixth year
in a row the rate was negative. None but a few within the Government have
predicted a return to real growth this year.
Freedom of
Expression and the Zimbabwean Economy
Friends,
permit me to elaborate a bit on the case of Zimbabwe. It is undeniable
that Zimbabwe's economy is in a downward spiral unmatched by any other
country not at war. And yet, if you rely on the state media, things aren't
that bad. In fact, the outlook is very rosy indeed and recovery is only
months away. Read the government dailies - the only daily newspapers circulated
in this country. Listen to state radio - the only radio permitted to broadcast
from Zimbabwean soil. Watch state TV - the only TV permitted to originate
in Zimbabwe. The economy will grow we're told 1-2% this year - the agricultural
sector by nearly 10%.
And this despite a
40% contraction over eight straight years of decline and no foreseeable
change in economic policy on the horizon! I for one will watch with interest
to see how this turnaround will be effected.
I say that noting
that the Government has just announced the composition of a National Economic
Recovery Council - what it casts as a public-private partnership to tackle
the nation's severe economic ills.
However, I have carefully
read the Government's statements for evidence that there will be policy
shifts that might address the fundamental problems in the economy here
- shifts that would restore domestic and international faith in the Zimbabwean
economy and lead to renewed investment and a cycle of recovery. So far,
I see structure, but no real debate. I see form, but no substance. I see
committees, but no commitment to change policies that have shown they
do not work.
One can't help but
recall the series of economic plans announced periodically since the country's
economic crises got underway at the beginning of this decade. We have
had the MERP - Millennium Economic Recover Plan; the NERP - New Economic
Recovery Plan; a Ten-point Plan; a NERP 2; a TNF - Tripartite Negotiating
Forum; and now, a NERC. All announced with great fanfare; unfortunately,
none yielding effective policy to arrest economic decline. We certainly
hope the NERC enjoys a different and happier fate, but historical experience
suggests some cause for healthy skepticism.
If I've done my job
at all well here today, the relevance of freedom of expression to economic
prosperity in Zimbabwe should already be clear to you. I won't go into
details lest some accuse me of overstepping diplomatic limits - notwithstanding
my undeniable right of reply to the government's repeated attribution
of its economic problems to my government's policies instead of its own.
But simply recall
the lessons of history and you will see that there is little new here.
When governments attempt to control information throughout society, economic
"strategies" tend to be top-down prescriptive exercises that produce little
because those most affected have little real input. When prices are set
by cumbersome bureaucracies with imperfect information and political agendas
instead of by innumerable motivated buyers and sellers responding nimbly
to ever-shifting market information, then disinvestment, shortages and
black markets inevitably occur. And with distorting artificial scarcities
of knowledge, everyone cheats - from the farmer who buys scarce inputs
from the black market and sells outside unremunerative government channels
to survive, to the elites who access scarce inputs at subsidized prices
and exploit the black market to resell those cheap goods for a huge, quick
profit. In short, look behind nearly every economic dysfunction and shortage
in this country - unavailability of fertilizer and fuel, underutilization
of land, burgeoning corruption - and you will likely find some impediment
to a free flow of information or the freedom to act on that information.
Such statist systems
- with their obsession to control political and economic information --
didn't work in 1930s Soviet Union or 1950s China and it seems doubtful
that they'll ever work elsewhere. Recall Chairman Mao's caution: "You
(i.e., government) will be unable to collect sufficient opinion from all
sides. There can be no communication between top and bottom. Top-level
organs of leadership will depend on one-sided and incorrect material to
decide issues. You will find it difficult to avoid being subjective."
In other words, operating in an information vacuum, any government - even
with the best of intentions - will get it wrong under the best of circumstances.
Remembering the experience of China and the conclusions of Chairman Mao
on the central importance of information flow is, I submit, ladies and
gentlemen, an important lesson and a real benefit to be learned from a
policy of "Looking East."
Conclusion
Friends,
the environment in which we exercise our freedom of expression in today's
world would be almost unrecognizable to the framers of the U.S. Constitution
more than 200 years ago. But the empowerment freedom of expression confers
on citizens and the dynamism it imparts to our political and economic
systems remain important to us here, just as they were to the plucky yeoman
farmer whose political and economic independence Thomas Jefferson believed
would be the bedrock on which genuine and lasting democracy could be built.
Jefferson and the
fathers of our constitution lived in a time of revolution. I can assure
you that it was no coincidence that a representative government based
on individual liberties was established just as the idea of and right
to free expression was taking off in the second half of the 18th century.
It was an era characterized by proliferating printing presses, a vibrant
coffee house atmosphere of debate and discussion, and a culture of town
hall meetings.
Similarly, it is no
coincidence that the modern market economy emerged in this same environment
of burgeoning freedom of expression. The growing flow of information allowed
the development of those institutions - stock markets, corporations, intellectual
property protection, transportation infrastructure, liberalized international
trade - that underpinned the unprecedented scientific and economic expansion
known to us all as "the Industrial Revolution" in the next century.
Today we are in an
information revolution that holds profound implications for politics and
economics throughout this ever-smaller planet. I cannot predict where
the internet revolution and the attendant dynamism of web publishing,
blogging, and mass communication on an unprecedented scale will take us.
But I can predict
with some confidence that 50 years from now, as you students of today
are finishing your own illustrious careers, you will look back to 2006
and hardly recognize it, the changes will have been so vast. Those who
learn to use the power of this revolution will benefit enormously. In
that vein, to unharness that power and maximize societal benefit, governments
will need to trust and empower their citizenry in both political and economic
spheres. Those who stand in the information revolution's way, who try
to block, control, squeeze and limit information, will - to borrow Mr.
Khrushchev's line - simply be buried, buried under the ashes of history
and consigned to irrelevance.
Some final parting
thoughts to all of you in the School of Journalism -
Remember Bacon: knowledge is power. As developers of knowledge, you future
journalists will be critical developers of power in our society.
Remember Spiderman:
with great power comes great responsibility. You have an obligation to
use your power, and to use it responsibly.
Indeed, societies
who fail to exercise the power of free speech risk having it taken away
by those who fear it. Free speech is a self-reinforcing asset; expression
of dynamic ideas in and of itself contributes to an environment that encourages
wider freedom of expression and all its attendant benefits. In short,
use it... or lose it!
Thank you, and I'll
be happy to entertain some questions now.
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