{"id":23912,"date":"2021-01-22T12:18:38","date_gmt":"2021-01-22T12:18:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.currentaffairs.org\/2021\/01\/build-back-better-for-whom-how-neoliberalism-recreates-disaster-risks\/"},"modified":"2021-02-03T10:16:01","modified_gmt":"2021-02-03T10:16:01","slug":"build-back-better-for-whom-how-neoliberalism-recreates-disaster-risks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/01\/22\/build-back-better-for-whom-how-neoliberalism-recreates-disaster-risks\/","title":{"rendered":"Build Back Better for Whom? How Neoliberalism (Re)creates Disaster Risks"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
<\/p>\n\n\n\n
On November 23, 2020 a ripple went across social media\u2014Joe Biden\u2019s transition website was now registered as \u201cbuildbackbetter.gov.\u201d For most people the news here was that the website had received a .gov web address, signifying the official move of the Biden team from contesting an election to wielding power. For people who study disasters though, the news was another chapter in this odd detour of the concept \u201cBuild Back Better.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Build Back Better, a phrase<\/a> familiar to<\/a> disaster researchers, international development experts, and others of the lanyard set who tend to see disasters as \u201cnatural events,\u201d has suddenly, strangely, penetrated into the year 2021 as a political slogan. For many who have been operating under the standards of Build Back Better\u2014or those of us who have been actively seeking to critique it\u2014the reaction to this odd parallel life has ranged from enraged and perplexed to dismissive and indifferent. However, for those of us who understand disasters as part of a socio-political process<\/a>, this new domain for the slogan was not totally surprising. The origins of Build Back Better are easy enough to pin down\u2014it was found<\/a> floating around the international development\/post-disaster reconstruction world by Bill Clinton following the 2005 Indian Ocean tsunami. Since then Build Back Better has become a set of best practices for international frameworks for post-disaster recovery. At the close of World War II, a new order of governments and government-backed international agencies latched onto international development<\/a> as a tool to even out the inequalities of a global capitalist economy. Both international development and post-disaster reconstruction would develop in an intertwined relationship. The elite actors steering the world economy shared a fundamental belief that prosperity, as brought about by development, would become the stabilizing factor in the post-war world. To this end, trade, globalization, and urbanization were seen as drivers of stability. In the developed yet damaged world, this prosperity was to be revived. In the developing world, this dynamic was brought about through policy and restructuring influences, often imposed by the developed countries. <\/p>\n\n\n\n The United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference was convened at the Mount Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in July of 1944. It brought together the 44 member nations of the Allied Powers in an effort to prevent a widespread international economic disaster resulting from the destruction and disruption caused by World War II. The participants in what is now informally referred to as Bretton Woods understood that fascism and the destabilization of Europe that had led to the war was in part the result of an ineffective, if not poorly considered, international approach to the aftermath of World War I. The Bretton Woods strategy<\/a> gave birth to both the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which was designed to stabilize global financial markets, and the World Bank, which would engage in reconstruction and development.<\/p>\n\n\n\n One of the roles of the capitalist state is to mediate unrest. A disaster is the possibility for unrest\u2014 not in terms of panic or riots, but in the creation of spontaneous alternatives to the present formation. At the end of World War II, the Allies worked to confront the mass destruction of the physical environment and the radical political changes<\/a> that were necessitated by a mass military confrontation. For example, the reconstruction of Japan<\/a> led not just to new urban forms for cities across the country, but to a new constitution as well. Likewise, the reconstruction of Germany involved the construction of buildings, as well as the early infrastructure of the Cold War. The moment called for radical action. However, this radical action could not be allowed to disrupt the dominance of capital. As these powerful actors considered the fate of the future world, they sought to maintain their own stability.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n Institutions formed to repair a world scarred by war\u2014namely the IMF and the World Bank\u2014would find other crises to apply themselves to. These institutions were created in line with the ideology of international development, but this ideology was not static. Over the decades this globalized effort to move beyond the destruction of World War II transformed into a new formation of ideology, policies, and laws known as neoliberalism. During the 1960s embedded liberalism suffered multiple breakdowns in individual countries, spreading outward to the international economy. This crisis of capitalism reached a breaking point with the stagflation of the 1970s. Both Thatcherism and Reaganism came to power, in the U.K. and the United States respectively, offering austerity, privatization, and a deconstruction of the social safety net as solutions to this crisis. As neoliberalism became the pervading ideology and policy set of the Global North in the 1970s, it would also establish itself as the predominant driver of international development and post-disaster reconstruction.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The United Nations defines Building Back Better<\/a> as, \u201cThe use of the recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction phases after a disaster to increase the resilience of nations and communities through integrating disaster risk reduction measures into the restoration of physical infrastructure and societal systems, and into the revitalization of livelihoods, economies, and the environment.” Since its formal introduction to disaster risk reduction (DRR) by the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction in 2015, \u201cBuild Back Better\u201d has been adopted by various INGOs, including the IFRC, the Asian Development Bank, and many others\u2014and has stayed largely within the DRR domain until very recently. During the COVID-19 pandemic it has become a slogan for economic recovery: the OECD used Build Back Better<\/a> to outline the post-pandemic plans for a more resilient and sustainable economy; the European Commission used the slogan in May<\/a> when announcing their \u20ac750 billion stimulus fund. <\/p>\n\n\n\n Build Back Better also became a clich\u00e9 on many policymakers\u2019 lips. On June 30, 2020, the U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised<\/a> to undertake \u201cthe most radical reforms to our planning system since the Second World War\u201d as this will help to \u201cbuild back better<\/em>, build back greener, build back faster\u201d in order to boost spending on infrastructure as a way for “levelling up the country\u201d and avoiding economic recession. It was also used by<\/a> Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and became a centerpiece for American President-elect Biden\u2019s campaign (and now presidential transition). The emphasis of BBB is on continuity\u2013i.e., to keep on going no matter what. The goal is not to alleviate the original conditions that created a crisis, but rather to quickly move past the crisis without altering the underlying political, economic, and societal structures. This emphasizes the core of neoliberalism: not as a mode of economic management, but as a mode of political rationality and government reasoning that constructs and regulates the realm within which a disaster\u2014and then the reconstruction\u2014occur .The contradiction here is that a disaster exposes, and is grounded in, the underlying inequalities in society while neoliberal capitalism relies on the maintenance of those same inequalities. <\/p>\n\n\n\n In a disaster, people can lose their livelihoods, shelter, family, sense of dignity, and the physical infrastructure that makes their daily lives possible. What we should always keep in mind, however, is that disasters do not affect everyone equally. Those who are most marginalized in our day-to-day existence are those who are most harmed by disasters. For African Americans forced by geographic segregation to live in flood-prone low-lying areas, or Sri Lankan fishing communities eking out a subsistence living in wooden shanties in the shadows of international resorts, a disaster is not a new, sudden, or unexpected danger. It is a continuation of everyday harm inflicted on those relegated to the margins of society. Disasters don\u2019t simply bring about suffering\u2014they expose it. For those who have no voice in decision-making, no claim to an official place to live, a livelihood tied to meager natural resources or a degraded environment, trauma, suffering, and displacement are not unique to a disaster event. <\/p>\n\n\n\n Yet, disasters offer an opportunity\u2014often at a large scale\u2014 to improve the material conditions of everyday life for masses of people. This is not only in terms of higher standards of safety and construction, but also in the possibility to address the root causes of disasters\u2014i.e., inequality and injustice rooted in our socio-political structures. Disasters can be a chance to make things better. For example, the Great Hanshin Earthquake<\/a> of 1995 led to a strengthening of building codes across Japan, which saved many lives during the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011. However, in the context of neoliberalism, the \u201cbetter\u201d in the slogan Build Back Better does not always mean good for all, meaning that the benefits are not always (and in fact, are rarely) fairly distributed. In order to find the answers that can truly lead to disaster risk reduction instead of disaster risk (re)creation and the re-establishment of the status quo, we need to first consider the following questions: Who decides what is better? Better for whom? What do we need to do better?<\/p>\n\n\n\n Characterized as a way for people and societies to become \u201cmore resilient,\u201d Build Back Better epitomizes the problematic ideology of resilience. Disasters are often portrayed<\/a> as unexpected external shocks<\/a> and are frequently naturalized and framed as inevitable, meaning that their root causes cannot be altered, and thus it is we<\/em> who must adapt. Resilience<\/a> and its ability to resolve all contemporary issues has become a useful neoliberal narrative to explain anything from how individuals should act<\/a> and cope with<\/a> hazards, risks and disasters, to a mainstreamed approach to development. Portrayed as something \u201cgood,\u201d resilience has become an important goal that needs to be achieved no matter what. Under neoliberal conditions, resilience therefore can be interpreted as the ability to survive under the conditions of destitution. Such resilience is profitable because \u201cresilient\u201d people can\u2014as sociologist Sarah Bracke notes in her 2016 essay \u201cBouncing back: vulnerability and resistance in times of resilience\u201d\u2014\u201cabsorb the impact of austerity measures and continue to be productive.\u201d <\/sup>As such, the resilience message essentially tells the most oppressed that they should keep taking knock after knock and get better at coping.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In a post-disaster setting, the calls for resilience highlight the idea of \u201cself-reliance,\u201d dismantling the redistributive functions of the state instead of providing for the emancipatory social change that is needed in a post-disaster reconstruction if it is to truly reduce disaster risks. Resilience fetishizes the status quo of our social system, to which only few want to go back. The discourse of resilience is highly compatible with the neoliberal ideological frames that, just like resilience, are malleable, nebulous, multifaceted, and replete with contradictions. In fact, resilience has only become popular because it fits so well with the neoliberal discourse. <\/p>\n\n\n\n In his propositions for Build Back Better, Clinton stated that \u201cdisasters and the response to them can exacerbate existing patterns of vulnerability and discrimination within societies\u201d and that \u201cit is incumbent upon governments, donors, and assistance providers to ensure that relief and recovery efforts do not exacerbate historic patterns of vulnerability, discrimination, and disadvantage.\u201d But is this possible in a society based on neoliberal values that do not coexist well with the values of equality? Here, a famous phrase that states neoliberalism is socialism for few and hardcore capitalism for many comes to mind. <\/p>\n\n\n\n Treated as apolitical, Build Back Better is enclaved as a non-political matter, whereas in reality it relies on markets and re-establishes the existing status quo, given that governments need to lead the way. This process re-inserts, or introduces, neoliberal capitalism rather than seeking any alternative. It is also a process of re-establishing \u201cnormality,\u201d in which \u201cnormal\u201d refers to the hegemonic social structures by which certain subjects are rendered \u201cnormal\u201d and \u201cnatural\u201d by contrasting them with other subjects deemed \u201cperverse\u201d and \u201cpathological.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n Build Back Better has been proposed as a technocratic managerial solution to a crisis. However, such a solution does not stop the spread of precarity. Moreover, given that a crisis is often rooted in extraction, weak governance, or profiteering, one triggering crisis should not be the narrow starting point for a Build Back Better strategy. The concept of Build Back Better needs to focus on eliminating processes that created risk in the first place instead of reconstructing these processes. <\/p>\n\n\n\n The ideal of Build Back Better is commendable, but as it is founded on a Western neoliberal tradition, the slogan seems to be missing a somewhat important part: \u201cbuilding back better for a chosen few<\/em>.\u201d In its current implementation, Build Back Better and its calls for rebuilding the economy, infrastructure, and revitalization of human resources, keeps the subaltern invisible. It allows elite actors to define what is and what isn\u2019t a risk, who is and isn\u2019t responsible for them, and what forms of action are to be taken in response to these risks. It shows a capacity to accommodate (i.e., make “better”)\u2014but not actively change\u2014social and political systems that create risk in the first place.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
While the origins of Build Back Better as a concept are simple to outline, the baggage it carries and its relevance to our current moment may not be clear to people who have not grappled with the concept in the context of disasters for the past decade. <\/p>\n\n\n\nBuilding Back, Neoliberal-Style<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n
\u201cBetter\u201d for Whom?<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n