Abstract

In this article, I show that the World Bank, along with other international financial institutions, is the primary architect of neoliberal policy of privatizing the formation of higher education and the migration of skilled labour from the Global South to the Global North. The Bank, through development gurus and theories orchestrating the pro-North development agenda, systematically manoeuvres the neoliberalization of higher education and migrant labour from the 1980s to the late 2000s with the promise of democracy, equity, justice and prosperity. Despite massive doses of The Bank-prescribed neoliberal development pills, the majority of the world’s population has yet to experience the promise. The Global South, through three selected countries that see the wisdom of wielding strong state roles in delivering social services, is able to partly parry the deadly sting of the 2008 global economic downturn. The South, immersed as it is in the North’s development agenda as shown in selected literature, has become a doppelganger of the North. In determining the South’s dynamic in service delivery, I turn to Habermas’ communicative rationality that likewise brings to bear similarly framed thoughts as the yardstick of the South’s critical voice against the North’s continuing espousal of neoliberal policy. It is this critical voice that further cultivates people’s micropolitics of beliefs, gender and language, and cries out “no” to The Bank-prescribed neoliberalized higher education and migrant labour – a prescription that leads to and simulates a “back-to-the-cave” circumstance.

Highlights

  • Hobbes once diagnosed life as “short, brutish and cruel” – a life reminiscent of cavemen’s, and prescribed the Leviathan for humans to cope with life’s shortness, brutishness and cruelty

  • I present the cases of China, India and the Philippines where states’ role in human capital formation and skilled labour migration has not been totally eclipsed by neoliberal posturing

  • The Bank does not talk about the role of entrepreneurs in funding human capital formation and skilled labour migration or the SAPs that it imposes on poor countries as part of The Bank’s neoliberal agenda

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Summary

Introduction

Hobbes once diagnosed life as “short, brutish and cruel” – a life reminiscent of cavemen’s, and prescribed the Leviathan for humans to cope with life’s shortness, brutishness and cruelty. I present modernization theory, that pursued specialized division of labour for solidarity and an active state for human capital formation from the 1940s to the 1970s (Martinussen, 1997), as leading to neoliberal economic policy.

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Conclusion
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