99GetSmart

News and commentary on political events
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Submit!
  • Donate

How The Boston Bombing Is Already Being Exploited To Introduce Tyranny

 Submitted Article  No Responses »
Apr 272013
 

By Brandon Smith, 99GetSmart

tyranny boston

I have no personal experience in the business of false flag terrorism, but I imagine that engineering a successfully staged terror attack to be blamed on innocent or semi-innocent parties with the goal of psychologically manipulating a population requires that one also be an accomplished storyteller.  It demands an avid imagination and an organized sense of foresight.  And, most of all, it requires a consistency of narrative.  Without consistency, the audience’s ability to suspend its disbelief is damaged, and they become disconnected from the fantasy being portrayed.

If I were the “writer” behind the “story” of the Boston Marathon Bombing, I would consider my efforts an abject failure.

The narrative of the event has changed multiple times in only a few days, following a hailstorm of conflicting observations from the government and the establishment-run media.  The “villain” of the original plotline was clearly meant to be “rightwing extremism” as numerous mainstream talking heads, led by federal agency inferences, began repeating the “homegrown right wing terrorist” meme everywhere.  This meme was partly abandoned after the alternative media and the Liberty Movement began its own investigation, revealing a large federal presence on the scene, including military Civil Support Teams often tied to the DHS and Northcom, as well as the witnesses who observed what on-scene officials called “training exercises” during the marathon.  I have no doubt that these citizen investigations forced the establishment to change the direction of their crime tale, and use Plan B patsies instead.  This, however, complicated the momentum of the fiction, and created even more questions.

The Chechen brothers now implicated in the attack have been revealed as long time FBI contacts.  This is a bit awkward for the FBI considering they asked the American public to help them “identify the suspects in on-scene photos” while they failed to mention that they knew EXACTLY who the two young men were already (this is what we might call a contrived story arch).  Today, the older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, is conveniently dead.  The younger brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, had his throat conveniently shot out. The feds are now supplying the media with “written confessions” from Dzhokhar to which there is no proof of legitimacy.  For all we know the boy hasn’t written a word.

The new “villains” get no voice in this drama, and thus become two dimensional characters.  They exist so that we can hate them.  Understanding them, or hearing their side of events from their own lips, is certainly out of the question.  Poorly fleshed out antagonists are a sure sign of a poorly constructed story.

Finally, we get to the “heroes”.  Though the criminal elements of our federal government and adjoining alphabet agencies did not yet get the right wing patriot patsy they obviously wanted, they have still so far gleaned considerable social capital from the bombings.  The point of a false flag is to frighten the population of any given nation into relinquishing freedom in the name of safety, which in the process gives the central government even more control.  In the wake of the Boston attack, the establishment is having a field day…

Martial Law Conditioning

For a few days, Boston became an Orwellian nightmare.  The city lockdown and subsequent militarization was swift, though any intelligent and guilty suspect could have easily left the area before hand.  This kind of response to catch only two supposed perpetrators is outlandish, unless you understand that it was not about catching the bombers.  Rather, it was an exercise designed to test the malleability of the American people during a crisis scenario.  In Watertown, residents were not only forced into lockdown; they were also subjected to house-to-house searches without warrant, pat downs, and numerous other violations of their 4th Amendment rights.  Take note that almost everything you see in the video below is an illegal and unconstitutional action on the part of Boston authorities:

As this was occurring, officials were consistently pushing media cameras away from the area in the name of “safety”, even though media cameramen are sent into domestic shootouts and foreign warzones on a regular basis.  The only real purpose that I can see to removing them from the scene was to reduce the amount of video footage depicting these illegal searches and seizures:

For those who can’t grasp what has happened here, let me explain; the dynamics of liberty have just been erased.  This kind of behavior on the part of government will not be limited to disasters like Boston, or New Orleans during Katrina; a precedence is being set to use martial law-style tactics anywhere for any reason at anytime.  The “national security argument” is being used as a free license to institute any measure regardless of law to achieve a particular combat objective.  The environment we saw in the dark days of Boston is an environment we’ll soon see all over the country, and here is why…

Escalation

Boston represents a clear escalation of the use of NDAA and martial law measures in the aftermath of a security event.  After the arrest of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2012, his Miranda Rights under the Constitution were denied due to “extraneous circumstances of national security”.  Numerous lawmakers called for the suspect to be treated as an “enemy combatant” so that he could be interrogated under the laws of war without due process:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/22/dzhokhar-tsarnaev-enemy-combatant_n_3132815.html

The Obama White House has cleverly called for a civilian trial of Tsarnaev in order to reduce criticisms of its support for numerous unconstitutional measures, including the NDAA and the use of assassination against American citizens.  The White House has always claimed that it would not use the combatant provisions against American citizens, but has never denied that those provisions could be applied to us.  The idea is that while the president does have these powers at his disposal, we’re supposed to have “faith” that he will not abuse them.  During the debate over the passage of the NDAA, Obama opposed certain language within the legislation that REQUIRED him to treat accused domestic terrorists as enemy combatants, not because he thought it was wrong, or unconstitutional, but because he wanted the OPTION to decide whether he would or would not black bag a citizen and throw him into an unspecified hole.   He has simply exercised his “option” for a citizen trial, at least this time around…

In the meantime, a simultaneous and so far poorly verified “train attack” has been averted in Canada, opening the door for more discussion on something the establishment has been trying to squeeze out of the populace for years:  consent for the federalized lockdown of travel and public events.  Whether through TSA, or the use of state authorities under the watch of the DHS, the government has been desperately clamoring to expand the control grid out of airports and federal buildings into the bus stations, subways, trains, highways and sidewalks of America:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/04/23/us-arrests-usa-railroads-idUSBRE93M1IZ20130423

I believe that we will soon see much greater presence of TSA VIPR teams at large public arenas and in transportation venues outside of airports, and that the Boston Bombing will be used as a primer for this expansion.  Recent comments by NY Mayor Michael Bloomberg only reinforce my belief.  Bloomberg, in reference to the marathon attack, stated that:

“…we live in a complex word where you’re going to have to have a level of security greater than you did back in the olden days, if you will. And our laws and our interpretation of the Constitution, I think, have to change.”

“Look, we live in a very dangerous world. We know there are people who want to take away our freedoms. New Yorkers probably know that as much if not more than anybody else after the terrible tragedy of 9/11…”

“We have to understand that in the world going forward, we’re going to have more cameras and that kind of stuff. That’s good in some sense, but it’s different from what we are used to…”

Ironically, the only enemy out there that appears ready to “take our freedoms away” are men like Bloomberg; snakes in the grass that pay lip service to the Constitution while constantly trying to undermine it.

Free Speech Is Next

The bombings in Boston took place, apparently by coincidence, just before Oath Keepers, a national organization of current serving military, police officers, and veterans promoting adherence to their constitutional oath was to hold a large rally at Lexington Green.  The Lexington Green board, one member of which had been openly hostile to Oath Keepers in the past, decided to use the crisis as an excuse to deny the rally permit already attained by the liberty minded group.

The Lexington Selectmen claimed that under the suggestions of “state officials” the rally had to be cancelled due to the “lack of police” available to secure the area and ensure public safety.  However, when Oath Keepers held a brief oath ceremony at the Green in protest of the decision, a police force was sent to watch them:

http://lexington.patch.com/articles/amid-manhunt-mayhem-oath-keepers-assemble-by-lexington-s-battle-green

This means that public safety was not the issue.  Rather, safety and security were being used yet again to deny a constitutional right, and this time it was the most vital and valuable right of all – free speech.

During the height of the civil rights marches of the 50’s and 60’s, the exact same tactics were used to silence dissent.  Black protesters were told that they could not obtain proper permits for peaceful marches because their “own safety” and the safety of the public could not be ensured.  This matter of using broad hypothetical dangers as a catalyst for censorship was finally argued before the Supreme Court in Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham.  The court sided with the protestors, pointing out that the use of undefined safety concerns and “prior restraint” to silence speech was unconstitutional.  Unfortunately, the decision has not prevented the U.S. government from slowly undermining public protest rights ever since.

The fascinating thing about incremental tyranny is the way in which naïve members of our society try to rationalize it.  They debate using logical fallacies like:

“How have your rights been violated in particular?  If your rights haven’t been violated, what right do you have to complain?”

And how about this gem…

“Yeah, there are problems in this country, but at least we have some freedom.  In many countries, you wouldn’t be allowed to complain the way you are…”

This is statist psychology at work.  Freedom, in their minds, is a privilege doled out by governments, rather than an inborn attribute outside of the realm of law.  They do not understand that the violation of the rights of one American is a violation of the rights of ALL Americans.  They do not understand that the destruction of some constitutional protections will one day lead to the destruction of ALL constitutional protections.

The establishment and the useful idiots they manipulate want to make the “threat” the center of attention, but ultimately, the threat is irrelevant.  There will always be the danger of terrorism and death.  Always!  And, if our government is following the Operation Gladio false flag model (look it up, folks, it was openly admitted government funded terrorism), as I believe they are, then we can count on Boston-style bombings all over the U.S. very soon.

True crisis lay in what we refuse to see, and the greatest crisis today is not the bombing of a marathon, but the destruction of our freedoms in the name of “security”.  The bottom line?  Our civil liberties are not up for compromise.  Period.  Shootings, bombs, nukes, nothing!  There is no rationalization that will ever make tyranny a moral enterprise.  I, like many other Americans, do not care what boogeyman fantasy is paraded in front of me.  We are not frightened, and we are not ignorant.  No attack, no matter how heinous, will ever convince us to hand over our freedom.

You can contact Brandon Smith at:  brandon@alt-market.com

Alt-Market is an organization designed to help you find like-minded activists and preppers in your local area so that you can network and construct communities for mutual aid and defense.  Join Alt-Market.com today and learn what it means to step away from the system and build something better.

 Posted by greydog at 12:38 PM  Tagged with: boston bombing, false flag terrorism, Martial Law Conditioning, NDAA

James Petras: “EL SOCIALISMO EUROPEO ESTÁ MUY METIDO CON EL COLONIALISMO EN ÁFRICA”

 Prof. James Petras, Spanish, Submitted Article  No Responses »
Jan 162013
 

El análisis de James Petras

image001

“Otra vez quiero enfatizar que nadie puede tener ninguna confianza en lo que se llama el socialismo europeo, siempre tiene estas dos caras, hablar de lo social interno mientras están metidos en guerras externas. Y cada vez más podríamos ver que el compromiso social no tiene ningún peso frente a las exigencias de las fuerzas económicas que dominan la política externa”, indicó el sociólogo norteamericano James Petras al analizar el lunes 14 en Radio Centenario (*) los bombardeos franceses a Mali. Entre otros temas que abordó en esta oportunidad, Petras dio las cifras de los flujos ilegales de ingresos en el mundo en 2012 y se refirió a las causas de la polución que afecta a China. A continuación transcribimos íntegramente el análisis de James Petras.

Efraín Chury Iribarne: Como cada lunes, tenemos el gusto de recibir a James Petras. ¿Cómo está?

James Petras: Estamos bien, con buen tiempo, pero un poco fresco.

EChI: Comenzamos con una noticia que fue creciendo en los países que intervienen en la misma, me estoy refiriendo a Mali con la intervención primero de Francia, de Gran Bretaña y de los Estados Unidos.

JP: Precisamente ese es el primer tema que quería ver hoy.

Primero debemos reconocer otra vez que el socialismo europeo está muy metido con el colonialismo. El hecho de que se llame socialista en Europa no significa para nada una posición antiimperialista. Los socialistas hace muchos años practican el mismo colonialismo que los gobiernos de la derecha, en el caso actual el presidente Hollande mandando aviones de guerra, tirando bombas sobre ciudades, matando civiles y entrando en una defensa de los intereses minerales en los países vecinos, en particular Níger que es una neocolonia francesa.

Y lo que es interesante en este caso, debemos analizar cómo las fuerzas islámicas ganaron tanta capacidad a tomar territorio en casi todo el norte de Mali y nadie habla del hecho de que los islámicos ahora bajo ataque de Francia y los otros países recibieran sus armas y financiamientos durante la invasión de Libia.

Es decir, Francia, Inglaterra, los EEUU entregaran las armas a los islámicos que derrocaran a Gadafi y estas mismas fuerzas después de terminar con Gadafi bajaran las armas y las fuerzas invadiendo Mali. Entonces, es un efecto boomerang, destruir Libia, fomentar el islamismo, armarlo y ahora Europa está combatiendo precisamente las fuerzas islámicas que eran la principal punta de lanza de la OTAN contra el gobierno secular  e independiente de Libia.

Y otra cosa que debemos comentar, mientras Hollande ahora habla de austeridad, la necesidad de cortar programas sociales está gastando millones de euros en una guerra en África. Es la gran contradicción, por un lado recortes sociales adentro dirigidos contra los obreros mientras está gastando dinero para una invasión a un país en África apoyando a un gobierno en Mali muy corrupto, con ningún compromiso con la independencia nacional. Incluso los gobernantes de Mali son tan corruptos e incapaces, son ellos mismos quienes llamaran a Francia a intervenir. Como siempre los gobiernos títeres siempre dependen de las fuerzas imperiales para mantenerlos en el poder.

Otra vez quiero enfatizar que nadie puede tener ninguna confianza en lo que se llama el socialismo europeo, siempre tiene estas dos caras, hablar de lo social interno mientras están metidos en guerras externas. Y cada vez más podríamos ver que el compromiso social no tiene ningún peso frente a las exigencias de las fuerzas económicas que dominan la política externa.

EChI: ¿Esto puede afectar a otras Naciones vecinas de Mali?

JP: Sí, es el hecho de que ahora podríamos ver que las mismas fuerzas islámicas que reciben apoyo en Siria, que son los principales agresores contra el gobierno de Siria, son los mismos que están involucrados en Mali.

En otras palabras, si de alguna forma los islámicos ganan poder en Siria, van a lanzar agresiones contra sus vecinos en Líbano, en Jordania, en Irak, en otros países. No hay una diferencia entre lo que pasó en Libia y ahora con Mali y lo que podría pasar si algo similar pasa en Siria. Es la visión destructiva del imperialismo que utiliza cualquier fuerza armada política como utilizara en Libia. Es lo mismo que pasó en Afganistán, que pasó en Irak, lo que está pasando en Siria. Los mismos islámicos fortalecidos después dan la vuelta y atacan los intereses occidentales y los países fortalecieron su presencia en estas regiones.

Y un punto más que quiero mencionar, que Hollande llamó la atención para que las fuerzas de seguridad de Francia tomen medidas de emergencia, porque dice que atacando los islámicos en Mali puede resultar en un ataque terrorista en Francia misma. Entonces, la agresión externa tiene como contrapartida los ataques de terroristas en Francia, hay un peligro que multiplican los acontecimientos en Francia y Europa.

EChI: Venimos a nuestro continente, el pasado jueves se realizó un multitudinario acto en Venezuela, en apoyo al presidente Hugo Chávez, día en el que tenía que reasumir la Presidencia. ¿Cómo te impresionó? ¿Cómo ha salido todo hasta ahora?

JP: Hasta ahora tenemos dos realidades. Una es la realidad práctica existente que el país siga funcionando con mucha estabilidad, el proceso económico siga igual, hay trabajo, hay inversión, hay crecimiento, la tasa de inflación está bajando. Y en la política hay gran movilización a favor de Chávez, hay estabilidad, hay un orden político, la decisión de la asamblea de continuar postergando la inauguración de Chávez.

Esa es la realidad. Ahora, contra esta realidad tenemos la propaganda de los medios de comunicación que hablan de la problemática, la incertidumbre, los procesos ilegales de transición, etc.

En otras palabras, tenemos un gran contraste entre lo que realmente está pasando en Venezuela y la noticia que está circulando en la prensa burguesa que trata de fomentar una imagen de ilegalidad donde existe una incertidumbre y caos que no es la realidad. Por lo menos lo que podríamos analizar de una forma objetiva.

Entonces, yo no tengo preocupación, por lo menos ahora, de que haya alguna crisis en Venezuela. Ahora, todos queremos que Chávez se recupere y vuelva a tomar su puesto como presidente, pero mientras tanto no debemos dar ninguna importancia a estos rumores y noticias fabricadas por la prensa burguesa.

EChI: ¿Hay algunas novedades respecto de nombramientos en puestos claves del presidente Obama en EEUU?

JP: Bueno, lo que podemos ver es que no hay ningún gran cambio. Los nombramientos, por ejemplo, del jefe de la CIA, del tesoro, son personas de confianza de Wall Street y del Pentágono. Son personajes que no muestran ninguna diferencia a los anteriores, están comprometidos con el sector financiero de Wall Street, son personas involucradas con ladrones y la tortura como el Sr. Donovan que está ahora en cargos de la política de inteligencia. Debemos ver la continuidad.

Ahora, el único que tiene problemas es el Sr. Hagel que es nombrado para tomar influencia en la política externa. Él enfrenta los ataques de los sionistas y sus cómplices en el Congreso, y eso sí podría encontrar problemas por el poder que el sionismo y las organizaciones judías están actuando como quinta columna de Israel. Pero mientras tanto esta controversia sigue siendo una controversia que no creo que vayan a ganar los sionistas a pesar de su enorme influencia económica.

EChI: ¿Tienes algún otro tema para analizar?

JP: Sí, tengo tres temas que quería discutir. Primero, tengo cifras sobre los flujos ilegales de ingresos en el mundo. Debemos reconocer que los flujos, saliendo del Tercer Mundo, desde el año 2001 al 2010, en los diez años salieron 5.8 trillones de dólares desde África hacia América Latina hacia los bancos y cuentas en el exterior en Europa y EE.UU.

El país que ha perdido la mayor cantidad de dinero es China, han perdido anualmente 274.000 millones. Es que los ricos chinos están enviando hacia el afuera tanto dinero 270.000 millones.

Méjico es el segundo país donde los flujos ilegales son 47.000 millones.

Ahora, esos son los principales países, pero también tenemos a Venezuela donde 3.8 mil millones sale ilegalmente en vez de invertirse en el país y pagar impuestos.

Estos flujos externos es una forma de evitar impuestos.

Tengo la cifra de Uruguay que es el número 61 en la lista de flujos ilegales al exterior. Cada año salen de Uruguay, 736 millones de dólares hacia las cuentas externas. Si calculamos las necesidades que Uruguay tiene para financiar proyectos sociales inversiones públicas, mejorar el ambiente, esta salida obviamente es muy perjudicial.

¿Pero cómo sale, de qué forma salen estos flujos ilegales? Primero, a partir del tráfico de drogas, a partir de corrupción, a partir de invasión y otras actividades ilegales que facilitan la salida. Entonces, cuando hablamos de problemas de desarrollo debemos analizar los flujos ilegales hacia afuera que es una forma de imponer los costos fiscales sobre los trabajadores y los asalariados. No es una cosa de menor importancia. Hay que poner mayores controles y particularmente sobre estos flujos ilegales, la evasión de impuestos que es notoria en todas partes.

Otro tema que debemos tomar en cuenta es la polución, la contaminación en China, los indicadores en este fin de semana eran 36 veces más de lo que es aceptable. 36 veces, la gente en Beijing ahora está caminando con máscaras porque es imposible respirar con este nivel de contaminación.

¿Y qué pasa? Las clases dominantes en China no quieren apoyar las reglas que existen. China tiene leyes que protegen el ambiente pero no las aplican porque se aplica contra el gran capital. Y los grandes capitales en China tienen tanta influencia en los círculos de poder que el gobierno no es capaz de implementar sus propias leyes. Entonces, otra vez es la política de la oligarquía nueva de China que es culpable de este problema y no hay ninguna fuerza popular porque el partido único no permite en China a la clase obrera y a los trabajadores imponer una mejor política ecológica.

Y finalmente el tema final que quiero comentar es sobre la gran minería en la frontera de Chile y Argentina. Están preparando con enormes inversiones para explotar la gran minería utilizando químicos como arsénico y otros para extraer el oro, plata, cobre, lo que existe allá, va a contaminar los ríos y van a contaminar la posibilidad de todos los agricultores, particularmente los que están con viñas de uva y otros productos en esta región.

Ni hablar de la contaminación del ambiente, los grandes lugares de nieve van a ser destruidos, van a poner 36 toneladas de dinamita, cartuchos, cada día. Y eso hay que pensar que va a destruir toda la montaña, va a afectar todos los flujos de agua, de nieve y va a tener un enorme efecto perjudicial.

Y ni Piñera en Chile ni Cristina Fernández dan alguna atención a este problema. En Argentina lo peor de todo es que en los pagos de regalías son de un 6%. Hay una enorme complicidad entre los gobiernos de Argentina y Chile para destruir el ambiente, contaminar los ríos y destruir la vida ecológica para mil millones de personas.

EChI: Bien, James Petras, realmente completísimo el análisis, te lo agradecemos. Y bueno, el deseo de que sigas pasando bien por ahí en California.

JP: Sí, una cosa rara, te voy a contar, aquí en California es un desierto y normalmente tenemos temperaturas de 20º pero aquí han bajado a 12º o 13º, en algunos casos está cerca del congelamiento. Pero en Nueva York tienen temperaturas record de calor, casi igual. La temperatura en Nueva York es igual de lo que existe aquí. En Fahrenheit, que es la forma de considerar la temperatura, es de 57º, algo así como 16º Celsius.

Entonces, estamos invirtiendo los tiempos, el cambio del clima está creando calores donde debe haber nieve y creando frío donde debemos tener calor, el mundo va para arriba y para abajo…

EChI: Sí, el calentamiento global es una realidad.

JP: Sí, podemos verlo en Australia donde hay incendios e inundaciones alternadas. Y los gobernantes laboristas no saben qué hacer porque están bajo la influencia de la gran minería capitalista. Otra vez el socialismo es la única forma de salvar, no sólo la vida social, pero de salvar al planeta.

EChI: Un enorme abrazo, que pase muy bien, nos encontramos el lunes.

JP: Un saludo y un gran abrazo a los oyentes, espero que estén pasando las vacaciones con algunos placeres de la vida cotidiana.

(*) Escuche en vivo la audición de James Petras por CX36, Radio Centenario desde

Montevideo (Uruguay) para todo el mundo a través de www.radio36.com.uy

CAMBIO DE HORARIO: Debido a que James Petras se encuentra en California,

durante este mes su columna se emite en directo los lunes a las 15:30 horas (hora

local).

 Posted by greydog at 9:21 AM  Tagged with: James Petras: “EL SOCIALISMO EUROPEO ESTÁ MUY METIDO CON EL COLONIALISMO EN ÁFRICA”, Prof James Petras / weekly radio interview / en espanol

Banks versus the People: The Underside of a Rigged Game!

 CADTM, Submitted Article  No Responses »
Jan 132013
 

By Eric Toussaint, CADTM

Translation: SnakeArbusto, Mike Krolikowski and and Charles La Via

0210-NYSE-German-merger.JPG_full_600

The first three parts of the series ’Banks versus the People: the Underside of a Rigged Game!’ published in 2012, have been collected together in this one document. This series is to be continued during January 2013.

Part 1 : 2007-2012: Six years that shook the banking world

Since 2007-2008, the major central banks (the ECB, Bank of England, the “Fed” in the USA, and the Swiss National Bank) have been making it their absolute priority to attempt to avoid a collapse of the private banking system. Contrary to what has been said more or less everywhere, the principal risk threatening the banks is not that a government will suspend payment of sovereign debt |1|. None of the bank failures since 2007 have been caused by that kind of payment default. None of the bank bailouts organized by the various governments has been made necessary by suspension of payment by an over-indebted State. What has threatened the banks since 2007 is the structured private-debt holdings they have gradually built up since the major deregulations, which began in the late 1970s and culminated during the 1990s. The balance sheets of private banks are still packed with bad assets |2| which range from completely toxic assets – veritable time bombs – to non-liquid assets (meaning they cannot be sold or shifted on financial markets), and include assets of which the value is completely over-estimated in the banks’ balance sheets. The sales and depreciations of assets banks have booked until now in order to reduce the weight of these explosive assets have been insufficient. A significant number of them depend on short-term financing (either provided or guaranteed by the Public Authorities with taxpayers’ money) to stay afloat |3| and handle debts that are themselves short-term. That explains why the Franco-Belgian bank Dexia, which in fact amounts to a very large hedge fund, has been on the brink of bankruptcy three times in four years – in October 2008, in October 2011 |4|, and again in October 2012. During the most recent episode, in early November 2012, the French and Belgian governments provided aid amounting to 5.5 billion euros (53% of which was borne by Belgium) to recapitalize Dexia SA, a moribund financial company whose equity has melted away. According to Le Soir: “The equity of the Dexia parent company dropped from 19.2 billion to 2.7 billion euros between the end of 2010 and the end of 2011. And at group level, total equity has become negative (-2.3 billion euros on 30 June 2012).” At the end of 2011, Dexia SA’s immediately outstanding debts amounted to 413 billion euros, and the amounts due under derivative contracts stood at 461 billion. Added together, those two figures amount to more than 2.5 times Belgium’s GDP! And yet Dexia’s senior executives, Belgian vice-prime minister Didier Reynders, and the dominant media are still claiming that the problem afflicting Dexia SA is largely caused by the sovereign debt crisis in the southern part of the Euro zone. The truth is that Dexia SA’s holdings in Greece did not amount to more than 2 billion euros in October 2011 – 200 times less than the amount of its immediately outstanding debts. In October 2012, Dexia’s shares were worth approximately 0.18 Euros – 100 times less than in September 2008. Despite this, the French and Belgian governments have decided once again to bail out this uncharitable organization at the cost of increasing the public debt in their own countries. In Spain, the near failure of Bankia was also caused by unsound financial packages, and not by a default on the part of any government. Since 2008, the same scenario has been replayed at least thirty times in Europe and the United States. Each time, the public authorities have come to the aid of the private banks (as they systematically do) by financing their bailouts with government debt.

Return to the beginning of the crisis in 2007

The gigantic private-debt house of cards began to collapse when the speculative real-estate bubble in the United States burst (followed by Ireland, the UK, Spain, etc.). The real-estate bubble burst in the United States when the price of homes, of which there was an oversupply, began to fall because more and more homes were without buyers.

The interpretations given by the mainstream media were dominated by partial – or deliberately fallacious – explanations for the crisis that struck the United States in 2007 and had a tremendous contagious effect, mainly on Western Europe. Regularly in 2007 and during the better part of 2008, it was explained to the public that the crisis had started in the United States because low-income people had gone into too much debt to acquire homes they were not able to pay for. Irrational behavior on the part of the poor was pointed to as the cause of the crisis. But beginning in late September 2008, after the failure of Lehmann Brothers, the dominant narrative changed and the finger was pointed at certain black sheep of the world of finance who had perverted the virtuous operation of capitalism. But the lies and partial explanations continued to circulate. Low-income families were no longer responsible for the crisis; it was the rotten apples in the capitalist class – Bernard Madoff, who put together a 50-billion-dollar swindle, or Richard Fuld, the boss of Lehmann Brothers.

The beginnings of the crisis go back to 2006, when the drop in real-estate prices began in the United States, caused by overproduction, itself caused by the speculative bubble that inflated real-estate prices and drove the construction sector to overheat and increase its activity far in excess of solvent demand. The collapse of real-estate prices is what caused the increase in the number of households unable to meet their payments on subprime mortgages. In the United States, households often refinance their mortgages after 2 or 3 years when home prices are trending upward in order to get more favorable terms (especially since, in the subprime-loan sector, the credit rate for the first two or three years was low and fixed, around 3%, before increasing sharply and becoming variable in the third or fourth year). When real-estate prices began to drop in 2006, households who had contracted subprime loans were no longer able to refinance their home loans favorably, and payment defaults began to multiply greatly starting in early 2007, causing the failure of 84 mortgage companies in the USA between January and August 2007.

As is very often the case, whereas the crisis is explained simplistically by the bursting of a speculative bubble, in reality the cause lies both in the production sector and in speculation. Of course, the fact that a bubble was created and eventually burst only multiplies the effects of a crisis that began with production. The entire rickety structure of subprime loans and structured products that had been under construction since the mid-1990s, collapsed, which had terrible repercussions on production in various sectors of the real economy. Austerity policies then amplified the phenomenon further by leading to the extended period of recession-depression in which the economies of the most industrialised countries are now floundering.

The impact of the real-estate crisis in the United States and the banking crisis that followed has had an enormous contagious effect internationally, due to the fact that numerous European banks had invested massively in US structured products and derivatives. Since the 1990s, growth in the United States and in several European economies had been supported by hypertrophy of the private financial sector and by a huge increase in private debt – household debt |5| and debts of financial and non-financial companies. On the other hand, public debt had tended to decrease between the second half of the 1990s and 2007-2008.

Thus there was a hypertrophy of the private financial sector. The volume of assets of European private banks compared to gross domestic product ballooned extraordinarily beginning in the 1990s to reach 3.5 times the GDP of the 27 member countries of the European Union in 2011 |6|. In Ireland in 2011, banks’ assets amounted to eight times the country’s gross domestic product.

The debts of the private banks |7| in the Euro zone also amounted to 3.5 times the Zone’s GDP. Debt in the British financial sector has reached unheard-of heights in proportion to the GDP – it is 11 times greater, whereas public debt represents approximately 80% of GDP.

The gross public debt of the countries of the Euro zone amounted to 86% of the GDP of the 17 member countries in 2011 |8|. Greek public debt was 162% of Greece’s GDP in 2011, while debts in its financial sector amounted to 311% of GDP – double the amount of public debt. Spain’s public debt was 62% of GDP in 2011, whereas debts in the financial sector were at 203%, or three times the amount of public debt.

A little history: The implementation of strict financial regulation after the crisis in the 1930s

The crash of Wall Street in October 1929, the enormous banking crisis of 1933, and the prolonged period of economic crisis in the United States and Europe during the 1930s led President Franklin Roosevelt, and then Europe, to strongly regulate the financial sector in order to avoid the repetition of serious stock-market and banking crises. As a result, during the thirty years following the World War II, the number of banking crises was minimal. That is demonstrated by two neoliberal North American economists, Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, in a book published in 2009 entitled This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. Kenneth Rogoff was chief economist of the IMF, and Carmen Reinhart, a university professor, is adviser to the IMF and the World Bank. According to these two economists – to whom it would never occur to call capitalism into question –, the very low number of banking crises can be explained mainly by “the repression of the domestic financial markets (in varying degrees), and the heavy-handed use of capital controls that followed for many years after World War II.” |9|

One of the strong measures taken by Roosevelt and the governments of Europe (in particular due to pressure from popular mobilization in Europe after the Liberation) consisted in limiting and strictly regulating the uses banks could make of the public’s money. This principle of protection of deposits resulted in a separation between commercial banks and investment banks, of which the US’s Glass-Steagall Act was the best-known example, but which was also applied, with certain variants, in European countries.

With this separation, only commercial banks could receive deposits from the public and benefit from government deposit guarantees. In parallel, their field of activities was reduced to making loans to individuals and businesses, and excluded the issuance of securities, shares, and all other types of financial instruments. Meanwhile, investment banks were required to derive their resources from the financial markets to be able to issue securities, shares, and other financial instruments.

Financial deregulation and the neoliberal turn

The neoliberal turn of the 1970s called those regulations into question. Within about twenty years, the deregulation of banks and the financial sector in general was complete. As Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart point out, banking and stock-market crises multiplied starting in the 1980s, and also became more and more acute.

In the traditional model inherited from the long period of regulation, banks evaluate and bear risk – that is, they analyze credit requests, decide whether or not to meet them, and, once the loans are granted, keep them on their books until they come due (this is what is called the “originate and hold” model).

Taking advantage of the profound movement towards deregulation they brought about, the banks abandoned the “originate and hold” model in order to increase their yield on equity. To do that, banks invented new processes – in particular securitisation, which consists in converting bank loans into financial securities. The goal was simply to no longer keep credit and its associated risks on their books. They transformed these loans into securities in the form of structured financial products, which they sold to other banks or private financial institutions. This is a new banking model, known as “originate to distribute,” also called “originate, repackage and sell.” For the bank, the advantage is twofold: It reduces its risk by removing the loans it has granted from its assets, and it has additional resources to use for speculating.

Deregulation made it possible for the private financial sector, and banks in particular, to take full advantage of what is known as the leverage effect. Xavier Dupret describes the phenomenon clearly: “The banking world has accumulated large amounts of debt in recent years via what is called leverage effects. The leverage effect consists in using indebtedness to increase the profitability of one’s equity. And for it to work, the rate of return of the selected project needs to be higher than the rate of interest to be paid on the borrowed amount. Leverage effects became stronger and stronger over time. Obviously this causes problems. As an example, in the spring of 2008, the Wall Street investment banks had leverage rates of between 25 and 45 (for each dollar of shareholders’ equity, they had borrowed between 25 and 45 dollars). Merrill Lynch had a leverage rate of 40. That was obviously an explosive situation, since an institution that is leveraged 40 to 1 can lose its shareholders’ equity with a drop of 2.5% (1/40th) of the value of the assets acquired.” |10|

Thanks to deregulation, banks were able to develop activities requiring gigantic amounts of financing (and therefore of debt) without accounting for them on their balance sheet. They engaged in so much off-balance sheet activity that in 2011 the volume of the activities in question exceeded 67,000 billion dollars (which is approximately equivalent to the sum of all the GDPs of all the countries on the planet). This is what is referred to as shadow banking |11| . When off-balance sheet activity leads to massive losses, sooner or later it will affect the soundness of the banks who initiated it. The major banks are far and away the ones who dominate shadow banking. The threat of failure has prompted governments to come to the aid of these banks by recapitalizing them. Whereas banks’ official balance sheets show a reduction in volume since the start of the crisis in 2007-2008, the volume of off-balance sheet or shadow banking activity has not followed the same pattern. After declining between 2008 and 2010, in 2011-2012 it returned to 2006-2007 levels, which is a clear symptom of the dangerousness of the situation of private finance worldwide. As a result, the range of action of the national and international public institutions, which are in charge of – to use their vocabulary – seeing to it that finance behaves more responsibly, is very limited. Regulators have not even provided themselves with the means of knowing what the banks they are supposed to control are really doing.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), the entity created by the G20 forum to be in charge of financial stability around the world, has issued its figures for 2011. “The amount of the shadow banking that escapes any regulation is 67,000 billion dollars according to its report covering 25 countries (90% of financial assets worldwide). That is 5,000 to 6,000 billion more than in 2010. This ‘parallel’ sector alone represents half the size of the total assets of the banks. Compared to the countries’ gross domestic product, shadow banking is prospering in Hong Kong (520%), Holland (490%), the UK (370%), Singapore (260%), and Switzerland (210%). But, in absolute terms, the United States remains in first place, with the share of this parallel sector representing 23,000 billion in assets in 2011, followed by the Euro zone (22,000 billion) and the UK (9,000 billion).” |12|

A large share of financial transactions totally escapes any official control. As we said previously, the volume of shadow banking represents half of the total assets of the banks! The over-the-counter (OTC) market, which is subject to no control by the market authorities for derivative financial products, must also be taken into account. The volume of derivatives developed exponentially between the 1990s and 2007-2008. While it declined a little at the start of the crisis, in 2011 the notional value of derivative contracts on the OTC market reached the astronomical sum of 650,000 billion dollars ($650,000,000,000,000), or approximately 10 times the worldwide GDP. The volume for the second semester of 2007 has been exceeded, and that of the first semester of 2008 is in sight. Interest-rate swaps accounted for 74% of the total, while currency-market derivatives accounted for 8%, credit default swaps (CDS) 5%, and equity derivatives 1%, with the rest distributed among a multitude of products.

Since 2008, bank bailouts have not resulted in more responsible behavior

With the financial crisis of 2007, the banks, despite being guilty of reprehensible actions and of having taken reckless risks, were given massive injections of funds through numerous and costly bailout plans. In a well-documented study |13|, two researchers set out to verify “whether the rescue operations were followed by a greater reduction of risk in new loans made by rescued banks compared to those that were not rescued.” To do that, the authors analyzed the balance sheets and the syndicated loan issues (loans granted to a company by several banks) of 87 large international commercial banks. The authors determined that “rescued banks continued to write riskier syndicated loans,” observing that “the syndicated lending of banks that later received a bailout was riskier before the crisis than that of non-rescued institutions.” Rather than serving as a remedy and an effective safeguard against abuses by banks, for a number of them the government bailout plans instead acted as a powerful incitement to continue and intensify their reprehensible practices. As the authors put it, “The expectation of state support may give rise to moral hazard and lead banks to engage in higher risk-taking” |14|.

In short, a grave crisis of private debt caused by the irresponsible actions of the major banks prompted leaders in the United States and Europe to bail them out using public funds. It was then that the “sovereign debt crisis” tune was struck up as background music to the brutal sacrifices imposed on the people. The financial deregulation of the 1990s was the fertile ground out of which this crisis grew, with its dramatic social consequences. Until they take control of international finance, the world’s peoples will be at its mercy. The struggle must be intensified, and quickly.

Translation: “Snake” Arbusto

The author thanks Patrick Saurin, Daniel Munevar, Damien Millet, and Virginie de Romanet for their help in writing this part.illu_banques-4d392

Part 2 : The ECB and the Fed at the service of the major private banks

The actions of the European Central Bank and the “Fed” |15|

Beginning in June 2011, the European banks entered a highly critical phase. Their situation was almost as serious as on 15 September, 2008, after the failure of Lehmann Brothers. Many of them were threatened with asphyxia because their massive needs for short-term financing (a few hundred billion dollars) were no longer being met by the American money market funds, who felt that the situation of the European banks was decidedly becoming more and more risky |16| . The banks were in danger of being unable to honor their debts. That is when the ECB, following an emergency European summit held on 21 July, 2011 to deal with the prospect of a series of bank failures, resumed massive purchasing of Greek, Portuguese, Irish, Italian and Spanish public-debt securities from the banks in order to provide cash flow and relieve them of a part of the securities they had greedily purchased during the preceding period. But it was not enough to prevent the banks’ shares from continuing to drop. The executives of these banks spent August on a tightrope. The decisive action that kept the European banks afloat was the extension by the ECB, beginning in September 2011 and in consultation with the Fed, the bank of England and the Swiss National Bank, of an unlimited line of credit. Banks that were starved for dollars and euros were put on life support. They began to breathe again; but the treatment was insufficient. Their share prices continued to plunge. Between 1 January and 21 October, 2011, the price of shares in France’s BNP Paribas dropped 33.3%, and in Deutsche Bank 28.8%; Barclays dropped 30.5% and Crédit Suisse 36.7%, and Société Générale plummeted 52.8%. The ECB was forced to bring out its heavy artillery – an LTRO (Long Term Refinancing Operation). Between December 2011 and February 2012, it lent more than 1,000 billion euros for a duration of 3 years at an interest rate of 1% to just over 800 banks.

The Fed had been doing no differently since 2008, at an even lower official rate. A July 2011 report from the GAO (US Government Accountability Office) revealed that the Fed has lent 16,000 billion dollars at below 0.25% |17| . The report shows that in pursuing such policies, the Fed did not adhere to its own prudential rules and did not inform Congress. According to an investigative commission of the United States Congress, there was clearly collusion between the Fed and the major private banks: “The CEO of JP Morgan Chase served on the New York Fed’s board of directors at the same time that his bank received more than $390 billion in financial assistance from the Fed. Moreover, JP Morgan Chase served as one of the clearing banks for the Fed’s emergency lending programs.” |18| According to former French Prime Minister Michel Rocard and economist Pierre Larrouturou, based on research done by the New York financial agency Bloomberg, the Fed lent part of the amount mentioned above at a rate that was even much lower: 0.01%. Michel Rocard and Pierre Larrouturou stated in the daily Le Monde: “After studying 20,000 pages of various documents, Bloomberg shows that Federal Reserve secretly lent the troubled banks the sum of 1,200 billion at the incredibly low rate of 0.01%. |19| ]]]] They ask the question: “Is it normal in a crisis for the private banks, who are usually financed at 1% by the Central Banks, to benefit from a rate of 0.01%, when in times of crisis certain States are obliged to pay rates 600 or 800 times higher?”

The major European banks also had access to such loans from the Fed until early 2011 (Dexia received a loan of 159 billion dollars |20|, Barclays $868 billion, the Royal Bank of Scotland $541 billion, Deutsche Bank $354 billion, UBS $287 billion, Crédit Suisse $260 billion, BNP-Paribas $175 billion, Dresdner Bank $135 billion and Société Générale $124 billion). The fact that this financing of European banks via the Fed dried up (in particular due to pressure from the US Congress) was one reason why the American money market funds also began shutting off the spigot of loans to the European banks as from May-June 2011.

What were the effects of the ECB making 1,000 billion euros available to the banks at 1%?

In 2012, the banks used the new flow of cash to make massive purchases of public debt securities in their own countries. Let’s take the example of Spain. The Spanish banks borrowed 300 billion euros from the ECB at 3 years at a rate of 1% in the LTRO framework |21|. With part of that money, they greatly increased their purchases of debt securities issued by the Spanish authorities. The evolution is quite striking: As of late 2006, the Spanish banks only held 16 billion euros of public securities from their own country. In 2010, they increased their purchases of Spanish public securities, to a level of 63 billion. In 2011, they again increased their purchases, and their holdings in Spanish securities amounted to 94 billion. But thanks to the LTRO, their acquisitions literally exploded – the volume of their holdings doubled in a few months to reach 184.5 billion euros in July 2012. |22| Clearly the operation was very profitable for them. Whereas they were borrowing at 1%, they could buy 10-year Spanish securities with an interest rate that varied between 5.5 and 7.6% in the second semester of 2012.

Now let’s look at the example of Italy. Between late December 2011 and March 2012, the Italian banks borrowed 255 billion euros from the ECB within the LTRO framework |23|. Whereas in late 2010 the Italian banks held 208.3 billion euros in bonds from their country, that amount increased to 224.1 billion in late 2011, a few days after the start of the LTRO. Then, they used the credits they received from the ECB to make massive acquisitions of Italian securities. In September 2012, the total value of the securities amounted to 341.4 billion euros |24|. As in the case of Spain, it was a very profitable operation – they borrowed at 1% and by purchasing 10-year Italian securities, they obtained an interest rate that varied from 5% to 6.6% in the second semester of 2012.

The same phenomenon was repeated in most euro zone countries. A part of the assets of the European banks were relocated to their countries of origin. Concretely, what happened is that the share of public debt of a given country held by the financial institutions in that same country increased very perceptibly during 2012. That development reassured the governments of the euro zone, in particular those of Spain and Italy, since they found that they had less difficulty in selling their bond issues. The ECB seemed to have found the solution. Lending massively to the private banks saved them from a critical situation and spared certain governments the pain of launching new bank bailout plans. The money lent to the banks was used in part to purchase public debt securities from euro zone States. This stopped the increase in interest rates in the most fragile countries and even resulted in lower rates for certain others.

It’s easy to see that, from the point of view of the interests of the populations of the countries concerned, a very different approach should have been adopted – the ECB should have lent directly to the governments at less than 1% (as has it done for the private banks since May 2012), or even without interest. The banks should also have been socialized under citizen control.

Instead, the ECB put the private banks on life support by extending an unlimited line of credit at a very low interest rate (between 0.75 and 1%). The banks used this windfall of public financing in different ways. As we just saw, on the one hand, they purchased sovereign-debt securities from countries like Spain and Italy who, under pressure from the banks, granted them high rates of remuneration (between 5 and 7.6% at 10 years). On the other hand, they deposited a part of the credit that had been extended to them by the ECB… in the ECB! Between 300 and 400 billion were deposited by the banks with the ECB as call money at a rate of 0.25% in early 2012 and 0% since May 2012. Why did they do this? Because they needed to show other bankers and private suppliers of credit (money market funds, pension funds, insurance companies) that they have ready cash to face the potential explosion of the time bombs that are on their books. Without this, potential lenders would shun them, or else demand very high interest rates. With the same objective of reassuring private lenders, they also purchased sovereign bonds from governments who are free of risk in the short or middle term – Germany, Holland, France, etc. The demand was such that 2-year bonds of the governments in question sold at a rate of 0% or even with a slightly negative yield (not counting inflation). The rates paid by Germany and the other countries that are considered financially sound dropped considerably thanks to the ECB’s policy and the increasing seriousness of the crisis affecting the periphery countries. This resulted in a flight of capital from the European periphery towards the center. German securities are so sure that in need of cash, they may be negotiated overnight without loss. Banks acquire them not for the purpose of earning money, but to have deposits or highly liquid securities in the ECB that are immediately available, so as to create the impression (often a false one) of solvency and to deal with unforeseen events. They make profits by lending to Spain and Italy, and that averages out certain losses they might take on the German securities. It is very important to stress the fact that the banks did not increase their loans to households and companies, whereas one of the official goals of the ECB loans was to increase such credit in order to stimulate the economy.

BCE_1-745f8

What do the elites feel about the ECB?

For a moment, let’s judge the ECB’s actions from the point of view of the wealthiest 1% of the population. The official discourse insists that the ECB has made a successful transition between its former president, France’s Jean-Claude Trichet, and the new president, Mario Draghi |25|, a former governor of the bank of Italy and former Vice-President of Goldman Sachs Europe. The ECB and the leaders of the main European countries negotiated a reduction of the Greek debt by convincing the private banks to accept a “haircut” of approximately 50% on their holdings and by getting the Greek government to undertake a new, radical austerity plan that includes massive privatizations and abandon of a large part of the country’s sovereignty. As from March 2012, representatives of the Troika took up permanent residence in ministries in Athens in order to keep a close watch over the country’s accounts. New loans to Greece are granted through an account directly controlled by the European authorities, who thus have the power to block them. What takes the cake is that new Greek debt issues are no longer under the jurisdiction of the Greek courts; the new bonds are subject to English law, and any disputes between the Greek State and private creditors will be settled in Luxembourg |26|.

That’s not all: Under pressure from the ECB and European leaders, Giorgos Papandreou’s PASOK government, which was very docile but more and more unpopular, was replaced – without election – by a New Democracy-PASOK national unity government, with key roles given to ministers who are directly linked to the banking world.

To complete the picture of the situation, there were three other key advantages for the ECB and the European leaders:

1. Silvio Bersluconi was forced to resign and was replaced by a government of technicians, led by Mario Monti, a former European commissioner who is very close to the banking world and capable of imposing an extension of neoliberal policies on Italy |27|.

2. In Spain, the head of the government that has been in place for a few months, Mariano Rajoy of the People’s Party, is also preparing to radicalize the neoliberal policies of his predecessor, Socialist José Luis Zapatero.

3.The European leaders |28| have agreed on a stability pact that will institutionalize budgetary austerity, abandonment by the Member States of more of their national sovereignty, and further submission to the logic of private capital. Finally, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) will soon enter into force and will make it easier to bail out States and banks |29| during inevitable future banking crises, and also EU Member States in need of financing.

These various examples show that European leaders serving the interests of capital have succeeded in marginalizing the legislative powers even further by simply riding roughshod over democracy. In any case, how can we call “democracy” a system under which voters who want to massively reject austerity can no longer express their choice through their vote, or in which the political force of the vote is canceled because the result is not in conformity with the wishes of those in power – as in 2005 in France and in Holland following the rejection of the European Constitution Treaty, or in Ireland and Portugal after the elections in 2011, or again in France and Holland after the 2012 elections. Everything is being set up so that the room for manoeuvre of the nationa |30|l governments and public authorities is limited by a European contractual framework that is more and more constraining. This is an extremely dangerous tendency – unless, of course, those governments, with the support of their populations, decide to disobey.

So if we put ourselves in the place of Mario Draghi, the main European leaders, and the banks, we can see that they must be extremely pleased with the events of March-April 2012. Everything seemed to be succeeding.

The limits of the success of the ECB and the European leaders

Then the dark clouds began to gather. The trouble began in May 2012, when Bankia, Spain’s fourth-largest bank, headed by the former Managing Director of the IMF, Rodrigo de Rato, announced its state of virtual insolvency. Depending on the source, the Spanish banks needed to be recapitalized to the tune of somewhere between 40 and 100 billion euros, and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who did not want to ask for a bailout from the Troika, was in a very difficult position. |31|Added to that was a series international banking scandals – the one involving manipulation of the Libor, the London interbank lending rate, being the most sensational – involving a dozen major banks. The Libor scandal came on top of revelations of reprehensible conduct by HSBC involving laundering drug money and other criminal dealings.

In France, a majority of voters rejected Nicolas Sarkozy. François Hollande was elected on 6 May, 2012; but that was not really a disquieting development for international finance, since the French Socialists, like the other European Socialist parties, can be counted on to show pragmatism and to continue austerity policies. Still, the French people are unpredictable and capable of various types of excesses once they decide that a real change is needed…

In Greece, the situation is more difficult for the ECB, since SYRIZA – the radical-Left coalition who promise to abrogate the austerity measures, suspend reimbursement of the debt, and defy the European authorities – could well win an electoral victory. For the champions of European austerity, such an occurrence must be prevented at any cost. On the evening of 17 June, 2012, there was great relief at the ECB, in Europe’s seats of government, and in the boardrooms of the major corporations: The rightist party New Democracy was ahead of SYRIZA. Even France’s new Socialist president expressed satisfaction with the results. The following day, the markets breathed again, and austerity, stabilization of the euro zone, and the balancing of the accounts of the private banks could continue.

Translation : ‘Snake’ Arbusto and Mike Krolikowski

Part 3: The greatest offensive against European social rights since the Second World War

We should not underestimate the capacity of the elites to make the most of a crisis situation

The mainstream media regularly deal with the questions of a possible breakup of the eurozone, the failure of austerity policies to revive economies, discord between Paris and Berlin, and London and eurozone members, contradictions within the ECB, the enormous difficulties in reaching an agreement on the European budget, and the tensions between certain European governments and the IMF concerning levels of austerity. All of these points are true, but one fundamental issue must not be forgotten: the capacity of the elites, who have meekly put themselves at the service of the multinationals, to manage crises, even chaotic situations, in the interest of these big companies. The complicity between governments and big business has gone public. At the head of several governments, in important ministerial posts and at the presidency of the BCE, are men who are part and parcel of the world of high finance, in particular ex-directors of Goldman Sachs. Certain high-level politicians find their rewards in jobs with big banks once they have fulfilled their loyal service to Big Capitalism. This revolving doors complicity is not new, just more candid and systematic than at any time over the last fifty years.

To imagine that the policies applied by the European elite have failed because economic growth has not reappeared is to be somewhat mistaken on the criteria of analysis. The goal of the board of the ECB, the European Commission, the governments of the strongest EU economies, the boardrooms of the banks and other big companies is not a quick return to growth, nor the reduction of inequalities in the eurozone and the EU, in order to create a more coherent structure that would favour the return of prosperity.

Two of their principal objectives must be noted in particular:

1.Avoiding banking and financial crash that could be worse than that of 2008 (the first two parts of this series dealt with this subject, which will be further developed in the fourth part);

2. The use of a choice of weapons (rampant unemployment, public debt repayment, balanced budgets, promoting unfettered competition between EU member states and between rival companies from other continents) to carry out the greatest aggression by Capital against Workers, on a European scale since the second world war. Capital’s objective is to further menace stable employment, radically reduce the capacity of the workers to organise, substantially push down direct and indirect wages while at the same time maintaining enormous disparities, within the EU, so as to sharpen the blade of labour competition. First, there are the inequalities between women and men, permanent and temporary, full time and part time. The inequalities gap has widened over the last twenty years, pushed by employer’s initiatives and helped along by successive governments (including left wing governments that have played an active role). Then, there are the different inequalities between workers in the different EU countries. The differences between workers in the principal economies and the secondary economies within the EU are complementary to those within national boundaries.

Profound disparities between workers in different EU countries

Workers’ wages in the stronger countries (Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden,) are double or triple the wages of Greek, Portuguese, or Slovenian workers, ten times more than Bulgarian workers, seven or eight times more than that earned by Romanian, Lithuanian, or Latvian workers. |32| In South America, although there are great disparities between the stronger economies (Argentina, Brazil, and Venezuela) and the weaker ones (Bolivia, Ecuador, and Paraguay), there is no more than a fourfold difference in the legal minimum wage there, which is much less significant than in the EU. This difference clearly shows how strong competition is among European workers today.

The major corporations in the stronger European economies profit greatly from this wage disparity. German corporations have chosen to greatly increase their production in the EU countries where the wages are the lowest. Partially finished goods are then reintroduced into Germany, without paying import/export taxes, for assembly and re-exportation, principally to the other European countries. This reduces production costs, puts the German workers into competition with their foreign comrades, and increases company profits. In addition, these assembled and re-exported goods appear, of course, in Germany’s export figures, whereas they are, largely, produced from imported goods. Corporations in the other strong European countries are doing the same thing, but proportionally speaking the German economy profits the most from the low wages and precarity of the eurozone workforce (including within Germany’s national boundaries |33|) and the EU. In 2007, 83% of German exports went to other EU countries (145 billion euros to eurozone countries, 79 billions to non-eurozone EU countries, and 45 billion to the rest of the world) |34|.

The German example is the result of the neoliberal offensive

Between 2003 and 2005, German employers were assisted by Gerhard Schroder’s Socialist government to impose sacrifices on the workers. The paper En finir avec la compétitivité (Putting an end to competition) published jointly by ATTAC and the Copernic foundation sets out the steps taken and the attacks against social and economic rights: “The Hartz acts (named after Volkswagen’s Human Resources Director who was also Schroder’s advisor) were passed between 2003-2005. Hartz I obliges the unemployed to accept any job that is proposed to them, even if the pay is less than unemployment benefits. Hartz II created the mini-job at less than €400 a month (exonerated from social contributions). Hartz III limits to one year the right to unemployment benefits for ageing workers and makes access more difficult. Hartz IV merged long term unemployment benefits with other social aid, and installed an aggregate maximum amount of €345 a month. To this was added successive retirement and healthcare reforms: capitalisation of pension schemes (Riester retirements), contribution increases, later retirement ages (objective of 67 years in 2017)” The authors of this paper mention in particular that “Together these reforms have contributed to an impressive rise in social inequalities. This point is often forgotten in the ’German example’ which may be demonstrated by some precise figures. Germany has become a very elitist country: a parliamentary draft report on wealth and poverty |35| has recently established that the poorest half of the population possess only 1% of the assets, compared to 53% for the richest. Between 2003 and 2010, the purchasing power of the median average wage decreased by 5.6%, but the effect was very unequally spread: -12% for the lowest paid 40%, -4% for the highest paid 40% |36|. Official statistics show that the proportion of the low salaries increased from 18.6% in 2006 to 21% in 2010. It must be mentioned that ’West Germany’ suffered the most”.

According to the same study, the number of employees increased by 1.2 million between 1999 and 2008, reflecting an increase of 1.9 million precarious jobs corresponding to a loss of half a million full time permanent jobs. A quarter of wage earners today occupy unstable jobs and this proportion (as in the US) is 40% for women. “The majority of precarious jobs (70%) are considered women’s jobs |37|. The proportion of unemployment benefit claimants dropped from 80% in 1995 to 35% in 2008 and all the people unemployed for over a year have been transferred to welfare”.

As noted by Arnaud Lechevalier, this trend lies within the general framework “of a context of erosion of the collective bargaining agreements protecting employees: the percentage of employees covered decreased from 76% to 62% in ten years, and in 2008 these agreements only apply in 40% of German firms. In addition, the unions have had to make many exemptions to sector-based, and/or company-wide collective bargaining agreements” |38|.

The ulterior motives of European leaders and elites

When we try to explain the current attitude taken towards the eurozone crisis by German leaders, we can express the hypothesis that one of the lessons they have learned from the absorption of East Germany at the beginning of the 1990’s is that important wage disparities between employees can be greatly exploited to the advantage of employers. The massive East German privatisations, the attacks against the job security of ex-GDR workers, along with an augmentation of German public debt due to the costs of this absorption (which have been used as the pretexts for austerity programmes) have permitted the employers to greatly erode the situation of East as well as West German workers. The present German leaders see the eurozone crisis, and the brutal conditions imposed on the Greek people, as an opportunity to push further and to reproduce at the European level, the gains they have made at home. The leaders of the other strong European countries and the Presidents of their major corporations are not to be left behind; they make the most of the common European political, commercial and economic zone. The northern European economies and transnational companies are exploiting the strife in the eurozone’s southern economies to improve their profitability and to take competitive advantages over their North American and Chinese competitors. Their objective at this point is not to revive growth and to reduce differences between the stronger and weaker economies of the EU. They are most interested in using the strife in the south to grab privatised sectors at give away prices, helped by the Troika and the southern governments themselves. Big Capital in the southern European countries is in favour of this prospect, hoping to get a piece of the cake it has been ogling for a long time. The grabbing of public sector companies in Greece and Portugal foreshadows what will happen in Spain and Italy where public companies are much bigger, as a percentage of their economies.

The will to push down wages

Let us return to the question of wages. According to Michel Husson, Real unit labour costs were compressed 10% in Germany between 2004 and 2008 |39|. In the rest of Europe these costs also decreased, but to a lesser extent. Since the 2008-2009 crisis, the eurozone has been severely affected by a clear drop in real wages in the most exposed countries. This is what is underlined by Patrick Artus “We remark an important reduction in real incomes in the eurozone countries having the most difficulties (Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain)” |40|. Patrick Artus claims that European leaders are applying a deliberate pay reduction policy, and he adds that it has neither boosted investment in the countries just mentioned nor helped their exportations to become more competitive. The favourable effects of “pay reductions are not showing in competitiveness, foreign trade, or business investments”, he writes, adding that lower wages have two clear effects: on the one hand they have raised profits (in Marxist terms, a reduction in variable capital investment leaving a greater margin of absolute surplus value, see boxed article “Essential elements on absolute and relative surplus-value and its relation to wages”) ; on the other hand, it has reduced consumer demand, which in turn has contracted the economy |41|. This report by Natixis confirms that the goal of the European leaders is neither to revive economic activity, nor to improve the situation of the peripheral countries in comparison with the central countries. These pay reductions aim to weaken workers resistance in the concerned countries, increase profits and to make progress in the destruction of what is left of the welfare states built up over the three and a half decades following the Second World War (the following period was that of the neoliberal turn-around of the end of the 1970s and beginning of the 1980s).

In the ’Global Wage Report 2012-2013’ published by the International Labour Organisation’ in December 2012, the authors reveal that “In developed economies, the crisis led to a “double dip” in wages: real average wages fell in 2008 and again in 2011, and the current outlook suggests that in many of these countries wages are growing marginally, if at all, in 2012)” |42|. This is the only part of the world along with the Middle East where wages have decreased since 2008. In China, the rest of Asia, and Latin America, wages have increased. In Eastern Europe they have recovered to a certain extent after plummeting in the 1990s. This report confirms the reorientation of capital’s offensive against labour towards the developed countries.

Essential elements on absolute and relative surplus-value and their relationship to wages |43|From the moment the worker starts a day’s production, a value of raw materials (or of intermediate goods for assembly) is immediately incorporated into the process. After a certain number of hours the worker has reproduced the value of the expected wages. If the worker stops working at that precise moment, the capitalist would not make a penny in surplus value and therefore see no interest in further purchasing the worker’s labour force. Like the usurer in the middle ages, he ’buys in order to sell’. He buys the labour force to obtain from it a product of higher value than that value which he has spent to purchase it. This ’left-over’ is precisely his surplus value, his profit. So if the worker reproduces the wage value in say 4 hours the working day must necessarily be 6, 7, 8, or 9 hours. During these extra 2, 3, 4, or 5 hours the worker produces surplus value for the capitalist in exchange for which there is no retribution. The origin of surplus-value is therefore extra work, free work appropriated by the capitalist. Must we cry, “Thieves!”? The reply must be “yes and no”. Yes! From the workers point of view; No! from the point of view of the Capitalist and the laws of the market. In fact, the capitalist has not purchased the value produced or to be produced by the worker (if that had been the case it would be a clear case of theft: he would have paid €25 for merchandise worth €50), he has purchased the worker’s force of labour. Like any merchandise this labour has its own value. The value of labour power is determined by the amount of that labour which permits its renewal, in other words, by the survival of the workers and their families. The surplus value originates in the difference between the value produced by the worker and the value of the goods necessary for the worker’s survival.

The value of the force of labour has one particular characteristic that sets it apart from all other commodities: it contains not only a precisely measurable element but also a variable element. The stable element is the value of the goods that are needed to reconstitute the physiological labour force of the worker (intake of calories and vitamins sufficient to reproduce the muscular and nervous energy capable of furnishing the normal working rhythm that the capitalist foresees as necessary), the variable element is the value of the goods in a given place and at a given moment that are not part of the physiological minimum. Marx calls this part of the force of labour the historical – moral fraction. This means that it is not arbitrary. It is the result of a historical process and a given situation which determines the balance of power between Capitalists and Labour. It is at this precise point in the Marxist analysis that the past and present class struggle becomes an important determining factor in the capitalist economy.

Wages are the market price of the force of labour. As all market prices, they fluctuate around the value of the considered merchandise. Wage fluctuations are determined, notably, by the fluctuations in the number of reserve workers, that is; the unemployed.

To achieve maximum profits and accumulate as much capital as possible, the Capitalists reduce as much as possible the portion of new value created by the force of labour that must be returned to the workers as wages.

The two principal means by which the Capitalists try to increase the part of surplus-value are:

Longer working hours, reduction of real wages and the lowering of subsistence levels. What Marx calls “growth in absolute surplus value”.

Increased work rates and competitiveness without increase in wages. What Marx calls “growth in relative surplus value”.

The offensive of capital against labour in perspective

The rigours imposed on the workers and benefit claimants in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain had already been imposed on the populations in developing countries by the 1980s and 90s debt crisis. Throughout the 1980s, the offensive attacked North American workers under the Reagan presidency, in connivance with Margaret Thatcher, the Iron Lady, and their emulators in Europe quickly followed suit. The workers in the ex-Eastern European bloc were also subject to brutal policies during the 1990s, imposed by their governments and the IMF. According to the 2012 – 2013 global wage report previously cited: “In Russia, for example, the real value of wages collapsed to less than 40 per cent of their value in the 1990s and it took another decade before wages recovered to their initial level” |44|. Then starting in 2003 – 2005, certainly in a less brutal manner than in the way the people in the Third World (from the poorest countries to the emerging economies) were treated, the offensive turned its regard towards German workers. A large part of the German working population still feels the harmful effects today even if the success of German exports |45| have limited unemployment and part of the working class has not felt the effects directly. This offensive, which has accelerated since 2007 – 2008, took off worldwide at the beginning of the 1980s |46|. The ILO concentrates its analysis on a shorter period (1999 – 2011), and the data is clear: “Between 1999 and 2011 average labour productivity in developed economies increased more than twice as much as average wages. In the United States, real hourly labour productivity in the non-farm business sector increased by about 85 per cent since 1980, while real hourly compensation increased by only around 35 per cent. In Germany, labour productivity surged by almost a quarter over the past two decades while real monthly wages remained flat” |47|. What Marx calls “growth in relative surplus value” (see text box).

Further on: “The global trend has resulted in a change in the distribution of national income, with the worker’s share decreasing while capital income shares increase in a majority of countries. Even in China, a country where wages roughly tripled over the last decade, GDP increased at a faster rate than the total wage bill – and hence the labour share went down” |48|. This strong worldwide tendency demonstrates the increase in surplus – value extracted from labour by capital. It is important to note that during much of the 19th century the principal means of increasing surplus-value was by increasing absolute surplus-value (lower wages, longer working hours). Progressively, in the developed economies, during the second half of the 19th century and throughout the 20th century (except under Nazism, fascism, and other dictatorial regimes that imposed wage reductions) this was replaced or outstripped by increases in relative surplus-value (productivity increases without the corresponding wage increases). After several decades of neoliberal offensives, increases in absolute surplus-value have become, once again, a major element in the extraction of surplus-value and add to the relative surplus-value. The employers, using crisis based campaigns are now gaining on both surplus values, thus showing the magnitude of the current offensive.

Whereas for several decades, employers basically increased the relative surplus value, principally through gains in labour productivity, since 2009-2010, they have succeeded in increasing absolute surplus value by cutting real wages and in certain cases increasing the number of hours worked. They have been using the crisis to combine an increase in the relative surplus value with an increase in the absolute surplus value. This tactic gives us an idea of the extent of their current offensive.

More and more oppression of workers

In a European Commission document entitled “The Second Economic Adjustment Programme for Greece” from March 2012 |49|, it is clearly indicated that the wage reduction program must be continued. Table 14 on page 41 shows that the Greek minimum legal wage is five times that of Romania or Bulgaria (neighbouring countries to Greece), three times that of Hungary and the Baltic States, double that of Poland and the Czech Republic and superior to the minimum legal wage in Portugal and Spain. The objective is to line-up Greece with the more ’competitive’ countries, in other words the lowest paid. Evidently, if Greek wages continue their vertiginous fall as the Troika and Capital wish, wages in Ireland, Portugal, Spain, and the stronger economies must follow this downward trend, and at an accelerating pace.

European leaders are at the service of a logic that increases the surplus-value extracted from European labour for Capital, and permits it to strike points against Asian and North American competitors.

These leaders are prepared to push the European unions to the wall by seriously reducing the negotiating options that they have enjoyed for decades

Capital scores more points against Labour

In several EU countries, the offensive of Capital, the European Commission and its leaders, against social protection systems has succeeded in radically reducing the reach of inter-professional collective bargaining. This is the case in the ex-Eastern bloc countries, and in Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain among others. In several countries, they have also succeeded in lowering the national minimum wage and retirement benefits. They have succeeded in radically reducing protection against redundancies and in imposing later retirements.

The worsening of the crisis in the peripheral eurozone countries

During 2012, the crisis worsened in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain as a result of the brutal austerity policies applied by their governments in line with the requirements imposed by the Troika. In Greece, the aggregate drop of GNP since the crisis has attained 20%. The purchasing power of the great majority of the population has been reduced by 30% to 50%. Unemployment and poverty have literally exploded.

The mainstream press announced, in March 2012, the official line that Greek debt had been cut by half |50|. However, according to official estimations made public in October 2012, Greek public debt, which was at a level of 162% of GNP before these reductions, is expected to attain 189% in 2013, and 192% in 2014 |51|. This information does not often appear in mainstream press headlines.

The press mentions Ireland much less often. Since the beginning of the crisis in 2008, |52| bank welfare has sucked 40% of GNP from the economy (Close to 70 billion euros out of 156 billion euros in 2011)) |53|, unemployment has risen to enormous proportions, forcing 189,200 young Irish to leave the country, one in three young workers who previously had employment has lost their jobs, the economy has contracted 20%, the government in Dublin has confirmed that it will axe 37,500 public sector jobs by 2015.

In Spain, youth unemployment is up to 50%. Since the beginning of the crisis 350,000 families have been expelled from their homes because of repossessions |54|. In one year, the number of families in which everyone is unemployed has increased by 300,000, bringing the total to 1.7million (10% of all Spanish families) |55|.

In Portugal, austerity measures have attained such violence, and the economic situation has become so degraded that one million people rallied spontaneously on 15 September 2012. This was the biggest demonstration since the first of May 1974, which celebrated the victory of the Carnation Revolution.

The situation in the ex-Eastern bloc countries continues to worsen, especially for those that have joined the eurozone.

In short, Capital has engaged in an offensive against Labour throughout the world. It is in Europe that this takes the most systematic nature, starting with the peripheral countries. Whereas the banks (and the capitalist system as such), which have caused the crisis are systematically protected. Public debt is the pretext used to justify the elimination of people’s economic and social rights everywhere. If the social movements and, amongst them, the unions, are really serious about opposing this devastating attack and coming out on top, they must take up the question of public debt to show that the principal argument put forward by the dominant powers is false. The abolition of the illegitimate part of the public debt and expropriation of the banks, to integrate them into a public service of savings and credit are essential measures in any programme that would be considered an alternative to the capitalist management of the crisis.

Translation : Mike Krolikowski and Charles La Via

 

Footnotes

|1| Sovereign debt is the debt of a State and the public entities attached to it.

|2| In general, the term “asset” refers to a product that has a realisable value, or that can generate revenues. In the opposite case, we speaks of a “liability” that is the part of the balance sheet made up of a company’s resources (the equity capital provided by the partners, provisions for liabilities, debts). See: http://www.banque-info.com/lexique-…

|3| Many banks depend on short-term financing because they have great difficulty in borrowing in the private sector at a sustainable (meaning the lowest possible) cost, in particular in the form of issuing debt securities. As we shall see, the ECB’s decision to lend slightly over 1,000 billion euros at an interest rate of 1% for a period of 3 years to more than 800 European banks was a lifeline for many of them. Subsequently, thanks to these ECB loans, the strongest ones were again able to issue debt securities to finance their activities. That would not have been possible had the ECB not acted as lender of last resort for 3 years.

|4| On the October 2011 episode, see Eric Toussaint, “Krach de Dexia : un effet domino en route dans l’UE ?” (“The Dexia crash: Is a domino effect underway in the EU?”), 4 October, 2011

|5| Household debt includes the debts American students have contracted to pay for their education. Student debt in the United States stands at a colossal 1,000 billion dollars, more than the total of the external public debt of Latin America, (460 billion dollars), Africa (263 billion ) and Southern Asia (205 billion). On the debts of these “continents,” see: Damien Millet, Daniel Munevar, Eric Toussaint,2012 World Debt Figures, table 7, p. 9. Downloadable Soon an English version will be available.

|6| See Damien Millet, Daniel Munevar, Eric Toussaint, 2012 World Debt Figures, table 30, p. 23. This table is based on data from the European Banking Federation, http://www.ebf-fbe.eu/index.php?pag…. See also Martin Wolf, “Liikanen is at least a step forward for EU banks,” Financial Times, 5 October 2012, p. 9.

|7| Banks’ debts should not be confused with their assets; they are part of their “liabilities.” See the footnote on bank’ “Assets” and “Liabilities” above.

|8| See Damien Millet, Daniel Munevar, Eric Toussaint, 2012 World Debt Figures, table 24, p. 18. This table uses the Morgan Stanley research database, as well as http://www.ecb.int/stats/money/aggr…and
http://www.bankofgreece.gr/Pages/en…

|9| Carmen M. Reinhart, Kenneth S. Rogoff, This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. Princeton University Press, 2009

|10| Xavier Dupret, “Et si nous laissions les banks faire faillite ?” (“And what if we allowed the banks to fail?”), 22 August, 2012, http://www.gresea.be/spip.php?artic…

|11| See Daniel Munevar, “Les risques du système bancaire de l’ombre” (“Risks of the shadow banking system”), 21 April, 2012, See also: Tracy Alloway, “Traditional lenders shiver as shadow banking grows,” Financial Times, 28 December, 2011

|12| See Richard Hiault, “Le monde bancaire ‘parallèle’ pèse 67.000 milliards de dollars” (“The ‘parallel’ banking system is worth 67,000 billion dollars”), Les Echos, 18 November, 2012,http://www.lesechos.fr/entreprises-…

|13| Michel Brei and Blaise Gadanecz, “Have public bailouts made banks’ loan book safer?”, Bis Quarterly Review, September 2012, pp. 61-72. The citations in this paragraph are from this paper.

|14| Ibid.

|15| The Bank of England and other central banks follow more or less the same policy.

|16| In August 2011 I described the situation at a time when few financial commentators were mentioning it. See the series entitled “In the eye of the storm: the debt crisis in the European Union”: “They (= the European banks) have always financed their loans to European States and companies using loans they themselves took out from the US money market funds – and they continue to do so. Those money market funds were scared by what is happening in Europe … So by June 2011, that source of low-interest finance had just about dried up, which has hurt major French banks most. This was what precipitated the tumble they took on the Stock Exchange and led to the increase of pressure on the ECB to buy back their bonds and thus provide them with new money. In short, this demonstrates the extent of the knock-on effect between the economies of the USA and the EU. It further explains the continual contact between Barack Obama, Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy, the ECB, the IMF… and the major banks from Goldman Sachs to BNP Paribas and the Deutsche Bank. A breakdown in the flow of dollar-loans to European banks could cause a very serious crisis in the Old World, just as difficulties encountered by European banks in repaying their US lenders could trigger off a new crisis on Wall Street”. (http://cadtm.org/In-the-eye-of-the-…, September 2011). A recent study by the bank Natixis confirms the distress of the French banks during the summer of 2011: Flash Economie, “Les banques françaises dans la tourmente des marchés monétaires”, 29 October 2012. We quote: “Between June and November 2011, the American money market funds suddenly withdrew the bulk of their financing from the French banks. (…) The French banks faced a shortfall of 140 billion USD in short-term financing in late November 2011, and none of them was spared.” (http://cib.natixis.com/flushdoc.asp…). That cut-off also affected the majority of the other European banks, as the study published by Natixis also shows.

|17| GAO, “Federal Reserve System, Opportunities Exist to Strengthen Policies and Processes for Managing Emergency Assistance”, July 2011, http://www.gao.gov/assets/330/321506.pdf. This report by the United States Government Accountability Office was conducted thanks to an amendment to the Dodd-Frank Act (see below) introduced by senators Ron Paul, Alan Grayson and Bernie Sanders in 2010. Bernie Sanders, an independent senator, made it public (http://www.sanders.senate.gov/imo/m… ). Also, according to an independent study by the Levy Institute, whose collaborators included such economists as Joseph Stiglitz, Paul Krugman and James K. Galbraith, the Fed’s credits reached an even higher level than that revealed by the GAO. The figure given was not 16,000 billion dollars, but 29,000 billion. See James Felkerson, “$29,000,000,000,000: A Detailed Look at the Fed’s Bailout by Funding Facility and Recipient,”www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/w…

|18| http://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsr…

|19| Michel Rocard and Pierre Larrouturou: “Pourquoi faut-il que les Etats payent 600 fois plus que les banques ? (“Why should States pay 600 times what banks pay?”), Le Monde, 3 January 2012http://www.larrouturou.net/2012/01/…

|20| See page 196 of the GAO report mentioned above, which refers to loans to Dexia amounting to 53 billion dollars, which represents only a part of the loans granted to Dexia by the Fed.http://www.gao.gov/assets/330/321506.pdf

|21| Financial Times, “Banks plot early repayment of ECB crisis loans”, 15 November, 2012, p. 25.

|22| According to the Spanish financial daily El Economista, http://www.eleconomista.es/espana/n…

|23| Financial Times, ibid.

|24| See http://www.bancaditalia.it/statisti…, table 2.1a.

|25| Mario Draghi became president of the ECB on 1 November, 2011.

|26| See http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crise_…. See also Alain Salles and Benoît Vitkine, “Fatalisme face à un sauvetage échangé contre une perte de souveraineté,” Le Monde, 22 February 2012,http://www.forumfr.com/sujet448690-….

|27| Mario Monti, prime minister since 13 November, 2011, was appointed senator for life by the President of the Republic, Giorgio Napolitano. On the occasion of his appointment, he left several positions of responsibility: the presidency of Italy’s most prestigious private university, Bocconi; the European chairmanship of the Trilateral Commission, one of the most important forums of the international oligarchic elite; his participation in the Steering Committee of the powerful Bilderberg Group, and the presidency of the neoliberal think tank Bruegel. Monti was an international advisor to Goldman Sachs from 2005 to 2011 (as a member of the Research Advisory Council of the Goldman Sachs Global Market Institute), and was appointed European Commissioner for the Internal Market (1995-1999), then European Commissioner for Competition (1999-2004) in Brussels. He has been a member of the Senior European Advisory Council of Moody’s, an advisor to Coca Cola, and is still one of the presidents of the Business and Economics Advisory Group of the Atlantic Council (an American think that promotes US leadership) and a member of the Praesidium of Friends of Europe, an influential think tank based in Brussels.

|28| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

|29| At a European summit held 21 June, 2012, it was decided that the ESM would also be used to bail out banks. At the time, this was presented by Mariano Rajoy as a victory that would enable Spain to escape the new conditions imposed by the European Commission or the Troika. Rajoy explained that the aid to be granted by the ESM to the Spanish banks would not be counted as part of Spain’s public debt, which the leaders of several Euro zone countries (Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, etc.) contested, as did the IMF. As of the end of November, 2012, there was still no consensus on the matter.

|30| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

|31| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

|32| See Le Monde 22 and 23 January 2012, based on Eurostat statistics

|33| According to Le Monde 17 May 2011; in Germany, in September 2010, 7.3 million workers were earning barely €400 a month. The number of part time workers increased by 46% between 2000 and 2010, whilst in France the increase was 17%.

|34| OECD, International Trade by Commodity Statistics (SITC Revision 3) mentioned in ATTAC and Copernic Foundation, En finir avec la compétitivité (Putting an end to competition), Paris, October 2012, http://www.france.attac.org/article…

|35| Lebenslagen in Deutschland. Entwurf des vierten Armuts- und Reichstumsberichts der Bundesregierung, Project of 17 September 2012, http://gesd.free.fr/arb912.pdf

|36| Karl Brenke and Markus M. Grabka, “Schwache Lohnentwicklung im letzten Jahrzehnt”, DIW Wochenbericht, n° 45, 2011, http://gesd.free.fr/brenke11.pdf

|37| Source: destatis.de (Federal German Office of Statistics).

|38| Arnaud Lechevalier, « Un modèle qui ne fait guère envie » (A model that is hardly envied),Alternatives économiques, n° 300, March 2011, http://gesd.free.fr/allmodel.pdf cited by ATTAC and Copernic Fondation

|39| See Michel Husson, ” Economie politique du « système-euro »” (Political economy of the “euro-system”, July 2012, or http://hussonet.free.fr/eceurow.pdf

|40| Patrick Artus: « La baisse des salaires dans les pays en difficulté de la zone euro est-elle utile ? » (Is the drop in salaries in distressed eurozone countries really useful?), Flash Economie n°289, 18 April 2012.

|41| Patrick Artus: “The only remaining effect is on consumption, resulting in a fall in activity of which the only good point is a reduced balance of payments deficits” (which reduces imports). Patrick Artus also demonstrates graphically that company profits have increased in the four countries studied.

|42| ILO, Global Wage report 2012-2013, Geneva, December 2012,
http://www.ilo.org/global/research/…

|43| This text is a free adaptation of passages from Ernest Mandel’s Introduction au marxisme (Introduction to Marxism), Edition Formation Léon Lesoil, Brussels, 2007, p. 59, p. 68, p. 66, and 67.

|44| See note 12

|45| Germany continued to register economic growth carried by bouyant exports whilst most of its EU partners and in particularly in the eurozone have been hard hit by the crisis As all of the EU is feeling the pinch of decreased consumption described above exacerbated by a decrease in public consumption, the market for German exports has become seriously restricted. The boomerang effect is already hitting the German economy.

|46| See Eric Toussaint, “In the South as well as the North: from the Great Transformation in the 1980s to the current crisis”, September 2009 http://cadtm.org/In-the-South-as-we….

|47| See note 12

|48| See note 12. The same report also shows the increasing income disparities within each country.

|49| See European Commission, General Directory of Economic and Financial Affairs,http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance…

|50| From the beginning, the CADTM has denounced the disinformation campaign by the Troika and the Greek government. See “The CADTM condemns the disinformation campaign on the Greek debt and the rescue plan by private creditors”, press release 10 March 2012. See also, Christina Laskaridis, “Greece already defaulted on the creditors’ terms; what they fear is that Greece imposes its own terms”, published 31 May 2012.

|51| Financial Times, 1 November 2012, Front page.

|52| Financial Times, 1 October 2012.

|53| Financial Times, 29 December 2011, p. 2.

|54| Miles Johnson, “Suicides spark call for Madrid to halt evictions by banks”, Financial Times, 13 November 2012, p. 2.

|55| Tobias Buck, “Spain’s deepening lack of hope takes its toll”, Financial Times, 6 November 2012, p. 4.

Eric Toussaint, Senior Lecturer at the University of Liège, is president of CADTM Belgium (Committee for the Abolition of Third-World Debt), and a member of the Scientific Committee of ATTAC France. He is the author, with Damien Millet, of AAA. Audit Annulation Autre politique, Seuil, Paris, 2012.

 Posted by greydog at 9:18 AM  Tagged with: Banks versus the People: The Underside of a Rigged Game, CADTM, Eric Toussaint

Should We Burn Uncle Sam’s Ass? by Charles Bukowski

 Submitted Article  No Responses »
Jan 102013
 

Posted by greydogg, 99GetSmart

Charles Bukowski

Charles Bukowski

 

1-e057e9c2c8

 

2-f6cea11656

 Posted by greydog at 2:35 PM  Tagged with: Should We Burn Uncle Sam's Ass? by Charles Bukowski

Invisible Money 5 – The Cloud Factory Revisited Up The Ladder, Marius Kohl To Luc Frieden

 Iddhis Bing, Submitted Article  2 Responses »
Dec 272012
 

By Iddhis Bing, 99GetSmart

Tax_cheats

With the equivalent of 67 trillion dollars floating in and around what is known as the off-shore “shadow banking system” – in tax havens and fiscal paradises from Delaware to Mauritius, the isle of Jersey to Hong Kong – we return, via Ed Perrin’s documentary, to Luxembourg to take a close look at how things work in one capital of guarded finance.1

Readers may recall that in 1998 the OECD – the thirty-four member, European-based Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation – agreed that “All members’ tax authorities must communicate about Advance Tax Agreements,” which effectively meant that if Starbucks wanted to camouflage its UK earnings by moving the money somewhere else, that somewhere else (if a member of the OECD) would have to notify Her Majesty’s Revenue Collection, and the HRMC could object. OECD rules are, however, enacted “by consensus.” Two member countries, Switzerland and Luxembourg, abstained, and thus, in the case of Starbucks, the money slipped away to Luxembourg, Starbucks cried poor, Her Majesty and subjects being none the wiser at least until hearings were held in November of this year. Luxembourg and Switzerland can therefore argue that they abide by OECD regulations, which are, as far as they’re concerned, toothless.2

(Switzerland, grandaddy of the fiscal havens, is a bit more complex: unlike Luxembourg, there is movement inside the country to change its status as tax pariah numero uno.)3

Marius Kohl spends his days in a brick and glass pile in Luxembourg’s capital. It’s one of those mysterious post-modern sandwiches which perfectly merge form and function: it’s impossible to guess what goes on inside, which is undoubtedly the point. 18, rue du Fort Wedell is where Kohl and his coworkers churn out tax schemes, for companies like Pearson and GlaxoSmithKline, that are the sole reason Luxembourg appears in the news.

Kohl is the head of Sociétés 6. The other five Sociétés divide their labors as follows:

Sociétés 1: ArcelorMittal, RTL Group, SES, Postes &Telecommunications Enterprises Luxembourg, Guardian group, Cactus, Match, Auchan and Monopol stores.

Sociétés 2: religious associations, the Friob group, and global corporations located in unlikely towns and hamlets from Bertrange to Winseler. It is precisely in places like that the 1,000s of sociétés anonymes listed in Perrin’s documents have established their world headquarters, at least on paper. The pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline, under Kohl’s purview in Sociétés 6, makes its home in the suburban hamlet of Mamer, just off the roadway to Belgium.

Sociétés 3: partnerships, limited partnerships, real estate companies, economic interest groups and European economic interest groups.

Sociétés 4: Commercial, industrial and craft groups covered by public law, associations and other communities; limited liability companies.

Sociétés 5: Farming cooperatives, resident commercial groups, insurance companies, the ASSEP savings and pension group, the CEPAL group.

Publicly available information all of the above, and no warrant to indict anyone. But one’s curiosity is piqued reading a list such as that in Sociétés 1: what exactly is the present relationship between ArcelorMittal – a steel and mining transnational operating in over 60 countries worldwide, with revenue of USD 93.97 billion as of March 21, 2012 – and Luxembourg? We know that its owner, Lakshmi Mittal, exploits his resident status to pay no taxes in the UK where he lives. So we are entitled to a few suspicions.4

Lazy Sods

Perrin went to no. 18, with camera and crew, on an official visit, hoping to find Marius Kohl and importune him with a few questions. Perrin had ample evidence that Kohl’s office was the most important of the bureaus, approving tax agreements for thousands of companies.

It was a weekday but, surprisingly, Marius Kohl wasn’t around. He had taken a day off, or so the pesky crew was told.

“In fact he was there. Later that afternoon, after we had left the building, I saw him quickly peer out his office window, but we didn’t have time to get a picture before he hurried back to his desk.”

“Luxembourg is not a big country,” Perrin continued. “There are only two men above Kohl, Pascale Toussing, Assistant Director, and Guy Heintz, Director of the International section at Contributions Directes; after that, one meets the Finance Minister, Luc Frieden. That’s the beauty of the place. Luxembourg is too small to ever produce an anomaly in its tax regime, and if you are seeking a safe haven for your money, it’s fast and easy.”

But not so fast and easy for some. The team from Cash Investigations, accompanied by Richard Brooks of Private Eye, slipped in the door to see if they could find Kohl, only to confront the haughty regard of the Luxembourgeois, who looked at them like losers.

“I learned how condescending the Luxembourgeois could be towards the bloody French,” Perrin told me. “We were the lazy sods, the 35-hour a week gang, a bunch of inefficient Latin peasants. In a way, it’s not so very different from the way the Flemish regard the Wallons in Belgium, who lost their dominance to the new rich on the block, those who wisely chose a new and more productive way. Luxembourg lost its industry and settled on finance. They feel proud of it, and they should.”

From Luxembourg’s point of view, France’s loss is their gain. If the French had made other arrangements, companies like Arcelor and stars like Gerard Depardieu, who handed in his passport and fled to Belgium, would never have slipped across the border. Such is the attitude in all tax paradises towards troublesome outsiders: here they are, the peasants, with mud on their shoes, looking for dirt.

If the Cash Investigations group had no luck cornering Kohl, they fared better with Luc Frieden, who serves as public point man for Luxembourg’s ingenious interpretation of European law and thus consented to letting himself be interviewed later on screen. Frieden is the heir apparent in Luxembourg and he takes his role seriously. Perhaps he saw the interview as one more skirmish in the war of the tax havens, to lift a phrase from Nicholas Shaxson. Frieden did not, in any case, count on Elise Lucet, who conducted the interview.

“If the description you made is accurate, I find it unacceptable”

Luc Frieden is a member of the Christian Social People’s Party, and currently serves as Finance Minister. He, and not Vice-Premier and Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, takes the lead in the tricky business of fending off attacks on Luxembourg’s status quo. He is on record as saying, “Our financial approach is totally European and applies all laws in the struggle against financial criminality.” He is very careful in his choice of words.5

It’s very rare for a senior official in a tax haven to speak publicly and on the record. Readers of Shaxson’s invaluable Treasure Islands know the many tactics, from coöptation to contempt to outright threats, that are employed to avoid doing exactly that. So it’s worthwhile to watch Frieden closely while he dances around the issues. It exposes the logic tax havens use to keep a respectable face on what they do.

For the sake of brevity, the interview is excerpted here.6

Cash Investigations: We’ve seen a lot of those docs. They cover Liechtenstein, the Caymen Islands and… Luxembourg. If we’re talking about tax havens, we find you, Luxembourg, in the middle of those schemes.

Luc Frieden: We abide by European law, which is not the case with all the countries you just mentioned. We should be compared to the UK and the Netherlands.

CI: So you reject the term tax haven?

LF: Absolutely. It’s an insult to my country because Luxembourg abides by every single OECD convention and we work in close cooperation with every single EU state. You cannot prove that Luxembourg does not adhere to EU law.

CI: But we’ve seen all the [tax haven] schemes and you are in league with those countries. You say it’s an insult to your country to be called a tax haven but you are always mentioned with those other countries. So, according to you, are Liechtenstein and the Caymens fiscal paradises?

LF: I’m not sufficiently versed in the tax laws of those countries or regions to be able to judge.

*

CI: If a large French company makes use of a subsidiary in Luxembourg, a non-active subsidiary, and succeeds in avoiding taxes in France, what happens?

LF: If it’s contrary to European law, and if the French mention it to us, I will take care to make sure it doesn’t happen.

CI: You won’t bring it up yourself?

LF: I would only be aware of it if the French tell me there’s a problem.

*

CI: When a French company has an office which it shares along with 31 other subsidiaries and where, quite blatantly, nothing goes on except for financial movement, for you as Finance Minister in Luxembourg, is this something you find shocking? I need to know your real position on this.

LF: Yes. If the description you made is accurate, I find it unacceptable.

CI: When the ATAs allow GlaxoSmithKline, for example, to avoid paying 40 million in taxes in their country, it’s a problem, isn’t it?

LF: Yes, I agree.

Impeccable manners indeed, and yet, by the end of the interview, the Finance Minister’s mask has slipped somewhat. His impeccable manners are still in place and if he isn’t exactly sweating his body language has changed, he’s leaning back to avoid Lucet’s punches, and, in a nice close-up, wringing his hands nervously. He has finessed the fight to a draw but not without making a few intriguing admissions.

To The Edge Of The Cliff For The View

If we step back briefly in time, to 2008-09, we can see what Frieden is nervous about. With the world’s economy hovering near the precipice, industrialized nations, the G20, the OECD were all seemingly caught by surprise. Et Alors!?! They had to do something to counter the crisis, and tax havens were certainly part of it. Instead of taking action, they decided to draw up lists.7

In 2008 Senator Barack Obama co-sponsored the Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act with Senator Carl Levin.  It raised temperatures in the Duchy: Luxembourg figured prominently in its list of tax havens. In early March the bill, with Obama now President, was reintroduced, and on April 2, the G20 was to meet in London to discuss the crisis.

“Even before the new Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act was introduced in both houses of Congress on 2 March, Frieden was considerably worried about Luxembourg’s inclusion on any number of lists,” according to the American ambassador, Ann Wagner.

Diplomatic cables between Luxembourg and Washington tell the tale. Released by Wikileaks as 09Luxembourg100, they present a vivid portrait of Luxembourg’s response to the crisis. They are excerpted here.8

On March 23, 2009, Frieden visited the offices of the U.S. Treasury in Washington D.C. to discuss “updating existing information exchange protocols.” At the same time, his boss, Prime Minister Juncker, lashed out at OECD’s proposed “black list” of tax havens as “incomprehensible, while singling out certain U.S. states as tax havens.” A stupendous piece of logic: the lists should not exist, but if they do, Luxembourg should not be on them, and if we must have them, Delaware goes first.

“A flurry of back door diplomacy and and visits by Treasury Minister Frieden to Paris, Berlin and Washington followed Luxembourg’s 13 March announcement that it would take the necessary steps to come into compliance with OECD standards on banking secrecy. Minister Frieden confided to Ambassador that Prime Minister Juncker tasked him to ‘do whatever it takes’ to stay off any lists.”

“3. (C) Prime Minister Frieden visited with Treasury officials in Washington 23 March to discuss what his country could do to remain off any blacklist. While under pressure from Germany and France and pending G20 or OECD announcement of a blacklist, the GoL exhibitied enormous anxiety over its inclusion on a list within Senator Levin’s Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act… Frieden’s visit with Treasury officials proved positive. Luxembourg agreed to offer a one-issue protocol without asking for any concessions. Negotiations appear to be imminent on an amendment to the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA)…”

While Luc Frieden was nervously playing down the international fracas through diplomatic and bureaucratic channels, the country’s Prime Minister, Jean-Claude Juncker continued on a tear, loudly protesting the existence of any lists at all. “4. (C) Despite Frieden’s eagerness to conclude an agreement, his boss Prime Minister Juncker has been taking pot shots at the U.S. Juncker has repeatedly mentioned states such as Delaware, Wyoming and Nevada, as well as the U.S. Virgin Islands as worthy of placement on a blacklist… Juncker told the press on 3 April that Luxembourg’s inclusion on an OECD gray list was ‘incomprehensible,’ repeating his criticism of the entire ‘list’ concept.”

Wagner appeared hopeful after a meeting with Frieden: “2. (S/NF) SUMMARY: Luxembourg Minister of Justice Luc Frieden… privately discussed with Ambassador the issue of USG’s perception of Luxembourg as a possible tax haven. Frieden’s discussions with the Ambassador indicate his and the GoL’s awareness that a dialogue must be initiated on the issue. Recent press coverage of U.S. tax fraud actions against Swiss bank UBS, combined with recent complaints about bank secrecy from powerful European Union neighbors have galvanized policymakers here. The introduction of a new ‘Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act’ in both houses has magnified Luxembourg’s anxiety.”9

On July 9, 2009 Luxembourg was removed from the OECD’s ‘gray list’ of tax havens after it signed a double information-sharing agreement with Norway. Barely two months later, in September, French President Sarkozy, in one of his notorious fits of braggadoccio, announced that “Tax havens and bank secrecy are finished.”

As of 2011 Luxembourg ranked no. 3 on the Tax Justice Network’s Financial Secrecy Index, behind Switzerland and the Cayman Islands. It continues, as Richard Brooks observes in the film, to play a double game, profiting by its participation in the EU while offering the same benefits as a tax haven in sunnier parts of the world.

Wagner and the government she represented were played by two sharp operators who know how to wait out a storm. In essence, Frieden, the chosen son, schmoozed his way capitol to capitol, parlaying and placating while Juncker stayed home and thundered to the cows on the hillsides, with the result that substantial changes in the outside world were averted and the local populace was once more induced to see Juncker and Frieden as their saviors. A roaring success.

Luc Frieden’s job is to make sure Sarkozy’s pronouncement never comes true for the country he one day hopes to lead.

*

For some reason I cannot get the scene in Quiet Days in Clichy out of my head, the one where the attentive cafe owner in Luxembourg has just handed Henry Miller and his friend Carl his business card, which says the bistro is “proudly Jew-free,” is then roundly cursed and insulted by his two visitors and finally collapses onto a chair flabbergasted, a bewildered wreck. “All they [the Luxembourgeois] were concerned about was to know which side of their bread was buttered. They couldn’t make bread but they could butter it.” Miller has other choice things to say about Luxembourg but then I think of Perrin’s comment that Luxembourg lost its industry and settled on finance, and if that gets taken away, what then? No one has imagined a future for the country. Frieden, like all pols, has no idea what comes next but he is determined to see it doesn’t happen. They exist to function as a brake on reality. That’s their job.    

Later this week or early next – if the world really hasn’t come to an end – we bid adieu to 2012 and Invisible Money – the latter for now at least – with a column that takes a close look at one of the most secretive politicians in Europe, a man who may have more control over European financial policy than any other.

Iddhis Bing 

1 67 trillion is the figure issued by the Financial Stability Board in their 2011 analysis. The FSB is a subgroup of the G20, one of many ‘powerful nation clubs’ (members include finance ministers and central bank governors from 20 major economies: 19 countries plus the European Union). So while the average pol might still claim ignorance, it is hard to see how their leaders can say they are, in George Bush’s immortal phrase, “out of the loop.”

2 Among the OECD’s 34 members are the United States, Russia, the EU member states, including what we might call the Premier League of tax havens such as Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and Switzerland.

3 For a portrait of two Swiss campaigners against bank secrecy, read this article in Der Spiegel.

4 The breakdown of Sociétés is here .

5 “Notre place financière est totalement européenne et applique toutes les règles de lutte contre la criminalité financière,” is a bit bold even for a ceaseless obsfucator like Frieden. June, 2006.

6 The full transcript will be posted on 99GetSmart.com in a day or so.

7 Despite the optimistic pronouncements, we are in all likelihood still standing at the edge of those scenic bluffs. Those who doubt it are referred to a pungent paragraph in Eric Toussaint’s Banks Versus The People: “Balance sheets of private banks are still packed with bad assets ranging from the completely toxic – veritable time bombs – to non-liquid assets… including assets of which the value is completely over-estimated in the banks’ balance sheets.” European leaders prefer to muddle through, have done nothing substantive about tax havens and when pinched, mutter the magic talisman, austerity. The Franco-Belgian bank Dexia has nearly tottered over three times in four years – October 2008, October 2011 and again in October of this year. The French and Belgian governments rescued them this time to the tune of 5.5 billion Euros. A mere bag of shells if one is in a generous mood but it begs the question, what’s so special about this bank? See Eric Toussaint, Six Years That Shook The Banking World.

8 Wikileaks published diplomatic cables between the American ambassador in Luxembourg, Ann Wagner, and Washington in the run-up to the April 2009 G20 conference in London and immediately after.

9 No one likes to spoil the mood these days so you really have to love “the perception of Luxembourg as a possible tax haven.” Perhaps all the tea cups in the Embassy would have shattered simultaneously if Wagner had said, “Luc, you’re a thief.” We’ll never make it through the apocalypse without a sense of humor.

*

Invisible Money Series by Iddhis Bing:

- Invisible Money 1: How It Gets That Way: http://99getsmart.com/?p=4736

- Invisible Money 2: Voyage to Luxembourg: http://99getsmart.com/?p=4914

- Invisible Money 3: http://99getsmart.com/?p=5319

- Invisible Money 4: Of Luxembourg, London and Paris, and a Lady Named Merkiavelli: http://99getsmart.com/?p=5411

 Posted by greydog at 9:48 AM  Tagged with: Cash Investigations, EU, Fiscal Paradises, Luc Frieden, Luxembourg, Marius Kohl, OECD, Pearson, SmithKlineGlaxo, Tax Havens

The World Bank must be held responsible

 Submitted Article  No Responses »
Dec 192012
 

Posted and translated by SnakeArbusto, 99GetSmart

arton8650-8e7a0

The World Bank must be held responsible

By Eric Toussaint, CADTM

This is the preface to the upcoming Japanese edition of Eric Toussaint’s book The World Bank: A Critical Primer (Pluto Press, London). The book was originally published in French in 2006. There are two English editions, one by Pluto Press in London and another by Vak in India. There are four Spanish editions: the first one published in Spain by Viejo Topo Banco Mundial : El golpe de estado permanente, the second in Ecuador by Abya-Yala, the third in Bolivia by Capitulo boliviano Derechos Humanos, and the fourth in Venezuela by Centro internacional Miranda (Banco Mundial : El Golpe de estado permanente). An Indonesian edition of the book is in preparation. A Pakistanis edition in Urdu and a Portuguese edition are also on way. The French edition is currently out of print, but is available for download free of charge in .pdf on the CADTM Web site. A new, updated edition will be published in 2014 to mark the seventieth year of the Word Bank’s existence.

Japan is the second-ranking power within the World Bank after the United States, with a little over 9% of the votes. Alone it has three times the number of votes allotted to China, and twice as many as Germany and France together. Japan’s citizens need to know about this international institution, which throughout its existence has nefariously undermined the fundamental human rights of the world’s peoples.

What is more, the projects it finances have a particularly damaging impact on the environment. Since the first edition of The World Bank: A Critical Primer in 2006, the policies conducted by the Bank have undergone no improvement. Its official discourse, which talks of protecting nature and the struggle against climate change, is no more than a mask for a policy which in fact increases emissions of greenhouse-effect gases.

The World Bank bears a large share of the responsibility for the food crisis that affected hundreds of millions of inhabitants of the countries of the global South in 2007-2008, and which is not over. During that time, the number of people suffering from hunger increased by 140 million, the result of a sharp 50% rise in food prices |1| in many developing countries. The Bank had recommended that the governments of the South stop maintaining the grain silos used to cover the domestic market in case of shortages or steep price increases. In coordination with the IMF, it encouraged the governments of the South to cut public credit for farmers, driving them into the clutches of private lenders (often large traders) or private banks exacting exorbitant rates. This caused much smallholder debt in India, Nicaragua, Mexico, Egypt and several countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. According to official studies, the high level of debt among Indian farmers has been the main cause of the suicides of 150,000 farmers in India over the past decade. India is one country where the World Bank has successfully persuaded the authorities to suppress public credit for farmers. That is not all: Over the past 40 years, the World Bank and the IMF have also coerced tropical countries into replacing staple-crop production with export crops (cocoa, coffee, tea, bananas, peanuts, flowers, etc.). Finally, to crown their efforts in favour of big agro-businesses and major grain exporting countries (the United States, Canada and Western Europe first among them), they also persuaded governments to open their internal markets to food imports which benefit from massive subsidies from governments in the North. This led to many producers in the South going bankrupt and to a severe reduction in local subsistence-crop production.

The World Bank also promotes a policy that encourages the grabbing of land traditionally farmed by smallholder farmers. Private multinational companies or foreign governments purchase hundreds of thousands of hectares of arable land outside their own borders, dispossessing smallholders and disorganising local production.

In 2009, at the height of a global crisis that sent the number of unemployed shooting skywards, the World Bank continued to advocate the elimination of social protection for workers. In Doing Business 2010 |2|, its widely circulated annual report published in September 2009, the Bank explains its strategy for fighting the informal economy by emphasising that “states with more flexible employment regulations saw a 25% larger decrease in informal firms”. Since its first report Doing Business 2003, the World Bank has issued an annual classification of those countries making the most reforms designed to improve the “business climate”. The objective is to constantly reinforce the rights of investors and private property to the detriment of social rights. In fact, to establish its ranking of the most “developed” economies, the World Bank uses an indicator relating to the hiring and firing of workers. The more a country’s legislation facilitates firing, the higher it is placed in the ranking. In spite of the many criticisms from social movements and the International Trade Union Confederation, the World Bank still persists in urging countries to lower severance pay and reduce or remove obligations regarding notice of termination.

By way of example, Rwanda in 2009 showed the greatest progress, and for good reason: Employers there are no longer obligated to engage in prior consultation with employees’ representatives or give notice to the labour inspectorate prior to “reorganisation”. On the other hand, Portugal has gone down in the ranking for extending the notice-of-termination period by two weeks. The list of countries downgraded for (slightly) improving workers’ conditions is a long one. This doesn’t stop the World Bank from affirming with extraordinary confidence that “the Doing Business Employing Workers indicators are fully consistent with the core labour standards but do not measure compliance with them”. However, Belarus, which has been stripped of EU trade preferences for having violated fundamental conventions of the International Labour Organisation (ILO), scored high in Doing Business 2010. A rise in the Doing Business classification is not good news for a country’s population, it is a sign of social regression.

Finally, it should be noted that the Bank is understandably satisfied with the record-breaking number of anti-social reforms implemented this year, and congratulates Eastern Europe, “particularly active this year”. |3| In fact, since 2008 some fifteen countries in that region have signed agreements with the IMF, and the World Bank, using the pretext of the global crisis, certainly intends to encourage a new offensive of Capital against Labour.

The World Bank faces a crisis of legitimacy due to the accumulated negative effects of its policies and the fact that it has been headed, since its inception, by a United States citizen designated by Washington. When The World Bank: A Critical Primer was published in French in 2006, Paul Wolfowitz, one of the strategists of the invasion of Iraq by the United States and its allies in 2003, had just begun his term of office as tenth president of the World Bank. He was forced to resign in June 2007, guilty of favouritism toward his companion, to whom he had given a large salary increase. Robert Zoellick, his replacement between 2007 and 2012, reinforced the neoliberal image of the World Bank; he had earlier been US Trade Representative under the Bush administration. He led the United States delegation in the WTO negotiations, in particular at the Doha meeting in 2001. The nomination of the current president, Jim Yong Kim, by Barack Obama in June 2012 raised a storm of protest. His name suggested that he was Korean, but in reality yet another United States citizen has been put in control of the World Bank.

For several decades, systematically, the Japanese authorities have been actively complicit in the activities of the World Bank. It is high time that Japan’s citizens demand accountability from their country’s representatives at the World Bank and support the populations of the countries of the global South who are gradually freeing themselves from its grasp. Ecuador is one example. The authorities in Quito, backed by the population, expelled the permanent representative of the World Bank in May 2007, began a debt-audit process, and finally decided in 2010 to withdraw from the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID), the World Bank’s tribunal. Bolivia had made that same decision in 2007, and Venezuela followed in 2012. These three countries have decided to institute a Bank of the South (BancoSur) along with four other South American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay). This proves that there are alternatives to the World Bank, and alternatives are indispensable given the extremely questionable nature of the Bank’s actions since its creation, which what follows will make clear.

Eric Toussaint
Liège, December 2012

Translated by ‘Snake’ Arbusto and Mike Krolikowski

Footnotes

|1| See Eric Toussaint “Getting to the roots of the food crisis”

|2| http://www.doingbusiness.org/docume…
Doing Business 2010 is the seventh edition of a series of annual reports on regulations that facilitate or complicate the practice of doing business. The report presents quantitative indicators on the regulations of companies and the protection of property rights in a comparison of 183 countries. Regulations having repercussions on ten stages in the life cycle of a company are evaluated: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, employing workers, registering property, getting credit, protecting investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and closing a business. The data for Doing Business 2010 date from June 1, 2009. The indicators serve to analyse economic results and to determine which reforms were effective, and why. The 2010 report covers 183 countries.

|3| http://www.doingbusiness.org/featur… “Doing Business in 2010: A record in business regulation reform”

 Posted by greydog at 11:20 AM  Tagged with: anti-social reforms, CADTM, Eric Toussaint, Fascism, food crisis, global crisis, unemployment, World Bank, World Bank / fascists, World Bank land grabs, world poverty

The ECB and the Fed at the service of the major private banks

 Submitted Article  No Responses »
Dec 162012
 

By Eric Toussaint, CADTM

fed-seal-300x300

Part One of this series is entitled “2007-2012: Six years that shook the banking world” and was published on 2 December, 2012.

The actions of the European Central Bank and the “Fed” |1|

Beginning in June 2011, the European banks entered a highly critical phase. Their situation was almost as serious as on 15 September, 2008, after the failure of Lehmann Brothers. Many of them were threatened with asphyxia because their massive needs for short-term financing (a few hundred billion dollars) were no longer being met by the American money market funds, who felt that the situation of the European banks was decidedly becoming more and more risky |2| . The banks were in danger of being unable to honor their debts. That is when the ECB, following an emergency European summit held on 21 July, 2011 to deal with the prospect of a series of bank failures, resumed massive purchasing of Greek, Portuguese, Irish, Italian and Spanish public-debt securities from the banks in order to provide cash flow and relieve them of a part of the securities they had greedily purchased during the preceding period. But it was not enough to prevent the banks’ shares from continuing to drop. The executives of these banks spent August on a tightrope. The decisive action that kept the European banks afloat was the extension by the ECB, beginning in September 2011 and in consultation with the Fed, the bank of England and the Swiss National Bank, of an unlimited line of credit. Banks that were starved for dollars and euros were put on life support. They began to breathe again; but the treatment was insufficient. Their share prices continued to plunge. Between 1 January and 21 October, 2011, the price of shares in France’s BNP Paribas dropped 33.3%, and in Deutsche Bank 28.8%; Barclays dropped 30.5% and Crédit Suisse 36.7%, and Société Générale plummeted 52.8%. The ECB was forced to bring out its heavy artillery – an LTRO (Long Term Refinancing Operation). Between December 2011 and February 2012, it lent more than 1,000 billion euros for a duration of 3 years at an interest rate of 1% to just over 800 banks.

The Fed had been doing no differently since 2008, at an even lower official rate. A July 2011 report from the GAO (US Government Accountability Office) revealed that the Fed has lent 16,000 billion dollars at below 0.25% |3| . The report shows that in pursuing such policies, the Fed did not adhere to its own prudential rules and did not inform Congress. According to an investigative commission of the United States Congress, there was clearly collusion between the Fed and the major private banks: “The CEO of JP Morgan Chase served on the New York Fed’s board of directors at the same time that his bank received more than $390 billion in financial assistance from the Fed. Moreover, JP Morgan Chase served as one of the clearing banks for the Fed’s emergency lending programs.” |4| According to former French Prime Minister Michel Rocard and economist Pierre Larrouturou, based on research done by the New York financial agency Bloomberg, the Fed lent part of the amount mentioned above at a rate that was even much lower: 0.01%. Michel Rocard and Pierre Larrouturou stated in the daily Le Monde: “After studying 20,000 pages of various documents, Bloomberg shows that Federal Reserve secretly lent the troubled banks the sum of 1,200 billion at the incredibly low rate of 0.01%. |5| ]]]] They ask the question: “Is it normal in a crisis for the private banks, who are usually financed at 1% by the Central Banks, to benefit from a rate of 0.01%, when in times of crisis certain States are obliged to pay rates 600 or 800 times higher?”

The major European banks also had access to such loans from the Fed until early 2011 (Dexia received a loan of 159 billion dollars |6|, Barclays $868 billion, the Royal Bank of Scotland $541 billion, Deutsche Bank $354 billion, UBS $287 billion, Crédit Suisse $260 billion, BNP-Paribas $175 billion, Dresdner Bank $135 billion and Société Générale $124 billion). The fact that this financing of European banks via the Fed dried up (in particular due to pressure from the US Congress) was one reason why the American money market funds also began shutting off the spigot of loans to the European banks as from May-June 2011.
What were the effects of the ECB making 1,000 billion euros available to the banks at 1%?

In 2012, the banks used the new flow of cash to make massive purchases of public debt securities in their own countries. Let’s take the example of Spain. The Spanish banks borrowed 300 billion euros from the ECB at 3 years at a rate of 1% in the LTRO framework |7|. With part of that money, they greatly increased their purchases of debt securities issued by the Spanish authorities. The evolution is quite striking: As of late 2006, the Spanish banks only held 16 billion euros of public securities from their own country. In 2010, they increased their purchases of Spanish public securities, to a level of 63 billion. In 2011, they again increased their purchases, and their holdings in Spanish securities amounted to 94 billion. But thanks to the LTRO, their acquisitions literally exploded – the volume of their holdings doubled in a few months to reach 184.5 billion euros in July 2012. |8| Clearly the operation was very profitable for them. Whereas they were borrowing at 1%, they could buy 10-year Spanish securities with an interest rate that varied between 5.5 and 7.6% in the second semester of 2012.

Now let’s look at the example of Italy. Between late December 2011 and March 2012, the Italian banks borrowed 255 billion euros from the ECB within the LTRO framework |9|. Whereas in late 2010 the Italian banks held 208.3 billion euros in bonds from their country, that amount increased to 224.1 billion in late 2011, a few days after the start of the LTRO. Then, they used the credits they received from the ECB to make massive acquisitions of Italian securities. In September 2012, the total value of the securities amounted to 341.4 billion euros |10|. As in the case of Spain, it was a very profitable operation – they borrowed at 1% and by purchasing 10-year Italian securities, they obtained an interest rate that varied from 5% to 6.6% in the second semester of 2012.

The same phenomenon was repeated in most euro zone countries. A part of the assets of the European banks were relocated to their countries of origin. Concretely, what happened is that the share of public debt of a given country held by the financial institutions in that same country increased very perceptibly during 2012. That development reassured the governments of the euro zone, in particular those of Spain and Italy, since they found that they had less difficulty in selling their bond issues. The ECB seemed to have found the solution. Lending massively to the private banks saved them from a critical situation and spared certain governments the pain of launching new bank bailout plans. The money lent to the banks was used in part to purchase public debt securities from euro zone States. This stopped the increase in interest rates in the most fragile countries and even resulted in lower rates for certain others.

It’s easy to see that, from the point of view of the interests of the populations of the countries concerned, a very different approach should have been adopted – the ECB should have lent directly to the governments at less than 1% (as has it done for the private banks since May 2012), or even without interest. The banks should also have been socialized under citizen control.

Instead, the ECB put the private banks on life support by extending an unlimited line of credit at a very low interest rate (between 0.75 and 1%). The banks used this windfall of public financing in different ways. As we just saw, on the one hand, they purchased sovereign-debt securities from countries like Spain and Italy who, under pressure from the banks, granted them high rates of remuneration (between 5 and 7.6% at 10 years). On the other hand, they deposited a part of the credit that had been extended to them by the ECB… in the ECB! Between 300 and 400 billion were deposited by the banks with the ECB as call money at a rate of 0.25% in early 2012 and 0% since May 2012. Why did they do this? Because they needed to show other bankers and private suppliers of credit (money market funds, pension funds, insurance companies) that they have ready cash to face the potential explosion of the time bombs that are on their books. Without this, potential lenders would shun them, or else demand very high interest rates. With the same objective of reassuring private lenders, they also purchased sovereign bonds from governments who are free of risk in the short or middle term – Germany, Holland, France, etc. The demand was such that 2-year bonds of the governments in question sold at a rate of 0% or even with a slightly negative yield (not counting inflation). The rates paid by Germany and the other countries that are considered financially sound dropped considerably thanks to the ECB’s policy and the increasing seriousness of the crisis affecting the periphery countries. This resulted in a flight of capital from the European periphery towards the center. German securities are so sure that in need of cash, they may be negotiated overnight without loss. Banks acquire them not for the purpose of earning money, but to have deposits or highly liquid securities in the ECB that are immediately available, so as to create the impression (often a false one) of solvency and to deal with unforeseen events. They make profits by lending to Spain and Italy, and that averages out certain losses they might take on the German securities. It is very important to stress the fact that the banks did not increase their loans to households and companies, whereas one of the official goals of the ECB loans was to increase such credit in order to stimulate the economy.

What do the elites feel about the ECB?

For a moment, let’s judge the ECB’s actions from the point of view of the wealthiest 1% of the population. The official discourse insists that the ECB has made a successful transition between its former president, France’s Jean-Claude Trichet, and the new president, Mario Draghi |11|, a former governor of the bank of Italy and former Vice-President of Goldman Sachs Europe. The ECB and the leaders of the main European countries negotiated a reduction of the Greek debt by convincing the private banks to accept a “haircut” of approximately 50% on their holdings and by getting the Greek government to undertake a new, radical austerity plan that includes massive privatizations and abandon of a large part of the country’s sovereignty. As from March 2012, representatives of the Troika took up permanent residence in ministries in Athens in order to keep a close watch over the country’s accounts. New loans to Greece are granted through an account directly controlled by the European authorities, who thus have the power to block them. What takes the cake is that new Greek debt issues are no longer under the jurisdiction of the Greek courts; the new bonds are subject to English law, and any disputes between the Greek State and private creditors will be settled in Luxembourg |12|.

That’s not all: Under pressure from the ECB and European leaders, Giorgos Papandreou’s PASOK government, which was very docile but more and more unpopular, was replaced – without election – by a New Democracy-PASOK national unity government, with key roles given to ministers who are directly linked to the banking world.

To complete the picture of the situation, there were three other key advantages for the ECB and the European leaders:

1. Silvio Bersluconi was forced to resign and was replaced by a government of technicians, led by Mario Monti, a former European commissioner who is very close to the banking world and capable of imposing an extension of neoliberal policies on Italy |13|.

2. In Spain, the head of the government that has been in place for a few months, Mariano Rajoy of the People’s Party, is also preparing to radicalize the neoliberal policies of his predecessor, Socialist José Luis Zapatero.

3.The European leaders |14| have agreed on a stability pact that will institutionalize budgetary austerity, abandonment by the Member States of more of their national sovereignty, and further submission to the logic of private capital. Finally, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) will soon enter into force and will make it easier to bail out States and banks |15| during inevitable future banking crises, and also EU Member States in need of financing.

These various examples show that European leaders serving the interests of capital have succeeded in marginalizing the legislative powers even further by simply riding roughshod over democracy. In any case, how can we call “democracy” a system under which voters who want to massively reject austerity can no longer express their choice through their vote, or in which the political force of the vote is canceled because the result is not in conformity with the wishes of those in power – as in 2005 in France and in Holland following the rejection of the European Constitution Treaty, or in Ireland and Portugal after the elections in 2011, or again in France and Holland after the 2012 elections. Everything is being set up so that the room for manoeuvre of the nationa |16|l governments and public authorities is limited by a European contractual framework that is more and more constraining. This is an extremely dangerous tendency – unless, of course, those governments, with the support of their populations, decide to disobey.

So if we put ourselves in the place of Mario Draghi, the main European leaders, and the banks, we can see that they must be extremely pleased with the events of March-April 2012. Everything seemed to be succeeding.

The limits of the success of the ECB and the European leaders

Then the dark clouds began to gather. The trouble began in May 2012, when Bankia, Spain’s fourth-largest bank, headed by the former Managing Director of the IMF, Rodrigo de Rato, announced its state of virtual insolvency. Depending on the source, the Spanish banks needed to be recapitalized to the tune of somewhere between 40 and 100 billion euros, and Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, who did not want to ask for a bailout from the Troika, was in a very difficult position. |17|Added to that was a series international banking scandals – the one involving manipulation of the Libor, the London interbank lending rate, being the most sensational – involving a dozen major banks. The Libor scandal came on top of revelations of reprehensible conduct by HSBC involving laundering drug money and other criminal dealings.

In France, a majority of voters rejected Nicolas Sarkozy. François Hollande was elected on 6 May, 2012; but that was not really a disquieting development for international finance, since the French Socialists, like the other European Socialist parties, can be counted on to show pragmatism and to continue austerity policies. Still, the French people are unpredictable and capable of various types of excesses once they decide that a real change is needed…

In Greece, the situation is more difficult for the ECB, since SYRIZA – the radical-Left coalition who promise to abrogate the austerity measures, suspend reimbursement of the debt, and defy the European authorities – could well win an electoral victory. For the champions of European austerity, such an occurrence must be prevented at any cost. On the evening of 17 June, 2012, there was great relief at the ECB, in Europe’s seats of government, and in the boardrooms of the major corporations: The rightist party New Democracy was ahead of SYRIZA. Even France’s new Socialist president expressed satisfaction with the results. The following day, the markets breathed again, and austerity, stabilization of the euro zone, and the balancing of the accounts of the private banks could continue.

(to be continued)
Part 3 of this series will deal with the two major goals being pursued by the European leaders – successfully completing the most vicious assault on social rights since the Second World War and avoiding a new financial / banking crash that could prove to be worse than that of September 2008.

Translation : ‘Snake’ Arbusto and Mike Krolikowski

 

Footnotes

|1| The Bank of England and other central banks follow more or less the same policy.

|2| In August 2011 I described the situation at a time when few financial commentators were mentioning it. See the series entitled “In the eye of the storm: the debt crisis in the European Union”: “They (= the European banks) have always financed their loans to European States and companies using loans they themselves took out from the US money market funds – and they continue to do so. Those money market funds were scared by what is happening in Europe … So by June 2011, that source of low-interest finance had just about dried up, which has hurt major French banks most. This was what precipitated the tumble they took on the Stock Exchange and led to the increase of pressure on the ECB to buy back their bonds and thus provide them with new money. In short, this demonstrates the extent of the knock-on effect between the economies of the USA and the EU. It further explains the continual contact between Barack Obama, Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy, the ECB, the IMF… and the major banks from Goldman Sachs to BNP Paribas and the Deutsche Bank. A breakdown in the flow of dollar-loans to European banks could cause a very serious crisis in the Old World, just as difficulties encountered by European banks in repaying their US lenders could trigger off a new crisis on Wall Street”. (http://cadtm.org/In-the-eye-of-the-…, September 2011). A recent study by the bank Natixis confirms the distress of the French banks during the summer of 2011: Flash Economie, “Les banques françaises dans la tourmente des marchés monétaires”, 29 October 2012. We quote: “Between June and November 2011, the American money market funds suddenly withdrew the bulk of their financing from the French banks. (…) The French banks faced a shortfall of 140 billion USD in short-term financing in late November 2011, and none of them was spared.” (http://cib.natixis.com/flushdoc.asp…). That cut-off also affected the majority of the other European banks, as the study published by Natixis also shows.

|3| GAO, “Federal Reserve System, Opportunities Exist to Strengthen Policies and Processes for Managing Emergency Assistance”, July 2011, http://www.gao.gov/assets/330/321506.pdf. This report by the United States Government Accountability Office was conducted thanks to an amendment to the Dodd-Frank Act (see below) introduced by senators Ron Paul, Alan Grayson and Bernie Sanders in 2010. Bernie Sanders, an independent senator, made it public (http://www.sanders.senate.gov/imo/m… ). Also, according to an independent study by the Levy Institute, whose collaborators included such economists as Joseph Stiglitz, Paul Krugman and James K. Galbraith, the Fed’s credits reached an even higher level than that revealed by the GAO. The figure given was not 16,000 billion dollars, but 29,000 billion. See James Felkerson, “$29,000,000,000,000: A Detailed Look at the Fed’s Bailout by Funding Facility and Recipient,”www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/w…

|4| http://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsr…

|5| Michel Rocard and Pierre Larrouturou: “Pourquoi faut-il que les Etats payent 600 fois plus que les banques ? (“Why should States pay 600 times what banks pay?”), Le Monde, 3 January 2012http://www.larrouturou.net/2012/01/…

|6| See page 196 of the GAO report mentioned above, which refers to loans to Dexia amounting to 53 billion dollars, which represents only a part of the loans granted to Dexia by the Fed.http://www.gao.gov/assets/330/321506.pdf

|7| Financial Times, “Banks plot early repayment of ECB crisis loans”, 15 November, 2012, p. 25.

|8| According to the Spanish financial daily El Economista, http://www.eleconomista.es/espana/n…

|9| Financial Times, ibid.

|10| See http://www.bancaditalia.it/statisti…, table 2.1a.

|11| Mario Draghi became president of the ECB on 1 November, 2011.

|12| See http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crise_…. See also Alain Salles and Benoît Vitkine, “Fatalisme face à un sauvetage échangé contre une perte de souveraineté,” Le Monde, 22 February 2012,http://www.forumfr.com/sujet448690-….

|13| Mario Monti, prime minister since 13 November, 2011, was appointed senator for life by the President of the Republic, Giorgio Napolitano. On the occasion of his appointment, he left several positions of responsibility: the presidency of Italy’s most prestigious private university, Bocconi; the European chairmanship of the Trilateral Commission, one of the most important forums of the international oligarchic elite; his participation in the Steering Committee of the powerful Bilderberg Group, and the presidency of the neoliberal think tank Bruegel. Monti was an international advisor to Goldman Sachs from 2005 to 2011 (as a member of the Research Advisory Council of the Goldman Sachs Global Market Institute), and was appointed European Commissioner for the Internal Market (1995-1999), then European Commissioner for Competition (1999-2004) in Brussels. He has been a member of the Senior European Advisory Council of Moody’s, an advisor to Coca Cola, and is still one of the presidents of the Business and Economics Advisory Group of the Atlantic Council (an American think that promotes US leadership) and a member of the Praesidium of Friends of Europe, an influential think tank based in Brussels.

|14| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

|15| At a European summit held 21 June, 2012, it was decided that the ESM would also be used to bail out banks. At the time, this was presented by Mariano Rajoy as a victory that would enable Spain to escape the new conditions imposed by the European Commission or the Troika. Rajoy explained that the aid to be granted by the ESM to the Spanish banks would not be counted as part of Spain’s public debt, which the leaders of several Euro zone countries (Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, etc.) contested, as did the IMF. As of the end of November, 2012, there was still no consensus on the matter.

|16| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

|17| With the exception of those of the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic

Eric Toussaint, Senior Lecturer at the University of Liège, is president of CADTM Belgium (Committee for the Abolition of Third-World Debt) and a member of the Scientific Committee of ATTAC France. He is the author, with Damien Millet, of AAA. Audit Annulation Autre politique, Seuil, Paris, 2012.

 Posted by greydog at 1:11 PM  Tagged with: CADTM, The ECB and the Fed at the service of the major private banks

This Is Your Future 3: Greek Medicine and the ICC

 Greece, Iddhis Bing, Submitted Article  No Responses »
Dec 142012
 

By Iddhis Bing, 99GetSmart

A soup kitchen in Athens. Photo: Louisa Gouliamaki /AFP/Getty.

Greek Medicine And The ICC

The Cat only grinned when it saw Alice. It looked good-natured, she thought: still it had very long claws and a great many teeth, so she felt that it ought to be treated with respect. - Alice in Wonderland, chapter VI

This article is in three parts: excerpts from and brief comments on an amicus brief filed to the International Criminal Court in the Hague; some facts on the ground in Germany at present; the latest information, as of press time, on Doctor Kosmopoulos’s situation in Athens. It’s a long piece, so thanks for your patience.

1.

And so we return to the game of cat and mouse, in which the mouse is Greece, in danger of being swallowed whole. But who is the cat? That’s the part of the picture we don’t see. Like Alice, we see only the smile in the tree – an appropriate place for this Cheshire cat, looking down from high above.

Because discussions are so often seen through a lens of Germany vs. Greece, or Europe vs. the Piigs, with the people of Europe on the sidelines, it might be useful to get other opinions.

This summer, journalists Georgios Tragkas, Panagiotis Tzenos, and Antonios Prekas, along with Dimitrios Konstantaras of the Nea Democratica party, filed suit at the International Criminal Court in the Hague, against Christine Lagarde of the IMF, Herman van Rompuy (President of the European Council), Jose Manuel Barroso (President of the European Commission), German Chancellor Angela Merkel and that country’s Minister of Finance, Dr. Wolfgang Schäuble. The charge: Crimes Against Humanity, as defined by the Rome Statute.1

That passed with little notice. But a curious thing happened in the last week of November. A supporting, or amicus, brief has been filed that backs up the original charges, with compelling evidence.

Sarah Luzia Hassel-Reusing is a practicing psychologist and human rights activist in Wuppertal, Germany. And one non-Greek on whom the meaning of solidarity is not lost.

Her thirty-page ICC filing substantiates, in copious detail, the charge of Crimes Against Humanity for actions carried out as part of the various Greek debt rescues, which have resulted in destruction of Greek medicine, their hospitals, doctors and their all too frequently malnourished patients.2

Readers should do a bit of research on Crimes Against Humanity. Wikipedia has the full text of the Rome Statute. Briefly, a crime against humanity is defined as taking place when someone knowingly attacks a civilian population, and does this either as part of a larger plan or systematically (art. 7 of the Rome Statute). In addition, Hassel-Reusing cites the UN Social Pact (Articles 11 and 12, the universal human rights to food and health). The ICC is now part of the apparatus of world law and as such has prosecuted well-known cases from Serbia to Ruanda.

Hassel-Reusing argues that the real motive behind the Greek debt arrangements is “to give more stability to the financial sector (especially the big banks, according to the „too big to fail“ hypothesis), than is allowed… to financial means, which must remain to fulfill those obligations secured by human rights, and [more] than the peoples themselves, if they were fully informed and asked, would ever allow.”

She further states that, “What the IMF has done to the health systems in countries such as Albania, Bangla Desh, Brazil, Ghana, India, Peru, Ruanda, Romania, Somalia, Ukraine, and Vietnam, threatens all states within the Eurozone. [...] The Greek people today are being used as a test case within the Eurozone for this. [Emphasis added.]

In addition, given the scarcity of food in Greece, and the growing crisis of malnutrition, Hassel-Reusing argues that, “The [expected] loss of human life in the Eurozone is… [more] comparable to Ruanda (hundred of thousands) than to recent cases in Nigeria (Boko Haram suspected of more than 1,000 deaths) or Guinea (army suspected for more than 150 deaths). So I request giving the official start of investigations on Greece the timely priority adequate to the systematic attack and the large scope.” She then goes on to provide documentation for the loss of life in Nigeria and Guinea.

(English translations of the brief are far from perfect. I have made minor alterations.)

I hope the friend who wrote to me about lazy bastards in Greece is reading the following two excerpts: “The memorandum of understanding of the troika (EU Commission, International Monetary Fund, and European Central Bank) in the scope of financial support of the EFSF of February 2012 obliged Greece, to direct all revenues of the state onto a blocked account, [predominately] to pay external creditors.”Hassel-Reusing, as she does throughout the brief, provides essential documentation.3

“As of 09.03.2012 credits of circa 1.4 billion € from various public institutions, among them universities and hospitals, have been completely taken away without warning from one day to another, and have been transferred to the blocked account at the Bank of Greece, which has already been implemented according to the memorandum of understanding. Even public hospitals have suddenly been without credit in their bank accounts, with respective effects on their work.”4

This goes a long way toward explaining why men such as Giorgos Kosmopoulos and Dimitris Christoulas have seen their pensions vanish into thin air. In what way is this justifiable as a method of financial correction? It is theft.

Other sections of Part III present a devastating picture of the specific effects that “debt relief” has had on the Greek people’s ability to secure medical care. It goes much further than the Le Monde article cited in the last This Is Your Future, and is amply detailed and sourced. Section III.4 (“The attack on nutrition in Greece,” mislabelled III.5 in the English version) is devastating: with approximately 439,000 children living under the poverty line in Greece, more than 400,000 are reaching severe stages of malnutrition. (Assertions documented in detail.)

Section III.5 looks at conditions in Portugal and Spain, which are, through the various debt arrangements, veering in the same direction. One quote will suffice: “The Red Cross, for the first time in the country’s history, has asked for food donations in view of 300,000 severly malnourished people.” Documented again.5

Is this or is it not a humantarian catastrophe heretofore unimaginable within the European Union’s borders? Perhaps the people of Europe should stop blaming Greece while chanting, It can’t happen here. It can.

And so the case sits with Mrs. Fatou Bensouda, Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in a shiny modern office tower on Maanstraat in the Hague. You may or may not have much faith in such institutions but it will be interesting to see how the game plays out. Will Hassel-Reusing’s brief get any traction at the ICC? In one sense it doesn’t matter. Her direct confrontation of business as usual means that fault lines are appearing, that the case against is too overwhelming from both the financial standpoint, where it cannot show a single success except on banks’ ledger sheets, to the reality of what is being done to Greece, which is a human disaster.

I urge readers to seek out the full document.

2.

We have, I think, identified the cat who is swallowing Greece. Let’s take a step back and look at the people presumibly paying the tab for this bailout: not the Greeks, but the Germans (and other Northern Europeans) who are funding it all – at least according to widely held belief. And because they are seeing their finances make the trip from their pockets to Greece and then to the banks in Greece, France and Germany, they are watching their living standards and infrastructure decline.

This is what a reader of my columns in Berlin wrote. It’s her take on German realities here and now, and as such are only one person’s opinion. But they are valuable not only because they contradict the dominant message abroad these days, which is, in part, Prosperous, hardworking Germans have a system that is the envy of all Europe. This is what she wrote:

“The whole world seems to think that Germany’s economy is doing great. It isn’t true. Fewer and fewer people can live by their salaries, more and more are subsidized by the state (i.e., welfare – which doesn’t show up in unemployment statistics), or they take part-time work at 4 Euros an hour or less, under impossible conditions with no minimum wage.

“German efficiency? Over. Things are crumbling here, too, people just pretend that they’re not. Infrastructure, health care, education, etc. – all spiraling downwards. Although we Germans are still rich in comparison with other countries.”

This tallies, at least in part, with observations made by the sociologist Ulrich Beck that Germans now “fear for their retirement, their little house and their economic miracle.” It also bring us a closer to the uncomfortable truth that great numbers of people see what is happening but prefer to act as if they don’t.6

Of course, this is easy to dismiss as “anecdoctal evidence.” That being the case, you might want to read an article from the current Der Spiegal, “Gap between Rich and Poor Grows in Germany.”7

(I would be interested to hear from people around Europe, with details of the effects austerity has had on their region.)

3.

As of Friday morning, December 14, Doctor Kosmopoulos and his family remain barricaded in their two-story flat in Athens with the Stop Cartel cam keeping an eye out front. He has accepted the reality that if he is to work in Greece, it will likely be in a location far from Athens. Doctors in Athens are presently paid about 1,200 Euros a month, and those in the rural Peloponnese, where Kosmopoulos would have to move, approximately 700. It amounts to a kind of internal exile.

To end on a happier note, truckers have not only offered to move and store his family’s belongings for free, but they have also interceded with the landlord and have secured an extension against the eviction – until Monday. Everyone in the family has now arranged for other places to stay. Authorities, however, are still threatening to come by later today to change the locks on the apartment.

Iddhis Bing

Paris

Many thanks to G.A. and Olivier Nourisson for help with photos, and to Linda Ross for updates.

1 The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court is the treaty that established the ICC in 1998. As of February 2012, 121 states are party to the statute.

2 Full text: www.scribd.com/doc/protected/100418463. Also: http://syrizapaianiaglykanera.wordpress.com/news-in-english/

3 German and English translation of the German Bundestag memorandum of understanding via Greece, February 2012, file number „Drucksache 17/8731“). http://dipbt.bundestag.de/dip21/btd/17/087/1708731.pdf

4 http://hellasfrappe.blogspot.gr/2012/03/how-venizelos-regime-robbed-state.html

5 www.taz.de/1/archiv/print-archiv/printarchiv/digi-artikel/? ressort=wu&dig=2012%2F10%2F12%

6 Beck’s essay appeared as Angela Merkel, nouveau Machiavel, in Le Monde, November 13, 2012.

7 http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/gap-between-rich-and-poor-grows-in-germany-a-856445.html and http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-30/german-unemployment-rises-for-a-fifth-month-amid-crisis.html

————————

RELATED ARTICLES: 

- Part 1: THIS IS YOUR FUTURE – Fast track evictions rampant in Greece: http://99getsmart.com/this-is-your-future/

- Part 2: This Is Your Future 2: Doctor Kosmopoulos And The Destruction of Greek Medicine: http://99getsmart.com/this-is-your-future-2-doctor-kosmopoulos-and-the-destruction-of-greek-medecine/

 

 Posted by greydog at 4:24 PM  Tagged with: Antonios Prekas, Dimitrios Konstantaras, Georgios Tragkas, greece, healthcare, International Criminal Co, Kosmopoulos, Medicine, Panagiotis Tzenos, Sarah Luzia Hassel-Reusin

The Anti-Empire Report by William Blum

 Submitted Article  No Responses »
Dec 122012
 

By William Blum, 99GetSmart

“Nuclear, ecological, chemical, economic — our arsenal of Death by Stupidity is impressive for a species as smart as Homo sapiens” 1

The hurricanes, the typhoons, the heat waves … the droughts, the heavy rains, the floods … ever more powerful, ever new records being set. Something must be done of course. Except if you don’t believe at all that it’s man-made. But if there’s even a small chance that the greenhouse effect is driving the changes, is it not plain that, at a minimum, we have to err on the side of caution? There’s too much at stake. Like civilization as we know it. Carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere must be greatly curtailed.

The three greatest problems facing the beleaguered, fragile inhabitants of this lonely planet are climate change, economic crisis, and the violence of war. It is my sad duty to report that the United States of America is the main culprit in each case. Is that not remarkable?

Why does Barack Obama not pursue the battle against climate change with the same intensity he pursues war? Why does he not seek to punish the American bankers and stockbrokers responsible for the financial calamity as much as he seeks to punish Julian Assange and Bradley Manning?

In both cases he’s putting the interests of the corporate world before anything else. No amount of fines or penalties will induce corporate leaders to modify their behavior. Only spending some hard time in a prison cellblock might cause the growth in them of their missing part, the part that’s shaped like a social conscience.

Only prosecuting George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and their partners in bombing and torture will discourage future American war lovers from following in their bloody footsteps.

The recent election result can only embolden Obama. He likely took it as an affirmation of his policies, although only 29.3% of those eligible to vote actually voted for him. And an unknown, but certainly significant, number of those who did so held their nose while voting for the supposed lesser of two evils. Hardly indicative of impassioned support for his policies.

Last week the United Nations Climate Summit was held in Doha, Qatar. The comments which came from many of the activists (as opposed to various government officials) were doomsdayish … “Time is running out … time has already run out … the climate has already changed … Hurricane Sandy, rising sea levels, the worst is yet to come.” The Kyoto protocol is still the only international treaty stipulating cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. It’s a touchstone for many environmentalists. But the United States has never ratified it. At the previous conferences in Copenhagen and Durban, the US blocked important global action and failed to honor vital pledges.

At the Doha conference the US was acutely criticized for failing to take the lead on planet protection, especially in light of its standing as the largest historic contributor to the current levels of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere. (“The most obdurate bully in the room”, declared the Indian environmentalist, Sunita Narain. 2)

What motivates the American representatives, now as before, as ever, is concern about corporate profits. Cutting back on greenhouse gas emissions can hurt the bottom line. A suitable epitaph for the earth’s tombstone. Shamus Cooke, writing on ZSpace, sums it up well: “Thus, if renewable energy is not as profitable as oil — and it isn’t — then the majority of capitalist investing will continue to go towards destroying the planet. It really is that simple. Even the best-intentioned capitalists do not throw their money away on non-growth investments.”

A brief history of Superpowers

From the Congress of Vienna of 1815 to the Congress of Berlin in 1878 to the “Allies” invasion of Russia in 1918 to the formation of what became the European Union in the 1950s, the great powers of Europe and the world have gotten together in grand meeting halls and on the field of battle to set the ground rules for imperialist exploitation of Latin America, Africa, Asia, and Australasia, to Christianize and ‘civilize’, to remake the maps, and to suppress revolutions and other threats to great-power hegemony. They have been deadly serious. In 1918, for example, some 13 nations, including France, Great Britain, Rumania, Italy, Serbia, Greece, Japan, and the United States, combined in a military invasion of Russia to “strangle at its birth” the nascent Bolshevik state, as Winston Churchill so charmingly put it.

And following World War 2, without any concern about who had fought and died to win that war, the Western powers, sans the Soviet Union, moved to create the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO, along with the European Union, then joined the United States in carrying out the Cold War and preventing the Communists and their allies from coming to power legally through elections in France and Italy. That partnership continued after the formal end of the Cold War. The United States, the European Union, and NATO are each superpowers, with extensive military, as well as foreign policy integration — almost all EU members are also members of NATO; almost all NATO members in Europe are in the EU; almost all NATO members have had a military contingent serving under NATO and/or the US in Iraq, Afghanistan, the Balkans and elsewhere.

Together, this Holy Triumvirate has torn apart Yugoslavia, invaded and devastated Afghanistan and Iraq, crippled Iran, Cuba and others with sanctions, overthrown the Libyan government, and are on the verge now of the same in Syria. Much of what the Triumvirate has told the world to justify this wanton havoc has concerned Islamic terrorism, but it should be noted that prior to the interventions in Iraq, Libya and Syria all three countries were secular and modern. Will the people of those sad lands ever see that life again?

In suppressing the left in France and Italy, and later in destabilizing the governments of Libya and Syria, the Holy Triumvirate has closely aligned itself with terrorists and terrorist methods to a remarkable extent. 3 In Syria alone, it would be difficult to name any Middle East terrorist group associated with al Qaeda — employing their standard car bombings and suicide bombers — that is not taking part in the war against President Assad with the support of the Triumvirate. Is there anything — legally or morally — the Triumvirate regards as outside its purview? Any place not within its geographical mandate? Britain and France have now joined Turkey and Arabian Peninsula states in recognizing a newly formed opposition bloc as the sole representative of the Syrian people. “From the point of view of international law, this is absolutely unacceptable,” Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev declared. “A desire to change the political regime of another state by recognizing a political force as the sole carrier of sovereignty seems to me to be not completely civilised.” France was the first Western state to recognize the newly-formed Syrian National Coalition and was swiftly joined by Britain, Italy and the European Union. 4 The neck irons tighten.

The European Union in recent years has been facing a financial crisis, where its overriding concern has been to save the banks, not its citizens, inspiring calls from the citizenry of some member states to leave the Union. I think the dissolution of the European Union would benefit world peace by depriving the US/NATO mob of a guaranteed partner in crime by returning to the Union’s members their individual discretion in foreign policy.

And then we can turn to getting rid of NATO, an organization that not only has a questionable raison d’être in the present, but never had any good reason-to-be in the past other than serving as Washington’s hit man. 5

The United Nations vote on the Cuba embargo — 21 years in a row

For years American political leaders and media were fond of labeling Cuba an “international pariah”. We don’t hear that any more. Perhaps one reason is the annual vote in the United Nations General Assembly on the resolution which reads: “Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States of America against Cuba”. This is how the vote has gone (not including abstentions):

Year Votes (Yes-No) No Votes
1992 59-2 US, Israel
1993 88-4 US, Israel, Albania, Paraguay
1994 101-2 US, Israel
1995 117-3 US, Israel, Uzbekistan
1996 138-3 US, Israel, Uzbekistan
1997 143-3 US, Israel, Uzbekistan
1998 157-2 US, Israel
1999 155-2 US, Israel
2000 167-3 US, Israel, Marshall Islands
2001 167-3 US, Israel, Marshall Islands
2002 173-3 US, Israel, Marshall Islands
2003 179-3 US, Israel, Marshall Islands
2004 179-4 US, Israel, Marshall Islands, Palau
2005 182-4 US, Israel, Marshall Islands, Palau
2006 183-4 US, Israel, Marshall Islands, Palau
2007 184-4 US, Israel, Marshall Islands, Palau
2008 185-3 US, Israel, Palau
2009 187-3 US, Israel, Palau
2010 187-2 US, Israel
2011 186-2 US, Israel
2012 188-3 US, Israel, Palau

Each fall the UN vote is a welcome reminder that the world has not completely lost its senses and that the American empire does not completely control the opinion of other governments.

How it began: On April 6, 1960, Lester D. Mallory, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, wrote in an internal memorandum: “The majority of Cubans support Castro … The only foreseeable means of alienating internal support is through disenchantment and disaffection based on economic dissatisfaction and hardship. … every possible means should be undertaken promptly to weaken the economic life of Cuba.” Mallory proposed “a line of action which … makes the greatest inroads in denying money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.” 6 Later that year, the Eisenhower administration instituted the suffocating embargo against its eternally-declared enemy.

Placing American presidents in their proper context

“Once upon a time there was a radical president who tried to remake American society through government action. In his first term he created a vast network of federal grants to state and local governments for social programs that cost billions. He set up an imposing agency to regulate air and water emissions, and another to regulate workers’ health and safety. Had Congress not stood in his way he would have gone much further. He tried to establish a guaranteed minimum income for all working families and, to top it off, proposed a national health plan that would have provided government insurance for low-income families, required employers to cover all their workers and set standards for private insurance. Thankfully for the country, his second term was cut short and his collectivist dreams were never realize. His name was Richard Nixon.” 7

Films on US foreign policy

The Power Principle is a series of three films by Scott Noble. Part one, “Empire”, is the only one I’ve seen completely so far and I can say that it’s great stuff. The three parts, with their times, are:

  • Part 1: Empire (1h 35m)
  • Part 2: Propaganda (1h 38m)
  • Part 3: Apocalypse (1h 10m)

Featured in the films are Noam Chomsky, Michael Parenti, John Stockwell, Christopher Simpson, Ralph McGehee, Philip Agee, Nafeez Ahmed, John Perkins, James Petras, John Stauber, Russ Baker, Howard Zinn, William Blum, Nancy Snow, William I. Robinson, Morris Berman, Peter Phillips, Michael Albert, and others of the usual suspects.

To comment about these films or others by Scott Noble, write to him at dmacab9@hotmail.com.

Much more publicized is the new film and book by Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick. Entitled The Untold History of the United States, it is a 10-part series appearing on Showtime. Only Stone’s name could get this dark side of US history and foreign policy on mainstream television. It will be interesting to observe what the mass media has to say about this challenge to some of America’s most cherished beliefs about itself.

Notes

  1. Jeanette Winterson, The New York Times, September 17, 2009 ↩
  2. Democracy Now!, December 7, 2012 ↩
  3. For France and Italy, see Operation Gladio Wikipedia; and Daniele Ganser, Operation Gladio: NATO’s Top Secret Stay-Behind Armies and Terrorism in Western Europe (2005) ↩
  4. Agence France Presse, November 26, 2012↩
  5. For the best coverage of the NATO monolith, sign up with StopNATO. To get on the mailing list write to Rick Rozoff at r_rozoff@yahoo.com. To see back issues at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stopnato ↩
  6. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1958-1960, Volume VI, Cuba (1991), p.885 ↩
  7. From the review of the book: I am the change: Barack Obama and the Crisis of Liberalism by Charles Kesler. Review by Mark Lilla, The New York Times Book Review, September 30, 2012, p.1 ↩

–

William Blum is the author of:

  • Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 2
  • Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower
  • West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir
  • Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire

Portions of the books can be read, and signed copies purchased, at www.killinghope.org

 

 Posted by greydog at 9:53 AM  Tagged with: The Anti-Empire Report by William Blum

“Legal Imperialism” and International Law:  Legal Foundations for War Crimes, Debt Collection and Colonization

 Prof. James Petras, Submitted Article  1 Response »
Dec 032012
 

By James Petras, 99GetSmart

Introduction

By now we are familiar with imperial states using their military power to attack, destroy and occupy independent countries.  Boatloads of important studies have documented how imperial countries have seized and pillaged the resources of mineral-rich and agriculturally productive countries, in consort with multi-national corporations.  Financial critics have provided abundant data on the ways in which imperial creditors have extracted onerous rents, royalties and debt payments from indebted countries and their taxpayers, workers, employees and productive sectors.

What has not been examined fully is the over-arching legal architecture which informs, justifies and facilitates imperial wars, pillage and debt collection.

The Centrality of Imperial Law

While force and violence, especially through overt and covert military intervention, have always been an essential part of empire-building, it does not operate in a legal vacuum: Judicial institutions, rulings and legal precedents precede, accompany and follow the process of empire building.  The legality of imperial activity is based largely on the imperial state’s judicial system and its own legal experts.  Their legal theories and opinions are always presented as over-ruling international law as well as the laws of the countries targeted for imperial intervention.  Imperial law supersedes international law simply because imperial law is backed by brute force; it possesses imperial/colonial air, ground and naval armed forces to ensure the supremacy of imperial law.  In contrast, international law lacks an effective enforcement mechanism.  Moreover, international law, to the extent that it is effective, is applied only to the weaker powers and to regimes designated by the imperial powers as ‘violators’. The very judicial processes, including the appointment of judges and prosecutors who interpret international law, investigate international crime and arrest, sentence and punish ‘guilty’ parties are under to the influence of the reigning imperial powers.  In other words, the application and jurisdiction of international law is selective and subject to constraints imposed by the configurations of imperial and national power.  International law, at best, can provide a ‘moral’ judgment, a not insignificant basis for strengthening the political claims of countries, regimes and people seeking redress from imperial war crimes and economic pillage. To counter the claims and judgments pertaining to international law, especially in the area of the Geneva protocols such as war crimes and crimes against humanity, imperial legal experts, scholars and judges have elaborated a legal framework to justify or exempt imperial-state activity.

The Uses of Imperial Law

Empire-building throughout history is the result of conquest – the use or threat of superior military force.  The US global empire is no exception.  Where compliant rulers ‘invite’ or ‘submit’ to imperial domination, such acts of treason on the part of ‘puppet’ or ‘client’ rulers usually precipitate popular rebellions, which are then suppressed by joint imperial and collaborator armies.  They cite imperial legal doctrine to justify their intervention to repress a subject people in revolt.  While empires arose through the direct or indirect use of unbridled force, the maintenance and consolidation of empires requires a legal framework.  Legal doctrines precede, accompany and follow the expansion and consolidation of empire for several reasons.

Legality is really an extension of imperial conquest by other means.  A state of constant warfare raises the cost of imperial maintenance. Force, especially in imperial democracies undermines the sense of civic virtue, which the rulers and citizens claim to uphold.  Maintaining ‘law and order’ in the conquered nations requires a legal system and doctrine to uphold imperial rule, giving the facade of legitimacy to the outside world , attracting collaborator classes and individuals and providing the basis for the recruitment of local military, judicial and police officials.

Imperial legal pronouncements, whether issued directly by executive, judicial, military or administrative bodies, are deemed the ‘supreme law of the universe’, superior to international law and protocols fashioned by non-imperial authorities and legal experts.  This does not imply that imperial rulers totally discard international law: they just apply it selectively to their adversaries, especially against independent nations and rulers, in order to justify imperial intervention and aggression – Hence the ‘legal bases’ for dismantling Yugoslavia or invading Iraq and assassinating its rulers.

Legal rulings are issued by the imperial judiciary to force states to comply with the economic demands of multi-national corporations, banks, creditors and speculators, even after the local or national courts have ruled such claims unlawful.  Imperial law protects and provides sanctuary and financial protection to convicted former collaborator-rulers charged with human rights crimes, pillage of public treasury and destruction of democratic institutions.  Imperial judicial and administrative agencies selectively investigate, prosecute and levy severe fines and even jail sentences on banks, individuals and financial institutions of their competitor imperial countries, thereby strengthening the economic position of their own ‘national’ imperial firms.

Judicial officials are not only ‘instruments’ of closely related imperial political and economic powers; they also instrumentalize and, in some cases, override officials from other branches of their own imperial government and economic sectors.  Judges, with ties to particular financial sectors, may rule in favor of one group of creditors thereby prejudicing others.  In a recent ruling,  a New York judge ruled in favor of the demands by minority creditors that the Argentine government make ‘full payment’ on long-standing national debt in, prejudicing already agreed upon payments to the majority of creditors who had negotiated an earlier debt-restructuring arrangement.

Imperial legal doctrine has played a central role in justifying and providing a basis for the exercise of international terrorism.  Executives, such as US Presidents Bush and Obama, have been provided with the legal power to undertake cross-national ‘targeted’ assassinations of opponents using predator drones and ordering military intervention, in clear violation of international law and national sovereignty.  Imperial law, above all else, ‘legalizes’ aggression and economic pillage and undermines the laws of targeted countries, creating lawlessness and chaos among its victims.

Imperial law and judicial rulings form the basis for imperial subjugation on the assumption that the world legal systems are multi-tiered:  Imperial-centered legal systems supersede those of less powerful states.  Within each ‘tier’ there are further refinements: Competing imperial legal systems adjudicate in favor of their partisan political and economic elites.  Imperial clients who obey their imperial overlords are favored by imperial laws while imperial laws are applied against their adversaries.

Conclusion

Clearly in a world imperial system there can be no independent judicial bodies who abide by universally accepted legal codes.  Each set of judicial authorities reflect and actively promote policies favoring and extending their imperial prerogatives. There are rare exceptions where a judge will rule against a particular imperial policy but over the long run imperial law guides judicial opinions

Imperial legal doctrines and judicial decisions set the groundwork for imperial wars and economic pillage.  The empire’s legal experts redefine assassinations, coercion, torture and arbitrary arrests as compatible with the ‘constitutional order’ by claiming imminent and constant threats to the security of the imperial state.

Law is not simply part of the superstructure “reflecting” the power of economic or political institutions:  it also guides and directs political and economic institutions committing material resources to implement imperial doctrines.

In this sense, imperial rulers are not ‘lawless’ as some liberal critics would argue; they function in accordance with ‘imperial jurisprudence’ and are faithful to the legal doctrines of empire building.  It is pointless to argue that most imperial leaders trample on constitutional guarantees and international laws.  If an imperial ruler pursued a “constitutional agenda” eroding imperial prerogatives or, even worse, applied international law to prosecute those carrying out brutal imperial policy, he would be quickly condemned for dereliction of duty and/or immoral behavior and impeached or overthrown.

 Posted by greydog at 3:09 PM  Tagged with: “Legal Imperialism” and International Law:  Legal Foundations for War Crimes, Debt Collection and Colonization, empire building, international
 Older Entries

Get this blog via email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Categories

  • Activism (65)
  • Anthony Verias (1)
  • Art (14)
  • Book Review (2)
  • CADTM (6)
  • Demonstration (8)
  • DEN PLIRONO (19)
  • Editorial (18)
  • Elias Theodoropoulos (1)
  • Global Occupation (104)
  • Greece (174)
  • Iddhis Bing (9)
  • Information (34)
  • Interviews (66)
  • Lecture (5)
  • Photo Essay (5)
  • Photos (22)
  • Police Brutality (6)
  • Political Humor (2)
  • Prof. James Petras (71)
  • READ (313)
  • Satire (1)
  • SnakeArbusto (4)
  • Spain (7)
  • Spanish (55)
  • StopCartel TV transcripts (63)
  • Submitted (88)
  • Submitted Article (122)
  • Video (204)
  • William Blum (5)

Recent Comments

  • Friday READ – 17 May 2013 | OccuWorld on The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: The 1% Strike Back Against Occupy Movement
  • greydog on Flamenco Barcelona Presents: 50 años sin Carmen Amaya dentro de la Semana de Poesia de Barcelona
  • dsentor on Monday READ 13 May 2013
  • francesco on Flamenco Barcelona Presents: 50 años sin Carmen Amaya dentro de la Semana de Poesia de Barcelona
  • greydog on Flamenco Barcelona Presents: 50 años sin Carmen Amaya dentro de la Semana de Poesia de Barcelona

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Blogroll

  • A Place Called Space
  • Alternet
  • Americablog
  • Anti Gold Greece
  • askaboutfukushimanow
  • Brad Blog
  • Brian J. Foley
  • Buzzflash
  • CADTM
  • Common Dreams
  • Counterpunch
  • Dahr Jamail
  • Demotix
  • Den Plirono
  • Energy News
  • Eschaton
  • Fictionaut
  • Firedoglake
  • Glenn Greenwald
  • Global Issues
  • Hullabaloo
  • I Don't Pay Movement
  • Information Clearing House
  • James Petras
  • Keep Talking Greece
  • LEFT.gr
  • Matt Taibbi
  • Naked Capitalism
  • Occupied Greece
  • OpEdNews
  • RoarMag
  • SnakeArbusto
  • Stop Cartel
  • StopNATO
  • Take the Square
  • Talking Points Memo
  • TechDirt
  • The Big Picture
  • The Occupied Wall Street Journal
  • This Can't Be Happening
  • Truthout
  • Washington's Blog
  • Zero Hedge
© 2011 99GetSmart Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha