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stealing nations: Monbiot
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globalisation Stealing Nations source: monbiot.com The International Monetary Fund does not make its "mistakes" by accident.
For how much longer should we give those who run the global economy
the benefit of the doubt? The International Monetary Fund has made the
same "mistake" so many times that only one explanation appears to remain:
it is engineering disaster.
The crises over which it has presided in Thailand, South Korea, Russia
and Argentina are well documented, by Joseph Stiglitz, the former chief
economist of the World Bank, among others.1 But we have, until now, lacked
a comprehensive description of the way it worked in eastern Europe. A new
book by the economist Pongrac Nagy shows for the first time how the IMF
smashed Hungary.2
Communist economic management was hopeless: coercive, unaccountable,
incompetent and wasteful. So when Hungary began to democratise in the late
1980s, it was plain that a new economic system was required. There were
a number of options for transition. But before anyone had considered them,
Hungary's naïve and trusting new government was persuaded by the western
powers that it had no alternative but to turn to the IMF.
Unless a country's economic policy is approved by the Fund, it cannot
obtain foreign capital. Post-communist Hungary needed foreign capital for
just one purpose: to help repay its enormous external debt. It could have
applied, as many other countries had done, for debt relief, but the Fund,
in the face of substantial evidence, told it that this would deter foreign
investors. The only option was to implement the policies the IMF recommended.
It has just one set of policies. Governments must impose restraints
upon the supply of money and credit, open the door to foreign capital,
privatise state assets and cut public spending. It justifies these demands
by persuading them that they are suffering from unmanageable debt and galloping
inflation.
So in 1990 the Fund told Hungary that it was undergoing an inflationary
crisis. Prices, it pointed out, had risen by 17% in 1989. In truth this
rise was caused not by inflation (demand outstripping supply), but mainly
by policy changes, such as the introduction of VAT and the abolition of
subsidies. The IMF insisted on pretending that it was caused by excess
demand.3
The best way of reducing demand, the Fund maintained, was to restrict
the amount of money the banks could lend. So between 1990 and 1996, the
central bank ensured that the credit made available to businesses halved.
The immediate and predictable result was that interest rates soared (to
50%), and businesses all over Hungary collapsed. As workers were sacked
and wages were cut, consumer demand crashed. The IMF, Nagy writes, had
"artificially plunged the Hungarian economy into its greatest ever depression
in peacetime".4 Between 1990 and 1993, Hungary's gross domestic product
fell by 18%.
Far from curing inflation, this treatment caused it. Between 1993 and
1996, prices rose by 130%. This was not because demand was rising, but
simply because it wasn't falling as fast as supply. But the IMF, once more,
treated this new problem as if it was caused by runaway demand. It insisted
on further economic restriction, which, predictably enough, pushed Hungary
further into depression.
To ensure that Hungary serviced its debt, the Fund demanded that it
cut every possible public service, and privatise every possible state asset.
Entire economic sectors were flogged swiftly and cheaply, with the result
that foreign corporations acquired complete market control. To ensure,
in the government's words, "the desirable reallocation of income ... towards
the business sector",5 Hungary was then obliged to introduce one of the
most regressive tax policies in the world: 43% of government revenue came
from taxes on consumption, but just 20% from income tax and 14% from business
taxes.
All this was carried out, as all IMF programmes are, in conditions of
total secrecy and institutional deceit. The lie the Fund tells is that
it simply approves the "letter of intent" written by a government, in which
the new economic policies are contained. This story relieves it of all
responsibility for what happens. But the letter of intent is actually written
by the IMF, and simply signed by the government. It is massive and detailed,
and guides the economic and political life of the nation for between one
and three years. It is entirely confidential. The only sight the people
of Hungary have ever received of IMF policy was a leaked letter from a
senior Fund official to the finance minister.6 His demands precisely matched
the policies the government was implementing.
One and a half million people (almost 30% of the workforce) lost their
jobs. The incomes of those who stayed in work declined by 24%; pensions
fell by 31%. By 1996, most people were living on or around subsistence
levels. Public services shrivelled. Between 1989 and 1998, the crime rate
rose by 166%. This, we must remember, was the result of a process almost
universally described as "the triumph of capitalism".
Then, in 1996, suddenly, without announcement or explanation, the policy
changed. The banks were permitted to start issuing credit again and the
recession, as a result, came to an immediate end. Over the next four years,
industrial production climbed by 45% and gross domestic product by 21%.
Wages and pensions began to rise again.
The experiment, in other words, could not have had a clearer outcome.
You apply the IMF's medicine and the economy collapses. You stop, and the
economy recovers. It has been repeated often enough for us to trust the
results. In Thailand, South Korea, Indonesia, Russia and Argentina, the
IMF's financial liberalisation and forced restrictions led to economic
crisis, which was relieved only as those restrictions were lifted. Those
nations which refused to take the medicine, even though they were confronting
almost identical conditions (Malaysia, China, Poland) prospered while their
neighbours collapsed.
So why, knowing what the results will be, does the IMF keep applying
the same formula for disaster? It has been imposed so often that this cannot
possibly be a mistake. And the results happen to suit its sponsors very
well. While the Fund works mainly in poor nations, it is controlled, through
its one-dollar, one-vote system, entirely by the rich. As a result, as
Stiglitz says, its programmes reflect "the interests and ideology of the
Western financial community".7
Desmond Tutu once remarked that "when the missionaries came to Africa,
they had the Bible and we had the land. They said 'let us close our eyes
and pray'. When we opened them, we had the Bible, and they had the land".
The Hungarians were handed the Bible of economic orthodoxy by its missionaries.
Through deceit and secrecy, the IMF ensured that their eyes were shut.
By the time they opened them, foreign banks and corporations owned the
economy; the public sector was giving way to foreign capital; structural
unemployment had produced a pliant and desperate workforce. The IMF, in
other words, had engineered the theft of an entire nation. How many more
times does this need to happen before we can see what the game is?
www.monbiot.com References: 1. Joseph Stiglitz, 2002. Globalization and its Discontents. Penguin/Allen Lane, London. 2. Pongrac Nagy, 2003. From Command to Market Economy in Hungary under the Guidance of the IMF. Akademiai Kiado, Budapest. 3. ibid 4. ibid 5. Government of the Republic of Hungary, September 1995. Medium-term economic strategy of the Hungarian Government, cited in Nagy, ibid. 6. Letter from Massimo Russon, Director of the Europe I Department of the IMF to Lakros Bokros, Hungarian Finance Minister, 1995, reproduced in Nagy, ibid. 7. Stiglitz, ibid.
19th August 2003 source: monbiot.com
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