by Andrew Gavin Marshall
February 22, 2010
from
GlobalResearch Website
Andrew Gavin Marshall is a Research Associate with the Centre for Research
on Globalization (CRG). He is currently studying Political Economy and
History at Simon Fraser University. |
Understanding the Nature of the Global Economic Crisis
The people have been lulled into a false sense of safety under the ruse of a
perceived “economic recovery.”
Unfortunately, what the majority of people
think does not make it so, especially when the people making the key
decisions think and act to the contrary. The sovereign debt crises that have
been unfolding in the past couple years and more recently in Greece, are
canaries in the coal mine for the rest of Western “civilization.”
The crisis
threatens to spread to Spain, Portugal and Ireland; like dominoes, one
country after another will collapse into a debt and currency crisis, all the
way to America.
In October 2008, the mainstream media and politicians of the Western world
were warning of an impending depression if actions were not taken to quickly
prevent this. The problem was that this crisis had been a long-time coming,
and what’s worse, is that the actions governments took did not address any
of the core, systemic issues and problems with the global economy; they
merely set out to save the banking industry from collapse.
To do this,
governments around the world implemented massive “stimulus” and “bailout”
packages, plunging their countries deeper into debt to save the banks from
themselves, while charging it to people of the world.
Then an uproar of stock market speculation followed, as money was pumped
into the stocks, but not the real economy. This recovery has been nothing
but a complete and utter illusion, and within the next two years, the
illusion will likely come to a complete collapse.
The governments gave the banks a blank check, charged it to the public, and
now it’s time to pay; through drastic tax increases, social spending cuts,
privatization of state industries and services, dismantling of any
protective tariffs and trade regulations, and raising interest rates.
The
effect that this will have is to rapidly accelerate, both in the speed and
volume, the unemployment rate, globally. The stock market would crash to
record lows, where governments would be forced to freeze them altogether.
When the crisis is over, the middle classes of the western world will have
been liquidated of their economic, political and social status. The global
economy will have gone through the greatest consolidation of industry and
banking in world history leading to a system in which only a few
corporations and banks control the global economy and its resources;
governments will have lost that right.
The people of the western world will
be treated by the financial oligarchs as they have treated the ‘global
South’ and in particular, Africa; they will remove our social structures and
foundations so that we become entirely subservient to their dominance over
the economic and political structures of our society.
This is where we stand today, and is the road on which we travel.
The western world has been plundered into poverty, a process long underway,
but with the unfolding of the crisis, will be rapidly accelerated. As our
societies collapse in on themselves, the governments will protect the banks
and multinationals. When the people go out into the streets, as they
invariably do and will, the government will not come to their aid, but will
come with police and military forces to crush the protests and oppress the
people.
The social foundations will collapse with the economy, and the state
will clamp down to prevent the people from constructing a new one.
The road to recovery is far from here. When the crisis has come to an end,
the world we know will have changed dramatically. No one ever grows up in
the world they were born into; everything is always changing. Now is no
exception.
The only difference is, that we are about to go through the most
rapid changes the world has seen thus far.
Assessing the Illusion of Recovery
In August of 2009, I wrote an article, Entering the Greatest Depression
in History, in which I analyzed how there is a deep systemic crisis in the
Capitalist system in which we have gone through merely one burst bubble thus
far, the housing bubble, but there remains a great many others.
There remains as a significantly larger threat than the housing collapse, a
commercial real estate bubble. As the Deutsche Bank CEO said in May of 2009,
“It's either the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning.”
Of even greater significance is what has been termed the “bailout bubble” in
which governments have superficially inflated the economies through massive
debt-inducing bailout packages. As of July of 2009, the government watchdog
and investigator of the US bailout program stated that the U.S. may have put
itself at risk of up to $23.7 trillion dollars.
[Entering the Greatest Depression in
History - August 7, 2009]
In October of 2009, approximately one year following the “great panic” of
2008, I wrote an article titled, The Economic Recovery is an Illusion, in
which I analyzed what the most prestigious and powerful financial
institution in the world, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), had
to say about the crisis and “recovery.”
The BIS, as well as its former chief economist, who had both correctly
predicted the crisis that unfolded in 2008, were warning of a future crisis
in the global economy, citing the fact that none of the key issues and
structural problems with the economy had been changed, and that government
bailouts may do more harm than good in the long run.
William White, former Chief Economist of the BIS, warned:
The world has not tackled the problems at the heart of the economic downturn
and is likely to slip back into recession. [He] warned that government
actions to help the economy in the short run may be sowing the seeds for
future crises.
[The Economic Recovery is an Illusion
- October 3, 2009]
Crying Wolf or Castigating Cassandra?
While people were being lulled into a false sense of security, prominent
voices warning of the harsh bite of reality to come were, instead of being
listened to, berated and pushed aside by the mainstream media.
Gerald Celente, who accurately predicted the economic crisis of 2008 and who had
been warning of a much larger crisis to come, had been accused by the
mainstream media of pushing “pessimism porn.”[1] Celente’s response has been
that he isn’t pushing “pessimism porn,” but that he refuses to push
“optimism opium” of which the mainstream media does so outstandingly.
So, are these voices of criticism merely “crying wolf” or is it that the
media is out to “castigate Cassandra”?
Cassandra, in Greek mythology, was
the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba of Troy, who was granted by the
God Apollo the gift of prophecy. She prophesied and warned the Trojans of
the Trojan Horse, the death of Agamemnon and the destruction of Troy. When
she warned the Trojans, they simply cast her aside as “mad” and did not heed
her warnings.
While those who warn of a future economic crisis may not have been granted
the gift of prophecy from Apollo, they certainly have the ability of
comprehension.
So what do the Cassandras of the world have to say today? Should we listen?
Empire and Economics
To understand the global economic crisis, we must understand the global
causes of the economic crisis. We must first determine how we got to the
initial crisis, from there, we can critically assess how governments
responded to the outbreak of the crisis, and thus, we can determine where we
currently stand, and where we are likely headed.
Africa and much of the developing world was released from the
socio-political-economic restraints of the European empires throughout the
1950s and into the 60s. Africans began to try to take their nations into
their own hands. At the end of World War II, the United States was the
greatest power in the world. It had command of the
United Nations, the
World
Bank and
the IMF, as well as setting up the NATO military alliance. The US
dollar reigned supreme, and its value was tied to gold.
In 1954, Western European elites worked together to form an international
think tank called the
Bilderberg Group, which would seek to link the
political economies of Western Europe and North America. Every year, roughly
130 of the most powerful people in academia, media, military, industry,
banking, and politics would meet to debate and discuss key issues related to
the expansion of Western hegemony over the world and the re-shaping of world
order.
They undertook, as one of their key agendas, the formation of the
European Union and the Euro currency unit.
[Controlling the Global Economy: Bilderberg, the
Trilateral Commission and the Federal Reserve. - August 3,
2009]
In 1971, Nixon abandoned the dollar’s link to gold, which meant that the
dollar no longer had a fixed exchange rate, but would change according to
the whims and choices of the
Federal Reserve (the
central bank of the United
States). One key individual that was responsible for this choice was the
third highest official in the U.S. Treasury Department at the time, Paul Volcker.[2]
Volcker got his start as a staff economist at the New York Federal Reserve
Bank in the early 50s. After five years there, “David Rockefeller’s Chase
Bank lured him away.”[3]
So in 1957, Volcker went to work at Chase, where
Rockefeller,
“recruited him as his special assistant on a congressional
commission on money and credit in America and for help, later, on an
advisory commission to the Treasury Department.”[4]
In the early 60s, Volcker went to work in the Treasury Department, and returned to Chase in
1965 “as an aide to Rockefeller, this time as vice president dealing with
international business.”
With Nixon entering the White House, Volcker got
the third highest job in the Treasury Department. This put him at the center
of the decision making process behind the dissolution of the Bretton Woods
agreement by abandoning the dollar’s link to gold in 1971.[5]
In 1973,
David Rockefeller, the then-Chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank and
President of the
Council on Foreign Relations, created the
Trilateral
Commission, which sought to expand upon the Bilderberg Group.
It was an
international think tank, which would include elites from Western Europe,
North America, and Japan, and was to align a “trilateral” political economic
partnership between these regions. It was to further the interests and
hegemony of the Western controlled world order.
That same year, the Petri-dish experiment of neoliberalism was undertaken in
Chile. While a leftist government was coming to power in Chile, threatening
the economic interests of not only David Rockefeller’s bank, but a number of
American corporations, David Rockefeller set up meetings between Henry
Kissinger, Nixon’s National Security Adviser, and a number of leading
corporate industrialists. Kissinger in turn, set up meetings between these
individuals and the CIA chief and Nixon himself. Within a short while, the
CIA had begun an operation to topple the government of Chile.
On September 11, 1973, a Chilean General, with the help of the CIA,
overthrew the government of Chile and installed a military dictatorship that
killed thousands. The day following the coup, a plan for an economic
restructuring of Chile was on the president’s desk. The economic advisers
from the University of Chicago, where the ideas of Milton Freidman poured
out, designed the restructuring of Chile along neoliberal lines.
Neoliberalism was thus born in violence.
In 1973, a global oil crisis hit the world. This was the result of the Yom
Kippur War, which took place in the Middle East in 1973. However, much more
covertly, it was an American stratagem.
Right when the US dropped the
dollar’s peg to gold, the State Department had quietly begun pressuring
Saudi Arabia and other OPEC nations to increase the price of oil. At the
1973 Bilderberg meeting, held six months before the oil price rises, a 400%
increase in the price of oil was discussed. The discussion was over what to
do with the large influx of what would come to be called “petrodollars,” the
oil revenues of the OPEC nations.
Henry Kissinger worked behind the scenes in 1973 to ensure a war would take
place in the Middle East, which happened in October. Then, the OPEC nations
drastically increased the price of oil. Many newly industrializing nations
of the developing world, free from the shackles of overt political and
economic imperialism, suddenly faced a problem: oil is the lifeblood of an
industrial society and it is imperative in the process of development and
industrialization. If they were to continue to develop and industrialize,
they would need the money to afford to do so.
Concurrently, the oil producing nations of the world were awash with
petrodollars, bringing in record surpluses. However, to make a profit, the
money would need to be invested. This is where the Western banking system
came to the scene. With the loss of the dollar’s link to cold, the US
currency could flow around the world at a much faster rate. The price of oil
was tied to the price of the US dollar, and so oil was traded in US dollars.
OPEC nations thus invested their oil money into Western banks, which in
turn, would “recycle” that money by loaning it to the developing nations of
the world in need of financing industrialization. It seemed like a win-win
situation: the oil nations make money, invest it in the West, which loans it
to the South, to be able to develop and build “western” societies.
However, all things do not end as fairy tales, especially when those in
power are threatened. An industrialized and developed ‘Global South’ (Latin
America, Africa, and parts of Asia) would not be a good thing for the
established Western elites. If they wanted to maintain their hegemony over
the world, they must prevent the rise of potential rivals, especially in
regions so rich in natural resources and the global supplies of energy.
It was at this time that the United States initiated talks with China.
The
“opening” of China was to be a Western project of expanding Western capital
into China. China will be allowed to rise only so much as the West allows
it. The Chinese elite were happy to oblige with the prospect of their own
growth in political and economic power. India and Brazil also followed suit,
but to a smaller degree than that of China.
China and India were to brought
within the framework of the Trilateral partnership, and in time, both China
and India would have officials attending meetings of the Trilateral
Commission.
So money flowed around the world, primarily in the form of the US dollar.
Foreign central banks would buy US Treasuries (debts) as an investment,
which would also show faith in the strength of the US dollar and economy.
The hegemony of the US dollar reached around the world.
[Controlling the Global Economy: Bilderberg, the
Trilateral Commission and the Federal Reserve
- August 3,
2009]
The Hegemony of Neoliberalism
In 1977, however, a new US administration came to power under the Presidency
of Jimmy Carter, who was himself a member of the Trilateral Commission. With
his administration, came another roughly two-dozen members of the Trilateral
Commission to fill key positions within his government.
In 1973, Paul Volcker, the rising star through Chase Manhattan and the Treasury Department
became a member of the Trilateral Commission. In 1975, he was made President
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the most powerful of the 12
regional Fed banks. In 1979, Jimmy Carter gave the job of Treasury Secretary
to the former Governor of the Federal Reserve System, and in turn, David
Rockefeller recommended Jimmy Carter appoint Paul Volcker as Governor of the
Federal Reserve Board, which Carter quickly did.[6]
In 1979, the price of oil skyrocketed again. This time, Paul Volcker at the
Fed was to take a different approach.
His response was to drastically
increase interest rates. Interest rates went from 2% in the late 70s to 18%
in the early 1980s. The effect this had was that the US economy went into
recession, and greatly reduced its imports from developing nations. A the
same time, developing nations, who had taken on heavy debt burdens to
finance industrialization, suddenly found themselves having to pay 18%
interest payments on their loans.
The idea that they could borrow heavily to
build an industrial society, which would in turn pay off their loans, had
suddenly come to a halt. As the US dollar had spread around the world in the
forms of petrodollars and loans, the decisions that the Fed made would
affect the entire world. In 1982, Mexico announced that it could no longer
service its debt, and defaulted on its loans.
This marked the spread of the
1980s debt crisis, which spread throughout Latin America and across the
continent of Africa.
Suddenly, much of the developing world was plunged into crisis. Thus, the
IMF and World Bank entered the scene with their newly developed “Structural
Adjustment Programs” (SAPs), which would encompass a country in need signing
an agreement, the SAP, which would provide the country with a loan from the
IMF, as well as “development” projects by the World Bank. In turn, the
country would have to undergo a neoliberal restructuring of its country.
Neoliberalism spread out of America and Britain in the 1980s; through their
financial empires and instruments - including the
World Bank and
IMF - they
spread the neoliberal ideology around the globe.
Countries that resisted neoliberalism were subjected to “regime change”.
This would occur through
financial manipulation, via currency speculation or the hegemonic monetary
policies of the Western nations, primarily the United States; economic
sanctions, via the United Nations or simply done on a bilateral basis;
covert regime change, through “colour revolutions” or coups, assassinations;
and sometimes overt military campaigns and war.
The neoliberal ideology consisted in what has often been termed “free market
fundamentalism.” This would entail a massive wave of privatization, in which
state assets and industries are privatized in order to become economically
“more productive and efficient.” This would have the social effect of
leading to the firing of entire areas of the public sector, especially
health and education as well as any specially protected national industries,
which for many poor nations meant vital natural resources.
Then, the market would be “liberalized” which meant that restrictions and
impediments to foreign investments in the nation would diminish by reducing
or eliminating trade barriers and tariffs (taxes), and thus foreign capital
(Western corporations and banks) would be able to invest in the country
easily, while national industries that grow and “compete” would be able to
more easily invest in other nations and industries around the world.
The
Central Bank of the nation would then keep interest rates artificially low,
to allow for the easier movement of money in and out of the country. The
effect of this would be that foreign multinational corporations and
international banks would be able to easily buy up the privatized
industries, and thus, buy up the national economy.
Simultaneously major
national industries may be allowed to grow and work with the global banks
and corporations. This would essentially oligopolize the national economy,
and bring it within the sphere of influence of the “global economy”
controlled by and for the Western elites.
The European empires had imposed upon Africa and many other colonized
peoples around the world a system of ‘indirect rule’, in which local
governance structures were restructured and reorganized into a system where
the local population is governed by locals, but for the western colonial
powers. Thus, a local elite is created, and they enrich themselves through
the colonial system, so they have no interest in challenging the colonial
powers, but instead seek to protect their own interests, which happen to be
the interests of the empire.
In the era of globalization, the leaders of the ‘Third World’ have been
co-opted and their societies reorganized by and for the interests of
the globalized elites. This is a system of indirect rule, and the local elites
becoming ‘indirect globalists’; they have been brought within the global
system and structures of empire.
Following a Structural Adjustment Program, masses of people would be left
unemployed; the prices of essential commodities such as food and fuel would
increase, sometimes by hundreds of percentiles, while the currency lost its
value. Poverty would spread and entire sectors of the economy would be shut
down. In the “developing” world of Asia, Latin America and Africa, these
policies were especially damaging. With no social safety nets to fall into,
the people would go hungry; the public state was dismantled.
When it came to Africa, the continent so rapidly de-industrialized
throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s that poverty increased by incredible
degrees.
With that, conflict would spread. In the 1990s, as the harsh
effects of neoliberal policies were easily and quickly seen on the African
continent, the main notion pushed through academia, the media, and policy
circles was that the state of Africa was due to the “mismanagement” by
Africans. The blame was put solely on the national governments. While
national political and economic elites did become complicit in the problems,
the problems were imposed from beyond the continent, not from within.
Thus, in the 1990s, the notion of “good governance” became prominent. This
was the idea that in return for loans and “help” from the IMF and World
Bank, nations would need to undertake reforms not only of the economic
sector, but also to create the conditions of what the west perceived as
“good governance.”
However, in neoliberal parlance, “good governance”
implies “minimal governance”, and governments still had to dismantle their
public sectors. They simply had to begin applying the illusion of democracy,
through the holding of elections and allowing for the formation of a civil
society.
“Freedom” however, was still to maintain simply an economic
concept, in that the nation would be “free” for Western capital to enter
into.
While massive poverty and violence spread across the continent, people were
given the “gift” of elections. They would elect one leader, who would then
be locked into an already pre-determined economic and political structure.
The political leaders would enrich themselves at the expense of others, and
then be thrown out at the next election, or simply fix the elections. This
would continue, back and forth, all the while no real change would be
allowed to take place. Western imposed “democracy” had thus failed.
An article in a 2002 edition of International Affairs, the journal of the
Royal Institute of International Affairs (the British counter-part to the
Council on Foreign Relations), wrote that:
In 1960 the average income of the top 20 per cent of the world’s population
was 30 times that of the bottom 20 per cent. By 1990 it was 60 times, ad by
1997, 74 times that of the lowest fifth. Today the assets of the top three
billionaires are more than the combined GNP [Gross National Product] of all
least developed countries and their 600 million people.
This has been the context in which there has been an explosive growth in the
presence of Western as well as local non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
in Africa. NGOs today form a prominent part of the ‘development machine’, a
vast institutional and disciplinary nexus of official agencies,
practitioners, consultants, scholars and other miscellaneous experts
producing and consuming knowledge about the ‘developing world’.
[...] Aid (in which NGOs have come to play a significant role) is
frequently portrayed as a form of altruism, a charitable act that enables
wealth to flow from rich to poor, poverty to be reduced and the poor to be
empowered.[7]
The authors then explained that NGOs have a peculiar evolution in Africa:
[T[heir role in ‘development’ represents a continuity of the work of their
precursors, the missionaries and voluntary organizations that cooperated in
Europe’s colonization and control of Africa. Today their work contributes
marginally to the relief of poverty, but significantly to undermining the
struggle of African people to emancipate themselves from economic, social
and political oppression.[8]
The authors examined how with the spread of neoliberalism, the notion of a
“minimalist state” spread across the world and across Africa. Thus, they
explain, the IMF and World Bank “became the new commanders of post-colonial
economies.”
However, these efforts were not imposed without resistance, as,
“Between 1976 and 1992 there were 146 protests against IMF-supported
austerity measures [SAPs] in 39 countries around the world.”
Usually,
however, governments responded with brute force, violently oppressing
demonstrations.
However, the widespread opposition to these “reforms” needed
to be addressed by major organizations and “aid” agencies in re-evaluating
their approach to ‘development’:[9]
The outcome of these deliberations was the ‘good governance’ agenda in the
1990s and the decision to co-opt NGOs and other civil society organizations
to a repackaged program of welfare provision, a social initiative that
could be more accurately described as a programme of social control.
The result was to implement the notion of ‘pluralism’ in the form of
‘multipartyism’, which only ended up in bringing,
“into the public domain the
seething divisions between sections of the ruling class competing for
control of the state.”
As for the ‘welfare initiatives’, the bilateral and
multilateral aid agencies set aside significant funds for addressing the
“social dimensions of adjustment,” which would “minimize the more glaring
inequalities that their policies perpetuated.”
This is where the growth of
NGOs in Africa rapidly accelerated.[10]
Africa had again, become firmly enraptured in the cold grip of imperialism.
Conflicts in Africa would be stirred up by imperial foreign powers, often
using ethnic divides to turn the people against each other, using the
political leaders of African nations as vassals submissive to Western
hegemony.
War and conflict would spread, and with it, so too would Western
capital and the multinational corporation.
Building a ‘New’ Economy
While the developing world fell under the heavy sword of Western neoliberal
hegemony, the Western industrialized societies experienced a rapid growth of
their own economic strength. It was the Western banks and multinational
corporations that spread into and took control of the economies of Africa,
Latin America, Asia, and with the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, Eastern
Europe and Central Asia.
Russia opened itself up to Western finance, and the IMF and World Bank swept
in and imposed neoliberal restructuring, which led to a collapse of the
Russian economy, and enrichment of a few billionaire oligarchs who own the
Russian economy, and who are intricately connected with Western economic
interests; again, ‘indirect globalists’.
As the Western financial and commercial sectors took control of the vast
majority of the world’s resources and productive industries, amassing
incredible profits, they needed new avenues in which to invest. Out of this
need for a new road to capital accumulation (making money), the US Federal
Reserve stepped in to help out.
The Federal Reserve in the 1990s began to ease interest rates lower and
lower to again allow for the easier spread of money. This was the era of
‘globalization,’ where proclamations of a “New World Order” emerged.
Regional trading blocs and “free trade” agreements spread rapidly, as world
systems of political and economic structure increasingly grew out of the
national structure and into a supra-national form. The North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was implemented in an “economic constitution for
North America” as Reagan referred to it.
Regionalism had emerged as the next major phase in the construction of the
New World Order, with the European Union being at the forefront.
The world
economy was ‘globalized’ and so too, would the political structure follow,
on both regional and global levels. The World Trade Organization (WTO) was
formed to maintain and enshrine global neoliberal constitution for trade.
All through this time, a truly global ruling class emerged, the
Transnational Capitalist Class (TCC), or
Global
Elite, which constituted a
singular international class.
However, as the wealth and power of elites grew, everyone else suffered.
The
middle class had been subjected to a quiet dismantling. In the Western
developed nations, industries and factories closed down, relocating to cheap
Third World countries to exploit their labour, then sell the products in the
Western world cheaply. Our living standards in the West began to fall, but
because we could buy products for cheaper, no one seemed to complain. We
continued to consume, and we used credit and debt to do so. The middle class
existed only in theory, but was in fact, beholden to the shackles of debt.
The Clinton administration used ‘globalization’ as its grand strategy
throughout the 1990s, facilitating the decline of productive capital (as in,
money that flows into production of goods and services), and implemented the
rise finance capital (money made on money). Thus, financial speculation
became one of the key tools of economic expansion. This is what was termed
the “financialization” of the economy.
To allow this to occur, the Clinton
administration actively worked to deregulate the banking sector. The
Glass-Steagle Act, put in place by FDR in 1933 to prevent commercial banks
from merging with investment banks and engaging in speculation, (which in
large part caused the Great Depression), was slowly dismantled through the
coordinated efforts of America’s largest banks, the Federal Reserve, and the
US Treasury Department.
Thus, a massive wave of consolidation took place, as large banks ate smaller
banks, corporations merged, where banks and corporations stopped being
American or European and became truly global.
Some of the key individuals
that took part in the dismantling of Glass-Steagle and the expansion of
‘financialization’ were Alan Greenspan at the Federal Reserve and Robert
Rubin and Lawrence Summers at the Treasury Department, now key officials in Obama’s economic team.
This era saw the rise of ‘derivatives’ which are ‘complex financial
instruments’ that essentially act as short-term insurance policies, betting
and speculating that an asset price or commodity would go up or go down in
value, allowing money to be made on whether stocks or prices go up or down.
However, it wasn’t called ‘insurance’ because ‘insurance’ has to be
regulated. Thus, it was referred to as derivatives trade, and organizations
called Hedge Funds entered the picture in managing the global trade in
derivatives.
The stock market would go up as speculation on future profits drove stocks
higher and higher, inflating a massive bubble in what was termed a ‘virtual
economy.’ The Federal Reserve facilitated this, as it had previously done in
the lead-up to the Great Depression, by keeping interest rates artificially
low, and allowing for easy-flowing money into the financial sector.
The
Federal Reserve thus inflated the ‘dot-com’ bubble of the technology sector.
When this bubble burst, the Federal Reserve, with Allen Greenspan at the
helm, created the “housing bubble.”
The Federal Reserve maintained low interest rates and actively encouraged
and facilitated the flow of money into the housing sector. Banks were given
free reign and actually encouraged to make loans to high-risk individuals
who would never be able to pay back their debt. Again, the middle class
existed only in the myth of the ‘free market’.
Concurrently, throughout the 1990s and into the early 2000s, the role of
speculation as a financial instrument of war became apparent. Within the
neoliberal global economy, money could flow easily into and out of
countries. Thus, when confidence weakens in the prospect of one nation’s
economy, there can be a case of ‘capital flight’ where foreign investors
sell their assets in that nation’s currency and remove their capital from
that country. This results in an inevitable collapse of the nations economy.
This happened to Mexico in 1994, in the midst of joining NAFTA, where
international investors speculated against the Mexican peso, betting that it
would collapse; they cashed in their pesos for dollars, which devalued the
peso and collapsed the Mexican economy.
This was followed by the East Asian
financial crisis in 1997, where throughout the 1990s, Western capital had
penetrated East Asian economies speculating in real estate and the stock
markets.
However, this resulted in over-investment, as the real economy,
(production, manufacturing, etc.) could not keep up with speculative
capital. Thus, Western capital feared a crisis, and began speculating
against the national currencies of East Asian economies, which triggered
devaluation and a financial panic as capital fled from East Asia into
Western banking sectors. The economies collapsed and then the IMF came in to
‘restructure’ them accordingly.
The same strategy was undertaken with Russia in
1998, and Argentina in 2001. [Forging a “New World Order” Under a One World
Government - August 13, 2009]
Throughout the 2000s, the housing bubble was inflated beyond measure, and
around the middle of the decade, when the indicators emerged of a crisis in
the housing market a commercial real estate bubble was formed.
This bubble
has yet to burst.
The 2007-2008 Financial Crisis
In 2007, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the most prestigious
financial institution in the world and the central bank to the world’s
central banks, issued a warning that the world is on the verge of another
Great Depression,
“citing mass issuance of new-fangled credit instruments,
soaring levels of household debt, extreme appetite for risk shown by
investors, and entrenched imbalances in the world currency system.”[11]
As the housing bubble began to collapse, the commodity bubble was inflated,
where money went increasingly into speculation, the stock market, and the
price of commodities soared, such as with the massive increases in the price
of oil between 2007 and 2008.
In September of 2007, a medium-sized British
Bank called Northern Rock, a major partaker in the loans of bad mortgages
which turned out to be worthless, sought help from the Bank of England,
which led to a run on the bank and investor panic. In February of 2008, the
British government bought and nationalized Northern Rock.
In March of 2008, Bear Stearns, an American bank that had been a heavy
lender in the mortgage real estate market, went into crisis. On March 14,
2008, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York worked with J.P. Morgan Chase
(whose CEO is a board member of the NY Fed) to provide Bear Stearns with an
emergency loan.
However, they quickly changed their mind, and the CEO of JP
Morgan Chase, working with the President of the New York Fed, Timothy Geithner, and the Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson (former CEO of Goldman
Sachs), forced Bear Stearns to sell itself to JP Morgan Chase for $2 a
share, which had previously traded at $172 a share in January of 2007. The
merger was paid for by the Federal Reserve of New York, and charged to the
US taxpayer.
In June of 2008, the BIS again warned of an impending Great Depression.[12]
In September of 2008, the US government took over Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, the two major home mortgage corporations. The same month, the global
bank Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy, giving the signal that no one is
safe and that the entire economy was on the verge of collapse. Lehman was a
major dealer in the US Treasury Securities market and was heavily invested
in home mortgages.
Lehman filed for bankruptcy on September 15, 2008,
marking the largest bankruptcy in US history. A wave of bank consolidation
spread across the United States and internationally. The big banks became
much bigger as Bank of America swallowed Merrill Lynch, JP Morgan ate
Washington Mutual, and Wells Fargo took over Wachovia.
In November of 2008, the US government bailed out the largest insurance
company in the world, AIG. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with
Timothy Geithner at the helm:
[Bought out], for about $30 billion, insurance contracts AIG sold on toxic
debt securities to banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill Lynch
& Co., Societe Generale and Deutsche Bank AG, among others. That decision,
critics say, amounted to a back-door bailout for the banks, which received
100 cents on the dollar for contracts that would have been worth far less
had AIG been allowed to fail.
As Bloomberg reported, since the New York Fed is quasi-governmental, as in,
it is given government authority, but not subject to government oversight,
and is owned by the banks that make up its board (such as JP Morgan Chase),
“It’s as though the New York Fed was a black-ops outfit for the nation’s
central bank.”[13]
The Bailout
In the fall of 2008, the Bush administration sought to implement a bailout
package for the economy, designed to save the US banking system. The leaders
of the nation went into rabid fear mongering.
The President warned:
More banks could fail, including some in your community. The stock market
would drop even more, which would reduce the value of your retirement
account. The value of your home could plummet. Foreclosures would rise
dramatically.
The head of the Federal Reserve Board, Ben Bernanke, as well as Treasury
Secretary Paulson, in late September warned of,
“recession, layoffs and lost
homes if Congress doesn’t quickly approve the Bush administration’s
emergency $700 billion financial bailout plan.”[14]
Seven months prior, in
February of 2008, prior to the collapse of Bear Stearns, both Bernanke and
Paulson said,
“the nation will avoid falling into recession.”[15]
In
September of 2008, Paulson was saying that people “should be scared.”[16]
The bailout package was made into a massive financial scam, which would
plunge the United States into unprecedented levels of debt, while pumping
incredible amounts of money into major global banks.
The public was told, as was the Congress, that the bailout was worth $700
billion dollars. However, this was extremely misleading, and a closer
reading of the fine print would reveal much more, in that $700 billion is
the amount that could be spent “at any one time.”
As Chris Martenson wrote:
This means that $700 billion is NOT the cost of this dangerous legislation,
it is only the amount that can be outstanding at any one time. After, say,
$100 billion of bad mortgages are disposed of, another $100 billion can be
bought. In short, these four little words assure that there is NO LIMIT to
the potential size of this bailout. This means that $700 billion is a
rolling amount, not a ceiling.
So what happens when you have vague language and an unlimited budget? Fraud
and self-dealing. Mark my words, this is the largest looting operation ever
in the history of the US, and it's all spelled out right in this
delightfully brief document that is about to be rammed through a scared
Congress and made into law.[17]
Further, the proposed bill would “raise the nation's debt ceiling to $11.315
trillion from $10.615 trillion,” and that the actions taken as a result of
the passage of the bill would not be subject to investigation by the
nation’s court system, as it would “bar courts from reviewing actions taken
under its authority”:
The Bush administration seeks “dictatorial power unreviewable by the third
branch of government, the courts, to try to resolve the crisis,” said Frank
Razzano, a former assistant chief trial attorney at the Securities and
Exchange Commission now at Pepper Hamilton LLP in Washington. “We are taking
a huge leap of faith.”[18]
Larisa Alexandrovna, writing with the Huffington Post, warned that the
passage of the bailout bill will be the final nails in the coffin of the
fascist coup over America, in the form of financial fascists:
This manufactured crisis is now to be remedied, if the fiscal fascists get
their way, with the total transfer of Congressional powers (the few that
still remain) to the Executive Branch and the total transfer of public funds
into corporate (via government as intermediary) hands.
[...] The Treasury Secretary can buy broadly defined assets, on any terms
he wants, he can hire anyone he wants to do it and can appoint private
sector companies as financial deputies of the US government. And he can
write whatever regulation he thinks [is] needed.
Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are
non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed
by any court of law or any administrative agency.[19]
At the same time, the US Federal Reserve was bailing out foreign banks of
hundreds of billions of dollars,
“that are desperate for dollars and can’t
access America’s frozen credit markets - a move co-ordinated with central
banks in Japan, the Eurozone, Switzerland, Canada and here in the UK.”[20]
The moves would have been coordinated through the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS) in Basle, Switzerland. As Politico reported,
“foreign-based banks with big U.S. operations could qualify for the Treasury
Department’s mortgage bailout.”
A Treasury Fact Sheet released by the US
Department of Treasury stated that:
Participating financial institutions must have significant operations in the
U.S., unless the Secretary makes a determination, in consultation with the
Chairman of the Federal Reserve, that broader eligibility is necessary to
effectively stabilize financial markets.[21]
So, the bailout package would not only allow for the rescue of American
banks, but any banks internationally, whether public or private, if the
Treasury Secretary deemed it “necessary”, and that none of the Secretary’s
decisions could be reviewed or subjected to oversight of any kind.
Further,
it would mean that the Treasury Secretary would have a blank check, but
simply wouldn’t be able to hand out more than $700 billion “at any one
time.” In short, the bailout is in fact, a coup d’état by the banks over the
government.
Many Congressmen were told that if they failed to pass the bailout package,
they were threatened with martial law.[22] Sure enough, Congress passed the
bill, and the financial coup had been a profound success.
No wonder then, in early 2009, one Congressman reported that the banks,
“are
still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the
place.”[23]
Another Congressman said that “The banks run the place,” and
explained,
“I will tell you what the problem is - they give three times more
money than the next biggest group. It's huge the amount of money they put
into politics.”[24]
The Collapse of Iceland
On October 9th, 2008, the government of
Iceland took control of the nation’s
largest bank, nationalizing it, and halted trading on the Icelandic stock
market.
Within a single week,
“the vast majority of Iceland's once-proud
banking sector has been nationalized.”
In early October, it was reported
that:
Iceland, which has transformed itself from one of Europe's poorest countries
to one of its wealthiest in the space of a generation, could face
bankruptcy. In a televised address to the nation, Prime Minister Geir Haarde
conceded:
"There is a very real danger, fellow citizens, that the Icelandic
economy in the worst case could be sucked into the whirlpool, and the result
could be national bankruptcy."
An article in BusinessWeek explained:
How did things get so bad so fast?
Blame the Icelandic banking system's
heavy reliance on external financing. With the privatization of the banking
sector, completed in 2000, Iceland's banks used substantial wholesale
funding to finance their entry into the local mortgage market and acquire
foreign financial firms, mainly in Britain and Scandinavia.
The banks, in
large part, were simply following the international ambitions of a new
generation of Icelandic entrepreneurs who forged global empires in
industries from retailing to food production to pharmaceuticals. By the end
of 2006, the total assets of the three main banks were $150 billion, eight
times the country's GDP.
In just five years, the banks went from being almost entirely domestic
lenders to becoming major international financial intermediaries. In 2000,
says Richard Portes, a professor of economics at London Business School,
two-thirds of their financing came from domestic sources and one-third from
abroad.
More recently - until the crisis hit - that ratio was reversed. But as
wholesale funding markets seized up, Iceland's banks started to collapse
under a mountain of foreign debt.[25]
This was the grueling situation that faced the government at the time of the
global economic crisis. The causes, however, were not Icelandic; they were
international.
Iceland owed,
“more than $60 billion overseas, about six times
the value of its annual economic output. As a professor at London School of
Economics said, ‘No Western country in peacetime has crashed so quickly and
so badly’.”[26]
What went wrong?
Iceland followed the path of neoliberalism, deregulated banking and
financial sectors and aided in the spread and ease of flow for international
capital.
When times got tough, Iceland went into crisis, as the Observer
reported in early October 2008:
Iceland is on the brink of collapse. Inflation and interest rates are raging
upwards. The krona, Iceland's currency, is in freefall and is rated just
above those of Zimbabwe and Turkmenistan.
[...] The discredited government and officials from the central bank have
been huddled behind closed doors for three days with still no sign of a
plan. International banks won't send any more money and supplies of foreign
currency are running out.[27]
In 2007, the UN had awarded Iceland the “best country to live in”:
The nation's celebrated rags-to-riches story began in the Nineties when free
market reforms, fish quota cash and a stock market based on stable pension
funds allowed Icelandic entrepreneurs to go out and sweep up international
credit.
Britain and Denmark were favorite shopping haunts, and in 2004
alone Icelanders spent £894m on shares in British companies. In just five
years, the average Icelandic family saw its wealth increase by 45 per
cent.[28]
As the third of Iceland’s large banks was in trouble, following the
government takeover of the previous two, the UK responded by freezing
Icelandic assets in the UK. Kaupthing, the last of the three banks standing
in early October, had many assets in the UK.
On October 7th, Iceland’s Central Bank governor told the media,
“We will not
pay for irresponsible debtors and… not for banks who have behaved
irresponsibly.”
The following day, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Alistair
Darling, claimed that,
“The Icelandic government, believe it or not, have
told me yesterday they have no intention of honoring their obligations
here,” although, Arni Mathiesen, the Icelandic minister of finance, said,
“nothing in this telephone conversation can support the conclusion that
Iceland would not honor its obligation.”[29]
On October 10, 2008, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said,
“We are freezing
the assets of Icelandic companies in the United Kingdom where we can. We
will take further action against the Icelandic authorities wherever that is
necessary to recover money.”
Thus:
Many Icelandic companies operating in the U.K., in totally unrelated
industries, experienced their assets being frozen by the U.K. government--as
well as other acts of seeming vengeance by U.K. businesses and media.
The immediate effect of the collapse of Kaupthing is that Iceland's
financial system is ruined and the foreign exchange market shut down.
Retailers are scrambling to secure currency for food imports and medicine.
The IMF is being called in for assistance.[30]
The UK had more than £840m invested in Icelandic banks, and they were moving
in to save their investments,[31] which just so happened to help spur on the
collapse of the Icelandic economy.
On October 24, 2008, an agreement between Iceland and the IMF was signed. In
late November, the IMF approved a loan to Iceland of $2.1 billion, with an
additional $3 billion in loans from Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden,
Russia, and Poland.[32]
Why the agreement to the loan took so long, was
because the UK pressured the IMF to delay the loan,
“until a dispute over the
compensation Iceland owes savers in Icesave, one of its collapsed banks, is
resolved.”[33]
In January of 2009, the entire Icelandic government was “formally dissolved”
as the government collapsed when the Prime Minister and his entire cabinet
resigned. This put the opposition part in charge of an interim
government.[34]
In July of 2009, the new government formally applied for
European Union membership, however,
“Icelanders have traditionally been
skeptical of the benefits of full EU membership, fearing that they would
lose some of their independence as a small state within a larger political
entity.”[35]
In August of 2009, Iceland’s parliament passed a bill “to repay Britain and
the Netherlands more than $5 billion lost in Icelandic deposit accounts”:
Icelanders, already reeling from a crisis that has left many destitute, have
objected to paying for mistakes made by private banks under the watch of
other governments.
Their anger in particular is directed at Britain, which used an
anti-terrorism law to seize Icelandic assets during the crisis last year, a
move which residents said added insult to injury.
The government argued it had little choice but to make good on the debts if
it wanted to ensure aid continued to flow. Rejection could have led to
Britain or the Netherlands seeking to block aid from the International
Monetary Fund (IMF).[36]
Iceland is now in the service of the IMF and its international creditors.
The small independent nation that for so long had prided itself on a strong
economy and strong sense of independence had been brought to its knees.
In mid-January of 2010, the IMF and Sweden together delayed their loans to
Iceland, due to Iceland’s,
“failure to reach a £2.3bn compensation deal with
Britain and the Netherlands over its collapsed Icesave accounts.”
Sweden,
the UK and the IMF were blackmailing Iceland to save UK assets in return for
loans.[37]
In February of 2010, it was reported that the EU would begin negotiations
with Iceland to secure Icelandic membership in the EU by 2012. However,
Iceland’s,
“aspirations are now tied partially to a dispute with the
Netherlands and Britain over $5 billion in debts lost in the country's
banking collapse in late 2008.”[38]
Iceland stood as a sign of what was to come. The sovereign debt crisis that
brought Iceland to its knees had new targets on the horizon.
Dubai Hit By Financial Storm
In February of 2009, the Guardian reported that,
“A six-year boom that
turned sand dunes into a glittering metropolis, creating the world's tallest
building, its biggest shopping mall and, some say, a shrine to unbridled
capitalism, is grinding to a halt,” as Dubai, one of six states that form
the United Arab Emirates (UAE), went into crisis.
Further,
“the real estate
bubble that propelled the frenetic expansion of Dubai on the back of
borrowed cash and speculative investment, has burst.”[39]
Months later, in November of 2009, Dubai was plunged into a debt crisis,
prompting fears of sparking a double-dip recession and the next wave of the
financial crisis.
As the Guardian reported:
Governments have cut interest rates, created new electronic money and
allowed budget deficits to reach record levels in an attempt to boost growth
after the near-collapse of the global financial system. [...] Despite
having oil, it's still the case that many of these countries had explosive
credit growth. It's very clear that in 2010, we've got plenty more problems
in store.[40]
The neighboring oil-rich state of Abu Dhabi, however, came to the rescue of
Dubai with a $10 billion bailout package, leading the Foreign Minister of
the UAE to declare Dubai’s financial crisis as over.[41]
In mid-February of 2010, however, renewed fears of a debt crisis in Dubai
resurfaced; Morgan Stanley reported that,
“the cost to insure against a
Dubai default [in mid-February] shot up to the level it was at during the
peak of the city-state's debt crisis in November.”[42]
These fears
resurfaced as:
Investors switched their attention to the Gulf [on February 15] as markets
reacted to fears that a restructuring plan from the state-owned conglomerate
Dubai World would pay creditors only 60 per cent of the money they are
owed.[43]
Again, the aims that governments seek in the unfolding debt crisis is not to
save their people from a collapsing economy and inflated currency, but to
save the ‘interests’ of their major banks and corporations within each
collapsing economy.
A Sovereign Debt Crisis Hits Greece
In October of 2009, a new Socialist government came to power in Greece on
the promise of injecting 3 billion euros to reinvigorate the Greek
economy.[44] Greece had suffered particularly hard during the economic
crisis; it experienced riots and protests.
In December of 2009, Greece said
it would not default on its debt, but the government added,
“Salaried
workers will not pay for this situation: we will not proceed with wage
freezes or cuts. We did not come to power to tear down the social state.”
As
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote for the Telegraph in December of 2009:
Greece is being told to adopt an IMF-style austerity package, without the
devaluation so central to IMF plans. The prescription is ruinous and
patently self-defeating. Public debt is already 113pc of GDP. The [European]
Commission says it will reach 125pc by late 2010. It may top 140pc by 2012.
If Greece were to impose the draconian pay cuts under way in Ireland (5pc
for lower state workers, rising to 20pc for bosses), it would deepen
depression and cause tax revenues to collapse further. It is already too
late for such crude policies. Greece is past the tipping point of a compound
debt spiral.
Evans-Pritchard wrote that the crisis in Greece had much to do with the
European Monetary Union (EMU), which created the Euro, and made all member
states subject to the decisions of the European Central Bank, as,
“Interest
rates were too low for Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Ireland, causing them
all to be engulfed in a destructive property and wage boom.”
Further:
EU states may club together to keep Greece afloat with loans for a while.
That solves nothing. It increases Greece's debt, drawing out the agony. What
Greece needs - unless it leaves EMU - is a permanent subsidy from the North.
Spain and Portugal will need help too.[45]
Greece’s debt had soared, by early December 2009, to a spiraling 300-billion
euros, as its,
“financial woes have also weighed on the
Euro currency, whose
long-term value depends on member countries keeping their finances in
order.”
Further, Ireland, Spain and Portugal were all facing problems with
their debt. As it turned out, the previous Greek government had been cooking
the books, and when the new government came to power, it inherited twice the
federal deficit it had anticipated.[46]
In February of 2010, the New York Times revealed that:
[W]ith Wall Street’s help, [Greece] engaged in a decade-long effort to skirt
European debt limits. One deal created by Goldman Sachs helped obscure
billions in debt from the budget overseers in Brussels.
Even as the crisis was nearing the flashpoint, banks were searching for ways
to help Greece forestall the day of reckoning. In early November - three
months before Athens became the epicenter of global financial anxiety
- a
team from Goldman Sachs arrived in the ancient city with a very modern
proposition for a government struggling to pay its bills, according to two
people who were briefed on the meeting.
The bankers, led by Goldman’s president, Gary D. Cohn, held out a financing
instrument that would have pushed debt from Greece’s health care system far
into the future, much as when strapped homeowners take out second mortgages
to pay off their credit cards.[47]
Even back in 2001, when Greece joined the Euro-bloc, Goldman Sachs helped
the country,
“quietly borrow billions” in a deal “hidden from public view
because it was treated as a currency trade rather than a loan, [and] helped
Athens to meet Europe’s deficit rules while continuing to spend beyond its
means.”
Further,
“Greece owes the world $300 billion, and major banks are on
the hook for much of that debt. A default would reverberate around the
globe.”
Both Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase had undertaken similar
efforts in Italy and other countries in Europe as well.[48]
In early February, EU nations led by France and Germany met to discuss a
rescue package for Greece, likely with the help of the European Central Bank
and possibly the IMF.
The issue had plunged the Eurozone into a crisis, as
confidence in the Euro fell across the board, and,
“Germans have become so
disillusioned with the Euro, many will not accept notes produced outside
their homeland.”[49]
Germany was expected to bail out the Greek economy, much to the dismay of
the German people.
As one German politician stated,
“We cannot expect the
citizens, whose taxes are already too high, to go along with supporting the
erroneous financial and budget policy of other states of the eurozone.”
One
economist warned that the collapse of Greece could lead to a collapse of the
Euro:
There are enough people speculating on the markets about the possible
bankruptcy of Greece, and once Greece goes, they would then turn their
attentions to Spain and Italy, and Germany and France would be forced to
step in once again.[50]
However, the Lisbon Treaty had been passed over 2009, which put into effect
a European Constitution, giving Brussels enormous powers over its member
states.
As the Telegraph reported on February 16, 2010, the EU stripped
Greece of its right to vote at a crucial meeting to take place in March:
The council of EU finance ministers said Athens must comply with austerity
demands by March 16 or lose control over its own tax and spend policies
altogether. It if fails to do so, the EU will itself impose cuts under the
draconian Article 126.9 of the Lisbon Treaty in what would amount to
economic suzerainty [i.e., foreign economic control].
While the symbolic move to suspend Greece of its voting rights at one
meeting makes no practical difference, it marks a constitutional watershed
and represents a crushing loss of sovereignty.
"We certainly won't let them off the hook," said Austria's finance minister,
Josef Proll, echoing views shared by colleagues in Northern Europe. Some
German officials have called for Greece to be denied a vote in all EU matter
until it emerges from "receivership".
The EU has still refused to reveal details of how it might help Greece raise
€30bn (£26bn) from global debt markets by the end of June.[51]
It would appear that the EU is in a troubling position. If they allow the
IMF to rescue Greece, it would be a blow to the faith in the Euro currency,
whereas if they bailout Greece, it will encourage internal pressures within
European countries to abandon the Euro.
In early February, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote in the Telegraph that,
“The Greek debt crisis has spread to Spain
and Portugal in a dangerous escalation as global markets test whether
Europe is willing to shore up monetary union with muscle rather than
mere words”.
Julian Callow from Barclays Capital said the EU may to need to invoke
emergency treaty powers under Article 122 to halt the contagion, issuing an
EU guarantee for Greek debt. “If not contained, this could result in a
'Lehman-style’ tsunami spreading across much of the EU.”
[...] EU leaders will come to the rescue in the end, but Germany has yet
to blink in this game of “brinkmanship”. The core issue is that EMU’s credit
bubble has left southern Europe with huge foreign liabilities: Spain at 91pc
of GDP (€950bn); Portugal 108pc (€177bn). This compares with 87pc for Greece
(€208bn).
By this gauge, Iberian imbalances are worse than those of Greece,
and the sums are far greater. The danger is that foreign creditors will cut
off funding, setting off an internal EMU version of the Asian financial
crisis in 1998.[52]
Fear began to spread in regards to a growing sovereign debt crisis,
stretching across Greece, Spain and Portugal, and likely much wider and
larger than that.
A Global Debt Crisis
In 2007, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), “the world's most
prestigious financial body,” warned of a coming great depression, and stated
that while in a crisis, central banks may cut interest rates (which they
subsequently did).
However, as the BIS pointed out, while cutting interest
rates may help, in the long run it has the effect of “sowing the seeds for
more serious problems further ahead.”[53]
In the summer of 2008, prior to the apex of the 2008 financial crisis in
September and October, the BIS again warned of the inherent dangers of a new
Great Depression. As Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote, “the ultimate bank of
central bankers” warned that central banks, such as the Federal Reserve,
would not find it so easy to “clean up” the messes they had made in
asset-price bubbles.
The BIS report stated that,
“It is not impossible that the unwinding of the
credit bubble could, after a temporary period of higher inflation, culminate
in a deflation that might be hard to manage, all the more so given the high
debt levels.”
As Evans-Pritchard explained,
“this amounts to a warning that
monetary overkill by the Fed, the Bank of England, and above all the
European Central Bank could prove dangerous at this juncture.”
The BIS
report warned that,
“Global banks - with loans of $37 trillion in 2007, or
70pc of world GDP - are still in the eye of the storm.”
Ultimately, the
actions of central banks were designed “to put off the day of reckoning,”
not to prevent it.[54]
Seeing how the BIS is not simply a casual observer, but is in fact the most
important financial institution in the world, as it is where the world’s
central bankers meet and, in secret, decide monetary policy for the world.
As central banks have acted as the architects of the financial crisis, the
BIS warning of a Great Depression is not simply a case of Cassandra
prophesying the Trojan Horse, but is a case where she prophesied the horse,
then opened the gates of Troy and pulled the horse in.
It was within this context that the governments of the world took on massive
amounts of debt and bailed out the financial sectors from their accumulated
risk by buying their bad debts.
In late June of 2009, several months following Western governments
implementing bailouts and stimulus packages, the world was in the euphoria
of “recovery.” At this time, however, the Bank for International Settlements
released another report warning against such complacency in believing in the
“recovery.” The BIS warned of only “limited progress” in fixing the
financial system.
The article is worth quoting at length:
Instead of implementing policies designed to clean up banks' balance sheets,
some rescue plans have pushed banks to maintain their lending practices of
the past, or even increase domestic credit where it's not warranted.
[...] The lack of progress threatens to prolong the crisis and delay the
recovery because a dysfunctional financial system reduces the ability of
monetary and fiscal actions to stimulate the economy.
That's because without a solid banking system underpinning financial
markets, stimulus measures won't be able to gain traction, and may only lead
to a temporary pickup in growth.
A fleeting recovery could well make matters worse, the BIS warns, since
further government support for banks is absolutely necessary, but will
become unpopular if the public sees a recovery in hand. And authorities may
get distracted with sustaining credit, asset prices and demand rather than
focusing on fixing bank balance sheets.
[...] It warned that despite the unprecedented measures in the form of
fiscal stimulus, interest rate cuts, bank bailouts and quantitative easing,
there is an “open question” whether the policies will be able to stabilize
the global economy.
And as governments bulk up their deficits to spend their way out of the
crisis, they need to be careful that their lack of restraint doesn't come
back to bite them, the central bankers said. If governments don't
communicate a credible exit strategy, they will find it harder to place
debt, and could face rising funding costs - leading to spending cuts or
significantly higher taxes.[55]
The BIS had thus endorsed the bailout and stimulus packages, which is no
surprise, considering that the BIS is owned by the central banks of the
world, which in turn are owned by the major global banks that were “bailed
out” by the governments.
However, the BIS warned that these rescue efforts,
“while necessary” for the banks, will likely have deleterious effects for
national governments.
The BIS warned that,
“there’s a risk central banks will raise interest rates
and withdraw emergency liquidity too late, triggering inflation”.
Central banks around the globe have lowered borrowing costs to record lows
and injected billions of dollars [or, more accurately, trillions] into the
financial system to counter the worst recession since World War II. While
some policy makers have stressed the need to withdraw the emergency measures
as soon as the economy improves, the Federal Reserve, Bank of England, and
European Central Bank are still in the process of implementing
asset-purchase programs designed to unblock credit markets and revive
growth.
“The big and justifiable worry is that, before it can be reversed, the
dramatic easing in monetary policy will translate into growth in the broader
monetary and credit aggregates,” the BIS said. That will “lead to inflation
that feeds inflation expectations or it may fuel yet another asset-price
bubble, sowing the seeds of the next financial boom-bust cycle.”[56]
Of enormous significance was the warning from the BIS that,
“fiscal stimulus
packages may provide no more than a temporary boost to growth, and be
followed by an extended period of economic stagnation.”
As the Australian
reported in late June:
The only international body to correctly predict the financial crisis - the
Bank for International Settlements (BIS) - has warned the biggest risk is
that governments might be forced by world bond investors to abandon their
stimulus packages, and instead slash spending while lifting taxes and
interest rates.
Further, major western countries such as Australia,
“faced the possibility of
a run on the currency, which would force interest rates to rise,” and
“Particularly in smaller and more open economies, pressure on the currency
could force central banks to follow a tighter policy than would be warranted
by domestic economic conditions.”
Not surprisingly, the BIS stated that,
“government guarantees and asset insurance have exposed taxpayers to
potentially large losses,” through the bailouts and stimulus packages, and
“stimulus programs will drive up real interest rates and inflation
expectations,” as inflation “would intensify as the downturn abated.”[57]
In May of 2009, Simon Johnson, former chief economist of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), warned that Britain faces a major struggle in the next
phase of the economic crisis:
[T]he mountain of debt that had poisoned the financial system had not
disappeared overnight. Instead, it has been shifted from the private sector
onto the public sector balance sheet. Britain has taken on hundreds of
billions of pounds of bank debt and stands behind potentially trillions of
dollars of contingent liabilities.
If the first stage of the crisis was the financial implosion and the second
the economic crunch, the third stage - the one heralded by Johnson - is
where governments start to topple under the weight of this debt. If 2008 was
a year of private sector bankruptcies, 2009 and 2010, it goes, will be the
years of government insolvency.
However, as dire as things look for Britain, “The UK is likely to be joined
by other countries as the full scale of the downturn becomes apparent and
more financial skeletons are pulled from the sub-prime closet.”[58]
In September of 2009, the former Chief Economist of the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS), William White, who had accurately predicted
the previous crisis, warned that,
“The world has not tackled the problems at
the heart of the economic downturn and is likely to slip back into
recession.” He “also warned that government actions to help the economy in
the short run may be sowing the seeds for future crises.”
An article in the
Financial Times elaborated:
“Are we going into a W[-shaped recession]? Almost certainly. Are we going
into an L? I would not be in the slightest bit surprised,” [White] said,
referring to the risks of a so-called double-dip recession or a protracted
stagnation like Japan suffered in the 1990s.
“The only thing that would really surprise me is a rapid and sustainable
recovery from the position we’re in.”
The comments from Mr White, who ran the economic department at the central
banks’ bank from 1995 to 2008, carry weight because he was one of the few
senior figures to predict the financial crisis in the years before it
struck.
Mr White repeatedly warned of dangerous imbalances in the global financial
system as far back as 2003 and - breaking a great taboo in central banking
circles at the time - he dared to challenge Alan Greenspan, then chairman of
the Federal Reserve, over his policy of persistent cheap money [i.e., low
interest rates].
[...] Worldwide, central banks have pumped [trillions] of dollars of new
money into the financial system over the past two years in an effort to
prevent a depression. Meanwhile, governments have gone to similar extremes,
taking on vast sums of debt to prop up industries from banking to car
making.
These measures may already be inflating a bubble in asset prices, from
equities to commodities, he said, and there was a small risk that inflation
would get out of control over the medium term if central banks miss-time
their “exit strategies”.
Meanwhile, the underlying problems in the global economy, such as
unsustainable trade imbalances between the US, Europe and Asia, had not been
resolved.[59]
In late September of 2009, the General Manager of the BIS warned governments
against complacency, saying that,
“the market rebound should not be
misinterpreted,” and that, “The profile of the recovery is not clear.”[60]
In September, the Financial Times further reported that William White,
former Chief Economist at the BIS, also,
“argued that after two years of
government support for the financial system, we now have a set of banks that
are even bigger - and more dangerous - than ever before,” which also, “has
been argued by Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the International
Monetary Fund,” who “says that the finance industry has in effect captured
the US government,” and pointedly stated: “recovery will fail unless we
break the financial oligarchy that is blocking essential reform.”[61]
In mid-September, the BIS released a warning about the global financial
system, as,
“The global market for derivatives rebounded to $426 trillion in
the second quarter [of 2009] as risk appetite returned, but the system
remains unstable and prone to crises.”
The derivatives rose by 16%,
“mostly
due to a surge in futures and options contracts on three-month interest
rates.”
In other words, speculation is back in full force as bailout money
to banks in turn fed speculative practices that have not been subjected to
reform or regulation.
Thus, the problems that created the previous crisis
are still present and growing:
Stephen Cecchetti, the [BIS] chief economist, said over-the-counter markets
for derivatives are still opaque and pose "major systemic risks" for the
financial system. The danger is that regulators will again fail to see that
big institutions have taken far more exposure than they can handle in shock
conditions, repeating the errors that allowed the giant US insurer AIG to
write nearly "half a trillion dollars" of unhedged insurance through credit
default swaps.[62]
In late November of 2009, Morgan Stanley warned that,
“Britain risks
becoming the first country in the G10 bloc of major economies to risk
capital flight and a full-blown debt crisis over coming months.”
The Bank of
England may have to raise interest rates “before it is ready - risking a
double-dip recession, and an incipient compound-debt spiral.”
Further:
Morgan Stanley said [the] sterling may fall a further 10pc in trade-weighted
terms. This would complete the steepest slide in the pound since the
industrial revolution, exceeding the 30pc drop from peak to trough after
Britain was driven off the Gold Standard in cataclysmic circumstances in
1931.[63]
As Ambrose Evans-Pritchard wrote for the Telegraph, this,
“is a reminder that
countries merely bought time during the crisis by resorting to fiscal
stimulus and shunting private losses onto public books,” and, while he
endorsed the stimulus packages claiming it was “necessary,” he admitted that
the stimulus packages “have not resolved the underlying debt problem. They
have storied up a second set of difficulties by degrading sovereign debt
across much of the world.”[64]
Morgan Stanley said another surprise in 2010
could be a surge in the dollar. However, this would be due to capital flight
out of Europe as its economies crumble under their debt burdens and capital
seeks a “safe haven” in the US dollar.
In December of 2009, the Wall Street Journal reported on the warnings of
some of the nation’s top economists, who feared that following a financial
crisis such as the one experienced in the previous two years,
“there's
typically a wave of sovereign default crises.”
As economist Kenneth Rogoff
explained,
“If you want to know what's next on the menu, that's a good bet,”
as “Spiraling government debts around the world, from Washington to Berlin
to Tokyo, could set the scene for years of financial troubles.”
Apart from
the obvious example of Greece, other countries are at risk, as the author of
the article wrote:
Also worrying are several other countries at the periphery of Europe
- the Baltics, Eastern European countries like Hungary, and maybe Ireland and
Spain. This is where public finances are worst. And the handcuffs of the
European single currency, Prof. Rogoff said, mean individual countries can't
just print more money to get out of their debts. (For the record, the
smartest investor I have ever known, a hedge fund manager in London, is also
anticipating a sovereign debt crisis.)
[...] The major sovereign debt crises, he said, are probably a couple of
years away. The key issue is that this time, the mounting financial troubles
of the U.S., Germany and Japan mean these countries, once the rich uncles of
the world, will no longer have the money to step in and rescue the more
feckless nieces and nephews.
Rogoff predicted that, “We're going to be raising taxes sky high,” and that,
“we're probably going to see a lot of inflation, eventually. We will have
to. It's the easiest way to reduce the value of those liabilities in real
terms.”
Rogoff stated, “The way rich countries default is through
inflation.” Further, “even U.S. municipal bonds won't be safe from trouble.
California could be among those facing a default crisis.”
Rogoff elaborated,
“It wouldn't surprise me to see the Federal Reserve buying California debt
at some point, or some form of bailout.”[65]
The bailouts, particularly that of the United States, handed a blank check
to the world’s largest banks.
As another favor, the US government put those
same banks in charge of ‘reform’ and ‘regulation’ of the banking industry.
Naturally, no reform or regulation took place.
Thus, the money given to
banks by the government can be used in financial speculation. As the
sovereign debt crisis unfolds and spreads around the globe, the major
international banks will be able to create enormous wealth in speculation,
rapidly pulling their money out of one nation in debt crisis, precipitating
a collapse, and moving to another, until all the dominoes have fallen, and
the banks stand larger, wealthier, and more powerful than any nation or
institution on earth (assuming they already aren’t).
This is why the bankers
were so eager to undertake a financial coup of the United States, to ensure
that no actual reform took place, that they could loot the nation of all it
has, and profit off of its eventual collapse and the collapse of the global
economy. The banks have been saved! Now everyone else must pay.
Edmund Conway, the Economics Editor of the Telegraph, reported in early
January of 2010, that throughout the year:
[S]overeign credit will buckle under the strain of [government] deficits;
the economic recovery will falter as the Government withdraws its fiscal
stimulus measures and more companies will continue to fail. In other words,
2010 is unlikely to be the year of a V-shaped recovery.[66]
In other words, the ‘recovery’ is an illusion.
In mid-January of 2010, the
World Economic Forum released a report in which it warned that,
“There is
now more than a one-in-five chance of another asset price bubble implosion
costing the world more than £1 trillion, and similar odds of a full-scale
sovereign fiscal crisis.”
The report warned of a simultaneous second
financial crisis coupled with a major fiscal crisis as countries default on
their debts.
The report,
“also warned of the possibility of China's economy
overheating and, instead of helping support global economic growth,
preventing a fully-fledged recovery from developing.”
Further:
The report, which in previous years had been among the first to cite the
prospect of a financial crisis, the oil crisis that preceded it and the
ongoing food crisis, included a list of growing risks threatening leading
economies. Among the most likely, and potentially most costly, is a
sovereign debt crisis, as some countries struggle to afford the
unprecedented costs of the crisis clean-up, the report said, specifically
naming the UK and the US.
[. . .] The report also highlights the risk of a further asset price
collapse, which could derail the nascent economic recovery across the world,
with particular concern surrounding China, which some fear may follow the
footsteps Japan trod in the 1990s.[67]
Nouriel Roubini, one of America’s top economists who predicted the financial
crisis, wrote an article in Forbes in January of 2010 explaining that,
“the
severe recession, combined with a financial crisis during 2008-09, worsened
the fiscal positions of developed countries due to stimulus spending, lower
tax revenues and support to the financial sector.”
He warned that the debt
burden of major economies, including the US, Japan and Britain, would likely
increase. With this, investors will become wary of the sustainability of
fiscal markets and will begin to withdraw from debt markets, long considered
“safe havens.”
Further:
Most central banks will withdraw liquidity starting in 2010, but government
financing needs will remain high thereafter. Monetization and increased debt
issuances by governments in the developed world will raise inflation
expectations.
As interest rates rise, which they will have to in a tightening of monetary
policy, (which up until now have been kept artificially low so as to
encourage the spread of liquidity around the world), interest payments on
the debt will increase dramatically.
Roubini warned:
The U.S. and Japan might be among the last to face investor aversion
- the
dollar is the global reserve currency and the U.S. has the deepest and most
liquid debt markets, while Japan is a net creditor and largely finances its
debt domestically. But investors will turn increasingly cautious even about
these countries if the necessary fiscal reforms are delayed.[68]
Governments will thus need to drastically increase taxes and cut spending.
Essentially, this will amount to a global “Structural Adjustment Program”
(SAP) in the developed, industrialized nations of the West.
Where SAPs imposed upon ‘Third World’ debtor nations would provide a loan in
return for the dismantling of the public state, higher taxes, growing
unemployment, total privatization of state industries and deregulation of
trade and investment, the loans provided by the IMF and World Bank would
ultimately benefit Western multinational corporations and banks.
This is
what the Western world now faces: we bailed out the banks, and now we must
pay for it, through massive unemployment, increased taxes, and the
dismantling of the public sphere.
In February of 2010, Niall Ferguson, a prominent British economic historian,
wrote an article for the Financial Times entitled, “A Greek Crisis Coming to
America.”
He starts by explaining that,
“It began in Athens. It is spreading
to Lisbon and Madrid. But it would be a grave mistake to assume that the
sovereign debt crisis that is unfolding will remain confined to the weaker eurozone economies.”
He explained that this is not a crisis confined to one
region,
“It is a fiscal crisis of the western world,” and “Its ramifications
are far more profound than most investors currently appreciate.”
Ferguson
writes that,
“the problem is essentially the same from Iceland to Ireland to
Britain to the US. It just comes in widely differing sizes,” and the US is
no small risk.
For the world’s biggest economy, the US, the day of reckoning still seems
reassuringly remote. The worse things get in the eurozone, the more the US
dollar rallies as nervous investors park their cash in the “safe haven” of
American government debt. This effect may persist for some months, just as
the dollar and Treasuries rallied in the depths of the banking panic in late
2008.
Yet even a casual look at the fiscal position of the federal government (not
to mention the states) makes a nonsense of the phrase “safe haven”. US
government debt is a safe haven the way Pearl Harbor was a safe haven in
1941.
Ferguson points out that,
“The long-run projections of the Congressional
Budget Office suggest that the US will never again run a balanced budget.
That’s right, never.”
Ferguson explains that debt will hurt major economies:
By raising fears of default and/or currency depreciation ahead of actual
inflation, they push up real interest rates. Higher real rates, in turn, act
as drag on growth, especially when the private sector is also heavily
indebted - as is the case in most western economies, not least the US.
Although the US household savings rate has risen since the Great Recession
began, it has not risen enough to absorb a trillion dollars of net Treasury
issuance a year. Only two things have thus far stood between the US and
higher bond yields: purchases of Treasuries (and mortgage-backed securities,
which many sellers essentially swapped for Treasuries) by the Federal
Reserve and reserve accumulation by the Chinese monetary authorities.[69]
In late February of 2010, the warning signs were flashing red that interest
rates were going to have to rise, taxes increase, and the burden of debt
would need to be addressed.
China Begins to Dump US Treasuries
US Treasuries are US government debt that is issued by the US Treasury
Department, which are bought by foreign governments as an investment. It is
a show of faith in the US economy to buy their debt (i.e., Treasuries). In
buying a US Treasury, you are lending money to the US government for a
certain period of time.
However, as the United States has taken on excessive debt loads to save the
banks from crisis, the prospect of buying US Treasuries has become less
appealing, and the threat that they are an unsafe investment is
ever-growing.
In February of 2009, Hilary Clinton urged China to continue
buying US Treasuries in order to finance Obama’s stimulus package.
As an
article in Bloomberg pointed out:
The U.S. is the single largest buyer of the exports that drive growth in
China, the world’s third-largest economy. China in turn invests surplus
earnings from shipments of goods such as toys, clothing and steel primarily
in Treasury securities, making it the world’s largest holder of U.S.
government debt at the end of last year with $696.2 billion.[70]
The following month, the Chinese central bank announced that they would
continue buying US Treasuries.[71]
However, in February of 2009, Warren Buffet, one of the world’s richest
individuals, warned against buying US Treasuries:
Buffett said that with the U.S. Federal Reserve and Treasury Department
going "all in" to jump-start an economy shrinking at the fastest pace since
1982, "once-unthinkable dosages" of stimulus will likely spur an "onslaught"
of inflation, an enemy of fixed-income investors.
"The investment world has gone from underpricing risk to overpricing it,"
Buffett wrote. "Cash is earning close to nothing and will surely find its
purchasing power eroded over time."
"When the financial history of this decade is written, it will surely speak
of the Internet bubble of the late 1990s and the housing bubble of the early
2000s," he went on. "But the U.S. Treasury bond bubble of late 2008 may be
regarded as almost equally extraordinary."[72]
In September of 2009, an article on CNN reported of the dangers if China
were to start dumping US Treasuries, which,
“could cause longer-term interest
rates to shoot up since bond prices and yields move in opposite directions,”
as a weakening US currency could lead to inflation, which would in turn,
reduce the value and worth of China’s holdings in US Treasuries.[73]
It has become a waiting game; an economic catch-22:
China holds US debt
(Treasuries) which allows the US to spend to “save the economy” (or more
accurately, the banks), but all the spending has plunged the US into such
abysmal debt from which it will never be able to emerge.
The result is that
inflation will likely occur, with a possibility of hyperinflation, thus
reducing the value of the US currency.
China’s economy is entirely dependent
upon the US as a consumer economy, while the US is dependent upon China as a
buyer and holder of US debt. Both countries are delaying the inevitable. If
China doesn’t want to hold worthless investments (US debt) it must stop
buying US Treasuries, and then international faith in the US currency would
begin to fall, forcing interest rates to rise, which could even precipitate
a speculative assault against the US dollar.
At the same time, a collapsing
US currency and economy would not help China’s economy, which would tumble
with it.
So, it has become a waiting game.
In February of 2010, the Financial Times reported that China had begun in
December of 2009, the process of dumping US Treasuries, and thus falling
behind Japan as the largest holder of US debt, selling approximately $38.8
billion of US Treasuries, as “Foreign demand for US Treasury bonds fell by a
record amount”:
The fall in demand comes as countries retreat from the "flight to safety"
strategy they embarked on at the peak of the global financial crisis and
could mean the US will have to pay more in debt interest.
For China, the sale of US Treasuries marks a reversal that it
signaled last
year when it said it would begin to reduce some of its holdings. Any changes
in its behavior are politically sensitive because it is the biggest US
trade partner and has helped to finance US deficits.
Alan Ruskin, a strategist at RBS Securities, said that China's
behavior
showed that it felt "saturated" with Treasury paper. The change of sentiment
could hurt the dollar and the Treasury market as the US has to look to other
countries for financing.[74]
So, China has given the US a vote of non-confidence. This is evident of the
slippery-slide down the road to a collapse of the US economy, and possibly,
the US dollar, itself.
Is a Debt Crisis Coming to America?
All the warning signs are there:
America is in dire straights when it comes
to its total debt, proper actions have not been taken to reform the monetary
or financial systems, the same problems remain prevalent, and the bailout
and stimulus packages have further exposed the United States to astronomical
debt levels.
While the dollar will likely continue to go up as confidence in
the Eurozone economies tumbles, this is not because the dollar is a good
investment, but because the dollar is simply a better investment (for now)
than the Euro, which isn’t saying much.
The Chinese moves to begin dumping US Treasuries is a signal that the issue
of American debt has already weighed in on the functions and movements of
the global financial system. While the day of reckoning may be months if not
years away, it is coming nonetheless.
On February 15, it was reported that the Federal Reserve, having pumped $2.2
trillion into the economy, “must start pulling that money back.” As the Fed
reportedly bought roughly $2 trillion in bad assets, it is now debating “how
and when to sell those assets.”[75]
As the Korea Times reported,
“The
problem: Do it too quickly and the Fed might cut off or curtail the
recovery. Wait too long and risk setting off a punishing round of
inflation.”[76]
In mid-February, there were reports of dissent within the Federal Reserve
System, as Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
City, warned that,
“The US must fix its growing debt problems or risk a new
financial crisis.”
He explained,
“that rising debt was infringing on the
central bank’s ability to fulfill its goals of maintaining price stability
and long-term economic growth.”
In January, he was the lone voice at a Fed
meeting that said interest rates should not remain near zero for an
“extended period.”
He said the worst case scenario would be for the US
government to have to again ask the Fed to print more money, and instead
suggested that,
“the administration must find ways to cut spending and
generate revenue,” admitting that it would be a “painful and politically
inconvenient” process.[77]
However, these reports are largely disingenuous, as it has placed focus on a
superficial debt level.
The United States, even prior to the onset of the
economic crisis in 2007 and 2008, had long been a reckless spender. The cost
of maintaining an empire is astronomical and beyond the actual means of any
nation. Historically, the collapse of empires has as much or more to do with
a collapse in their currency and fiscal system than their military defeat or
collapse in war. Also important to note is that these processes are not
mutually exclusive, but are, in fact, intricately interconnected.
As empires decline, the world order is increasingly marred in economic
crises and international conflict. As the crisis in the economy worsens,
international conflict and wars spread. As I have amply documented
elsewhere, the United States, since the end of World War II, has been the
global hegemony: maintaining the largest military force in the world, and not
shying away from using it, as well as running the global monetary system.
Since the 1970s, the US dollar has acted as a world reserve currency.
Following the collapse of the USSR, the grand imperial strategy of America
was to dominate Eurasia and control the world militarily and economically.
[An Imperial Strategy for a New World Order: The
Origins of World War III - October 16, 2009]
Throughout the years of the Bush administration, the imperial strategy was
given immense new life under the guise of the “war on terror.”
Under this
banner, the United States declared war on the world and all who oppose its
hegemony. All the while, the administration colluded with the big banks and
the Federal Reserve to artificially maintain the economic system. In the
latter years of the Bush administration, this illusion began to come
tumbling down.
Never before in history has such a large nation wages
multiple major theatre wars around the world without the public at home
being fiscally restrained in some manner, either through higher taxes or
interest rates. In fact, it was quite the opposite. The trillion dollar wars
plunged the United States deeper into debt.
By 2007, the year that Northern Rock collapsed in the UK, signaling the
start of the collapse of 2008, the total debt - domestic, commercial and
consumer debt - of the United States stood at a shocking $51 trillion.[78]
As if this debt burden was not enough, considering it would be impossible to
ever pay back, the past two years has seen the most expansive and rapid debt
expansion ever seen in world history - in the form of stimulus and bailout
packages around the world.
In July of 2009, it was reported that,
“U.S.
taxpayers may be on the hook for as much as $23.7 trillion to bolster the
economy and bail out financial companies, said Neil Barofsky, special
inspector general for the Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program.”[79]
That is worth noting once again: the “bailout” bill implemented under Bush,
and fully supported and sponsored by President-elect Obama, has possibly
bailed out the financial sector of up to $23.7 trillion. How could this be?
After all, the public was told that the “bailout” was $700 billion.
In fact, the fine print in the bailout bill revealed that $700 billion was
not a ceiling, as in, $700 billion was not the maximum amount of money that
could be injected into the banks; it was the maximum that could be injected
into the financial system “at any one time.”
Thus, it became a “rolling
amount.” It essentially created a back-door loophole for the major global
banks, both domestic and foreign, to plunder the nation and loot it
entirely. There was no limit to the money banks could get from the Fed. And
none of the actions would be subject to review or oversight by Congress or
the Judiciary, i.e., the people.[80]
This is why, as Obama became President in late January of 2009, his
administration fully implemented the financial coup over the United States.
The man who had been responsible for orchestrating the bailout of AIG, the
buyout of Bear Stearns as a gift for JP Morgan Chase, and had been elected
to run the Federal Reserve Bank of New York by the major global banks in New
York (chief among them, JP Morgan Chase), had suddenly become Treasury
Secretary under Obama.
The Fed, and thus, the banks were now put directly in
charge of the looting.
Obama then took on a team of economic advisers that made any astute economic
observer flinch in terror. The titans of economic crisis and catastrophe had
become the fox in charge of the chicken coop. Those who were instrumental in
creating and constructing the economic crises of the previous decades and
building the instruments and infrastructure that led to the current crisis,
were with Obama, brought in to “solve” the crisis they created.
Paul Volcker, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve and architect of the 1980s
debt crisis, was now a top economic adviser to Obama. As well as this,
Lawrence Summers joined Obama’s economic team, who had previously been
instrumental in Bill Clinton’s Treasury Department in dismantling all
banking regulations and creating the market for speculation and derivatives
which directly led to the current crisis.
In short, the financial oligarchy is in absolute control of the United
States government. Concurrently, the military structure of the American
empire has firmly established its grip over foreign policy, as America’s
wars are expanded into Pakistan, Yemen, and potentially Iran.
Make no mistake, a crisis is coming to America, it is only a question of
when, and how severe.
Imperial Decline and the Rise of the New World Order
The decline of the American empire, an inevitable result of its half-century
of exerting its political and economic hegemony around the world, is not an
isolated event in the global political economy.
The US declines concurrently
with the rise of what is termed the “New World Order.”
America has been used by powerful western banking and corporate interests as
an engine of empire, expanding their influence across the globe. Banks have
no armies, so they must control nations; banks have no products, so they
must control industries; banks have only money, and interest earned on it.
Thus, they must ensure that industry and governments alike borrow money en
masse to the point where they are so indebted, they can never emerge.
As a
result, governments and industries become subservient to the banking
interests. Banks achieved this masterful feat through the construction of
the global central banking system.
Bankers took control first of Great Britain through the Bank of England,
building up the massive might of the British Empire, and spread into the
rest of Europe, creating central banks in the major European empires. In the
20th Century, the central bankers took control of the United States through
the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913, prior to the outbreak of World
War I. [Global Power and Global Government: Evolution
and Revolution of the Central Banking System - July 21,
2009]
Following World War I, a restructuring of the world order was undertaken. In
part, these actions paved the way to the Great Depression, which struck in
1929. The Great Depression was created as a result of the major banks
engaging in speculation, which was actively encouraged and financed by the
Federal Reserve and other major central banks.
As a result of the Great Depression, a new institution was formed, the
Bank
for International Settlements (BIS), based in Basle, Switzerland.
As
historian Carroll Quigley explained, the BIS was formed to,
“remedy the
decline of London as the world’s financial center by providing a mechanism
by which a world with three chief financial centers in London, New York, and
Paris could still operate as one.”
He explained:
[T]he powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing
less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands
able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the
world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by
the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements
arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences.
The apex of the
system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basle,
Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world’s central
banks which were themselves private corporations.[81]
The new order that is being constructed is not one in which there is another
single global power, as many commentators suggest China may become, but
rather that a multi-polar world order is constructed, in which the global
political economy is restructured into a global governance structure: in
short, the new world order is to be marked by the construction of a world
government.
This is the context in which the solutions to the global economic crisis are
being implemented.
In April of 2009, the G20 set into motion the plans to
form a global currency, which would presumably replace the US dollar as the
world reserve currency. This new currency would either be operated through
the IMF or the BIS, and would be a reserve currency whose value is
determined as a basket of currencies (such as the dollar, yen, euro, etc),
which would play off of one another, and whose value would be fixed to the
global currency.
This process is being implemented, through long-term planning,
simultaneously as we see the further emergence of regional currencies, as
not only the Euro, but plans and discussions for other regional currencies
are underway in North America, South America, the Gulf states, Africa and
East Asia.
A 1988 article in the Economist foretold of a coming global currency by
2018, in which the author wrote that countries would have to give up
monetary and economic sovereignty, however:
Several more big exchange-rate upsets, a few more stockmarket crashes and
probably a slump or two will be needed before politicians are willing to
face squarely up to that choice. This points to a muddled sequence of
emergency followed by patch-up followed by emergency, stretching out far
beyond 2018-except for two things.
As time passes, the damage caused by
currency instability is gradually going to mount; and the very trends that
will make it mount are making the utopia of monetary union feasible.[82]
To create a global currency, and thus a global system of economic
governance, the world would have to be plunged into economic and currency
crises to force governments to take the necessary actions in moving towards
a global currency.
From 1998 onwards, there have been several calls for the formation of a
global central bank, and in the midst of the global economic crisis of 2008,
renewed calls and actual actions and efforts undertaken by the G20 have sped
up the development of a “global Fed” and world currency.
A global central
bank is being offered as a solution to prevent a future global economic
crisis from occurring. [The Financial New World Order: Towards a Global
Currency and World Government - April 6, 2009]
In March of 2008, closely following the collapse of Bear Stearns, a major
financial firm released a report stating that, “Financial firms face a ‘new
world order’,” and that major banks would become much larger through mergers
and acquisitions.
There would be a new world order of banking
consolidation.[83]
In November of 2008, The National, a prominent United Arab Emirate
newspaper, reported on Baron
David de Rothschild accompanying Prime Minister
Gordon Brown on a visit to the Middle East, although not as a “part of the
official party” accompanying Brown.
Following an interview with the Baron,
it was reported that,
“Rothschild shares most people’s view that there is a
new world order. In his opinion, banks will deleverage and there will be a
new form of global governance.”[84]
In February of 2009, the Times Online reported that a,
“New world order in
banking [is] necessary,” and that, “It is increasingly evident that the
world needs a new banking system and that it should not bear much
resemblance to the one that has failed so spectacularly.”[85]
However, what
the article fails to point out is that the ‘new world order in banking’ is
to be constructed by the bankers.
This process is going hand-in-hand with the formation of a new world order
in global political structures, following the economic trends. As
regionalism was spurred by economic initiatives, such as regional trading
blocs and currency groupings, the political structure of a regional
government followed closely behind.
Europe was the first to undertake this
initiative, with the formation of a European trading bloc, which became an
economic union and eventually a currency union, and which, as a result of
the recently passed Lisbon Treaty, is being formally established into a
political union. [Forging a “New World Order” Under a One World
Government - August 13, 2009]
The new world order consists of the formation of regional governance
structures, which are themselves submissive to a global governance
structure, both economically and politically.
‘New Capitalism’
In the construction of a ‘New World Order’, the capitalist system is under
intense reform.
Capitalism has, since its inception, altered its nature and
forms. In the midst of the current global economic crisis, the construction
of the ‘New Capitalism’ is based upon the ‘China model’; that is,
‘Totalitarian Capitalism’.
Governments will no longer stand behind the ‘public relations’ - propagandized illusion of ‘protecting the people’. When an economy
collapses, the governments throw away their public obligations, and act for
the interests of their private owners.
Governments will come to the aid of
the powerful banks and corporations, not the people, as,
“The bourgeoisie
resorts to fascism less in response to disturbances in the street than in
response to disturbances in their own economic system.”[86]
During a large
economic crisis:
[The state] rescues business enterprises on the brink of bankruptcy, forcing
the masses to foot the bill. Such enterprises are kept alive with subsidies,
tax exemptions, orders for public works and armaments. In short, the state
thrusts itself into the breach left by the vanishing private customers.
[...]
Such maneuvers are difficult under a democratic regime [because people
still] have some means of defense [and are] still capable of setting some
limit to the insatiable demands of the money power. [In] certain countries
and under certain conditions, the bourgeoisie throws its traditional
democracy overboard.[87]
Those who proclaim the actions of western governments ‘socialist’ are
misled, as the ‘solutions’ are of a different nature. Daniel Guerin wrote in
Fascism and Big Business about the nature of the fascist economies of Italy
and Germany in the lead up to World War II.
Guerin wrote of the actions of
Italian and German governments to bail out big businesses and banks in an
economic crisis:
It would be a mistake to interpret this state intervention as ‘socialist’ in
character. It is brought about not in the interest of the community but in
the exclusive interest of the capitalists.[88]
Fascist economic policy:
[I]ssues paper and ruins the national currency at the expense of all the
people who live on fixed incomes from investments, savings, pensions,
government salaries, etc. - and also the working class, whose wages remain
stable or lag far behind the rise in the cost of living. [...] The
enormous expenses of the fascist state do not appear in the official budget,
[hiding the inflation].[89]
[...] The hidden inflation produces the same effects as open inflation:
the purchasing power of money is lessened.[90]
The bureaucracy of the fascist state becomes much more powerful in directing
the economy, and is advised by the ‘capitalist magnates’,
who “become the
economic high command - no longer concealed, as previously, but official - of the state. Permanent contact is established between them and the
bureaucratic apparatus. They dictate, and the bureaucracy executes.”[91]
This is exactly the nature of the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve,
most especially since the Obama administration took office.
In November of 2008, the National Intelligence Council (NIC) issued a report
in collaboration between all sixteen US intelligence agencies and major
international foundations and think tanks, in which they assessed and
analyzed general trends in the world until 2025.
When it reported on trends
in ‘democratization’, discussing the spread and nature of democracy in the
world, the report warned:
[A]dvances [in democracy] are likely to slow and globalization will subject
many recently democratized countries to increasing social and economic
pressures that could undermine liberal institutions. [...] The better
economic performance of many authoritarian governments could sow doubts
among some about democracy as the best form of government.
[...] Even in many well-established democracies [i.e., the West], surveys
show growing frustration with the current workings of democratic government
and questioning among elites over the ability of democratic governments to
take the bold actions necessary to deal rapidly and effectively with the
growing number of transnational challenges.[92]
The warning from Daniel Guerin is vital to understanding this trend:
“The
bourgeoisie resorts to fascism less in response to disturbances in the
street than in response to disturbances in their own economic system.”[93]
Totalitarianism is on the rise, as David Lyon wrote:
The ultimate feature of the totalitarian domination is the absence of exit,
which can be achieved temporarily by closing borders, but permanently only
by a truly global reach that would render the very notion of exit
meaningless. This in itself justifies questions about the totalitarian
potential of globalization. [...]
Is abolition of borders intrinsically
(morally) good, because they symbolize barriers that needlessly separate and
exclude people, or are they potential lines of resistance, refuge and
difference that may save us from the totalitarian abyss? [I]f globalization
undermines the tested, state-based models of democracy, the world may be
vulnerable to a global totalitarian etatization, [i.e., centralization and
control].[94]
In 2007, the British Defense Ministry released a report in which they
analyzed future trends in the world. It stated in regards to social
problems,
“The middle classes could become a revolutionary class, taking the
role envisaged for the proletariat by Marx.”
Interestingly:
The thesis is based on a growing gap between the middle classes and the
super-rich on one hand and an urban under-class threatening social order:
‘The world's middle classes might unite, using access to knowledge,
resources and skills to shape transnational processes in their own class
interest’.
Marxism could also be revived, it says, because of global
inequality. An increased trend towards moral relativism and pragmatic values
will encourage people to seek the ‘sanctuary provided by more rigid belief
systems, including religious orthodoxy and doctrinaire political ideologies,
such as popularism and Marxism’.[95]
The general trend has thus become the reformation of the capitalist system
into a system based upon the ‘China model’ of totalitarian capitalism. The
capitalist class fear potential revolutionary sentiment among the middle and
lower classes of the world.
Obama was a well-packaged Wall Street product,
sold to the American people and the people of the world on the promise of
‘Hope’ and ‘Change.’ Obama was put in place to pacify resistance.
Prior to Obama becoming President, the American people were becoming united
in their opposition against not only the Bush administration, but Congress
and the government in general. Both the president and Congress were equally
hated; the people were uniting.
Since Obama became President, the people
have been turned against one another: ‘conservatives’ blame the ‘liberals’
and ‘socialists’ for all the problems, pointing fingers at Obama (who is
nothing more than a figurehead), while those on the left point at the
Republicans and ‘conservatives’ and Bush, placing all the blame on them.
The
right defends the Republicans; the left defends Obama. The people have been
divided, arguably more so than at any time in recent history.
In dividing the people against each other, those in power have been able to
quell resistance against them, and have continued to loot and plunder the
nation and people, while using its military might to loot and plunder
foreign nations and people.
Obama is not to provide hope and change for the
American people; his purpose was to provide the illusion of ‘change’ and
provide ‘hope’ to the elites in preventing a purposeful and powerful
opposition or rebellion among the people. Meanwhile, the government has been
preparing for the potentiality of great social and civil unrest following a
future collapse or crisis.
Instead of coming to the aid of the people, the
government is preparing to control and oppress the people.
Could Martial Law Come to America?
Processes undertaken in the American political establishment in previous
decades, and rapidly accelerated under the Bush administration and carried
on by the Obama administration, have set the course for the imposition of a
military government in America.
Readily armed with an oppressive state
apparatus and backed by the heavy surveillance state apparatus, the
‘Homeland Security’ state is about controlling the population, not
protecting them.
In January of 2006, KBR, a subsidiary of the then-Vice President Cheney’s
former corporation, Halliburton, received a contract from the Department of
Homeland Security:
[T]o support the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities in the event of an emergency. [The
contract] has a maximum total value of $385 million over a five-year term,
consisting of a one-year based period and four one-year options, the
competitively awarded contract will be executed by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, Fort Worth District. KBR held the previous ICE contract from 2000
through 2005.
[It further] provides for establishing temporary detention and processing
capabilities to augment existing ICE Detention and Removal Operations (DRO)
Program facilities in the event of an emergency influx of immigrants into
the U.S., or to support the rapid development of new programs. [...]
The contract may also provide migrant
detention support to other U.S. Government organizations in the event of
an immigration emergency, as well as the development of a plan to react
to a national emergency, such as a natural disaster. [96]
Put simply, the contract is to develop a system of ‘internment camps’ inside
the United States to be used in times of ‘emergency’.
Further, as Peter Dale
Scott revealed in his book, The Road to 9/11:
On February 6, 2007, homeland security secretary Michael Chertoff announced
that the fiscal year 2007 federal budget would allocate more than $400
million to add sixty-seven hundred additional detention beds (an increase of
32 percent over 2006). [This was] in partial fulfillment of an ambitious
ten-year Homeland Security strategic plan, code-named Endgame, authorized in
2003, [designed to] remove all removable aliens [and] potential
terrorists.[97]
As Scott previously wrote,
“the contract evoked ominous memories of Oliver
North's controversial Rex-84 ‘readiness exercise’ in 1984. This called for
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to round up and detain
400,000 imaginary ‘refugees,’ in the context of ‘uncontrolled population
movements’ over the Mexican border into the United States.”
However, it was
to be a cover for the rounding up of ‘subversives’ and ‘dissenters’.
Daniel
Ellsberg, who leaked the ‘Pentagon papers’ in 1971, stated that,
“Almost
certainly this [new contract] is preparation for a roundup after the next
9/11 for Mid-Easterners, Muslims and possibly dissenters.”[98]
In February of 2008, an article in the San Francisco Chronicle, co-authored
by a former US Congressman, reported that,
“Beginning in 1999, the
government has entered into a series of single-bid contracts with
Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR) to build detention
camps at undisclosed locations within the United States. The government has
also contracted with several companies to build thousands of railcars, some
reportedly equipped with shackles, ostensibly to transport detainees.”[99]
Further, in February of 2008, the Vancouver Sun reported that:
Canada and the U.S. have signed an agreement that paves the way for the
militaries from either nation to send troops across each other's borders
during an emergency, but some are questioning why the Harper government has
kept silent on the deal. [...]
Neither the Canadian government nor the
Canadian Forces announced the new agreement, which was signed Feb. 14 in
Texas [but the] U.S. military's Northern Command, however, publicized the
agreement with a statement outlining how its top officer, Gen. Gene Renuart,
and Canadian Lt.-Gen. Marc Dumais, head of Canada Command, signed the plan,
which allows the military from one nation to support the armed forces of the
other nation in a civil emergency.
[...] If U.S. forces were to come into Canada they would be under
tactical control of the Canadian Forces but still under the command of the
U.S. military.[100]
Commenting on the Military Commissions Act of 2006, Yale law and political
science professor Bruce Ackerman wrote in the Los Angeles Times that the
legislation,
“authorizes the president to seize American citizens as enemy
combatants, even if they have never left the United States. And once thrown
into military prison, they cannot expect a trial by their peers or any other
of the normal protections of the Bill of Rights.”
Further, it states that
the legislation,
“grants the president enormous power over citizens and legal
residents. They can be designated as enemy combatants if they have
contributed money to a Middle Eastern charity, and they can be held
indefinitely in a military prison.”
Not only that, but, “ordinary Americans
would be required to defend themselves before a military tribunal without
the constitutional guarantees provided in criminal trials.”
Startlingly,
“Legal residents who aren't citizens are treated even more harshly. The bill
entirely cuts off their access to federal habeas corpus, leaving them at the
mercy of the president's suspicions.”[101]
Senator Patrick Leahey made a statement on February 2007 in which he
discussed the John Warner Defense Authorization Act of 2007, saying:
Last year, Congress quietly made it easier for this President or any
President to
declare martial law. That’s right: In legislation added at the
Administration’s request to last year’s massive Defense Authorization Bill,
it has now become easier to bypass longtime
posse comitatus restrictions
that prevent the federal government’s use of the military, including a
federalized National Guard, to perform domestic law enforcement duties.
He added that,
“posse comitatus [is] the legal doctrine that bars the use of
the military for law enforcement directed at the American people here at
home.”
The Bill is an amendment to the Insurrection Act, of which Leahey
further commented:
When the Insurrection Act is invoked, the President can
- without the
consent of the respective governors - federalize the National Guard and use
it, along with the entire military, to carry out law enforcement duties.
[This] is a sweeping grant of authority to the President. [...] In
addition to the cases of insurrection, the Act can now be invoked to restore
public order after a terrorist attack, a natural disaster, a disease
outbreak, or - and this is extremely broad - ‘other condition’.[102]
On May 9, 2007, the White House issued a press release about the National
Security Presidential Directive (NSPD) 51, also known as the “National
Security and Homeland Security Presidential Directive.”
This directive:
[P]rescribes continuity requirements for all executive departments and
agencies, and provides guidance for State, local, territorial, and tribal
governments, and private sector organizations in order to ensure a
comprehensive and integrated national continuity program that will enhance
the credibility of our national security posture and enable a more rapid and
effective response to and recovery from a national emergency.
The document defines “catastrophic emergency” as,
“any incident, regardless
of location, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties,
damage, or disruption severely affecting the U.S. population,
infrastructure, environment, economy, or government functions.”
It explains “Continuity of Government” (COG),
as,
“a coordinated effort within the Federal
Government's executive branch to ensure that National Essential
Functions continue to be performed during a Catastrophic Emergency.”
The directive states that,
“The President shall lead the activities of the
Federal Government for ensuring constitutional government. In order to
advise and assist the President in that function, the Assistant to the
President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism (APHS/CT) is hereby
designated as the National Continuity Coordinator.”[103]
Essentially, in time of a “catastrophic emergency”, the President takes over
total control of the executive, legislative and judicial branches of
government in order to secure “continuity”.
In essence, the Presidency would
become an “Executive Dictatorship”.
In late September of 2008, in the midst of the financial crisis, the Army
Times, an official media outlet of the Pentagon, reported that,
“Helping
‘people at home’ may become a permanent part of the active Army,” as the 3rd
Infantry Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team, having spent years patrolling
Iraq, are now “training for the same mission - with a twist
- at home.”
Further:
They may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control or to
deal with potentially horrific scenarios such as massive poisoning and chaos
in response to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or high-yield
explosive, or CBRNE, attack.[104]
None of the authorizations, bills, executive orders, or contracts related to
the declaration of marital law and suspension of democracy in the event of
an ‘emergency’ have been repealed by
the Obama administration.
In fact, as the New York Times revealed in July 2009, the Obama
administration has decidedly left in place the Bush administration decisions
regarding the government response to a national emergency in ‘Continuity of
Government’ (COG) plans in establishing a ‘shadow government’:
A shift in authority has given military officials at the White House a
bigger operational role in creating a backup government if the nation’s
capital were “decapitated” by a terrorist attack or other calamity,
according to current and former officials involved in the decision.
The move, which was made in the closing weeks of the administration of
President George W. Bush, came after months of heated internal debate about
the balance of power and the role of the military in a time of crisis,
participants said. Officials said the Obama administration had left the plan
essentially intact.
Under the revamped structure, the White House Military Office, which reports
to the office of the White House chief of staff, has assumed a more central
role in setting up a temporary “shadow government” in a crisis.
The Obama administration announced that their continuity plans were
‘settled’ and they “drew no distance between their own policies and those
left behind by the Bush administration.”[105]
In July of 2009, it was also
reported on moves by the Obama administration to implement a system of
‘preventive detention’. With this, any semblance of democratic
accountability and freedom have been utterly gutted and disemboweled; the
Republic is officially dead:
[‘Preventive detention’] is to be a permanent, institutionalized detention
scheme with the power vested in the President going forward to imprison
people with no charges.
[...] Manifestly, this isn't about anything other than institutionalizing
what has clearly emerged as the central premise of the Obama Justice System:
picking and choosing what level of due process each individual accused
Terrorist is accorded, to be determined exclusively by what process ensures
that the state will always win. If they know they'll convict you in a real
court proceeding, they'll give you one; if they think they might lose there,
they'll put you in a military commission; if they're still not sure they
will win, they'll just indefinitely imprison you without any charges.
[. . .] It's Kafkaesque show trials in their most perverse form: the outcome
is pre-determined (guilty and imprisoned) and only the process changes.
That's especially true since, even where a miscalculation causes someone to
be tried but then acquitted, the power to detain them could still be
asserted.[106]
Society, and with it, any remaining ‘democracy’ is being closed down. In
this economic crisis, as Daniel Guerin warned decades ago, the financial
oligarchy have chosen to ‘throw democracy overboard’, and have opted for the
other option: totalitarian capitalism; fascism.
In Conclusion
The current crisis is not merely a failure of the US housing bubble, that is
but a symptom of a much wider and far-reaching problem.
The nations of the
world are mired in exorbitant debt loads, as the sovereign debt crisis
spreads across the globe, entire economies will crumble, and currencies will
collapse while the banks consolidate and grow. The result will be to
properly implement and construct the apparatus of a global government
structure.
A central facet of this is the formation of a global central bank
and a global currency.
The people of the world have been lulled into a false sense of security and
complacency, living under the illusion of an economic recovery. The fact
remains: it is only an illusion, and eventually, it will come tumbling down.
The people have been conned into handing their governments over to the
banks, and the banks have been looting and pillaging the treasuries and
wealth of nations, and all the while, and making the people pay for it.
There never was a story of more woe, than that of human kind, and their monied foe.
Truly, the people of the world do need a new world order, but not one
determined and constructed by and for those who have created the past failed
world orders. It must be a world order directed and determined by the people
of the world, not the powerful.
But to do this, the people must take back
the power.
The way to achieving a stable economy is along the path of peace. War and
economic crises play off of one another, and are systematically linked.
Imperialism is the driver of this system, and behind it, the banking
establishment as the financier.
Peace is the only way forward, in both political and economic realms. Peace
is the pre-requisite for social sustainability and for a truly great
civilization.
The people of the world must pursue and work for peace and justice on a
global scale: economically, politically, socially, scientifically,
artistically, and personally. It’s asking a lot, but it’s our only option.
We need to have ‘hope’, a word often strewn around with little intent to the
point where it has come to represent failed expectations. We need hope in
ourselves, in our ability to throw off the shackles that bind us and in our
diversity and creativity construct a new world that will benefit all.
No one knows what this world would look like, or how exactly to get there,
least of all myself. What we do know is what it doesn’t look like, and what
road to steer clear of. The time has come to retake our rightful place as
the commanders of our own lives.
It must be freedom for all, or freedom for
none.
This is our world, and we have been given the gift of the human mind
and critical thought, which no other living being can rightfully boast; what
a shame it would be to waste it.
Notes
[1] Dan Harris, Pessimism Porn? Economic Forecasts Get Lurid. ABC News:
April 9, 2009: http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=7299825&page=1
Hugo Lindgren, Pessimism Porn. New York Magazine: February 1, 2009:
http://nymag.com/news/intelligencer/53858/
[2] Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend. John
Wiley and Sons, 2004: page 38
[3] Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend. John
Wiley and Sons, 2004: page 36
[4] Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend. John
Wiley and Sons, 2004: page 37
[5] Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend. John
Wiley and Sons, 2004: page 38
[6] Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend. John
Wiley and Sons, 2004: pages 57-60
[7] Firoze Manji and Carl O’Coill, The Missionary position: NGOs and
development in Africa. International Affairs: Issue 78, Vol. 3, 2002: pages
567-568
[8] Firoze Manji and Carl O’Coill, The Missionary position: NGOs and
development in Africa. International Affairs: Issue 78, Vol. 3, 2002: page
568
[9] Firoze Manji and Carl O’Coill, The Missionary position: NGOs and
development in Africa. International Affairs: Issue 78, Vol. 3, 2002: page
578
[10] Firoze Manji and Carl O’Coill, The Missionary position: NGOs and
development in Africa. International Affairs: Issue 78, Vol. 3, 2002: page
579
[11] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, BIS warns of Great Depression dangers from
credit spree. The Telegraph: June 27, 2009:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/2811081/BIS-warns-of-Great-Depression-dangers-from-credit-spree.html
[12] Gill Montia, Central bank body warns of Great Depression. Banking
Times: June 9, 2008:
http://www.bankingtimes.co.uk/09062008-central-bank-body-warns-of-great-depression/
[13] David Reilly, Secret Banking Cabal Emerges From AIG Shadows: David
Reilly. Bloomberg: January 29, 2010:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601039&sid=aaIuE.W8RAuU
[14] AP, Bernanke, Paulson: Congress must act now. MSNBC: September 23,
2008: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26850571/
[15] Chris Isidore, Paulson, Bernanke: Slow growth ahead. CNN Money:
February 14, 2008:
http://money.cnn.com/2008/02/14/news/economy/bernanke_paulson/index.htm
[16] People should be more scared than mad, Paulson says. Politico:
September 24, 2008:
http://www.politico.com/blogs/thecrypt/0908/People_should_be_more_scared_than_mad_Paulson_says.html
[17] Chris Martenson, What the latest bailout plan means.
ChrisMartenson.com: September 21, 2008:
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/what-latest-bailout-plan-means/5149
[18] Alison Fitzgerald and John Brinsley, Treasury Seeks Authority to Buy
$700 Billion Assets. Bloomberg: September 20, 2008:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aZ2aFDx8_idM&refer=home
[19] Larisa Alexandrovna, Welcome to the final stages of the coup.
Huffington Post: September 29, 2008:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/larisa-alexandrovna/welcome-to-the-final-stag_b_127990.html
[20] Liam Halligan, A default by the US government is no longer unthinkable.
The Telegraph: September 20, 2008:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/liamhalligan/3023967/A-default-by-the-US-government-is-no-longer-unthinkable.html
[21] Mike Allen, Exclusive: Foreign banks may get help. Politico: September
21, 2008: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0908/13690.html
[22] Steve Watson, Democratic Congressman: Representatives Were Threatened
With Martial Law In America Over Bailout Bill. Infowars.com: October 3,
2008: http://www.infowars.net/articles/october2008/031008Sherman.htm
[23] Ryan Grim, Dick Durbin: Banks "Frankly Own The Place". Huffington Post:
April 29, 2009:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/04/29/dick-durbin-banks-frankly_n_193010.html
[24] GRETCHEN MORGENSON and DON VAN NATTA Jr., In Crisis, Banks Dig In for
Fight Against Rules. The New York Times: May 31, 2009:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/01/business/01lobby.html
[25] Kerry Capell, The Stunning Collapse of Iceland. BusinessWeek: October
9, 2008:
http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/oct2008/gb2008109_947306.htm?chan=globalbiz_europe+index+page_top+stories
[26] Toby Sanger, Iceland's Economic Meltdown Is a Big Flashing Warning
Sign. AlterNet: October 21, 2008:
http://www.alternet.org/economy/103525/iceland%27s_economic_meltdown_is_a_big_flashing_warning_sign/?comments=view&cID=1038826&pID=1038711
[27] Tracy McVeigh, The party's over for Iceland, the island that tried to
buy the world. The Observer: October 5, 2008:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/oct/05/iceland.creditcrunch
[28] Ibid.
[29] Arsaell Valfells, Gordon Brown Killed Iceland. Forbes: October 16,
2008:
http://www.forbes.com/2008/10/16/brown-iceland-britain-oped-cx_av_valfells.html?referer=sphere_related_content&referer=sphere_related_content
[30] Ibid.
[31] Councils 'not reckless with cash'. BBC: October 10, 2008:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7660438.stm
[32] Economic programme in cooperation with IMF. The Icelandic Government
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http://www.iceland.org/info/iceland-imf-program/
[33] David Ibison, Iceland's rescue package flounders. The Financial Times:
November 12, 2008
[34] David Blair, Financial crisis causes Iceland's government to collapse.
The Telegraph: January 27, 2009:
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[35] Iceland applies to join European Union. CNN: July 17, 2009:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/07/17/iceland.eu.application/index.html?iref=newssearch
[36] Omar Valdimarsson, Iceland parliament approves debt bill. Reuters:
August 28, 2009: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE57R3B920090828
[37] Rowena Mason, IMF and Sweden to delay Iceland loans. The Telegraph:
January 14, 2010:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/6990795/IMF-and-Sweden-to-delay-Iceland-loans.html
[38] Justyna Pawlak, EU to recommend start of Iceland talks - EU official.
Reuters: February 16, 2010:
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[39] Paul Lewis, Dubai's six-year building boom grinds to halt as financial
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[40] Larry Elliott and Heather Stewart, Fears of double-dip recession grow
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[41] Hugh Tomlinson, UAE minister claims Dubai crisis is over. The Times
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[42] AP, Dubai debt fears resurface as questions linger. Forbes: February
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[43] Alastair Marsh, Markets hit as fears over Dubai debt rekindled. The
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[44] Ed Harris, Greece turns to Socialists to fight economic crisis. London
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[45] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Greece defies Europe as EMU crisis turns
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[46] Elena Becatoros, Greece prepares economic crisis plan. The Globe and
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[47] LOUISE STORY, LANDON THOMAS Jr. and NELSON D. SCHWARTZ, Wall St. Helped
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[48] Ibid.
[49] Sam Fleming and Kirsty Walker, The euro? It's a great success, says
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[51] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Greece loses EU voting power in blow to
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[52] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Fears of 'Lehman-style' tsunami as crisis hits
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[53] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, BIS warns of Great Depression dangers from
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[54] Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, BIS slams central banks, warns of worse crunch
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