- BIS
-
by Patrick Wood
July 21,
2020
from
Technocracy Website
Although written by Patrick Wood in 2005, nothing
has changed to the historical fact of the Bank for
International Settlements. It has nefarious roots
and is the tap-root of modern globalization.
Today, the BIS is getting headlines again because of
its direction of central banks to go cashless. It is
readily apparent that it has not lost its power and
influence over the decades.
For anyone wanting to understand how the world
really works, this is a must-read paper.
NOTE: Carl Teichrib contributed to this
report
Created at
Bretton Woods in 1944, the World
Bank has been dominated by international bankers, members of the
Council on Foreign Relations and
later by the
Trilateral Commission.
Corruption and
self-interest run amok as public funds are converted into private
hands by the billions.
Introduction
According to
The World Bank, it is,
"a vital source of
financial and technical assistance to developing countries
around the world. We are not a bank in the common sense.
We are made up of two
unique development institutions owned by 184 member countries -
the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(IBRD)
and the International Development Association (IDA).
Each institution
plays a different but supportive role in our mission of global
poverty reduction and the improvement of living standards.
The IBRD focuses on
middle income and creditworthy poor countries, while IDA focuses
on the poorest countries in the world.
Together we provide
low-interest loans, interest-free credit and grants to
developing countries for education, health, infrastructure,
communications and many other purposes." 1
High-minded words like,
"our mission of
global poverty reduction and the improvement of living
standards",
...would lead the reader
to believe that the World Bank is some benevolent and global welfare
organization.
Why is it then, that
The World Bank joins the International Monetary Fund and the
World Trade Organization as organizations that people around
the world just love to hate?
In reality, the World
Bank carries its weight, along with the International Monetary
Fund (IMF)
and the Bank for International Settlements (BIS),
to forcibly integrate minor countries of the world into its own
brand of 'capitalistic
democracy'...
World Bank
Beginnings
A sibling of the IMF, the World Bank was born out of the U.N.
Monetary and Financial Conference at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire in
July, 1944.
The original name given
to the World Bank was the International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development (IBRD) and reflects its original mission:
to rebuild Europe
after the devastation of World War II.
The name "World Bank" was
not actually adopted until 1975.
Both the IBRD and the IMF were created as independent specialized
agencies of the United Nations, of which they remain to this day.
The word "Development" in the IBRD name was rather insignificant at
the time because most of the southern hemisphere was still under
colonial rule, with each colonial master responsible for the
business activities in their respective countries.
Note:
It is argued by
some that there was an original desire by banking elites to put an
end to colonialism by restructuring investment and trade patterns in
colonized countries.
This paper will
not deal with this issue, but it should be noted that this has been
exactly what has happened, in many cases being aided by the
operations of the World Bank and the IMF.
As a "reconstruction" bank, however, the World Bank was impotent.
It ultimately loaned only
$497(US) million for reconstruction projects.
The Marshall Plan, by contrast,
became the true engine of the reconstruction of Europe by loaning
over $41(US) billion by 1953.
The primary architects of the World Bank were Harry Dexter White
and John Maynard Keynes, both of whom are summarized Global
Banking:
The International
Monetary Fund as follows:
"Such is the
moral fiber and intellectual credentials of the creators of
the IMF [and the World Bank]: One was an English ideologue
economist with a markedly global bent, and the other a
corrupt and high-ranking U.S. government official who was a
top Soviet spy." 2
Structure of the
World Bank
Today, the World Bank consists of two primary units:
The already-mentioned
IBRD and the International Development Association (IDA), which
was created in 1960.
The IBRD lends only to governments who are credit-worthy; in
other words, there is an expectation that they will repay their
loans. The IDA, by contrast, only lends to governments who are
not credit-worthy and are usually the poorest nations.
Together, they create a
"one-two" punch in global lending to any government that they are
able to talk into borrowing.
The U.S. currently
contributes about $1 billion per year of taxpayer funds to the
IDA.
Three other affiliates
combine with the World Bank, to be collectively called the World
Bank Group:
-
The International
Finance Corporation (IFC) - Founded in 1956, lends directly
to the private sector in developing counties.
-
The Multilateral
Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) - Founded in 1988,
provides guarantees to investors in developing countries
against losses caused by noncommercial risks.
-
The International
Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) -
Founded in 1966, provides international facilities for
conciliation and arbitration of investment disputes.
Headquarters for the
World Bank is Washington, DC. It employs approximately 7,000 in the
Washington complex, and another 3,000 in 109 offices scattered
throughout member countries.
IBRD funds its lending operations by selling AAA-rated bonds and
other debt instruments to other banks, pension funds, insurance
companies and corporations around the world.
By contrast, the IDA is
funded by (taxpayer) contributions from member countries. Annual
levels of lending is roughly equal between IBRD and IDA.
While the IFC generates
its own capital in open markets, MIGA and ICSID receive the majority
of their funding from the World Bank, much of which is taxpayer
funded.
Ownership of the World Bank consists of voting shares held by member
countries, according to size and contributions.
Currently, the U.S.
is the largest shareholder with 16.4% of total votes.
The next largest
voting blocks are,
-
Japan (7.9%)
-
Germany
(4.5%)
Because major
decisions require an 85 percent super-majority vote, the U.S.
can effectively veto any change (100% -16.4% = 83.6%).
American
Hegemony
It should be noted that the United Nations is headquartered in the
United States, on land originally donated to it by
David Rockefeller.
The Bretton Woods
Conference was held in New Hampshire. Every president of the World
Bank has hailed from the United States. It is no wonder that the
rest of the world views the World Bank as an American operation.
There has been an unwritten but traditional rule that the World Bank
president will always be an American, while the president of the IMF
is European. (A recent exception to this is the current IMF
president, who is Canadian)
It is instructive to review the past presidents of the World Bank,
because it demonstrates which elite cabal is really in control of
World Bank operations.
In turn, this will point
strongly to the real beneficiaries of the World Bank hegemony.
The complete biographies
and accomplishments of these men far exceed the available space in
this report, so only a few highlights are noted.
-
Eugene Meyer.
June to December, 1946.
Chairman, Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve from 1930-1933; owner of
the Washington Post; Member, Council on Foreign Relations;
agent of Lazard Freres, Brown Brothers, Harriman; appointed
head of the War Finance Corporation during WWI by Woodrow
Wilson.
-
John J. McCloy.
March 1947 to April 1949.
Member and chair
of the Council on Foreign Relations; Chairman, Ford
Foundation; Chairman, Chase Manhattan Bank; lawyer whose
firm was council to Chase Manhattan Bank.
-
Eugene Black.
July 1949 to December 1962.
Chairman, Board
of Directors for the Federal Reserve System (1933-34);
senior vice president of Chase Manhattan Bank; Member,
Council on Foreign Relations; member of Bilderbergers;
created the International Finance Corporation and the
International Development Association at the World Bank.
-
George Woods.
January 1963 to March 1968.
Vice president of
Harris, Forbes & Co.; vice president of Chase Bank; vice
president of and board member of First Boston Corp. (one of
the largest U.S. investment banking firms).
-
Robert Strange
McNamara. April 1968 to June 1981.
President and
director of Ford Motor Company; Secretary of Defense in the
Kennedy and Johnson administrations; member of Trilateral
Commission, Council on Foreign Relations and Bilderbergers;
honorary council trustee of Aspen Institute. Personally
negotiated China's entrance into the World Bank.
-
A.W. Clausen.
July 1981 to June 1986.
President, CEO
and chairman of Bank of America; member, Trilateral
Commission; member, Bretton-Woods Committee.
-
Barber B. Conable.
July 1986 to August 1991.
Member of U.S.
House of Representatives from 1965 to 1985; member
Trilateral Commission and Council on Foreign Relations;
senior fellow, American Enterprise Institute; board member,
New York Stock Exchange; member, Commission on Global
Governance.
-
Lewis T. Preston.
September 1991 to May 1995.
President, CEO
and chairman of J.P. Morgan & Co., and chairman of the
executive committee; vice president of Morgan Guaranty Trust
Co.; member and treasurer of Council on Foreign Relations;
director of General Electric.
-
James D.
Wolfensohn. June 1995 to 2005
Executive partner
and head of the investment banking department, Salomon
Brothers (New York); executive deputy chairman and managing
director, Schroders Ltd. (London); director, Rockefeller
Foundation; board member, Rockefeller University; honorary
trustee, Brookings Institution; Director, Population Council
(founded by John D. Rockefeller); member, Council on Foreign
Relations.
-
Paul Wolfowitz.
2005 - present.
Deputy Secretary
of Defense (2001-2005); member, Trilateral Commission;
member, Council on Foreign Relations; member, Bilderbergers;
director of the neocon flagship, Project for the New
American Century ( PNAC); member of the elite "Vulcans"
group that advised George W. Bush on foreign policy during
the 2000 presidential elections (other neocon members
included Condoleezza Rice, Colin Powell and Richard Perle);
member of and frequent speaker at Social Democrats USA
(successor to the Socialist Party of America).
An important pattern
emerges here.
These men frame a
50-year time period stretching from 1946 to 2006.
The early players
have long since passed away. There was no social connection
between the early and latter presidents.
Yet, seven out of ten
are members of the Council on Foreign Relations; four are
members of the Trilateral Commission, seven have major global
bank affiliations (Chase Manhattan, J.P. Morgan, Bank of
America, First Boston, Brown Brothers, Harriman, Salomon
Brothers, Federal Reserve), and four men were directly connected
to Rockefeller interests.
A detailed analysis is
not required to see the pattern emerge:
Global bankers (the
same old crowd) and their related global proxies, have
completely dominated the World Bank for its entire history.
Collectively and
individually, they have always operated purposefully and
consistently for their own self-interested, financial gain.
Why would anyone expect
even one of them to act out of character (e.g., be concerned for
world poverty) while directing the helm of the World Bank?
Purposes of
convenience
Whatever the true purposes of the World Bank and IMF might have
been, the publicly displayed purposes have changed when it was
convenient and necessary.
In 1944, reconstruction of war torn countries after WW II was the
important issue.
When the Bank demonstrated its impotence by loaning only a pittance
of less than $500 million, it changed its pubic image by positioning
itself as a check and balance to the expansion of communism.
Without the World Bank to
engage all of the lesser countries of the world who were susceptible
to communist influence, communism might spread and ultimately
threaten to end the cold war with an ugly nuclear Holocaust.
Public and legislative sentiment ultimately fizzled and the Bank was
again under heavy criticism when
Robert Strange McNamara was
appointed president.
Poverty
Reduction - Trojan Horse
As noted above, McNamara was president of the World Bank from 1968
through 1981.
He was also among the
original membership of the Trilateral Commission, founded in 1973 by
Rockefeller and Brzezinski, and was widely considered to be a
central figure in the global elite of his day.
It was McNamara who caused the focus of the World Bank to fall on
poverty and poverty reduction. This has essentially remained the
siren call right into the present.
This was a brilliant
maneuver because,
who would ever say
they are 'anti-poor' or 'pro-poverty'...?
Any attack on the Bank
would thus be viewed as an attack on poverty relief itself.
From 1968 onward, the
battle cry of the Bank has been "eliminate poverty."
This is clearly seen on the About Us page of the World Bank
web site, where these words are prominently displayed:
"Each institution (IBRD
and IDA) plays a different but supportive role in our mission of
global poverty reduction and the improvement of living
standards."
However, Article I of
The Articles of Agreement of the IBRD, as amended on February
16, 1989, state its official Purposes as follows:
-
To assist in the
reconstruction and development of territories of members by
facilitating the investment of capital for productive
purposes, including the restoration of economies destroyed
or disrupted by war, the reconversion of productive
facilities to peacetime needs and the encouragement of the
development of productive facilities and resources in less
developed countries.
-
To promote
private foreign investment by means of guarantees or
participations in loans and other investments made by
private investors; and when private capital is not available
on reasonable terms, to supplement private investment by
providing, on suitable conditions, finance for productive
purposes out of its own capital, funds raised by it and its
other resources.
-
To promote the
long-range balanced growth of international trade and the
maintenance of equilibrium in balances of payments by
encouraging international investment for the development of
the productive resources of members, thereby assisting in
raising productivity, the standard of living and conditions
of labor in their territories.
-
To arrange the
loans made or guaranteed by it in relation to international
loans through other channels so that the more useful and
urgent projects, large and small alike, will be dealt with
first.
-
To conduct its
operations with due regard to the effect of international
investment on business conditions in the territories of
members and, in the immediate postwar years, to assist in
bringing about a smooth transition from a wartime to a
peacetime economy.
The Bank shall be guided
in all its decisions by the purposes set forth above. 3
Note that the word "poverty" does not appear even once.
The reason is clear:
Whatever "business as
usual" might be with the Bank, it has nothing to do with
poverty or poverty reduction.
Rather, the Bank is
in business to loan money by stimulating borrowing demand in
developing countries, with a view to increasing international
trade.
The primary beneficiaries
of international trade are
the global corporations, and the
poor are actually poorer as a result.
This hypocrisy was noted even by Nobel laureate and former World
Bank chief economist, Joseph Stiglitz, as late as 2002:
As far as these
'client countries' were concerned, it was a charade in which the
politicians pretended to do something to redress the problems
[of poverty] while financial interests worked to preserve as
much of the status quo as they could. 4
Liberalization
and Structural Adjustments
When Alden Clausen (also an original member of the Trilateral
Commission) took over the reins from Robert McNamara in 1981, a
massive shakeup in the bank occurred.
As Stiglitz noted,
"In the early 1980's
a purge occurred inside the World Bank, in its research
department, which guided the Bank's thinking and direction."
5
Clausen, a true core
member of the global elite, brought in a new chief economist with
radical new ideas:
"…Ann Krueger, an
international trade specialist, best known for her work on 'rent
seeking' - how special interests use tariffs and other
protectionist measures to increase their incomes at the expense
of others…
Krueger saw
government as the problem. Free markets were the solution to the
problems of developing countries." 6
This was precisely the
time when so-called liberalization policies and Structural
Adjustments were forcefully implemented as a means of forcing
countries to privatize industries.
If governments were the
problem, then they should turn over areas of critical infrastructure
to private multinational corporations which, according to Krueger,
could perform better and more efficiently than bureaucratic
government bodies.
Not surprisingly, most of the career staff economists left the Bank
in the early 1980's in protest over Clausen and Krueger's policies.
How the Money
Laundry Works
The mechanism and operation of Structural Adjustments, along with
the tight cooperation between the IMF and the World Bank, was
adequately covered in The August Review's Global Banking:
The
International Monetary Fund...
The following
well-documented example will be the "picture worth a thousand words"
in the Review's effort to profile self-serving Bank and global
corporate policies.
It also demonstrates the
"tag-team" approach used by the Bank and IMF in the prying open of
closed markets in uncooperative countries.
It's a rather tangled
story, but careful reading will produce understanding of how the
"system" works.
Water Wars
In 1998, the IMF approved a loan of $138 million for Bolivia it
described as designed to help the country control inflation and
stabilize its domestic economy.
The loan was
contingent upon Bolivia's adoption of a series of "structural
reforms," including Privatization of "all remaining public
enterprises," including water services.
Once these loans were
approved, Bolivia was under intense pressure from the World Bank
to ensure that no public subsidies for water existed and that
all water projects would be run on a "cost recovery" basis,
meaning that citizens must pay the full construction, financing,
operation and maintenance costs of a water project.
Because water is an
essential human need and is crucial for agriculture, cost
recovery pricing is unusual, even in the developed world.
In this context, Cochabamba, the third largest city in Bolivia,
put its water works up for sale in late 1999.
Only one entity, a consortium led by Bechtel subsidiary Aguas
del Tunari, offered a bid, and it was awarded a 40-year
concession to provide water.
The exact details of
the negotiation were kept secret, and Bechtel claimed that the
numbers within the contract are "intellectual property."
But, it later came to
light that the price included the financing by Cochabamba's
citizens of a part of a huge dam construction project being
undertaken by Bechtel, even
though water from the
Misicuni Dam Project would be
600% more expensive than alternative water sources.
Cochabambans were
also required to pay Bechtel a contractually guaranteed 15%
profit, meaning that the people of Cochabamba were asked to pay
for investments while the private sector got the profits.
Immediately upon receiving the concession, the company raised
water rates by as much as 400% in some instances. These
increases came in an area where the minimum wage is less than
$100 a month.
After the price hike,
self-employed men and women were estimated to pay one quarter of
their monthly earnings for water.
Immediately upon receiving the concession, the company raised
water rates by as much as 400% in some instances. These
increases came in an area where the minimum wage is less than
$100 a month.
After the price hike,
self-employed men and women were estimated to pay one quarter of
their monthly earnings for water.
The city's residents were outraged. In January of 2000, a broad
coalition called the Coordination for the Defense of Water and
Life, or simply La Coordinadora, led by a local worker,
Oscar Olivera, called for peaceful demonstrations.
Cochabamba was shut
down for four days by a general strike and transportation
stoppage, but the demonstrations stopped once the government
promised to intervene to lower water rates.
However, when there
were no results in February, the demonstrations started again.
This time, however, demonstrators were met with tear gas and
police opposition, leaving 175 injured and two youths blinded.
The threat that privatization of public services under GATS
(General Agreement on Trade in Services) poses to democracy were
demonstrated in March 2000.
La Coordinadora
held an unofficial referendum, counted nearly 50,000 votes, and
announced that 96% of the respondents favored the cancellation
of the contract with
Aguas del Tunari. They were
told by the water company that there was nothing to negotiate.
On April 4, the residents of the city returned to the streets,
shutting down the city. Again, they were met with police
resistance, and on April 8, the government declared martial law.
The Bolivian military
shot a 17-year-old protester in the face, killing him.
However, the protests
continued, and, on April 10, the government relented, signing an
accord that agreed to the demand of the protesters to reverse
the water concession. The people of Cochabamba took back their
water.
Unfortunately, this inspiring story didn't simply end with the
victory for the people of Cochabamba.
On February 25, 2002,
Bechtel filed a grievance using investor protections granted in
a Bolivia-Netherlands Bilateral Investment Agreement at the
World Bank, demanding a $25 million dollar payment as
compensation for lost profits. 7
Note:
Bechtel
Engineering is the largest civil engineering company in the world.
It is privately owned by the Bechtel family.
For many years,
general counsel (and vice-president) for Bechtel was none other than
original Trilateral Commission member Caspar Weinberger.
Since then, the World Bank has granted additional "poverty
reduction" loans to Bolivia.
Carefully read the Bank's
current (2006) assessment on Bolivia found on its web site:
"Bolivia is
experiencing a time of difficulty and uncertainty. In recent
months, various political and social disturbances have escalated
with serious consequences, culminating in the resignation of
President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada in October 2003, and
the appointment of Vice-President Carlos Mesa as
President.
The current
administration inherits a difficult economic, political and
social climate, which is compounded by long-term issues, such as
profound inequality, an economy that has been adversely affected
by the region's recent economic slump, and widespread public
disenchantment with corruption." 8
Political and social
disturbances?
Difficult economic,
political and social climate?
Profound inequality?
Widespread
disenchantment with corruption?
It leaves one speechless.
So, in the case
of Bolivia, we see the following in
operation:
-
An IMF loan is
made to Bolivia, with conditionalities
-
The World Bank
steps in to enforce the conditionalities and impose
structural adjustments
-
The World Bank
loans "development" funds to Bolivia, and simultaneously
brings in private bank consortiums to fund the various
projects that Bechtel had in mind.
-
Bechtel makes a
sole-source bid, and it is accepted.
-
The water project
ends in total failure and Bechtel gets kicked out after
extreme political pressure from consumers.
-
Bechtel files a
"lost profit" claim according to a pre-negotiated "insurance
guarantee" with the World Bank Group (MIGA, see above.)
-
If Bechtel wins
its claim, it will be paid off with taxpayer money
contributed by member countries.
-
Undoubtedly, any
loans from private-sector banks that later turn sour, will
be bailed-out with taxpayer funds as well.
This kind of operation is
brazen stealing (albeit perhaps legally) of funds from everyone in
sight: Bolivia, the city of Cochabamba, the people of Cochabamba,
U.S. taxpayers.
The only beneficiaries
are Bechtel, the commercial banks and a few corrupt politicians who
got their customary bribes and kickbacks.
A penetrating question remains to be answered:
When did Bechtel
first set their sights on the Bolivia deal?
Did Bechtel have a
role in suggesting or creating the conditionalities and
Structural Adjustments specified by the World Bank in the first
place?
If so, there would be
grounds for criminal investigation.
It is not likely that the
World Bank will tell us, because of its very secretive inner
workings.
Even Stiglitz has noted,
"The IMF and World
Bank still have disclosure standards far weaker than those of
governments in democracies like the United States, or Sweden or
Canada.
They attempt to hide
critical reports; it is only their inability to prevent leaks
that often forces the eventual disclosure." 9
Corruption
The World Bank has received accusations of corruption for many
years.
Since the Bank is an
independent specialized agency of the United Nations and considering
the old adage,
"The fruit doesn't
fall far from the tree", this might not come as a surprise to
most.
The United Nations has a
major and documented track record on corruption of every conceivable
sort. It would be too simplistic to just leave it at that.
In May, 2004, Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Indiana), as Chairman of
the Foreign Relations Committee, kicked off the most recent inquiry
into corruption related to the activities of the multilateral
development banks, of which the World Bank is foremost.
The heads of the various development banks were invited to testify
(voluntarily) before the Committee.
According to Sen. Lugar,
James Wolfensohn,
"declined the
invitation, citing the established practice of Bank officials
not to testify before the legislatures of their numerous member
countries."
Witnesses before the
Committee testified that as much as $100 billion may have been lost
to corruption in World Bank lending projects.
In Sen. Lugar's opening remarks, he points out that the entire
history of the World Bank is suspect, with between 5 percent and 25
percent of all lending being lost to corruption.
"But corruption
remains a serious problem.
Dr. Jeffrey Winters
of Northwestern University, who will testify before us today,
estimates that the World Bank,
'has participated
mostly passively in the corruption of roughly $100 billion
of its loan funds intended for development.'
Other experts
estimate that between 5 percent and 25 percent of the $525
billion that the World Bank has lent since 1946 has been
misused.
This is equivalent to
between $26 billion and $130 billion.
Even if corruption is
at the low end of estimates, millions of people living in
poverty may have lost opportunities to improve their health,
education, and economic condition." 10
One must wonder why World
Bank officials have been so sloppy and careless with taxpayer
dollars.
Even further, one must
wonder if the corruption was a necessity to achieve the underlying
purposes of the Bank, that is, to create bogus and unwanted projects
in order to "stimulate" trade.
Sen. Lugar continued his opening remarks,
"Corruption thwarts
development efforts in many ways.
Bribes can influence
important bank decisions on projects and on contractors. Misuse
of funds can inflate project costs, deny needed assistance to
the poor, and cause projects to fail. Stolen money may prop up
dictatorships and finance human rights abuses.
Moreover, when
developing countries lose development bank funds through
corruption, the taxpayers in those poor countries are still
obligated to repay the development banks.
So, not only are the
impoverished cheated out of development benefits, they are left
to repay the resulting debts to the banks." 11
It has not been
determined which Bank employees might have taken bribes in exchange
for influence, but one can be sure that any deal starting with
corruption only has one direction to go - down.
In the end, it is
helpless individuals who are left holding the bag. The incurred
debts and failed projects just add to the impoverishment of already
poor people.
This is not to say that charges of corruption at the World Bank are
modern revelations only.
In 1994, marking the 50th
anniversary of its creation at Bretton Woods, South End Press
released "50 Years is Enough - The Case Against the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund," edited by Kevin Danaher.
The book details official
Bank and IMF reports that reveal the same kind of corruption back
then. In addition, it revealed different types of corruption, for
instance,
"Beyond the wasted
money and the environmental devastation, there was an even more
sinister side to the Bank during the McNamara years:
the World Bank's
predilection for increasing support to military regimes that
tortured and murdered their subjects, sometimes immediately
after the violent overthrow of more democratic governments.
In 1979, Senator
James Abourezk (D-South Dakota) denounced the bank on the
Senate floor, noting that the Bank was increasing,
'loans to four
newly repressive governments [Chile, Uruguay, Argentina and
the Philippines] twice as fast as all others.'
He noted that 15 of
the world's most repressive governments would receive a third of
all World Bank loan commitments in 1979, and that Congress and
the Carter administration had cut off bilateral aid to four of
the 15,
-
Argentina
-
Chile
-
Uruguay
-
Ethiopia,
...for flagrant human
rights violations.
He blasted the Bank's
'excessive secretiveness' and reminded his colleagues that 'we
vote the money, yet we do not know where it goes.'" 12
The text speaks for
itself and needs no comment. Readers of this report will likely have
a better understanding of where the money went!
Conclusions
This report does not pretend to be an exhaustive analysis of the
World Bank.
There are many facets,
examples and case studies that could be explored. In fact, many
critical and analytical books have been written about the World
Bank.
The object of this report
was to show how the World Bank fits into globalization as a central
member in
the triad of global monetary powers:
-
the IMF
-
the BIS
-
the World Bank
The World Bank is likely
to continue to operate despite any amount of political flack or
public protest. Such is the pattern of elitist-dominated
institutions. Such is the history of the International Monetary Fund
and the Bank for International Settlements.
It is sufficient to conclude that…
-
of the two
architects of the World Bank, one was a top Soviet communist
agent (Harry Dexter White) and the other was a British
ideologue (John Maynard Keynes) totally dedicated to
globalism (See Global Banking: The International Monetary
Fund for more details on White and Keynes)
-
from the
beginning, the Bank has been dominated by international
banking interests and members of the Council on Foreign
Relations and later by the Trilateral Commission
-
the cry of
"poverty reduction" is a sham to conceal the recycling of
billions of taxpayer dollars, if not trillions, into private
hands
-
the cry of
"poverty reduction" defuses critics of the Bank as being
anti-poor and pro-poverty
-
corruption at the
World Bank goes back decades, if not all the way to the very
beginning
Footnotes
-
World Bank web
site, About Page
-
The August Review - 'Global Banking -
The World Bank'
-
World Bank web
site, IBRD Articles of Agreement: Article I
-
Stiglitz,
Globalization and its Discontents (Norton, 2002), p. 234
-
ibid, p. 13
-
ibid
-
Wallach, Whose
Trade Organization? (The New Press, 2004), p.125]
-
See also,
Bechtel Vs. Bolivia: The Bolivian Water Revolt
-
See also, The
New Yorker, letter on Leasing the Rain
-
See also,
PBS, Leasing the Rain
-
World Bank web
site, Bolivia Country Brief
-
Stiglitz, op.
cit., p. 234
-
Lugar, U.S.
Senate Website, $100 billion may have been lost to World
Bank Corruption, May 13, 2004
-
ibid.
-
Hanaher,
50 Years is Enough: The Case Against
the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund,
(South End Press, 1994), p. 10
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