NGOs Call for Radical Reforms as IMF Offers New Loans
WASHINGTON - Two weeks before U.S. President George W. Bush hosts an economic summit to address the six-week-old financial crisis that has wreaked havoc on the world's capital and stock markets, a coalition of nearly 600 non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from 88 countries is calling for a "fundamental and far-reaching transformation on the international financial and economic system."
In a statement released Wednesday, the groups demanded that the upcoming Group of 20 meeting Nov. 15 here to the way for a much broader and more inclusive reform effort in which all of the world's governments and international civil society should participate.
"It is of course imperative to agree on immediate measures to address the crisis, and we emphasize that priority must be given to responses to the impacts on ordinary employees and workers, low-income households, pensioners and other extremely vulnerable sectors," according to the statement that was signed by Friends of the Earth, ActionAid, and Social Watch, among other international groups.
"But we are deeply concerned that the proposed meetings will be carried out in a rushed and non-inclusive manner, and, as a result, not address the comprehensive range of changes needed, nor fairly allocate their burden," it said.
The groups, which also included Civicus, the European Network on Debt and Development (EURODAD), and Jubilee, decried what they called a "double standard" by which wealthy western governments, in dealing with the crisis, were currently engaged in the kind of government intervention that western-dominated institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had forbidden their poor-country borrowers.
"The double standard is not only unacceptable, but it also signals the demise of free-market fundamentalism," the statement said. "The international financial system, its architecture and its institutions must be completely rethought."
The statement comes on the eve of the first meeting of a U.N. task force set up by the president of the General Assembly, Miguel D'Escoto, and chaired by Economics Nobel Laureate and former World Bank Chief Economist Joseph Stiglitz to make recommendations about how to cope with the ongoing crisis.
It also comes as the IMF announced the creation of the a new lending arm, the Short-Term Liquidity Facility (SLF), that will have the authority to lend up to five times a borrowing country's quota to help it overcome temporary liquidity problems in global capital markets.
"Exceptional times call for an exceptional response," said the IMF's managing director, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. "The Fund is responding quickly and flexibly to requests for financing. We are offering some countries substantial resources on an expedited basis, with conditions based only on measures absolutely necessary to get past the crisis and to restore a viable external position."
Creation of the SLF, which is similar to the Contingent Credit Line facility created by the IMF during the Asian crisis of 1997-98, has been considered urgent over the last couple of weeks as it became clear that the credit crisis that began with the collapse of Lehman Brothers investment firm last month was rapidly spreading to emerging markets and poor countries whose economies are dependent on commodity exports.
Still, critics have warned that, given the growing line of countries, starting with Iceland, Ukraine, and Hungary and Pakistan, in desperate need of the estimated 250 billion dollars the IMF has available, the SLF may not be sufficient to keep up with demand.
Thus, Strauss-Kahn made a point of welcoming Wednesday's announcement by the U.S. Federal Reserve and the central banks of Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, and Singapore to set up swap lines of up to 30 billion dollars to boost liquidity in emerging markets. Similar lines have already been set up between the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank and with the central banks of the Australia and New Zealand.
The Nov. 15 G-20 summit at the National Building Museum will include the leaders of the major industrialized countries and emerging markets, such as China, India, Brazil, and Mexico. It has been billed by some European leaders, notably British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, as a "new Bretton Woods", a reference to the New Hampshire resort where in 1944 U.S. and British finance officials laid the groundwork for the post-World War II western-dominated economic order overseen by the IMF and the World Bank.
Bush, who will be a lame duck when the summit convenes, is expected to oppose any moves that could result in big changes in the way those two agencies are run, particularly given the disproportionate voting power Washington -- including the ability to veto any major policy changes -- enjoys on their governing boards. The Europeans, who also exercise disproportionate power on the boards, appear to be more favorably inclined toward reform.
"There is no doubt that these institutions need reform when Belgium has the same amount of votes as China," noted Louis Belanger of Oxfam International.
It has been through the combined voting power of the U.S. and other western industrialized powers that the Bank and the IMF have imposed the so-called "Washington Consensus" -- policies that require borrowing countries to implement neo-liberal, "market-friendly" policies and reduce the role of government in their economies -- over the last 30 years.
Grassroots and many international NGOs have long claimed that these policies have mainly benefited western-based multi-national corporations, often to the detriment of the poorest and most vulnerable populations in borrowing countries whose governments were forced to cut their budgets and adopt austerity measures recommended by the Bank and the IMF.
To them, the response to current crisis in both North America and Europe demonstrates the bankruptcy of both the "Washington Consensus" and the agencies that enforced it.
"To stave off regional and global recessions and restore stability and confidence in the market, northern governments are pursuing a massive and unprecedented program of government intervention, nationalizing banks, injecting massive subsidies into ailing institutions and re-regulating their financial sectors," they said.
These measures stand "in direct contrast to the austere neo-liberal policies pressed on developing countries by the World Bank, the IMF, and developed countries for the past thirty years."
"These policies have failed spectacularly," said Vitalis Meja, coordinator for the African Forum & Network on Debt and Development (Afrodad). "And now, the response is to bring 20 governments to Washington for a new 'Washington Consensus'."
Writing in the Financial Times Wednesday, financier and philanthropist George Soros noted that, "The so-called Washington consensus imposed strict market discipline on other countries but the U.S. was exempt from it."
In the NGOs' view, any attempted reform of the current system should best be pursued under auspices of the United Nations where each country has a vote.
"Since the impacts are likely to be the greatest on the poorest people, and in emerging economies and developing countries," noted Lidy Nacpil of Jubilee South -- Asia/Pacific Movement on Debt and Development, "shouldn't all countries -- governments and peoples -- have a say, not just those responsible for this crisis?"
"Any attempt by the most powerful countries to stitch up a deal with no public consultation and no involvement of the majority of the world's countries through an inclusive process will only further undermine public trust and confidence," added Roberto Bissio of Social Watch.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
16 Comments so far
Show AllThanks for the Crismartonsen tapes.... exponential levels of Debt and inflation compounded annually and engineered by our War profiteer financial and political class... War causes the most inflation and debt of all.
Maybe the day will come soon when I will have to sing for my supper!
Jim Glover, ardee and Mordechai - great comments!
Jim: ..."no Country will be able to begin to get at the root until those countries take OWNERSHIP of the National banks..." (the FED in the US)
Precisely! The deceptive language here is very revealing: The "FED" isn´t federal at all, nor "national" for that matter, it is nothing but a trojan horse for a private banking cartel whose founders even wrote the "Federal Reserve Act" (which created it in 1913) themselves. Full story see here:
http://video.google.de/videosearch?q=zeitgeist+the+fed&emb=0&aq=f#
(pick "The Men behind the curtain" - 49 min so you can watch it in one piece)
or watch the whole zeitgeist video: "Zeitgeist, The Movie - Remastered / Final Edition"
What do organized religon, 9/11 and the dubious "Banking System" have in common? Find out in this amazing documentary....(also on google-video)
ardee: "The reality is that financial markets are self-destabilizing"....
"The housing bubble was merely the trigger that detonated a much larger bubble. That super-bubble, created by the ever-increasing use of credit and debt leverage,... is now exploding..."
You are quite right,too. The myth, that the root cause of the problem are the "sub-prime" loans, the derivatives, etc. is also being perpetuated here in Europe. Although these factors did play a significant role in the crisis, the real, basic problem is the debt system itself - which can only bed described as organized madness -...
The devastating consequences of this system for all of us (except the masters of the game) is analyzed here (easy to understand - no economic jargon): http://www.chrismartenson.com/crash-course
Mordechai: "... the Gordon Gekkos of this world don't give a rat's backside whether they further undermine public trust and confidence. ...Real change will come only when people who don't read sites like this ......start reading sites like this and start considering them the truth."
I agree. I find it absolutely laughable to say that by pumping billions into the financial markets one can "restore confidence". It`s like giving huge sums to an addicted gambler who has just lost a fortune (borrowed money!)....
This great game is not based on "confidence", it is based on deception and manipulation, a point I have tried to illustrate in my blog:
http://uglyrumors.wordpress.com/2008/10/26/greenspan-and-market-morals/
All informed people would agree, that a "fundamental and far-reaching transformation of the international financial and economic system" is needed but do we have the power to initate a real paradigm change? Jim also wrote "This is the beginning of a huge global revolution" - I wish it were...
The problem is, that (as Jim and Jefferson pointed out) whoever is in control of the money supply is in effect more powerful than any government.
THINK ABOUT IT: The government (which in effect means the taxpayers) is paying INTEREST for its own money to private banks. (See also the video "Money as Debt" on google)
This system has lead to such an enormous concentration of power and wealth in the hands of an economic elite that REAL democracy had no chance: our government and parliaments are now so dominated by "special interests" (whether Reps or Dems or any of the big parties here) that democracy has become a farce and the greatest farce is the election circus: I found this on the web and think it describes the Republican (Pain /Palin PR-strategy) pretty well:
"All propaganda must be popular and its intellectual level must be adjusted to the most limited intelligence among those it is addressed to. Consequently, the greater the mass it is intended to reach, the lower its purely intellectual level will have to be. But if, as in propaganda for sticking out a war, the aim is to influence a whole people, we must avoid excessive intellectual demands on our public, and too much caution cannot be exerted in this direction."
"The receptivity of the great masses is very limited, their intelligence is small, but their power of forgetting is enormous. In consequence of these facts, all effective propaganda must be limited to a very few points and must harp on these in sloans until the last member of the public understands what you want him to understand by your slogan".
(>>> 08: terror, war on terror, Iraq, war hero, protect America, muslim, muslim - terrorist, socialist, real values, real America, guns and religion - real America...<<<<) - to sum it all up: "Be a good American - don´t try to think!!)
The author of these lines? Adolf Hitler.
.Thank you but...those words were Soros' and not mine. Though I think I agree (as far as I can understand them)..;-}
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Whichever forms these radical changes might take...one thing for certain: stay away from the IMF. It is an American institution pretending to help people. The IMF (instant misery follows) has hurt countless people all over the world. The only one benefiting are US companies. Enough of this hypocrisy and blackmail.
snydly
Grrreat posts! Everything Thom Hartmann, Korten, Chomsky, Chalmers Johnson, John Perkins, et al, have said about corporations should be brought into the mix for a fix in a big way. Corporations as they are now are anti-human. This planet is only human, and, yes, we are part of nature. Corporatism has given lesser minds and baser instincts the power to overcome humanity's potential for natural sustainability. The huge imbalances and ubiquitous toxicity demonstrate that. The internal contradictions gamed into corporatism will keep on crashing our chances until we get it right.
IF we have time...
Looks like now, or never.
These are the real solutions:
Direct Democracy (like how the constituion was established only every day then forever).
Calorie Economics (which means human effort MUST be repaid in HUMAN EFFORT, eliminating the means to game people by cash or material.)
Thermal Depolymerization (The ability to recycle literally anything by feeding it through a pressure boiling process.)
Raised Field Agriculture (Lost Ancient Agricultural system that delivers crop yields on par with modern agriculture which though is sustainable, not environmentally damaging by chemical fertilizer and pesticide.)
Wind Power (Wind energy over America if well enough harnessed could offer 2X the energy that America consumes from all sources today. This does not account for Skyrise Wind Turbines which is my very own invention that I can not find the least help to bring to market.)
Geothermal Energy (Drill to the mantle, pipe some water to it, use the steam coming off it to spin the magnets past the wire coils of your alternator, voila, electricity.)
Wave, River and Tidal Hydro Power (More magnets spinning past wire coils...)
Conversion of solar energy by Heat Engine (aka Stirling Engine... Incidentally solar by photovoltaic and nuclear and biodiesel and oil from half empty wells ALL require more energy to deliver to market than they could possibly return, thus are energy drains and not in the least energy solutions.)
Regenerative medicine (The use of adult stem cells to grow limbs and damaged tissues and whatever's necessary to repair a person.)
Oxidative Medicine (The use of high levels of oxygen to dissolve ANY organism foreign to the human system.)
Chelation (The removal of heavy metal toxins from the body by EDTA.)
This is a list of every nutrient that people need, you can find vege sources of every of these on my blog www.lamegame.name.:
Vitamins
Biotin
Folic Acid
Niacin
Pantothenic Acid
Riboflavin
Thiamin
Vitamin A
Vitamin B6
Vitamin B12
Vitamin C
Vitamin D
Vitamin E
Vitamin K
Minerals
Calcium
Chromium
Copper
Fluoride
Iodine
Iron
Magnesium
Manganese
Molybdenum
Phosphorus
Potassium
Selenium
Sodium (Chloride)
Zinc
Other Nutrients
L-Carnitine
Choline
Coenzyme Q10
Essential Fatty Acids
Lipoic Acid
Phytochemicals
Carotenoids
Chlorophyll & Chlorophyllin
Curcumin
Fiber
Flavonoids
Garlic
Indole-3-Carbinol
Isothiocyanates
Lignans (phytoestrogens)
Phytosterols
Resveratrol
Soy Isoflavones (phytoestrogens)
Amino acids
Alanine
Arginine
Asparagine
Aspartic Acid
Cysteine
Glutamic Acid
Glutamine
Glycine
Histidine
Isoleucine
Lysine
Methionine
Phenylalanine
Proline
Serine
Threonine
Tryptophan
Tyrosne
Valine
rocyahsoul@yahoo.com
www.lamegame.name
Daniel Vincent Kelley
The concept of a new Bretton Woods is certainly timely, as the financial model imposed by the old one is no longer relevant due to rapacious capitalism where there are no consequences as long as the "corporate veil" is there. This is especially urgent given the emergence of China, where if they emulate any of the conduct of the West, the consequences would be truly dire for the rest of the planet. Additionally, it is time that the Euro replace the US$ as the currency used by the World Bank & IMF.
All valid points.
But I fear that a new Bretton Woods would be created in much the same manner as the first...after a brutal war.
It looks like the people of the world are saying we gotta figure this "who owns our money" thing quick and no Country will be able to begin to get at the root until those countries take ownership of the National banks, The FED.... the Brains of the Monster! If the people don't have control of the Head we are a slave of the system. Jefferson warned us about them National Banks..... I think he still is!
And to be fair the world will realize that they have to do it together and get the best progressive new ideas on how to build a healthy sustainable life for the most people and the future of our planet with a new monetary system designed to do it best..
This is the beginning of a huge global revolution. That's what I get from too much CD!
George Soros is the currency speculator who made a lot of money during the Asian Crisis by relying on IMF conditions (such as the ability to extract money from a country at the drop of a hat - which people with 401(k) plans are NOT able to do).
It's no surprise that he's defending the IMF and blaming the U.S. crisis on the failure of the U.S. to adopt those very same IMF conditions. What an effort at re-spinning the picture. Soros' heavy philanthropic "giving" will ensure that his message gets out there, as well, as all the left-wing news outlets that take money from his foundation will be reluctant to honestly cover the real story.
Robber barons want to be able to do as they please without any restrictions. That's what the IMF is really all about: ensuring that they can.
.Well , yes and no....Soros has been criticised before but he is a regulator not a deregulator and seems a cut above, for example:
http://jotman.blogspot.com/2008/10/george-soros-interviewed-at-imf-world.html
Soros predicts a global "powershift toward Asia." He says the financial crisis calls for a new "paradigm" by which markets need to be understood -- and regulated.
Of course, Soros has been speaking out for a long time on these subjects. In the Huffington Post interview, Soros reiterates his view as to the underlying problem behind the market collapse:
The key to understanding this crisis -- the worst since the 1930s -- is to see that it was generated within the financial system itself. What we are witnessing is not the result of some exogenous shock that knocked things off balance, as the prevailing paradigm, which believes markets are self-correcting, would suggest. The reality is that financial markets are self-destabilizing; occasionally they tend toward disequilibrium, not equilibrium.
The paradigm I'm proposing differs from the conventional wisdom in two respects. First, financial markets don't reflect the actual economic fundamentals. Expectations by traders and investors are always distorting them. Second, these distortions in the financial markets can affect the fundamentals -- as we see in both bubbles and crashes. Euphoria can lift housing and dot.com prices; panic can send sound banks tumbling.
That two-way connection -- that you affect what you reflect -- is what I call "reflexivity." That is how financial markets really work. Their instability is now spreading to the real economy, not the other way around. In short, the boom-bust sequences, the bubbles, are endemic to the financial system.
The current situation is not just about the housing bubble. The housing bubble was merely the trigger that detonated a much larger bubble. That super-bubble, created by the ever-increasing use of credit and debt leverage, combined with the conviction that markets are self-correcting, took more than 25 years to grow. Now it is exploding.
.
We see things, not as they are, but as we are.
Anais Nin
Will there be any transparency in all of this? Can we ask C-SPAN to cover all of it?? Expose the liars & thieves as they loot from us on the way out the door...
Money can get you something for nothing until the chickens come home to roost.
¿ Why would the bankster gangsters be tarried by such a little thing like massive international hypocracy and unified world opinion against them ?
___ Hell'$ bell$,
___ there'$ profit$ to be made
Namaste
"Any attempt by the most powerful countries to stitch up a deal with no public consultation and no involvement of the majority of the world's countries through an inclusive process will only further undermine public trust and confidence,"
Needless to say, the Paulsons, Bernankes, Greenspans and all the other Daddy Warbucks, Scrooge McDucks and Gordon Gekkos of this world don't give a rat's backside whether they further undermine public trust and confidence. Real change will come only when people who don't read sites like this because they consider them communist start reading sites like this and start considering them the truth.
Thank you, M O R D E C H A I _ S H I B L I K O V
You nailed it !
" … when saying the TRUTH becomes REVOLUTIONARY … "
Namaste