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The IMF: Violating Women Since 1945
As Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the world’s most powerful financial institution, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), spends a few nights in Rikers Island prison awaiting a hearing, the world is learning a lot about his history of treating women as expendable sex objects. Strauss-Kahn has been charged with rape and forced imprisonment of a 32-year-old Guinean hotel worker at a $3,000-a-night luxury hotel in New York.
While the media dissects the attempted rape of a young African woman and begins to dig out more information about Strauss-Kahn’s past indiscretions, we couldn’t help but see this situation through the feminist lens of the “personal is political.”
For many in the developing world, the IMF and its draconian policies of structural adjustment have systematically “raped” the earth and the poor and violated the human rights of women. It appears that the personal disregard and disrespect for women demonstrated by the man at the highest levels of leadership within the IMF is quite consistent with the gender bias inherent in the IMF’s institutional policies and practice.
Systematic Violation of Women’s Human Rights
The IMF and the World Bank were established in the aftermath of World War II to promote international trade and monetary cooperation by giving governments loans in times of severe budget crises. Although 184 countries make up the IMF’s membership, only five countries—France, Germany, Japan, Britain, and the United States—control 50 percent of the votes, which are allocated according to each country’s contribution.
The IMF has earned its villainous reputation in the Global South because in exchange for loans, governments must accept a range of austerity measures known as structural adjustment programs (SAPs). A typical IMF package encourages export promotion over local production for local consumption. It also pushes for lower tariffs and cuts in government programs such as welfare and education. Instead of reducing poverty, the trillion dollars of loans issued by the IMF have deepened poverty, especially for women who make up 70 percent of the world’s poor.
IMF-mandated government cutbacks in social welfare spending have often been achieved by cutting public sector jobs, which disproportionately impact women. Women hold most of the lower-skilled public sector jobs, and they are often the first to be cut. Also, as social programs like caregiving are slashed, women are expected to take on additional domestic responsibilities that further limit their access to education or other jobs.
In exchange for borrowing $5.8 billion from the IMF and World Bank, Tanzania agreed to impose fees for health services, which led to fewer women seeking hospital deliveries or post-natal care and naturally, higher rates of maternal death. In Zambia, the imposition of SAPs led to a significant drop in girls’ enrollment in schools and a spike in “survival or subsistence sex” as a way for young women to continue their educations.
But IMF’s austerity measures don’t just apply to poor African countries. In 1997, South Korea received $57 billion in loans in exchange for IMF conditionalities that forced the government to introduce “labor market flexibility,” which outlined steps for the government to compress wages, fire “surplus workers,” and cut government spending on programs and infrastructure. When the financial crisis hit, seven Korean women were laid off for every one Korean man. In a sick twist, the Korean government launched a "get your husband energized" campaign encouraging women to support depressed male partners while they cooked, cleaned, and cared for everyone.
Nearly 15 years later, the scenario is grim for South Korean workers, especially women. Of all OECD countries, Koreans work the longest hours: 90% of men and 77% of women work over 40 hours a week. According to economist Martin Hart-Landsberg, in 2000, 40 percent of Korean workers were irregular workers; by 2008, 60 percent worked in the informal economy. The Korean Women Working Academy reports that today 70 percent of Korean women workers are temporary laborers.
Selling Mother Earth
IMF policies have also raped the earth by dictating that governments privatize the natural resources most people depend on for their survival: water, land, forests, and fisheries. SAPs have also forced developing countries to stop growing staple foods for domestic consumption and instead focus on growing cash crops, like cut flowers and coffee for export to volatile global markets. These policies have destroyed the livelihoods of small-scale subsistence farmers, the majority of whom are women.
“IMF adjustment programs forced poor countries to abandon policies that protected their farmers and their agricultural production and markets,” says Henk Hobbelink of GRAIN, an international organization that promotes sustainable agriculture and biodiversity. "As a result, many countries became dependent on food imports, as local farmers could not compete with the subsidized products from the North. This is one of the main factors in the current food crisis, for which the IMF is directly to blame."
In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), IMF loans have paved the way for the privatization of the country’s mines by transnational corporations and local elites, which has forcibly displaced thousands of Congolese people in a context where women and girls experience obscenely high levels of sexual slavery and rape in the eastern provinces. According to Gender Action, the World Bank and IMF have made loans to the DRC to restructure the mining sector, which translates into laying off tens of thousands of workers, including women and girls who depend on the mining operations for their livelihoods. Furthermore, as the land becomes mined and privatized, women and girls responsible for gathering water and firewood must walk even further, making them more susceptible to violent crimes.
We Are Over It
Women’s rights activists around the globe are consistently dumbfounded by how such violations of women’s bodies are routinely dismissed as minor transgressions. Strauss-Kahn, one of the world’s most powerful politicians whose decisions affected millions across the globe, was known for being a “womanizer” who often forced himself on younger, junior women in subordinate positions where they were vulnerable to his far greater power, influence, and clout. Yet none of his colleagues or fellow Socialist Party members took these reports seriously, colluding in a consensus shared even by his wife that the violation of women’s bodily integrity is not in any sense a genuine violation of human rights.
Why else would the world tolerate the unearthly news that 48 Congolese women are raped every hour with deadening inaction? Eve Ensler speaks for us all when she writes, “I am over a world that could allow, has allowed, continues to allow 400,000 women, 2,300 women, or one woman to be raped anywhere, anytime of any day in the Congo. The women of Congo are over it too.”
We live in a world where millions of women don’t speak their truth, don’t tell their dark stories, don’t reveal their horror lived every day just because they were born women. They don’t do it for the same reasons that the women in the Congo articulate – they are tired of not being heard. They are tired of men like Strauss-Kahn, powerful and in suits, believing that they can rape a black woman in a hotel room, just because they feel like it. They are tired of the police not believing them or arresting them for being sex workers. They are tired of hospitals not having rape kits. They are tired of reporting rape and being charged for adultery in Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia.
Fighting Back
For each one of them, and for those of us who have spent many years investing in the tenacity of women’s movements across the globe, the courage and gumption of the young Guinean immigrant shines like the torch held by Lady Liberty herself. This young woman makes you believe we can change this reality. She refused to be intimidated. She stood up for herself. She fought to free herself—twice—from the violent grip of the man attacking her. She didn’t care who he was—she knew she was violated and she reported it straight to the hotel staff, who went straight to the New York police, who went straight to JFK to pluck Strauss-Kahn from his first-class Air France seat.
In a world where it often feels as though wealth and power can buy anything, the courage of a young woman and the people who stood by her took our breath away. These stubborn, ethical acts of working class people in New York City reminded us that women have the right to say “no.” It reminded us that “no” does not mean “yes” as the Yale fraternities would have us believe, and, most importantly that no one, regardless of their position or their gender, should be above the law. A wise woman judge further drove home the point about how critically important it is to value women’s bodies when she denied Strauss-Kahn bail citing his long history of abusing women.
Strauss-Kahn sits in his Rikers Island cell. It would be a great thing if his trial succeeds in ending the world’s tolerance for those who discriminate and abuse women. We cannot tolerate it one second longer. We cannot tolerate it at the personal level, we must refuse to condone it at the professional level, and we must challenge it every time it we see it in the policies of global institutions like the International Monetary Fund.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllActually the young woman in question didn't know who he was, it apparently came as a bit of a shock later. Just as well really.
This sort of thing is enough to make a person wish that men like this could be sentenced to spend the rest of their lives as females.
I know my views are not shared by many (maybe any) on CD, but no matter what your beliefs are. I hope you do the very best that you (as individuals and as families) can do to take care of yourselves and those that you love, as not to empower those who claim to be serving you, but never invested their skin in your game.
It comes as no surprise to me at all that a person who claimed to support/work for the people was really working for his oversized ego.
It doesn't surprise me at all that he would think himself above the law and/or put his desires above the human rights/civil liberties of others.
It doesn't surprise me at all that persons who put their skin into the game of a political movement would prefer to look the other way as opposed to doing the right thing because of "bad press for the movement which will give ammunition to opponents."
As humans we love that which we put our blood sweat and tears into. We protect that which we put our blood sweat and tears into, in many cases above the greater good.
If anyone claims to be serving you without investing their skin, their blood, their sweat, and their tears, in you directly, be exceptionally skeptical.
Regardless of the outcome of the Strauss-Kahn case, independently of the seriousness or the frivolity of the conspiracy theory, this article, which goes far beyond a punctual or anecdotal violation of the law, is simply admirable in that it masterfully addresses structural problems which result from the from the way so many societies,if not the entire world, are artificially and needlessly organized, promoting injustice and breeding misery , except for the powerfully vicious and the viciously powerful.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn was threatening a very powerful global criminal enterprise: the IMF. He was trying to reform the IMF. Holy toledo. Pissing off those who profit from the IMF's business of looting third-world countries is a quick way to get famous, and not in a good way. He was, arguably, one of the good guys - certainly so far as it concerns the IMF. Accusing him of rape is, just possibly, a very effective way to create a sensational, unanswerable, and thrilling distraction from what is really going on: any potential he may have had to challenge the boys who don't play beanbag has just been irretrievably ended.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Dominique-Strauss-Kahn-was-by-Mike-Whitney-110519-58.html
I agree with every point made by these authors, but would remind them of A. Lincoln's words: the hen is the wisest animal because she does not cluck until the egg is laid.
There has been no trial yet, no conviction yet, only an indictment. I find it passing strange that in the wee hours of the morning there was press present to film this asshole being duckwalked in handcuffs. Sarkozy is a slimebag that admires W and the skulduggery of the Bush/Chaney cabal. Something stinks besides the capatalistic inhumanity of the IMF.
Anyone with knowledge of the particulars of how the arrest transpired that will difuse these suspicions, please reply, because I don't want to be sucked into another pointless conspiracy theory. This should be simple: how and why was the press present to record the damning image of one of the most powerful men in the world in handcuffs being not-too-gently pushed by plainclothes police towards incarceration. Don't get me wrong, I have no sympathy for this jerk.
His immediate conviction in the press is dubious. He was the main challenge to Sarkozy in the coming elections. Of course Strauss-Kahn is a louse, he may well be guilty, but his sudden fall is being questioned by people who are thinking more about the grand chessboard of things. His scandal could be a bit like the Wikileaks scandal—a manufactured "honeypot" scandal. He's not being presumed innocent until proven guilty anywhere in the press. If Maureen Dowd is screaming for his head, I'd think it over. I'd wonder more about what this means for France than about the IMF, which is obvious.
"Also, as social programs like caregiving are slashed, women are expected to take on additional domestic responsibilities that further limit their access to education or other jobs."
And just as necessary, loss of time and resources available to care for their children and help maintain community..
Because Rape has nothing to do with sex, you can relate it to the way these people pray on the rest of us. Rape is not about sex it is about Power and that is how the whole IMF and other huge corrupt banks use their power to take what they want from everywhere. The corporate media flies high on scandals but when it comes to real news and information from around the world, when these predatory banks destroy countries and confiscate their resources and make the people serfs, there is no news. All over the world, farmlands are being destroyed and the corporate media is defending the screwing of Mother Earth by getting tougher in censoring the news of rise of farmers committing suicide as one example.
MAX, sweetheart, I know you're working hard to win your "feminist" bona fides in this forum, but please, it's not "the way these people pray on the rest of us," unless you mistake his sexual intentions for those of a rapt clergy man. You meant PREY...
I once saw an advertisement that said, "Come and prey with me." Same kind of thing... sometimes spelling really DOES matter.
maxpayne said; "these people pray on the rest of us." I just want to point out that the word should be prey and that it is a problem with a lot of people who mix up "praying for" with "preying on".....literally that is.
I dunno but I sometimes can't tell the difference. The rightwing religious zealots can all too easily stretch praying to the point of almost looking like they're preying. But good point though.
DJM: Because I react to posts before reading the entire thread, I didn't realize you noticed the same thing I did. Oh, well...
And Max, the "dunno" is getitng old. Either you know or you don't know. Right?
Sioux, when I say dunno instead of don't know, it usually means I'm overwhelmed and/or fatigued. I'll keep your point in mind as I go back and review and reflect on what I wrote.
I am no fan of the IMF, but this situation sounds exactly like the Julian Assange setup. He was the major challenger to Sarkozy, and he was a reformer. Check out these stories:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article28135.htm
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article28122.htm
MALA: I buy your proposition entirely with Elliot Spitzer. And also with Julian... but you know, men CAN behave badly. Should such behavior happen to run concurrent with policies inconvenient to those in power circles, powers who would like to bring them down a notch, then certainly they will enthusiastically align with the muscle of the law to bring justice when it's convenient to their purposes.
In other words, he may have become less of an asset to the IMF hit team, yet that does not excuse his behavior. Let's face it, lots of young women work as maids, and lots of men think they have a biological ticket to access... this guy probably thought if he threw down a $100 dollar bill, that would make it right. To those married to big money, in their minds everyone HAS a price.
How about all those Republicans caught playing footsie, or "coming out" after 20 years of marriage, 3 kids, and commitment to Christian abstinence causes? Would we say they were all set up, too?
Not many people are healthy or balanced these days, and sex is a potent force that all of us wrestle with. I would not give this guy a pass... I think his behavior should not be excused as yet another set-up.
Shit does happen. And sometimes adults ARE responsible for their elected actions.
Jennifer Bedingfield (or anyone else intent upon using the meme that "feminism is dead"), please consider these words, taken from this article, the next time you wish to plant (in this forum) what conscious persons should note for its deception:
"We live in a world where millions of women don’t speak their truth, don’t tell their dark stories, don’t reveal their horror lived every day just because they were born women. They don’t do it for the same reasons that the women in the Congo articulate – they are tired of not being heard. They are tired of men like Strauss-Kahn, powerful and in suits, believing that they can rape a black woman in a hotel room, just because they feel like it. They are tired of the police not believing them or arresting them for being sex workers. They are tired of hospitals not having rape kits. They are tired of reporting rape and being charged for adultery in Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia."
When voices are silenced, when established powers marginalize the needs and rights of some, when media smothers the truth in lies... to blame those seeking a better, more just way, is well, disingenous at best.
"
It also probably helped matters that she was here legally and a member of a union. A lot of conspiracy speculation is going on around this case, but it looks like DSK's groping ways finally caught up to him and he couldn't be covered for.
Technical (and possibly pedantic) point, but it's usually a mistake to assume intent
where wilful ignorance explains events. Everything in the text - and particularly the parts relating to Strauss-Kahn - was important and needed saying, but I couldn't help thinking that the author of the headline and the paragraph headers had a tendency towards sensationalism and the fallacy of the undistributed (or even ignored) middle.
I'd love to believe that the IMF were institutionally sexist in addition to their other vagaries, but though this article shows significant correlation there's no evidence of causality - women are disproportionately adversely affected, but this is because they are disproportionately represented in the adversely affected groups. Why this might be the case is hugely important, but it's another question that's a lot older and broader than considerations of the IMF.
Could the wilful ignorance be described as sexist? Maybe, but I'm not convinced. Sticking your fingers in your ears and going 'LaLaLa' blocks everyone. The IMF really don't care. Though I'd like to believe it, I've seen no evidence in this piece that the IMF is any more sexist than the societies in which it operates, which is where our problem lies. Unfortunately, the assertion that the IMF have been violating women since 1945 suggests that they are only half as bad as they are.
If you only knew what an honest, conscientious economic development worker -- a professional at the African Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the Inter-American development Bank,the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and, yes the World Bank and the IMF -- has to go through! As Anne Sinclair -- Anne Strauss-Kahn -- says "une chienne de vie" or "une vie de chien". But, what's the purpose of my telling you my experience? Even reading John Perkins' "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" won't give you a remote sense of how hard that life is, because, while he was "an economic hit man", John Perkins had frozen his sense of honesty and decency just to survive. You might find it hard to believe, but there ARE professionals at the IMF, the WB, the AfDB, the IADB, the AsDB, the EBRD who are impeccably honest and humane and, at the same time, have the steel nerves and competence to ensure.that their institution ALWAYS maintains a AAA rating.while actually delivering on their development mandate.
IMF policies revolve around the sort of measures ('austerity', cuts to public services, etc.) that many of us posting on this site consider right-wing capitalism (assuming there's a different kind of capitalism). Funding (but, more often, loans) are available, but only if the recipients follow certain policies.
To me, this smells like colonialism. The IMF's goal appears to be to make poorer nations similar to the wealthy West. I don't dispute that this might bring many advantages, but these are neither universal nor universally appreciated. This is the "development mandate", and it's a lot closer to one of the Ceasars than it is to Bob Geldof.
I'm certain there are well-intentioned people working in these organzations, but the engineers who built Fukushima meant well. The sort of policies the IMF and others are putting forward appear to many of us - certainly those of us of a Keynesian financial philosophy - to be a disaster waiting to happen.
Meanwhile, you are right that we don't know what a conscientious employee of such an organization has to go through. Care to share?
"Thanks for giving me the opportunity to clarify a little more. "Keynesian financial philosophy" is a catch-all term that often does great disservice to a complex (in the twenty-first century 'complexity-theory/emergence' sense) analysis that the great economist J.M. Keynes developed and Axel Lejonhufvud so skillfully elaborated on, and that Joseph Stiglitz and Robert Barro and Howard Grossman fined-tuned in later post-Keynesian models and Lance Taylor modified further in his economic structuralist models. Joseph Stiglitz himself had been Chief Economist of the World bank and had the guts to openly disagree with Robert Rubin when the latter was Treasury Secretary and Stglitz dared thereafter to resign from the World Bank. To those who have a little more knowledge of the Bretton Woods institutions than what can be glimpsed from newsmedia accounts, the case of Claudio Loser and his team who had to resign from the IMF as a result of the Argentina financial fiasco of the 1980's during the "Chicago Boys" episode is very eloquent of the near-quixotic but immensely courageous struggle that excellent professional economists such as Claudio Loser and his team (who deserve admiration as much as Joseph Stiglitz does) have waged against a political hierarchy that others in the civil societies of their own imperialist countries as well as in 'economic hitmen's target countries' have rarely dared to wage. And I include among these latter groups such heroes of mine as Senator Ray Mac Govern, Chris Hedges, Naom Chomsky, and Congressman Kucinich. I wish that Christine Ahn and Kavita Ramdass would use their institutional leverage to track down and interview Claudio Loser and let the views they gather inform their future writings. One final point: in the run-up to the 1994 South African elections, two expert Economist teams reports were prepared to guide post-apartheid South Africa's sicio-economic and political orientation. One was led by the market-friendly Jeffrey Sachs, the other by the Structuralist Lance Taylor. Mandela’s advisers chose Jeffrey Sachs’ model. Trevor Manuel corrected the economic orientation from slightly-left-of-centre to exact centre. Now, Trevor is being touted as a possible “ideal left-wing successor’ to Strauss-Kahn!