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It's Not Just Dominique Strauss-Kahn. The IMF Itself Should Be On Trial
Imagine a prominent figure was charged, not with raping a hotel maid, but with starving her, and her family, to death
Sometimes, the most revealing aspect of the shrieking babble of the 24/7 news agenda is the silence. Often the most important facts are hiding beneath the noise, unmentioned and undiscussed.
So the fact that Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the former head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), is facing trial for allegedly raping a maid in a New York hotel room is – rightly – big news. But imagine a prominent figure was charged not with raping a maid, but starving her to death, along with her children, her parents, and thousands of other people. That is what the IMF has done to innocent people in the recent past. That is what it will do again, unless we transform it beyond all recognition. But that is left in the silence.
To understand this story, you have to reel back to the birth of the IMF. In 1944, the countries that were poised to win the Second World War gathered in a hotel in rural New Hampshire to divvy up the spoils. With a few honorable exceptions, like the great British economist John Maynard Keynes, the negotiators were determined to do one thing. They wanted to build a global financial system that ensured the money and resources of the planet were forever hoovered towards them. They set up a series of institutions designed for that purpose – and so the IMF was delivered into the world.
The IMF’s official job sounds simple and attractive. It is supposedly there to ensure poor countries don’t fall into debt, and if they do, to lift them out with loans and economic expertise. It is presented as the poor world’s best friend and guardian. But beyond the rhetoric, the IMF was designed to be dominated by a handful of rich countries – and, more specifically, by their bankers and financial speculators. The IMF works in their interests, every step of the way.
Let’s look at how this plays out on the ground. In the 1990s, the small country of Malawi in Southeastern Africa was facing severe economic problems after enduring one of the worst HIV-AIDS epidemics in the world and surviving a horrific dictatorship. They had to ask the IMF for help. If the IMF has acted in its official role, it would have given loans and guided the country to develop in the same way that Britain and the US and every other successful country had developed – by protecting its infant industries, subsidizing its farmers, and investing in the education and health of its people.
That’s what an institution that was concerned with ordinary people – and accountable to them – would look like. But the IMF did something very different. They said they would only give assistance if Malawi agreed to the ‘structural adjustments’ the IMF demanded. They ordered Malawi to sell off almost everything the state owned to private companies and speculators, and to slash spending on the population. They demanded they stop subsidizing fertilizer, even though it was the only thing that made it possible for farmers – most of the population – to grow anything in the country’s feeble and depleted soil. They told them to prioritize giving money to international bankers over giving money to the Malawian people.
So when in 2001 the IMF found out the Malawian government had built up large stockpiles of grain in case there was a crop failure, they ordered them to sell it off to private companies at once. They told Malawi to get their priorities straight by using the proceeds to pay off a loan from a large bank the IMF had told them to take out in the first place, at a 56 per cent annual rate of interest. The Malawian president protested and said this was dangerous. But he had little choice. The grain was sold. The banks were paid.
The next year, the crops failed. The Malawian government had almost nothing to hand out. The starving population was reduced to eating the bark off the trees, and any rats they could capture. The BBC described it as Malawi’s “worst ever famine.” There had been a much worse crop failure in 1991-2, but there was no famine because then the government had grain stocks to distribute. So at least a thousand innocent people starved to death.
At the height of the starvation, the IMF suspended $47m in aid, because the government had ‘slowed’ in implementing the marketeeing ‘reforms’ that had led to the disaster. ActionAid, the leading provider of help on the ground, conducted an autopsy into the famine. They concluded that the IMF “bears responsibility for the disaster.”
Then, in the starved wreckage, Malawi did something poor countries are not supposed to do. They told the IMF to get out. Suddenly free to answer to their own people rather than foreign bankers, Malawi disregarded all the IMF’s ‘advice’, and brought back subsidies for the fertilizer, along with a range of other services to ordinary people. Within two years, the country was transformed from being a beggar to being so abundant they were supplying food aid to Uganda and Zimbabwe.
The Malawian famine should have been a distant warning cry for you and me. Subordinating the interests of ordinary people to bankers and speculators caused starvation there. Within a few years, it had crashed the global economy for us all.
In the history of the IMF, this story isn’t an exception: it is the rule. The organization takes over poor countries, promising it has medicine that will cure them – and then pours poison down their throats. Whenever I travel across the poor parts of the world I see the scars from IMF ‘structural adjustments’ everywhere, from Peru to Ethiopia. Whole countries have collapsed after being IMF-ed up – most famously Argentina and Thailand in the 1990s.
Look at some of the organization’s greatest hits. In Kenya, the IMF insisted the government introduce fees to see the doctor – so the number of women seeking help or advice on STDs fell by 65 per cent, in one of the countries worst affected by AIDS in the world.
In Ghana, the IMF insisted the government introduce fees for going to school – and the number of rural families who could afford to send their kids crashed by two-thirds. In Zambia, the IMF insisted they slash health spending – and the number of babies who died doubled. Amazingly enough, it turns out that shoveling your country’s money to foreign bankers, rather than your own people, isn’t a great development strategy.
The Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz worked closely with the IMF for over a decade, until he quit and became a whistle-blower. He told me a few years ago: “When the IMF arrives in a country, they are interested in only one thing. How do we make sure the banks and financial institutions are paid?... It is the IMF that keeps the [financial] speculators in business. They’re not interested in development, or what helps a country to get out of poverty.”
Some people call the IMF “inconsistent”, because the institution supports huge state-funded bank bailouts in the rich world, while demanding an end to almost all state funding in the poor world. But that’s only an inconsistency if you are thinking about the realm of intellectual ideas, rather than raw economic interests. In every situation, the IMF does what will get more money to bankers and speculators. If rich governments will hand banks money for nothing in “bailouts”, great. If poor countries can be forced to hand banks money in extortionate “repayments”, great. It’s absolutely consistent.
Some people claim that Strauss-Kahn was a “reformer” who changed the IMF after he took over in 2009. Certainly, there was a shift in rhetoric – but detailed study by Dr Daniela Gabor of the University of the West of England has shown that the substance is business-as-usual.
Look, for example, at Hungary. After the 2008 crash, the IMF lauded them for keeping to their original deficit target by slashing public services. The horrified Hungarian people responded by kicking the government out, and choosing a party that promised to make the banks pay for the crisis they had created. They introduced a 0.7 per cent levy on the banks (four times higher than anywhere else). The IMF went crazy. They said this was “highly distortive” for banking activity – unlike the bailouts, of course – and shrieked that it would cause the banks to flee from the country. The IMF shut down their entire Hungary program to intimidate them.
But the collapse predicted by the IMF didn’t happen. Hungary kept on pursuing sensible moderate measures, instead of punishing the population. They imposed taxes on the hugely profitable sectors of retail, energy and telecoms, and took funds from private pensions to pay the deficit. The IMF shrieked at every step, and demanded cuts for ordinary Hungarians instead. It was the same old agenda, with the same old threats. Strauss-Kahn did the same in almost all the poor countries where the IMF operated, from El Salvador to Pakistan to Ethiopia, where big cuts in subsidies for ordinary people have been imposed. Plenty have been intimidated into harming their own interests. The US-based think tank the Center for Economic and Policy Research found 31 of 41 IMF agreements require ‘pro-cyclical’ macroeconomic policies – pushing them further into recession.
It is not only Strauss-Kahn who should be on trial. It is the institution he has been running. There’s an inane debate in the press about who should be the next head of the IMF, as if we were discussing who should run the local Milk Board. But if we took the idea of human equality seriously, and remembered all the people who have been impoverished, starved and killed by this institution, we would be discussing the establishment of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission – and how to disband the IMF entirely and start again.
If Strauss-Kahn is guilty, I suspect I know how it happened. He must have mistaken the maid for a poor country in financial trouble. Heads of the IMF have, after all, been allowed to rape them with impunity for years.
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22 Comments so far
Show AllAll the nation states of what is called the "Third World" should take the opportunity to renege on all debts to the IMF and Foreign bankers and nationalize their industry and resources booting out the foreign owners.
With the thugs of the world already involved in more wars then their economies can manage the response of the USA or of Europe would be limited in scope thus allowing these countries the ability to restructure their economies for the benefit of the people before the US Military and its black op agencies have the capability to visit those nations and "Bring them democracy" at the barrel of a gun
The IMF and world bank along with the US Military and its CIA are simply agents of the Empire. Palpatine would feel right at home serving the dark side in the United States of America..
I couldn't agree more GW, but I have a feeling the CIA is already in those countries working hard to ensure that doesn't happen.
If it is going to happen it will require mass, essentially leaderless, revolutions that can be maintained no matter how many "heads are cut off."
No wonder housekeepers who have been raped by global plutocrats have rarely brought charges up until now...they felt like they were getting off easy...just being raped rather than being starved to death.
Perhaps the New York housekeeper victimized by the IMF chief was emboldened by the tide shifting against the plutocrats in her native Africa ?
It is easier to take over a country with money than marines. The IMF is an extension of that distorted philosophy known as Milton Freidman's Chicago School of Economics. Unfortunately the IMF policy is in perfect sync with the Republican and Democratic platforms; undercut the public interest at every turn while propping up that tiny elite that desires to enslave us all.
Strauss-Kahn is obviously a sociopath, or else he would have never been seriously considered heading up the IMF. In America well known sociopaths like Sara Palin, Donald Trump and Scott Walker get lots of media attention because corporate America is constantly auditioning nutbars for their coveted positions of political power. Unfortunately most Americans buy into this hogwash and as a result we live in a country run by mentally ill people.
I think I'd rather live in a Monarchy than a Plutocracy. At least once in awhile you'll get an aristocrat who empathizes with their subjects. But a corporate CEO? Never!
It's becoming increasingly obvious that ostensibly free and democratic capitalist governments are actually glorified crime syndicates.
Therefore, it's no surprise that supposedly humanitarian, if not altruistic, financial organizations like the IMF are actually international Organized Crime's loan sharks, specializing in extortion and shakedown rackets.
Worse. We're talking nothing short of 'rape and pillage' here.
The NWO (of which the IMF is but one 'tool') is barbaric.
I've posted on this site many times, though not in a while, that financial organizations -- all of them -- are criminal conspiracies, and they only reason they don't get busted is that they've bought the law, and the politicians, and the media.
I learned this when I had the misfortune many years ago of working in the world headquarters of one of those financial institutions and saw senior management in action. Additionally, though complicated family background, I've had some experience with genuine organized crime soldiers. The Mafia is less hypocritical because they all know they're criminals, and act accordingly. Senior financial institution management people think they're the salt of the earth, the best sort of people. They overestimate how smart they are, by a long shot, and are smoothly blind to the harm their institutions are causing, because they never see it except in reports. The fact that so many bankers are deeply imbedded in this administration is, to me, very scary. They are deeply involved in so many activities that directly affect people's lives, like the prices paid for things, and this his horrible because nobody can cause more harm that people who think they're smarter than they actually are.
Hear, hear! Exactly right, Mr. Hari.
Huffpo has something about downgrading our credit rating; i say, "Bring it on!" What a shame that we can "stand up" to poor countries that have the resources we covet, but not to the bankster bullies worldwide.
Let them downrate the whole wide world, while we keep our land and government programs, start Medicare for all, and redo the progressive tax system.
Closer to home, and in an animation, the history of the Federal Reserve:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mII9NZ8MMVM&feature=email
Near the video's end, JFK is seen signing a bill to restore control of America to America. Six months later, JFK was dead, and Lyndon Johnston recinded the bill.
Manysummits
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PS: A complex subject made simple.
That was an excellent video. Thanks for the tip.
Thank you, Johann Hari, GREAT piece! It reinforces the same ideas (and evidence) chronicled in Naomi Klein's, "The Shock Doctrine." This sinister organization, literally preying on the world's most poor and vulnerable, is too ugly for words to describe.
Superb stuff from Johann Hari, who is always spot on. Seeing his bright young face in the photo gives hope. Looks like an angel, but fights like a champ.
How long can Hari last, making sense the way he does, in a world of corporatized media?
The Malawi story is nothing short of Biblical. You know, all those stories of prophets advising the Kings about the storage of grain for the lean years god will send, and what happens to the ones that listen and the ones that scoff.
If I were interested in the Bible as anything but sometimes good story-telling and literature I might ask what the frigging hell it says should be done about the kind of vampiric (vampiric?) entities like the IMF that plaque the world. Would it be "Give to Caesar (or the banks) what is Caesar’s? Or Jeremiah lamenting the collapse of the temple and the enslavement of a people who do not listen to their prophets?
As more and more small countries show the way, survive and even thrive, by tossing out the playbook of the thieves of the IMF, the IMF will have no options but to appeal to its war-making sibling in the current global construct, lorded-over by the destructive nightmare siblings, sister Hoarder and brother War-Maker, of what has become of capitalism in order to press for the continued sucking up of the smaller and smaller stocks of resources to replenish the larders of the rich. Never ending war.
And, as the stories from Malawi and Hungary put up against the not-so-happy outcomes from other IMF-impoverished nations show, not only will oil, iron, copper and the other shrinking amounts of essential minerals be put up on the IMF’s self-destructive auction block, but food and water, and the health and well-being of the masses of folks who can be happy with much, much less than what the key figures in the IMF’s plutocracy demand and expect for themselves and their secret pals, the CEOs of those vast and increasingly feudal international corporations.
Call this missive and Hari’s class warfare if you wish… and tsk tsk all you want… but I call it the serfs rising up against the Kings, Queens and Czars.
Interesting that Keynes almost invariably comes into these conversations, and that most followers of Milton Friedman's ilk find him old-fashioned, and too slow for their pocketbooks and hoarding addiction (that terrible ilk, that monster of the lie of the possibility of permanent growth on a planet that is more and more proving the obvious, that the planet and everything about it is completely finite; that it and its inhabitants are required to live within the natural limits or perish in their hubris if nothing else. It's just a shrug, mind you, and we, along with the terrible IMF and the great cities and our eye on the beauties of this world, and our songs... even Lady Gaga... are gone).
Interesting too that the Freidmanites would be the first to float the idea that Keynes was at least a Fascist sympathizer, and at worse, collaborator, when he merely understood the obvious: how depriving a nation of its ability to provide for itself would result in an even greater and harder to contain depravity. Now look at whose economic practices are nurturing a rising global evil?
Let’s hear it for the opposing movement to resist these dunces; they have no clothes, so saith the boys of Malawi!
Make it easier on yourself Mr. Strauss-Kahn. Bring the IMF down.
You think he'll take a plea bargain to bring down IMF to get himself off the hook for his rape charge? I'll watch for that.
Typical liberal delusion. DSK had / has no intention to bring the IMF down. He was brought in to provide a publicity makeover, to better preserve the IMF/
An excellent article that reminded me of John Perkins' book "Confessions of an Economic Hitman," which describes how Bechtel and their ilk (e.g., Halliburton/KBR) receive no-bid contracts as part of IMF / World Bank "loans," so that the target country never even gets any of the money. Perkins describes the process as mafia-like, where the IMF "loan" is an offer you can't refuse (unless you want to risk being in a clandestine CIA airplane "accident").
And it's been going on a long time. After reading this, by L. Fletcher Prouty, who was there for the start of the Vietnam war and the events leading up to the JFK murder (he was the "Mr. X" Donald Sutherland part in Oliver Stone's JFK, and contributed to the script), helped me better understand how the whole thing works.
http://www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/ST/
Although airplane "accidents" have been done and will no doubt be done again, the thing that makes IMF/World Bank loans offers that can't be refused is what they have the power to do to countries that do refuse their demand to privatize -- basically, shove them all the way into Haiti-like poverty. This, of course, hurts the peasants badly, but it also cuts into the incomes of the elites in those countries who need to keep their plantations running, so of course they'll agree.
The only nit I would pick with this article is the last sentence in the next to last paragraph. "...and how to disband the IMF and start again" He should have left off the last three words.
Great piece from Johann.
the really egregious insult to the world's poor is that the IMF and World Bank have been doing this for so long. prancing around the globe saying over and over how they are here to help, slapping them with structural adjustments that do nothing but make everything worse. This really must stop.
The writer makes good points all "round" as the Brits would put it. We Yanks would say around, but this is good. The metaphor of the rape as applied to what the Internaitonal Monetary Fund does is right on the mark and has been used before in this forum. Bang bang! The IMF rapes again and nobody lifts a finger to stop these swine. Some powerful politicians could build up their political capital by doing something. Nation states at least powerful ones still have some sovereignty.
On Bretton Woods which was very much backed by Franklin D Roosevelt, that's way off the mark. An article I saw by Noam Chomsky showed that FDR intended to stabilizer all currencies and economies of all countries. He had no interest in any kind of imperialism including economic. That won't hold water at all. Do read Chomsky's take on the Bretton Woods agreement which Tricky Dick got rid of.