On June 1, U.S. Congress rejected a bill to increase the debt limit
by $2.4 trillion, delivering a humiliating defeat to President Barack Obama.
For now, there is no immediate threat of a U.S. default on its debt,
but the government will have to dramatically cut costs or go back to
Congress with new proposals. Obama will be forced to reach a compromise
with the Republicans in Congress, and the only question now is the price
he will have to pay for it.
Republicans are demanding fundamental changes to U.S. financial
policy and limits to the emission of dollars and to the endless
government borrowing on financial markets that threatens to put the
United States in the same position that Russia found itself at the end
of President Boris Yeltsin’s
rule. During Russia’s crisis, government bonds essentially became a
financial pyramid that finally collapsed during the default of August
1998.
Now Washington finds itself in a similar position. But in contrast to
the Yeltsin government, which limited the money supply so sharply that
people did not receive salaries for months, U.S. authorities have
resorted to borrowing actively on the credit market and printing
dollars, otherwise known as “quantitative easing.” Those dollars have
spread like wildfire throughout the world economy, fueling speculative
investment and keeping oil prices high.
By trying to keep its own financial system afloat, the United States
is essentially financing Russian raw materials companies, Chinese
exporters and European bankers.
The flip side of the U.S. monetary expansion is a ubiquitous rise in
the price of food and housing (except for in the United States) and the
transformation of many ordinary consumer goods into unaffordable
luxuries for a significant percentage of the world’s population. These
dangerous tendencies could easily result in serious political upheavals
across the globe, including Russia, if they continue unabated.
No matter how the conflict between Congress and the Obama
administration is resolved, it will inevitably affect the fate of the
international economy. A sharp cut in government spending and a limit on
the emission of dollars threatens to send the U.S. economy back into
another recession.
For Russia, the looming second wave of a global recession threatens
to become a full-blown social catastrophe. Russian leaders escaped this
kind of disaster in 2009 with almost no effort. They were saved only
when the U.S. Federal Reserve began printing dollars. But they won’t be
saved in the next crisis, which may hit the country before the March
presidential election.
Russian leaders are probably well aware of these dangers. But this
hardly means that they will change their policies and take measures now
to help control the damage. Instead, they have proposed commercializing
education and selling off state property.
There is a fierce battle for power among the ruling elite, but there
is no battle of ideas. The result is that all the major decisions have
already been made, and they are devoid of common sense. To have a true
battle of ideas, you have to have prudent and forward-thinking ideas in
the first place.
Source: The Moscow Times