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The Super Rich Sabotage The Arab Revolutions
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By Shamus Cooke
workerscompass.org
Tuesday, Jun 28, 2011
With revolutions
sweeping the Arab world and bubbling-up across Europe, aging tyrants or
discredited governments are doing their best to cling to power. It's
hard to over-exaggerate the importance of these events: the global
political and economic status-quo is in deep crisis. If pro-democracy or
anti-austerity movements emerge victorious, they'll have an immediate
problem to solve -- how to pay for their vision of a better world. The
experiences thus far in Egypt and Greece are proof enough that money
matters. The wealthy nations holding the purse strings are still able to
influence the unfolding of events from afar, subjecting humiliating
conditions on those countries undergoing profound social change.
This strategy is being ruthlessly deployed in the Arab
world. Take for example Egypt, where the U.S. and Europe are quietly
supporting the military dictatorship that replaced the dictatorship of
Hosni Mubarak. Now Mubarak's generals rule the country. The people of
Egypt, however, still want real change, not a mere shuffling at the top;
a strike wave and mass demonstrations are testing the power of the new
military dictatorship.
A strike wave implies that Egyptians want better wages and
working conditions; and economic opportunity was one of the central
demands of the revolutionaries who toppled Mubarak. But revolutions
tend to have a temporarily negative effect on a nation's economy. This
is mainly because those who dominate the economy, the rich, do their
best to sabotage any social change.
One defining feature of revolutions is the exodus of the rich,
who correctly assume their wealth will be targeted for redistribution.
This is often referred to as "capital flight.” Also, rich foreign
investors stop investing money in the revolutionary country, not knowing
if the company they're investing in will remain privately owned, or if
the government they're investing in will strategically default and
choose not to pay back foreign investors. Lastly, workers demand higher
wages in revolutions, and many owners would rather shut down -- if they
don't flee -- than operate for small profits. All of this hurts the
economy overall.
The New York Times reports:
"The 18-day [Egyptian] revolt stopped new foreign investment and
decimated the pivotal tourist industry... The revolution has inspired
new demands for more jobs and higher wages that are fast colliding with
the economy's diminished capacity...Strikes by workers demanding their
share of the revolution's spoils continue to snarl industry... The main
sources of capital in this country have either been arrested, escaped or
are too afraid to engage in any business..." (June 10, 2011). [1]
Understanding this dynamic, the rich G8 nations are doing their best
to exploit it. Knowing that any governments that emerge from the Arab
revolutions will be instantly cash-starved, the G8 is dangling $20
billion with strings attached. The strings in this case are demands that
the Arab countries pursue only "open market" policies, i.e.,
business-friendly reforms, such as privatizations, elimination of food
and gas subsidies, and allowing foreign banks and corporations better
access to the economy. A separate New York Times article addressed the
subject with the misleading title, Aid Pledge by Group of 8 Seeks to
Bolster Arab Democracy:
"Democracy, the [G8] leaders said, could be rooted only in economic reforms that created open markets ...The
[$20 billion] pledge, an aide to President Obama said, was “not a blank
check” but “an envelope that could be achieved in the context of
suitable [economic] reform efforts.” (May 28, 2011). [2]
The G8 policy towards the Arab world is thus the same policy the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank have pursued against
weaker nations that have run into economic problems. The cure is always
worse than the disease, since "open market" reforms always lead to the
national wealth being siphoned into the hands of fewer and fewer people
as public entities are privatized, making the rich even richer, while
social services are eliminated, making the poor even poorer. Also, the
open door to foreign investors evolves into a speculative bubble that
inevitably bursts; the investors flee an economically devastated
country. It is no accident that many former IMF "beneficiary" countries
have paid off their debts and denounced their benefactors, swearing
never to return.
Nations that refuse the conditions imposed by the G8 or IMF are thus
cut off from the capital that any country would need to maintain itself
and expand amid a time of social change. The rich nations proclaim
victory in both instances: either the poorer nation asks for help and
becomes economically penetrated by western corporations, or the poor
country is economically and politically isolated, punished and used as
an example of what becomes of those countries that attempt a
non-capitalist route to development.
Many Arab countries are especially appetizing to foreign
corporations hungry for new investments, since large state-run
industries remain in place to help the working-class populations, a
tradition begun under the socialist-inspired Egyptian President, Gamal
Abdel Nasser that spread across the Arab world. If Egypt falls victim to
an Iraq-like privatization frenzy, Egypt's working people and poor will
pay higher prices for food, gas, and other basic necessities. This is
one reason, other than oil, that many U.S. corporations would also like
to invade Iran.
The social turmoil in the Arab world and Europe have fully exposed
the domination that wealthy investors and corporations have over the
politics of nations. All over Europe "bailouts" are being discussed for
poorer nations facing economic crises. The terms of these bailout loans
are ruthless and are dictated by nothing more than the desire to
maximize profits. In Greece, for example, the profit-motive of the
lenders is obvious to everyone, helping to create a social movement that
might reach Arab proportions. The New York Times reports:
"The new [Greece bailout] loans, however, will only be forthcoming if
more austerity measures are introduced...Along with faster progress on
privatization, Europe and the [IMF] fund have been demanding that Greece
finally begin cutting public sector jobs and closing down unprofitable
entities." (June 1, 2011). [3]
This same phenomenon is happening all over Europe, from England to
Spain, as working people are told that social programs must be slashed,
public jobs eliminated, and state industries privatized. The U.S. is
also deeply affected, with daily media threats about the "vigilante bond
holders" [rich investors] who will stop buying U.S. debt if Social
Security, Medicare, and other social services are not eliminated.
Never before has the global market economy been so damningly exposed
as biased and dominated by the super-wealthy. These
consciousness-raising experiences cannot be easily siphoned into
politicians promising "democracy,” since democracy is precisely the
problem: a tiny minority of super-rich individuals have dictatorial
power due to their enormous wealth, which they use to threaten
governments who don't cater to their every whim. Money is thus given to
subservient governments and taken away from independent ones, while the
western media never questions these often sudden shifts in policy, which
can instantly transform a longtime U.S. ally into a "dictator" or
vice-versa.
The toppling of dictators in the Arab world has immediately raised
the question of, "What next"? The economic demands of working people
cannot be satisfied while giant corporations dominate the economy, since
higher wages mean lower corporate profits, while better social services
require that the rich pay higher taxes. These fundamental conflicts lay
just beneath the social upheavals all over the world, which came into
maturity with the global recession and will continue to dominate social
life for years to come. The outcome of this prolonged struggle will
determine what type of society emerges from the political tumult, and
will meet either the demands of working people or serve the needs of
rich investors and giant corporations.
Notes:
1) http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/10/world/middleeast/10egypt.html?_r=1&hpw
2) http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/28/world/europe/28g8.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&sq=g8%20arab&st=cse&scp=1
3) http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/01/business/economy/01euro.html?hpw
Shamus Cooke is a social service worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action. He can be reached at portland@workerscompass.org
workerscompass.org
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