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(Sumeet Moghe / Creative Commons) |
The sailors drew their weapons as the men in uniform approached the ship. The vessel, an Argentine warship named the Libertad,
would not be allowed to leave the Ghanaian port where it had docked,
the men—Ghanaian authorities—warned; the ship itself was being claimed
as collateral by a foreign power across the sea. As news reached
Argentina, it was met with shock and outrage. The foreign power—a man
named Paul Singer—demanded $20 million from Argentina for the ship’s
release.
Was this an act of international piracy? Argentina’s economy minister and some commentators
alluded to it as such. It was October 2, 2012, and it was the latest
maneuver by billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Singer and his NML
Capital fund to seize assets held by the Argentine government. It would
be two-and-a-half months before the fate of the Libertad would be resolved and the United Nations' International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea ordered that it be released.
When the Libertad returned home, a defiant Cristina Fernández, the Argentine president, proclaimed,
“These ‘vulture’ funds (hedge funds) that tried to take our Libertad
ship, this is the 28th extortion they've attempted. They're the product
of this global crisis that can be defined as ‘anarchist capitalism’
where there are no global rules and only the lobby of the most powerful
is in the right.”
A year-and-a-half later, it appears that Fernández was
correct: might makes right in the financial world, and billionaires can
potentially wield more power than countries. This is the opinion of
many, if not most, analysts and commentators following the 2012 ruling
by a U.S. District Court judge in favor of NML Capital and other
hold-out investors, which was subsequently upheld in June this year when
the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear Argentina’s appeal.
Argentina’s long battle with these “vulture funds”
tracks the history of the country’s emergence from an economic
depression and ruin into a dynamic economy with growth and poverty
reduction that was among the most successful in the hemisphere over the
past 12 years.
For years in the 1990s Argentina was the poster-child
for “Washington Consensus” neoliberal economic policies. It had tamed
inflation and pegged its currency to the U.S. dollar in what the Toronto Globe and Mail noted was “widely viewed as a masterstroke.” In 1997, IMF Managing Director Michel Camdessus praised Argentina
for “reducing state intervention in the economy,” and policies that
would allow “high-quality growth of the kind that will be genuinely
sustainable over the long term." It seemed to be a model for other middle- and lower-income countries to consider emulating.
Then it all collapsed. The currency’s peg to the U.S. dollar became unsustainable,
and a recession that began in mid-1998 turned into a depression. In
December of 2001 there were riotous protests in the streets as Argentina
was forced to default on its debt. The following month it would break
its currency peg to the dollar, and the Argentine peso plummeted in
value. Poverty spiked to almost 50% and unemployment passed 20%. Stories appeared in the press of desperately hungry people hunting down cats, dogs, horses, and rats for food.
Argentina was forced to default on $100 billion of debt
owed to private creditors. The government threatened to default to the
IMF as well (and even briefly did, in 2003), and announced it would
pursue alternative policies to the ones that the Fund was pressing on
it. Venezuela would later loan billions to Argentina, and offered more
so that Argentina could escape dependence on the Fund. But in 2002, the IMF, the business press, and much of the economics profession predicted
that Argentina’s troubles were just beginning. They would turn out to
be wrong. Even though its access to international financial markets was
now limited, Argentina was unrestrained by “Washington Consensus” policy
dictates and was free to pursue remedies that would result in robust
economic recovery. The economy began to grow, ending the depression
just three months after the default. Argentina was able to reach its
pre-recession level of GDP within three years, and led South America in
economic growth over most of the next decade. And by breaking with the
IMF, Argentina broke the power of the IMF; Argentina showed that it
could stand up to the Fund and get away with it.
“The fact that Argentina's break with the IMF and its
policies was key to the country's economic success also has implications
for other countries,” Mark Weisbrot, the Co-Director of the Center for
Economic and Policy Research (CEPR) has noted.
In the years following, Bolivia, Brazil, Venezuela, and others would
also end their obligations to the Fund and forego IMF agreements. By
2007, before the global recession hit, the IMF’s total loan portfolio
was down to just $20 billion from $96 billion three years before, and most of that $20 billion was loaned to Turkey and Pakistan.
Argentina’s success story resulted from policy choices, not from a commodities boom, as has often been described by the press. As the Center for Economic and Policy Research described in a 2011 report,
after Argentina broke with the Fund, social spending tripled in real
(inflation-adjusted) terms. Employment as a percent of the labor force
rose to a record high 55.7 percent by 2010. Real wages increased by over 40% in five years. Poverty was reduced by over two-thirds, and inequality declined significantly.
In order to do all this, however, default was necessary.
Argentina could not both service its debt and address urgent social
needs in the wake of the recession and financial crisis. After years of
negotiation, the government struck a deal with the great majority—about
three-fourths—of its creditors in 2005; by 2010 more than 92% of
creditors had reached an agreement for debt restructuring. But Paul
Singer and NML Capital, who bought up shares of debt in 2006, apparently
never intended to reach any deal. Whereas the great majority of
bondholders had lost money, Singer seeks to get a 1,600% return on his bonds.
Judge Thomas Griesa of the U.S. District Court of the
Southern District of New York handed Singer a victory by ruling that
Argentina must pay NML Capital and other hold-outs at the same time as
the majority of creditors with whom it had previously worked out an
agreement. The New York Times reported
that Griesa appears not to have understood the complexities of the
case, including that some of the debt is denominated in foreign
currencies. This time, commentary
overwhelmingly supported Argentina. The IMF, France, Brazil and Mexico
filed briefs in support of Argentina’s appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court
(the U.S. government did not, but did so at the previous appellate
court). On July 31, over 120 economists including Nobel laureate Robert
Solow, Dani Rodrik, and Branko Milanovic sent a letter
to the U.S. Congress warning of the ruling’s implications not only for
Argentina but for the international financial system and the U.S. as a
center of global finance. Countries like Belgium and the U.K. have laws
that would prevent the kind of claims the vultures have made on
Argentina; the economists noted that countries may choose to issue their
debt on those financial markets in the future, rather than the United
States.
Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz cautioned
that “The vultures have imposed enormous harm on global sovereign debt
markets and on those countries whose well-being depends on them,
especially in the emerging markets and developing countries.”
But in the end, the U.S. government—which opted not to file in favor of Argentina before the Supreme Court, and apparently prevented the IMF
from doing so either—seems to have backed Singer, even over its own
interests. For the vultures, the precedent that Griesa’s ruling sets
could be a big win. As the economic justice network Jubilee USA points out, countries such as Grenada and the Democratic Republic of the Congo may be imperiled more immediately, as they also seek to fend off vulture funds.
The Fernández administration in Buenos Aires may
ultimately also emerge a political victor. The fight has inflamed
national sentiments and rallied the public. Alex Kicillof, the telegenic
economy minister famous for his Elvis-style sideburns, has emerged on
the international stage
as a heroic figure championing the Argentine people. Kicillof is
perhaps reminiscent of another bold, young economy minister in a
different South American country: Ecuador’s Rafael Correa, whose public
sparring with the World Bank in 2005 helped to launch his political
career; he was elected president a year later.
Argentina, the press has reported, is in default following the
failure to reach agreement with the vulture funds by a July 30 deadline.
But the Argentine government rejects this characterization: “Preventing
someone from paying is not default,” Fernández said
in a televised address, referring to Argentina’s efforts to repay the
great majority of bondholders. Meanwhile, the world waits to see whether
a single billionaire—empowered by an extremist judge—can hold a country
of 41 million people hostage, or whether sanity will prevail. The
former would uphold the ruthless world of Wall Street piracy, like a
nightmare version of the finance pirates in Monty Python’s “The Meaning of Life.”
Source: NACLA
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