|
In the
last few weeks, the current president of the United States
has been striving to demonstrate that the crisis is yielding
as a result of his efforts to confront the grave problem
that the United States and the world inherited from his
predecessor.
Nearly all
economists are making reference to the economic crisis that
began in October 1929. The preceding one came at the end of
the 19th century. The highly generalized tendency of U.S.
politicians is to believe that as soon as the banks have
sufficient dollars to grease the machinery of the productive
apparatus, everything will march toward an idyllic and
never-dreamed of world.
The
differences between the so-called economic crisis of the 30s
and the current one are many, but I will confine myself to
just one of the most important.
At the end
of World War I, the dollar, based on the gold standard,
replaced the pound sterling, due to the vast sums in gold
that Britain spent on the war. The great economic crisis in
the United States came barely 12 years after that war.
Franklin
D. Roosevelt, from the Democratic Party, won to a good
extent aided by the crisis, as did Obama in the present
crisis. Following the Keynes theory, the former injected
money into circulation, constructed public works such as
highways, dams and others of unquestionable benefit, which
increased spending, demand for products, employment and the
GDP for years, but he did not obtain the funding by printing
dollar bills. He obtained it from taxes and with part of the
monies deposited in banks. He sold U.S. bonds with
guaranteed interest, which made them attractive to buyers.
The price
of gold, which stood at 20 dollars per troy ounce in 1929,
was raised by Roosevelt to 35 dollars as an internal
guarantee of U.S. dollar bills.
On the
basis of that guarantee in physical gold, the Bretton Woods
agreement emerged in 1944, giving the powerful country the
privilege of printing hard currency at a time when the rest
of the world was bankrupt. The United States possessed more
than 80% of the world’s gold.
I do not
need to recall what came afterward, from the dropping of the
atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki – the 64th anniversary
of that act of genocide has just passed – to the coup d’état
in Honduras and the seven military bases that the government
of the United States proposes to install in Colombia. The
real fact is that, in 1971, under the Nixon administration,
the gold standard was eliminated and the unlimited printing
of dollars turned into the greatest fraud of humanity. In
virtue of the Bretton Woods privilege, by unilaterally
suppressing convertibility, the United States is paying with
paper for the goods and services that it acquires in the
world. It is true that, in exchange for dollars it also
provides goods and services, but it is also a fact that,
since the elimination of the gold standard, that country’s
dollar bill, quoted at $35 per troy ounce, has lost almost
30 times its value and 48 times the value that it had in
1929. The rest of the countries of the world have suffered
those losses, their natural resources and money have
financed rearmament and, to a large extent, underwritten the
empire’s wars. Suffice it to note that, according to
conservative calculations, the quantity of bonds supplied to
other countries are in excess of $3 trillion, and the public
debt, which continues growing, is in excess of $11 trillion.
While
competing amongst themselves, the empire and its capitalist
allies have made people believe that the anti-crisis
measures constitute formulas of redemption. But Europe,
Russia, Japan, Korea, China and India are raising funds not
by selling Treasury bonds or printing money, but by applying
other formulas to defend their currencies and their markets,
sometimes with great austerity for their populations. The
overwhelming majority of the developing countries in Asia,
Africa and Latin America are the ones who are paying for the
broken dishes, by supplying non-renewable natural resources,
sweat and human lives.
The North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is the clearest
example of what can happen to a developing country in the
jaws of the wolf: in the most recent summit, Mexico was
unable to obtain solutions for its immigrants in the United
States, nor permission to travel to Canada without a visa.
However,
under the crisis, full force is being acquired by the
largest FTA [Free Trade Agreement] on a world level: the
World Trade Organization, which grew under the triumphant
notes of neoliberalism to the lofty heights of world
finances and idyllic dreams.
On the
other hand, BBC Mundo reported yesterday, August 11, that
1,000 UN officials, meeting in Bonn, Germany, announced that
they are trying to prepare the way for an agreement on
climate change in December of this year, but that time is
running out.
Ivo de
Boer, the highest-ranking UN official on climate change,
stated that the summit is only 119 days away and that "we
have an enormous number of divergent interests, scant time
for discussion, a complicated document on the table (200
pages) and funding problems…"
"The
developing nations are insisting that the greatest volume of
gases producing the greenhouse effect originate in the
industrialized world."
The
developing world is affirming its need for financial aid to
do battle with climatic effects.
Ban Ki-moon,
UN secretary general, stated: "If urgent measures are not
taken to combat climate change, they could lead to violence
and mass disturbances throughout the planet."
Climate
change will intensify droughts, floods and other natural
disasters."
"The
scarcity of water will affect hundreds of millions of
people. Malnutrition is going to lay waste to a large part
of the developing countries."
A New
York Times article on August 9 explained that "The
changing global climate will pose profound strategic
challenges to the United States in the coming decades,
raising the prospect of military intervention to deal with
the effects of violent storms, drought, mass migration and
pandemics, military and intelligence analysts say.
"Such
climate-induced crises could topple governments, feed
terrorist movements or destabilize entire regions, say the
analysts, experts at the Pentagon and intelligence agencies
who for the first time are taking a serious look at the
national security implications of climate change."
"‘It gets
real complicated real quickly,’ said Amanda J. Dory, the
deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy, who is
working with a Pentagon group assigned to incorporate
climate change into national security strategy planning."
One can
deduce from The New York Times article that not
everyone in the Senate is as yet convinced that it is a real
problem, one that has been totally ignored by the U.S.
government to date since it was approved 10 years ago in
Kyoto.
Some
people are saying that the economic crisis is the end of
imperialism; perhaps that should be proposed if it doesn’t
signify something worse for our species.
In my
judgment, it will always be best to have a just cause to
defend and the hope of moving forward.
Fidel Castro Ruz
August 12,
2009
9:12 p.m.
|