Showing posts with label foreign debt trap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foreign debt trap. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2015

The International Monetary Fund (IMF)- What Is It? Why Native Filipinos Should Oppose It... The Current Greek Financial Crisis (2015)

"The chief business of America is business" - President Calvin Coolidge, 1925

"What else do bankers do -- walk-in and turn-off the lights in the country." - William Slee, 1978

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LET US NOT KEEP OUR HEADS IN THE SAND
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OFW Remittances BSP Statistics (2010 to 2015):      http://www.bsp.gov.ph/statistics/keystat/ofw.htm

Philippine Foreign Debt BSP Statistics (2012 to 2015):  ttp://www.bsp.gov.ph/statistics/spei_pub/Table%2005.pdf



UPDATES (6/10/2013 & 7/21/2015): 

Hi All,

The Greek financial crisis has been in the headlines in recent months/weeks. I was initially impressed by the young Prime Minister AlexisTsipras, but apparently, he sold out at the end.
I sort of expected it on the day his Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis resigned, which I suspected was forced on the PM by the EU Group. Based on an interview of the Finance Minister, it appears the PM has less breadth and depth of conviction than him; Yanis and 49 other members of their SYRIZA party voted against the acceptance of the new (3rd) "austerity" programs as a condition to approval of loans.
The Greek crisis is not the first of a kind, several countries in Latin America like Mexico, Peru, Argentina, etc. have been through such. It was only Argentina that stood its ground. (See some news links re Greek crisis at end of this post)
Anyway, if the Greek financial crisis piqued your interest, I have updated and reposted here my 2005 post about the IMF, the gatekeeper of and/or enforcer for the creditor countries. We native Filipinos ought to know and understand that the public corruption and thievery that dominate mass/social media though very significant is not the sole explanation for our massive impoverishment/poverty.

Our humongous, cumulative foreign debts are the greater causes of our national poverty, and the IMF's "recommended" programs to fix poverty have demonstrably and consistently failed.  All of which our Presidents (and their technocrats and cohorts)  from Diosdado Macapagal, Ferdinand Marcos, Cora Aquino, Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, and to current Benigno Noynoy Aquino [add Rodrigo Duterte and his successor. 2022] have unquestioningly followed, despite their disastrous socio-economic consequences, All these subservience by our native rulers to foreign dictates have been brought about by default due to the massive ignorance and/or indifference of both the illiterate and so-called educated among us native Filipinos.
- Bert
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Hi All,

Our homeland with its rich natural resources gives us no reason to be a people in dire poverty. But due to perennial misrule allowed by the complacency, selfishness, and indifference by our so-called leaders and so-called educated among us: mainly middle and high-income class (Socioeconomic Classes A-B-C) we are. 

Meanwhile, extreme impoverishment has crept on the majority (socioeconomic classes D-E) of our fellow native Filipinos in the last 33 years as precipitated by the Marcos Dictatorship.

Though the first significantly large foreign borrowing began during the time of President Diosdado Macapagal, his successor Ferdinand Marcos precipitated the great national economic slide by incurring humongous foreign debts, some of which turned out to be odious debtsthrough the IMF-WB tandem. 

The foreign debt addiction continues under subsequent and subservient regimes (Cora Aquino, Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, and expectedly the next regimes -- all of whom come from the top socioeconomic class with their insatiable selfish, vested interests for more economic and political power, in partnership with foreign interests while keeping the native Filipino majority ignorant, entertained by trash pop culture media and suppressed with military and extrajudicial threats.

These foreign debts, which any informed and thinking Filipino knows, have burned as much as 70% of our yearly national budget as foreign debt installment payments (or 90% of annual revenues nowadays, as De Venicia claims).

De Venicia wants to fix our foreign debts by giving/surrendering away our national assets to these financial institutions and/or their consortium of creditors rather than asking for a moratorium of debt payments, defaulting, etc. 

How to deal with debts bravely and decisively is not on the table of our so-called leaders who have no balls, so to speak. Given the ignorance of the native majority, who are busy with mere, daily survival and thus without time; and consequent incapacity to understand what really is going on.

Below is an introduction to the IMF which together with the World Bank (WB) and the latter's supposedly good mission of poverty reduction, both instead turned into economic inquisitors and executioners of poor countries like ours. 

IMF/WB methodologies and ways to further screw a poor country/people, further continue to pressure bankrupt, un-nationalistic native rulers and citizenry to be "more efficient,"  include recommendations to:

  • reduction in public expenditures, particularly social services, i.e. public health, education, etc.;
  • improve and raise tax collection, (Value-Added tax VAT was started under Gloria Macapagal Arroyo);
  • increase exports, etc. (agribusiness, labor, etc).
  • influence our educational system (designed to direct/make us absolutely adhere to the doctrine of economic liberalism (neoliberalism)-- an economic system that has not worked in the long-run betterment of the native Filipino majority since our American colonization);
  • privatization of public companies;
  • the strict control of organized labor;
  • deregulation of the national economy; 
  • decontrol of global financial flows.

All these to perpetuate the acceptance of  Neoliberalism and Global Orderthe economic system and its "new" world order -- now euphemistically labeled as "globalism or globalization" -- which makes our homeland and the majority of our fellow native, Malay Filipinos what we are today: impoverished, ignorant, and thus naively desperate cowards.

- Bert 


ADDENDUM: The millstone on the necks of present and future generations of native (Malay) Filipino majority in the Philippines. With the government’s -domestic and foreign- outstanding debt at P5.32 trillion, it means that each Filipino owes P55,469, based on the latest population estimate of 96 million. (Phil Daily Inquirer, 4/20/2013)

Philippine External/Foreign Debt:
  1.  When Marcos came to the presidency after defeating Pres. Diosdado Macapagal in 1965, our foreign debt stood at $600 million; then it grew to $2 billion in 1972 and $26 billion by the time the USA helped him flee to Hawaii in 1986. With the Post-Marcos successor regimes of Cora Aquino, Fidel Ramos, Joseph Estrada, Gloria Arroyo, and now Noynoy Aquino, our foreign debt ballooned from $26 billion to $60.5 billion in 2010 and $ 60.3 billion - ending Y2012 BSP Statistical Data; and now at $71 B as of June 2015, BSP)
  2. From these years to the present, the ruling regimes oftentimes do not pay beyond the required minimum payments on the loans. (Banks love installment payments, as anyone who have loans/credit cards know, as many continuous and maximum profits are made by the creditors -- especially more so from countries, which are afraid to default.
  3. Thanks to Cora Aquino, naive, weak, and incompetent for the presidential office who-- rather than taking the opportunity of worldwide popularity/sympathy and working for an economic breathing spell for the native Filipino majority (suffering from a series of peso devaluations, plant closures, and unemployment, high prices, etc.) --instead decided to please the applauding foreign governments, i.e. USA, Japan, etc. and foreign institutions/banks by not asking them for payment moratorium/rescheduling; and promised uninterrupted loan payments. Worst, she passed into law the prioritizing of foreign debt payments among others; all these she did despite the advice of then NEDA Director-General Solita Collas-Monsod).
  4. Compared with the South Koreans who were devastated by the 1998 financial crisis and had to be bailed out by borrowing $50 billion from the IMF, the South Koreans completely paid off their IMF debt by August 2001, almost two years ahead of schedule!  As Yoon Dae-hee, a spokesman for the South Korean Ministry of Finance and Economy. "We've retaken our economic sovereignty," Yoon said."From now on, we no longer need prior consultations with the IMF in planning and executing our economic policies."
  5. The present PenoyAquino regime claims we have more foreign reserves than foreign debt, mainly due to OFW remittances at $21 billion (2012), or else the Philippines would be in the red all these years). It's time we pay off the foreign debts insignificant amount towards the loan principal and not just the accumulating interests and be done with IMF/WB dictates on our national economy. Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) totaled only $1.25 billion in 2012. -  BSP Statistical Data). 
  6. We also pay some of these foreign debts via "asset conversion," whereby our government is forced to "privatize" or surrender some public assets like public land or facility. It may be the case for some of our former military bases that are now converted and owned privately, e.g. Fort Bonifacio (The Fort), etc.
  7. With the minimal FDI inflow compared to OFW remittances each year, we should find it suspicious why our rulers and those who call themselves (economic) reformers, under the foreign-influenced and local resident Chinese-led coRRECT Movement, insist on dismantling the already watered-down nationalist provisions in our 1987 Philippine Constitution "to attract foreign investments " 
  8. We therefore should instead defy the IMF/WB/WTO and revert to a more truly nationalistic Filipino First Policy in our homeland which of course can be realized only by a more informed, nationalistic, and thus united native citizenry - this latter being the objective task, though difficult even dangerous at times, of those amongst us who know and understand "what's going on."
  9. What Can We Do?
    We can not expect the present and subsequent regimes as these are populated by mainly political dynasties, oligarchs, and so-called technocrats. Bloody revolution or not, we need to educate ourselves and our fellow native Filipino majority about what's going on politically, economically, culturally, etc.  Because a true democracy can be realized, that is, change and work for the citizenry only when the latter are well-informed; so it can actively select leaders to peacefully and/or forcefully demand socio-economic and political changes for the common good.

    Click: 10 Reasons to Oppose the IMF. (Sometimes URLs disappear or are deleted from the internet, so what follows is the article with my highlights.


     BERT


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What is the IMF?

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB) were created in 1944 at a conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, and are now based in Washington, DC. The IMF was originally designed to promote international economic cooperation and provide its member countries with short-term loans so they could trade with other countries (achieve a balance of payments). 

Since the debt crisis of the 1980s, the IMF has assumed the role of bailing out countries during financial crises (caused in large part by currency speculation in the global casino economy) with emergency loan packages tied to certain conditions, often referred to as "structural adjustment policies (SAPs)." 

The IMF now acts like a global loan shark, exerting enormous leverage over the economies of more than 60 countries. These countries have to follow the IMF's policies to get loans, international assistance, and even debt relief. Thus, the IMF decides how much debtor countries can spend on education, health care, and environmental protection

The IMF is one of the most powerful institutions on Earth -- yet few know how it works. 



1. The IMF has created an immoral system of modern-day colonialism that SAPs the poor

The IMF -- along with the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the World Bank
 -- has put the global economy on a path of greater inequality and environmental destruction. The IMF's and World Bank's SAPs ensure debt repayment by requiring countries to:
  • cut spending on education and health; 
  • eliminate basic food and transportation subsidies;
  • devalue national currencies to make exports cheaper; 
  • privatize national assets; and
  • freeze wages. 

Such belt-tightening measures increase poverty, reduce countries' ability to develop strong domestic economies, and allow multinational corporations to exploit workers and the environment.

A recent IMF loan package for Argentina, for example, is tied to cuts in doctors' and teachers' salaries and decreases in social security payments... The IMF has made elites from the Global South (poor/underdeveloped countries) more accountable to First World (developed/rich) elites than their own people, thus undermining the democratic process.



2. The IMF serves wealthy countries and Wall Street

Unlike a democratic system in which each member country would have an equal vote, rich countries dominate decision-making in the IMF because voting power is determined by the amount of money that each country pays into the IMF's quota system. It's a system of one dollar, one vote. 

The U.S. is the largest IMF shareholder with a quota of 18 percent. Germany, Japan, France, Great Britain, and the US combined control about 38 percent. The disproportionate amount of power held by wealthy countries means that the interests of bankers, investors, and corporations from industrialized countries are put above the needs of the world's poor majority.



3. The IMF is imposing a fundamentally flawed development model

Unlike the path historically followed by the industrialized countries, the IMF forces countries from the Global South to prioritize export production over the development of diversified domestic economies. 

Nearly 80 percent of all malnourished children in the developing world live in countries where farmers have been forced to shift from food production for local consumption to the production of export crops destined for wealthy countries.

The IMF also requires countries to eliminate assistance to domestic industries while providing benefits for multinational corporations -- such as forcibly lowering labor costs. Small businesses and farmers can't compete. 

Sweatshop workers in free trade zones set up by the IMF and World Bank earn starvation wages, live in deplorable conditions, and are unable to provide for their families. The cycle of poverty is perpetuated, not eliminated, as governments' debt to the IMF grows.



4. The IMF is a secretive institution with no accountability
The IMF is funded with taxpayer money, yet it operates behind a veil of secrecy. Members of affected communities do not participate in designing loan packages. The IMF works with a select group of central bankers and finance ministers to make policies without input from other government agencies such as health, education, and environment departments. The institution has resisted calls for public scrutiny and independent evaluation.



5. IMF policies promote corporate welfare

To increase exports, countries are encouraged to give tax breaks and subsidies to export industries

Public assets such as forestland and government utilities (phone, water, and electricity companies) are sold off to foreign investors at rock bottom prices. 

In Guyana, an Asian-owned timber company called Barama received a logging concession that was 1.5 times the total amount of land all the indigenous communities were granted. Barama also received a five-year tax holiday. 

The IMF forced Haiti to open its market to imported, highly subsidized US rice at the same time it prohibited Haiti from subsidizing its own farmers. A US corporation called Early Rice now sells nearly 50 percent of the rice consumed in Haiti.



6. The IMF hurts workers

The IMF and World Bank frequently advise countries to attract foreign investors by weakening their labor laws -- eliminating collective bargaining laws and suppressing wages, for example. The IMF's mantra of "labor flexibility" permits corporations to fire at whim and move where wages are cheapest. 

According to the 1995 UN Trade and Development Report, employers are using this extra "flexibility" in labor laws to shed workers rather than create jobs. In Haiti, the government was told to eliminate a statute in their labor code that mandated increases in the minimum wage when inflation exceeded 10 percent. By the end of 1997, Haiti's minimum wage was only $2.40 a day.

Workers in the U.S. are also hurt by IMF policies because they have to compete with cheap, exploited labor. The IMF's mismanagement of the Asian financial crisis plunged South Korea, Indonesia, Thailand, and other countries into a deep depression that created 200 million "newly poor." 

The IMF advised countries to "export their way out of the crisis." Consequently, more than US 12,000 steelworkers were laid off when Asian steel was dumped in the US.



7. The IMF's policies hurt women the most

SAPs make it much more difficult for women to meet their families basic needs. When education costs rise due to IMF-imposed fees for the use of public services (so-called "user fees") girls are the first to be withdrawn from school. User fees at public clinics and hospitals make healthcare unaffordable to those who need it most. 

The shift to export agriculture also makes it harder for women to feed their families. Women have become more exploited as government workplace regulations are rolled back and sweatshop abuses increase.



8. IMF Policies hurt the environment

IMF loans and bailout packages are paving the way for natural resource exploitation on a staggering scale. The IMF does not consider the environmental impacts of lending policies, and environmental ministries and groups are not included in policymaking. 

The focus on export growth to earn hard currency to pay back loans has led to an unsustainable liquidation of natural resources. For example, the Ivory Coast's increased reliance on cocoa exports has led to a loss of two-thirds of the country's forests.



9. The IMF bails out rich bankers, creating a moral hazard and greater instability in the global economy

The IMF routinely pushes countries to deregulate financial systems. The removal of regulations that might limit speculation has greatly increased capital investment in developing country financial markets. More than $1.5 trillion crosses borders every day. 

Most of this capital is invested short-term, putting countries at the whim of financial speculators. The Mexican 1995 peso crisis was partly a result of these IMF policies.

When the bubble popped, the IMF and US government stepped in to prop up interest and exchange rates, using taxpayer money to bail out Wall Street bankers. Such bailouts encourage investors to continue making risky, speculative bets, thereby increasing the instability of national economies. 

During the bailout of Asian countries, the IMF required governments to assume the bad debts of private banks, thus making the public pay the costs and draining yet more resources away from social programs.



10. IMF bailouts deepen, rather than solve, economic crisis

During financial crises -- such as with Mexico in 1995 and South Korea, Indonesia, Thailand, Brazil, and Russia in 1997 -- the IMF stepped in as the lender of last resort. Yet the IMF bailouts in the Asian financial crisis did not stop the financial panic -- rather, the crisis deepened and spread to more countries. 

The policies imposed as conditions of these loans were bad medicine, causing layoffs in the short run and undermining development in the long run. 

In South Korea, the IMF sparked a recession by raising interest rates, which led to more bankruptcies and unemployment. Under the IMF imposed economic reforms after the peso bailout in 1995, the number of Mexicans living in extreme poverty increased by more than 50 percent and the national average minimum wage fell by 20 percent.

Source: http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/IMF_WB/TenReasons_OpposeIMF.html



"The ruling elites know who their enemies are, and their enemies are the people, the people at home and the people abroad. Their enemies are anybody who wants more social justice, anybody who wants to use the surplus-value of society for social needs rather than for individual class greed, that's their enemy." – Michael Parenti 

"You show me a capitalist, I'll show you a bloodsucker" - Malcolm X, 1965

"Capitalism and altruism are incompatible; they are philosophical opposites; they cannot coexist in the same man or in the same society" - Ayn Rand, 1961

"The glory of the United States is business" - Wendell L. Willkie, 1936

Re Greek ex-Finance Minister (2/13/2015 & 7/13/2015):
http://www.newstatesman.com/…/yanis-varoufakis-full-transcr…

Paul Krugman NYTimes (Throwback 6/13/2012) GREECE AS VICTIM
http://www.nytimes.com/…/opi…/Krugman-Greece-as-victim.html…
END OF POST.

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    "Those who profess to favor freedom
    and yet deprecate agitation

    are men who want crops without 
    plowing up the ground;
    they want rain without thunder and
    lightning.
    They want the ocean without
    the awful roar of its waters.
    This struggle may be a moral one
    or it may be a physical one

    or it may be both moral and physical
    but it must be a struggle.
    Power concedes nothing without a
    demand
    It never did, and never will." – Frederick Douglass
    ,
     American AbolitionistLecturerAuthor and Slave1817-1895


    "The question is not how to get good people to rule; the question is how to stop the powerful from doing as much damage as they can to us." – Sir Karl Popper, (28 July 1902 – 17 September 1994) Austro-British[4] philosopher and professor at the London School of Economics.[5] 

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Economic Hit Man EHM [Use of Globalization to Cheat Poor Countries] - John Perkins Interview

WHAT WE FILIPINOS SHOULD KNOW: Note: Underlined words are HTML links. Click on them to see the linked postings/articles. Forwarding the postings to relatives and friends, especially in the homeland, is greatly appreciated.

To write or read a comment, please go to http://www.thefilipinomind.blogspot.com/ and scroll down to the bottom of the current post (or another post you read and may want to respond) and click on "Comments."


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"What else do bankers do -- walk-in and turn-off the lights in the country." - William Slee, 1978

"I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies." - Thomas Jefferson, 1816
"The chief business of America is business" - President Calvin Coolidge, 1925





[ John Perkins was the first insider or EHM - economic hit man to reveal how systemic corruption -the modus operandi- of big transnational corporations, mostly American, have subverted the national economies of poor countries like our homeland. Below was his interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now.

I have worked for Bechtel Corporation and other big American E&C companies for several years and have been involved in so-called mega-projects (billion-dollar projects back in the early 1980s). We Bechtel engineers "knew" that our company has good connections in the Middle East. Bechtel used to reject hundred-million dollar projects since it only went for megas; and of course, we had a great time. Those were the good times in the oil/gas and petrochemical industries. Now, the US has mainly de-industrialized and instead import manufactured products and concentrated on the financial sector for the most part which I think, as an engineer, is the wrong direction for America or any other country to progress- industrialization creates real products, good jobs for more people, hones skills, etc. thus lifts the national economy. But this is another story.]

Update: Now, in The Secret History of the American Empire (2007), Perkins zeroes in on hot spots around the world and, drawing on interviews with other hit men, jackals, reporters, and activists, examines the current geopolitical crisis. Instability is the norm: It’s clear that the world we have created is dangerous and no longer sustainable. How did we get here? Who’s responsible? What good have we done and at what cost? And what can we do to change things for the next generations? Addressing these questions and more, Perkins reveals the secret history behind the events that have created the American Empire, including:

• The current Latin-American revolution and its lessons for democracy
• How the "defeats" in Vietnam and Iraq benefited big business
• The role of Israel as "Fortress America" in the Middle East
• Tragic repercussions of the IMF’s "Asian Economic Collapse"
• U.S. blunders in Tibet, Congo, Lebanon, and Venezuela
• Jackal (CIA operatives) forays to assassinate democratic presidents

From the U.S. military in Iraq to infrastructure development in Indonesia, from Peace Corps volunteers in Africa to jackals in Venezuela, Perkins exposes a conspiracy of corruption that has fueled instability and anti-Americanism around the globe. Alarming yet hopeful, this book provides a compassionate plan to reimagine our world.
John Perkins is the author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, a startling exposé of international corruption that spent over a year on the New York Times bestseller list. He is a founder and chairman of Dream Change, a nonprofit organization devoted to raising consciousness and creating a stable, sustainable, and peaceful world for future generations. Perkins has lectured and taught at universities on four continents including Wharton, Princeton, and Harvard, and is a champion for environmental and social causes. - AMAZON Books


I highly recommend these two books, very relevant and fact-filled, by John Perkins.  

- Bert

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“If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them”. – Isaac Asimov, 1920-1992

"The selfish spirit of commerce knows no country, and feels no passion or principle but that of gain" - Thomas Jefferson, 1809


"You show me a capitalist, I'll show you a bloodsucker" - Malcolm X, 1965

"Capitalism and altruism are incompatible; they are philosophical opposites; they cannot coexist in the same man or in the same society" - Ayn Rand, 1961

"The glory of the United States is business" - Wendell L. Willkie, 1936

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November 09, 2004

Confessions of an Economic Hit Man: How the U.S. Uses Globalization to Cheat Poor Countries Out of Trillions

Perkinsj


We speak with John Perkins, a former respected member of the international banking community. In his book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man he describes how as a highly paid professional, he helped the U.S. cheat poor countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars by lending them more money than they could possibly repay and then take over their economies.


John Perkins describes himself as a former economic hit man–a highly paid professional who cheated countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars. 20 years ago Perkins began writing a book with the working title, “Conscience of an Economic Hit Man.”

Perkins writes, "The book was to be dedicated to the presidents of two countries, men who had been his clients whom I respected and thought of as kindred spirits–Jaime Roldós, president of Ecuador, and Omar Torrijos, president of Panama. Both had just died in fiery crashes. Their deaths were not accidental. They were assassinated because they opposed that fraternity of corporate, government, and banking heads whose goal is global empire. We Economic Hit Men failed to bring Roldós and Torrijos around, and the other type of hit men, the CIA-sanctioned jackals who were always right behind us, stepped in.


John Perkins goes on to write: “I was persuaded to stop writing that book. I started it four more times during the next twenty years. On each occasion, my decision to begin again was influenced by current world events: the U.S. invasion of Panama in 1980, the first Gulf War, Somalia, and the rise of Osama bin Laden. However, threats or bribes always convinced me to stop.

But now Perkins has finally published his story. The book is titled Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. John Perkins joins us now in our Firehouse studios.
  • John Perkins, from 1971 to 1981 he worked for the international consulting firm of Chas T. Main where he was a self-described “economic hit man.” He is the author of the new book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.

Rush Transcript

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AMY GOODMAN: John Perkins joins us now in our firehouse studio. Welcome to Democracy Now!

JOHN PERKINS: Thank you, Amy. It’s great to be here.


AMY GOODMAN: It’s good to have you with us. Okay, explain this term, “economic hit man,” e.h.m., as you call it.

JOHN PERKINS: Basically what we were trained to do and what our job is to do is to build up the American empire. To bring—to create situations where as many resources as possible flow into this country, to our corporations, and our government, and in fact we’ve been very successful. We’ve built the largest empire in the history of the world. It’s been done over the last 50 years since World War II with very little military might, actually. It’s only in rare instances like Iraq where the military comes in as a last resort. This empire, unlike any other in the history of the world, has been built primarily through economic manipulation, through cheating, through fraud, through seducing people into our way of life, through the economic hit men. I was very much a part of that.


AMY GOODMAN: How did you become one? Who did you work for?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, I was initially recruited while I was in business school back in the late sixties by the National Security Agency, the nation’s largest and least understood spy organization; but ultimately I worked for private corporations. The first real economic hit man was back in the early 1950’s, Kermit Roosevelt, the grandson of Teddy, who overthrew of government of Iran, a democratically elected government, Mossadegh’s government who was Time‘s magazine person of the year; and he was so successful at doing this without any bloodshed—well, there was a little bloodshed, but no military intervention, just spending millions of dollars and replaced Mossadegh with the Shah of Iran.

At that point, we understood that this idea of economic hit man was an extremely good one. We didn’t have to worry about the threat of war with Russia when we did it this way. The problem with that was that Roosevelt was a C.I.A. agent. He was a government employee. Had he been caught, we would have been in a lot of trouble. It would have been very embarrassing. So, at that point, the decision was made to use organizations like the C.I.A. and the N.S.A. to recruit potential economic hit men like me and then send us to work for private consulting companies, engineering firms, construction companies, so that if we were caught, there would be no connection with the government.


AMY GOODMAN: Okay. Explain the company you worked for.

JOHN PERKINS: Well, the company I worked for was a company named Chas. T. Main in Boston, Massachusetts. We were about 2,000 employees, and I became its chief economist. I ended up having fifty people working for me. But my real job was deal-making. It was giving loans to other countries, huge loans, much bigger than they could possibly repay. One of the conditions of the loan—let’s say a $1 billion to a country like Indonesia or Ecuador—and this country would then have to give ninety percent of that loan back to a U.S. company, or U.S. companies, to build the infrastructure—a Halliburton or a Bechtel. These were big ones.
Those companies would then go in and build an electrical system or ports or highways, and these would basically serve just a few of the very wealthiest families in those countries.

 The poor people in those countries would be stuck ultimately with this amazing debt that they couldn’t possibly repay. A country today like Ecuador owes over fifty percent of its national budget just to pay down its debt. And it really can’t do it. So, we literally have them over a barrel. So, when we want more oil, we go to Ecuador and say, “Look, you’re not able to repay your debts, therefore give our oil companies your Amazon rain forest, which are filled with oil.”
And today we’re going in and destroying Amazonian rain forests, forcing Ecuador to give them to us because they’ve accumulated all this debt. So we make this big loan, most of it comes back to the United States, the country is left with the debt plus lots of interest, and they basically become our servants, our slaves. It’s an empire. There’s no two ways about it. It’s a huge empire. It’s been extremely successful.


AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. You say because of bribes and other reason you didn’t write this book for a long time. What do you mean? Who tried to bribe you, or who—what are the bribes you accepted?
JOHN PERKINS: Well, I accepted a half a million dollar bribe in the nineties not to write the book.


AMY GOODMAN: From?
JOHN PERKINS: From a major construction engineering company.

AMY GOODMAN: Which one?
JOHN PERKINS: Legally speaking, it wasn’t—Stone & Webster. Legally speaking it wasn’t a bribe, it was—I was being paid as a consultant. This is all very legal. But I essentially did nothing. It was a very understood, as I explained in Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, that it was—I was—it was understood when I accepted this money as a consultant to them I wouldn’t have to do much work, but I mustn’t write any books about the subject, which they were aware that I was in the process of writing this book, which at the time I called “Conscience of an Economic Hit Man.” And I have to tell you, Amy, that, you know, it’s an extraordinary story from the standpoint of—It’s almost James Bondish, truly, and I mean-–


AMY GOODMAN: Well that’s certainly how the book reads.
JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, and it was, you know? And when the National Security Agency recruited me, they put me through a day of lie detector tests. They found out all my weaknesses and immediately seduced me. They used the strongest drugs in our culture, sex, power and money, to win me over. I come from a very old New England family, Calvinist, steeped in amazingly strong moral values. I think I, you know, I’m a good person overall, and I think my story really shows how this system and these powerful drugs of sex, money and power can seduce people, because I certainly was seduced. And if I hadn’t lived this life as an economic hit man, I think I’d have a hard time believing that anybody does these things. And that’s why I wrote the book, because our country really needs to understand, if people in this nation understood what our foreign policy is really about, what foreign aid is about, how our corporations work, where our tax money goes, I know we will demand change.


AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to John Perkins. In your book, you talk about how you helped to implement a secret scheme that funneled billions of dollars of Saudi Arabian petrol dollars back into the U.S. economy, and that further cemented the intimate relationship between the House of Saud and successive U.S. administrations. Explain.
JOHN PERKINS: Yes, it was a fascinating time. I remember well, you’re probably too young to remember, but I remember well in the early seventies how OPEC exercised this power it had, and cut back on oil supplies. We had cars lined up at gas stations. The country was afraid that it was facing another 1929-type of crash—depression; and this was unacceptable. So, they—the Treasury Department hired me and a few other economic hit men. We went to Saudi Arabia. We—


AMY GOODMAN: You’re actually called economic hit men—e.h.m.’s?
JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, it was a tongue-in-cheek term that we called ourselves. Officially, I was a chief economist. We called ourselves e.h.m.‘s. It was tongue-in-cheek. It was like, nobody will believe us if we say this, you know? And, so, we went to Saudi Arabia in the early seventies. We knew Saudi Arabia was the key to dropping our dependency, or to controlling the situation. And we worked out this deal whereby the Royal House of Saud agreed to send most of their petro-dollars back to the United States and invest them in U.S. government securities.

The Treasury Department would use the interest from these securities to hire U.S. companies to build Saudi Arabia—new cities, new infrastructure—which we’ve done. And the House of Saud would agree to maintain the price of oil within acceptable limits to us, which they’ve done all of these years, and we would agree to keep the House of Saud in power as long as they did this, which we’ve done, which is one of the reasons we went to war with Iraq in the first place. And in Iraq we tried to implement the same policy that was so successful in Saudi Arabia, but Saddam Hussein didn’t buy.

When the economic hit men fail in this scenario, the next step is what we call the jackals. Jackals are C.I.A.-sanctioned people that come in and try to foment a coup or revolution. If that doesn’t work, they perform assassinations. or try to. In the case of Iraq, they weren’t able to get through to Saddam Hussein. He had—His bodyguards were too good. He had doubles. They couldn’t get through to him. So the third line of defense, if the economic hit men and the jackals fail, the next line of defense is our young men and women, who are sent in to die and kill, which is what we’ve obviously done in Iraq.


AMY GOODMAN: Can you explain how Torrijos died?
JOHN PERKINS: Omar Torrijos, the President of Panama. Omar Torrijos had signed the Canal Treaty with Carter much—and, you know, it passed our congress by only one vote. It was a highly contended issue. And Torrijos then also went ahead and negotiated with the Japanese to build a sea-level canal. The Japanese wanted to finance and construct a sea-level canal in Panama. Torrijos talked to them about this which very much upset Bechtel Corporation, whose president was George Schultz and senior council was Casper Weinberger. When Carter was thrown out (and that’s an interesting story—how that actually happened), when he lost the election, and Reagan came in and Schultz came in as Secretary of State from Bechtel, and Weinberger came from Bechtel to be Secretary of Defense, they were extremely angry at Torrijos—tried to get him to renegotiate the Canal Treaty and not to talk to the Japanese. He adamantly refused. He was a very principled man. He had his problem, but he was a very principled man.

He was an amazing man, Torrijos. And so, he died in a fiery airplane crash, which was connected to a tape recorder with explosives in it, which—I was there. I had been working with him. I knew that we economic hit men had failed. I knew the jackals were closing in on him, and the next thing, his plane exploded with a tape recorder with a bomb in it. There’s no question in my mind that it was C.I.A. sanctioned, and most—many Latin American investigators have come to the same conclusion. Of course, we never heard about that in our country.


AMY GOODMAN: So, where—when did your change your heart happen?
JOHN PERKINS: I felt guilty throughout the whole time, but I was seduced. The power of these drugs, sex, power, and money, was extremely strong for me. And, of course, I was doing things I was being patted on the back for. I was chief economist. I was doing things that Robert McNamara liked and so on.


AMY GOODMAN: How closely did you work with the World Bank?
JOHN PERKINS: Very, very closely with the World Bank. The World Bank provides most of the money that’s used by economic hit men, it and the I.M.F. But when 9/11 struck, I had a change of heart. I knew the story had to be told because what happened at 9/11 is a direct result of what the economic hit men are doing. And the only way that we’re going to feel secure in this country again and that we’re going to feel good about ourselves is if we use these systems we’ve put into place to create positive change around the world.

I really believe we can do that. I believe the World Bank and other institutions can be turned around and do what they were originally intended to do, which is help reconstruct devastated parts of the world. Help—genuinely help poor people. There are twenty-four thousand people starving to death every day. We can change that.


AMY GOODMAN: John Perkins, I want to thank you very much for being with us. John Perkins’ book is called, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.

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Source: http://www.uwec.edu/Geography/Ivogeler/w111/articles/Confessions-Economic-Hit-Man.htm