The Sky is
Falling on
Mexico, Too
By JOHN ROSS
11/10/08
"Counterpunch"
-- - Mexico
City. --
Fury at the
billionaire
bail-out of
the criminal
class that
has driven
Wall Street
into a
disaster of
9/11
dimensions
festers down
at the
bottom of
the economic
food chain
on Main
Street USA.
It is a
familiar
syndrome
south of the
border.
Bailing out
the super
rich on the
backs of the
rest of us
has had
Mexicans
seething
since the
great FOBAPROA
scam of the
mid-1990s.
The Mexican
Meltdown
kicked in in
late 1994.
The outgoing
president,
the reviled
Carlos
Salinas de
Gortari, had
borrowed $33
billion USD
in
short-term
loans to
keep his
house of
cards from
crashing
down before
he left
office.
Worried
about his
legacy,
Salinas
refused to
devaluate a
chronically
over-valued
peso,
leaving the
dirty work
to his inept
successor
Ernesto
Zedillo.
When on
December
20th, the
new
president
was forced
to devalue,
the peso
sank from
three to ten
to a dollar
overnight.
Panicked
investors
pulled their
money out of
the country
to the tune
of $1.5
billion a
day. Capital
flight
emptied out
the nation's
once-healthy
reserves.
With payback
on Salinas's
short-term "tesobonos"
coming due
daily,
Mexico was
staring down
default by
January
1995.
Meanwhile,
Mexican
banks, which
were
re-privatized
just two
years
previous,
had been
stripped
back to the
bone. The
only
liquidity
left in the
vaults was
said to be
$26 billion
in narco-money
that the
U.S. Drug
Enforcement
Administration
claims is
washed
through the
Mexican
banking
system
annually.
Interest
rates were
ratcheted up
to 100% plus
and debtors
were
crucified.
Encouraged
by the
banks,
farmers had
borrowed
beyond their
means to
position
themselves
for the
never-materialized
bonanza of
the North
American
Free Trade
Agreement (TLCAN
are its
Spanish
initials)
and couldn't
pay up. The
banks
foreclosed
on family
farms,
ranches,
machinery,
and herds of
livestock.
Urban
borrowers,
squeezed by
the soaring
rates, lost
taxis and
taco stands,
their
furniture
and their
apartments.
The banks
hired armed,
off-duty
cops who
broke down
the doors of
the debtors,
terrorizing
their
families.
Over a
thousand
citizens
were
unlawfully
jailed and
charged with
theft.
By February
1995, Mexico
had lurched
into its
deepest
economic
slide since
the Great
Depression.
Indeed,
depression
was the mood
of the day.
Farmers
drank
pesticide to
end it all
or poured
gasoline
over their
bodies and
immolated
themselves
in despair.
33 citizens
leaped to
their deaths
before
onrushing
trains down
in the
Mexico City
Metro in
1996, a
record.
But other
debtors
organized
and fought
back. El
Barzon which
took its
name from a
popular
depression-era
tune (the "barzon"
was the
strap that
fastened the
plough to
the mule
team)
mobilized
farmers and
cityslickers
alike. Bank
officials
were tarred
and
feathered,
highway
tollbooths
burnt to the
ground. In
Mexico City,
the
Barzonistas
sealed bank
doors shut
with
superglue
and marched
through the
streets in
their
underwear or
less or
clothed only
in barrels
in classic
Great
Depression
style. One
day, El
Barzon
paraded a
circus the
banks had
foreclosed
on to the
great doors
of the Bank
of Mexico
where the
elephants
took dumps
on the
marble
steps, a
steaming
souvenir for
the hated
bankers.
The U.S.
Central
Intelligence
Agency told
the daily
business
journal El
Financiero
that the
Barzon
movement was
even more
subversive
than the
Zapatista
Army of
National
Liberation,
the Indian
rebels in
Chiapas whom
Zedillo was
falsely
blaming for
destabilizing
Mexico and
triggering
the
collapse.
Like the
Cassandras
of Wall
Street
today, the
bankers
cried
Armageddon
and the
president,
Zedillo,
much as
George Bush
in the
current
imbroglio,
stampeded
congress
into a
monumental
bail-out.
FOBAPROA
("Banking
Fund for the
Protection
of Savings")
dumped $120
billion USD
in bad debt
on the backs
of Mexican
taxpayers,
20% of the
nation's
gross
domestic
product -
Bush's
monstrous
bail-out
only
accounts for
7% of U.S.
GDP.
Unlike the
U.S.
Congress's
testy
reaction to
what is
being dubbed
"GRINGOPROA"
here, the
Mexican
legislature,
then
dominated by
the
long-ruling
(71 years)
Institutional
Revolutionary
Party (PRI),
in
connivance
with the
right-wing
PAN, signed
off on
FOBAPROA
without
missing a
beat. Only
the left
Party of the
Democratic
Revolution
(PRD), led
by Andres
Manuel Lopez
Obrador
(AMLO)
raised its
voice in
protest. A
referendum
on the
bail-out
organized by
Lopez
Obrador
drummed up
2,000,000
votes
against
Zedillo's
skam.
The cost of
FOBAPROA has
been
incalculable.
With the
Mexican
government
obligated to
shell out $8
to 10
billion USD
of Mexican
taxpayers
hard-earned
money each
year to pay
off the
debts of
deadbeat
banks,
social
budgets have
shrunk,
schools and
hospitals do
not get
built, and
the nation's
highway
system, also
privatized
under
Salinas and
Zedillo, has
fallen into
dangerous
disrepair.
Once the
banks had
been
reasonably
sanitized,
the Zedillo
government
sold them
off to
international
financial
combines -
Citigroup,
Santander,
the Bank of
Nova Scotia,
the Spanish
BBVA, and
the Hong
Kong-based
HSBC
dominate the
Mexican
banking
industry,
90% of which
is in
non-Mexican
hands. Now
the
globalization
of the
Mexican
banking
system has
left it
vulnerable
to contagion
from the
collapse of
Wall Street.
In fact, the
gringo
credit
crunch has
already
spread south
of the
border.
Battered by
spiraling
interest
rates,
Mexican
borrowers
are
defaulting
big time on
their loans
- 6.9% of
all bank
loans are
unrecoverable.
Spurred by
unconscionable
hand-outs of
credit cards
to the
middle and
underclasses,
8.9% of all
plastic is
contaminating
credit
markets.
Constricting
credit
threatens
2,000,000
small
businesses
and
doomsayers
speculate
that fresh
crisis and a
new FOBAPROA
are on
Mexico's
plate for
2009.
The U.S.
debacle,
tagged the
"Jazz
Effect" by
Argentinean
president
Cristina
Fernandez at
the United
Nations
General
Assembly
conclave
last week
(an insult
to a
uniquely
American art
form), has
infected
Mexico's
economic
bloodstream
and the
nation's
well-being
seems beyond
recovery for
the
foreseeable
future.
Whereas
President
Felipe
Calderon and
his
350-pound
finance
minister
Agustin
Carstens
once assured
suspicious
investors of
3% growth in
2008, the
lowest on
the Latin
American
totem pole
trailing
even basket
case
countries
like
Honduras and
Haiti,
Merrill
Lynch,
itself a
flattened
former
powerhouse
just spun
off to the
Bank of
America, has
recalibrated
that anemic
forecast to
a sickly
1.9% in
light of the
fall-out
from the
downturn in
El Norte.
Sinking oil
prices as
energy
demand tails
off into a
deflationary
spiral will
cripple
investment
in PEMEX,
the national
oil
consortium
Calderon so
ardently
wants to
sell off to
Big Oil -
PEMEX
accounts for
40% of the
nation's
budget. Even
more ominous
is the
nosedive in
"remesas",
remittances
sent south
by Mexican
workers in
the U.S.
that is the
only
sustenance
for whole
rural
regions and
which
constitute
Mexico's
poverty
program -
one out of
every four
Mexican
families now
subsist on
the remesas.
Remittances
are Mexico's
second
source of
dollars,
right behind
petroleum.
This August,
the flow of
greenbacks
from the
north
diminished
by a
shocking 12%
and total
remesas have
sunk 4.4% in
the first
five months
of 2008.
Prospects
for relief
are dim.
Mexicans
working in
the U.S. are
the last
hired and
the first
fired. With
U.S.
national
unemployment
topping 6% -
California
where more
Mexicans
work than
any other
state
registered
7.9%
unemployment
last month
and the
construction
industry
which
employs many
Mexican
workers is
off 14% -
workers are
beginning to
return home
even though
unemployment
and
inflation
here are
hitting
highs not
seen since
the Meltdown
of the
1990s.
Although the
Calderon
administration
minimalizes
the return
migration,
estimating
that no more
than 200,000
workers will
come home to
Mexico in
coming
months, many
immigration
watchers are
calculating
that the
numbers
could
stretch into
the
millions.
Despite
labor
secretary
Javiar
Lozano's
happy face
forecast
that Mexico
will be able
to provide
jobs for the
returnees,
it should be
remembered
that these
workers fled
to the U.S.
precisely
because they
could not
find work
here.
Moreover,
Mexico,
which runs a
serious
trade
deficit with
the U.S.,
will see
exports and
the jobs
they
generate dry
up in 2009.
Automobile
and auto
parts
orders, a
big chunk of
Mexico's
export
basket, have
been
cancelled
due to
sagging
sales up
north and
workers are
being laid
off on both
sides of the
border.
Manufacturing
orders for
border-based
maquiladoras
are
plummeting
and hundreds
of thousands
of jobs have
been lost to
even lower
wage
countries
like China
in recent
years.
The news
gets worse.
Workers'
pension
funds,
privatized
under
Zedillo to
allow for
investment
in money
markets,
have lost
62.5 billion
pesos since
the first of
the year.
The credit
collapse has
gutted the
Mexican
stock market
as sorely as
it has
eviscerated
U.S.,
European,
and Asian
exchanges -
the Bolsa de
Valores has
lost over a
thousand
points just
in the last
month,
panicking
the nation's
top Forbes
list
billionaires.
Carlos Slim,
the world's
first,
second,
third, or
fourth
richest man
depending on
how one
measures
fortunes,
claims to
have lost
half of his
in recent
weeks -
Slim, owner
of many
telephone
companies in
Latin
America, is
heavily
invested in
both Wall
Street and
the Mexican
stock market
where his
corporations
account for
a third of
the trading
volume. The
despondent
Slim
recently
summoned the
press to
hear out his
doom and
gloom
prognosis,
describing
the current
credit
crisis as
far more
dangerous
than 1929
and
anticipating
deep and
prolonged
world
recession if
not Great
Depression.
While the
sky falls in
on Mexico's
future,
President
Felipe
Calderon
appears
astoundingly
blasé,
echoing John
McCain's
misguided
appraisal of
his own
economy by
declaring
Mexico's
"fundamentally
sound", an
opinion he
shared with
brokers last
week at the
reeling New
York Stock
Exchange
where he was
invited to
open trading
by clanging
the
traditional
bell.
Calderon's
optimism was
echoed by
his
super-sized
finance
minister
Carstens who
assures
investors
that "this
is one
crisis
Mexico is
prepared
for." The
old maxim
that when
Wall Street
gets the
sniffles,
Mexico comes
down with
pneumonia is
no longer
operative,
the former
World Bank
behemoth
counsels.
"Now Wall
Street has
pneumonia
and we will
only get a
little
cough." Such
delusional
reasoning
invoked a
chorus of
coughing
when
Carstens
went before
congress
recently to
insist that
Mexico would
resist the
gringo
disease
without
resorting to
cutting
budgets.
Dubious
observers
like La
Jornada
financial
columnist
Carlos
Fernandez
Vega
suggests
that a good
place to
initiate
cuts might
be Carstens
himself.
Imagine how
much Mexico
could save
in spiraling
food costs
if the
corpulent
finance
secretary's
intake was
slashed 10%
in the next
budget
cycle.
John Ross is
wrestling
with "El
Monstruo" in
the maw of
Mexico City.
These
dispatches
will
continue at
10-day
intervals
until the
draft is
done. If you
have further
information
visit
www.johnross-rebeljournalist.com
or
johnross@igc.org