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The
Naked Hegemon
Part
1: Why the emperor has no clothes
By Andre Gunder Frank
01/20/05 "Asia Times" -- Uncle Sam has reneged
and defaulted on up to 40% of its trillion-dollar foreign debt,
and nobody has said a word except for a line in The Economist. In
plain English that means Uncle Sam runs a worldwide confidence
racket with his self-made dollar based on the confidence that he
has elicited and received from others around the world, and he is
a also a deadbeat in that he does not honor and return the money
he has received.
How much of our dollar stake we have lost depends on how much we
originally paid for it. Uncle Sam let his dollar fall, or rather
through his deliberate political economic policies drove it down,
by 40%, from 80 cents to the euro to 133 cents. The dollar is down
by a similar factor against the yen, yuan and other currencies.
And it is still declining, indeed is apt to plummet altogether.
There was also a spate of competitive devaluations in the 1930s,
called the "beggar thy neighbor policy" of shifting the
costs for the neighbors to bear. True, as the dollar has declined,
so has the real value that foreigners pay to service their debt to
Uncle Sam. But that works only if they can themselves earn in
currencies that have increased in value against the dollar.
Otherwise, foreigners earn and pay in the same devalued dollars,
and even then with some loss from devaluation between the time
they got their dollars and the time they repay them to Uncle Sam.
China and other East Asian nations do earn in dollars, to which
they have pegged their currencies, so they have already lost a
substantial portion of their dollar stake, by far the world's
largest.
And they, like all others, will also lose the rest. For Uncle
Sam's debt to the rest of the world already amounts to more than a
third of his annual domestic production and is still growing. That
alone already makes his debt economically and politically never
repayable, even if he wanted to, which he does not. Uncle Sam's
domestic, eg credit-card, debt is almost 100% of gross domestic
product (GDP) and consumption, including that from China. Uncle
Sam's federal debt is now US$7.5 trillion, of which all but $1
trillion was built up in the past three decades, the last $2
trillion in the past eight years, and the last $1 trillion in the
past two years. Alas, that costs more than $300 billion a year in
interest, compared with, for example, the $15 billion spent
annually on the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA). But no worries: Congress just raised the debt ceiling to
$8.2 trillion. To help us visualize, $1 trillion tightly packed up
in $1,000 bills would create a pile 100km high.
But nearly half is owed to foreigners. All Uncle Sam's debt,
including private household consumer credit-card, mortgage etc
debt of about $10 trillion, plus corporate and financial, with
options, derivatives and the like, and state and local government
debt comes to an unvisualizable, indeed unimaginable, $37
trillion, which is nearly four times Uncle Sam's GDP. Only some of
that can be managed domestically, but with dangerous limitations
for Uncle Sam noted below. That is only one reason I want you to
meet Uncle Sam, the deadbeat confidence man, who may remind you of
the film Meet Joe Black; for as we get to know him better
below, we will find that he is also a Shylock, and a corrupt one
at that.
The United States is the world's most privileged nation for having
the monopoly privilege of printing the world's reserve currency at
will and at a cost of nothing but the paper and ink it is printed
on. Moreover, by doing so, Uncle Sam can export abroad the
inflation he generates by the extra dollars he prints, of which
there are already at least three times as many floating around the
world as at Uncle Sam's home. Additionally, his is also the only
country whose "foreign" debt is mostly denominated in
his own world-currency dollars that he can print at will; while
most foreigners' debt is also denominated in the same dollar, but
they have to buy it from Uncle Sam with their own currency and
real goods. So he simply pays the Chinese and others in essence
with these dollars that already to begin with have no real worth
beyond their paper and ink. So especially poor China gives away
for nothing at all to rich Uncle Sam hundreds of billions of
dollars' worth of real goods produced at home and consumed by
Uncle Sam. Then China turns around and trades these same paper
dollar bills in for more of Uncle Sam's paper called Treasury
Certificate bonds, which are even more worthless, except that they
pay a percent of interest. For as we already noted, they will
never be able to be cashed in and redeemed in full or even in
part, and anyway have the lost much of their value to Uncle Sam
already.
In an earlier essay, I argued that Uncle Sam's power rests on two
pillars only, the paper dollar and the Pentagon. Each supports the
other, but the vulnerability of each is also an Achilles' heel
that threatens the viability of the other. Since then, Iraq, not
to mention Afghanistan, has shown confidence in the Pentagon not
to be what it was cracked up to be; and with the
in-part-consequent decline in the dollar, so has confidence in it
and Uncle Sam's ability to use it to finance his Pentagon's
foreign adventures (See Coup
d'Etat and Paper Tiger in Washington, Fiery Dragon in the Pacific,
which also conjures up the productive growth of China).
Additionally we must realize that Uncle Sam's numbers above and
below are also all literally relative. So far relations with other
countries, in particular with China, still favor Uncle Sam, but
they also help maintain an image that is deceptive. Consider the
following:
A $2 toy leaving a US-owned factory in China is a $3 shipment
arriving at San Diego. By the time a US consumer buys it for $10
at Wal-Mart, the US economy registers $10 in final sales, less
$3 import cost, for a $7 addition to the US GDP. (Blaming
'undervalued' yuan wins votes, Asia Times Online,
February 26, 2004)
Moreover, ever-clever Uncle Sam has arranged matters so as to
earn 9% from his economic and financial holdings abroad, while
foreigners earn only 3% on theirs, and among them on their
Treasury Certificates only 1% real return. Note that this
difference of 6 percentage points is already double what Uncle Sam
pays out, and his total 9% take is triple the 3% he gives back.
Therefore, although foreign holdings and Uncle Sam's are now about
equal, Uncle Sam is still the big net interested winner, just like
any Shylock, but no other ever did so grand a business.
But Uncle Sam also earns quite well, thank you, from other
holdings abroad, eg from service payments by mostly poor foreign
debtors. The sums involved are not peanuts or even small potatoes.
For from his direct investments in foreign property alone, Uncle
Sam's profits now equal 50%, and including his receipts from other
holdings abroad now are a full 100% of profits derived from all of
his own domestic activities combined. These foreign receipts add
more than 4% to Uncle Sam's national domestic product. That helps
nicely to compensate for the failure of domestic profits as yet to
recover even their 1972 level, because Uncle Sam has failed to
boost productivity sufficiently at home.
The productivity hype of president Bill Clinton's "new
economy" in the 1990s was limited to computers and
information technology (IT), and even that proved to be a sham
when the dot-com bubble burst. Also, not only the apparent
increase in "profits" but also that of
"productivity" were, at the bottom, on the backs of
shop-floor, office and sales-floor workers working harder and
longer hours and, at the top, the result of innovative accounting
shams by Enron and the like. Such factors still compensate for and
permit much of Uncle Sam's $600-billion-and-still-rising trade
deficit from excess home consumption over what he himself
produces. That is what has resulted in the multitrillion-dollar
debt. Exactly how large that debt is Uncle Sam is reluctant to
reveal, but what is sure is that it is by far the world's largest,
even as net debt to foreigners, after their debt to him is
deducted.
How has all this come about?
The simple answer is that Uncle Sam, who is increasingly hooked on
consumption, not to mention harder drugs, saves no more than 0.2%
of his own income. The Federal Reserve's guru and now you see it,
now you don't doctor of magic, Alan Greenspan, recently observed
that this is so because the richest 20% of Americans, who are the
only ones who do save, have reduced their savings to 2%. Yet even
these measly savings (other, poorer countries save and even invest
20%, 30%, even 40% of their income) are more than counterbalanced
by the 6% deficit spending of the government. That is what brings
the average saving rate to 0.2%. To maintain that
$400-plus-billion budget deficit (more than 3% of national
domestic product), which is really more the $600 billion if we
count, as we should, the more than $200 billion Uncle Sam
"borrows" from the temporary surplus in his own Federal
Social Security fund, which he is also bankrupting. (But never
mind, President George W Bush just promised to privatize much of
that and let people buy their own old-age "security" in
the ever-insecure market).
So with this $600-billion-plus budget deficit and the
above-mentioned related $600-billion-plus deficit, rich Uncle Sam,
and primarily his highest earners and biggest consumers, as well
as of course the Big Uncle himself, live off the fat of the rest
of the world's land. Uncle Sam absorbs the savings of others who
themselves are often much poorer, particularly when their central
banks put many of their reserves in world-currency dollars and
hence into the hands of Uncle Sam in Washington, and some also in
dollars at home. Their private investors send dollars to or buy
dollar assets on Wall Street, all with the confidence that they
are putting their wherewithal in the world's safest haven (and
that, of course, is part of the above-mentioned confidence
racket). From the central banks alone, we are looking at yearly
sums of more than $100 billion from Europe, more than $100 billion
from poor China, $140 billion from super-saver Japan, and many 10s
of billions from many others around the globe, including the Third
World. But in addition, Uncle Sam obliges them, through the good
offices of their own states, to send their thus literally forced
savings to Uncle Sam as well in the form of their
"service" of their predominantly dollar debt to him.
His treasury secretary and his International Monetary Fund (IMF)
handmaiden blithely continue to strut around the world insisting
that the Third - and ex-Second, now also Third - World of course
continue to service their foreign debts, especially to him. No
matter that with interest rates multiplied several times over by
Uncle Sam himself after the Fed's Paul Volcker's coup in October
1979, most have already paid off their original borrowings three
to five times over. For to pay at all at interest rates that
Volcker boosted to 20%, they had to borrow still more at still
higher rates until thereby their outstanding foreign debt doubled
and tripled, not to mention their domestic debt from which part of
the foreign payments were raised, particularly in Brazil.
Privatization is the name of the game there and elsewhere, except
for the debt. The debt was socialized after it had been incurred
mostly by private business, but only the state had enough power to
squeeze the greatest bulk of back payments out of the hides of its
poor and middle-class people and transfer them as "invisible
service payments" to Uncle Sam.
When Mexicans were told to tighten their belts still further, they
answered that they couldn't because they had already had to eat
their belts. Only Argentina and for a while Russia declared an
effective moratorium on debt "service", and that only
after political economic policies had destroyed their societies,
thanks to Uncle Sam's advisers and his IMF strong arm. Since then,
Uncle Sam himself has been blithely defaulting on his own foreign
debt, as he already had several times before in the 19th century.
Speaking of that, it may be well to recall at least two pieces of
advice from that time: Lord Cromer, who administered Egypt for
then-dominant British imperial interests, said his most important
instrument for doing so was Egypt's debts to Britain. These had
just multiplied when Egypt was obliged to sell its Suez Canal
shares to Britain in order to pay off earlier debts and British
prime minister Benjamin Disraeli explained and justified his
purchase of the same on the grounds that it would strengthen
British imperial interests. Today, that is called
"debt-for-equity swaps", which is one of Uncle Sam's
latter-day favorite policies to use the debt to acquire profitable
and/or strategically important real resources, as of course also
was the canal as the way to the jewel of the British Empire,
India.
Another piece of practical advice came from the premier military
strategist Carl von Clausewitz: make the lands you conquer pay for
their own conquest and administration. That is of course exactly
what Britain did in and with India through the infamous "Home
Charges" remitted to London in payment for Britain
administering India, which even the British themselves recognized
as "tribute" and responsible for much of "The
Drain" from India to Britain. How much more efficient yet to
let foreign countries' own states administer themselves but by
rules set and imposed by Uncle Sam's IMF and then effect a drain
of debt service anyway. Actually, the British therein also set the
19th-century precedent of relying on the "imperialism of free
trade" with "independent" states as far and as long
as possible, using gunboat diplomacy to make it work (which Uncle
Sam had already learned to copy by early in the 20th century); and
if that was not enough, simply to invade, and if necessary to
occupy - and then rely on the Clausewitz rule.
We shall note several recent instances thereof, and especially the
Iraqi one, in the second article in this series.
After I wrote the above, I received by e-mail an excerpt from
the Democracy Now! website, titled Confessions
of an economic hit man: How the US uses globalization to cheat
poor countries out of trillions
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 US 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: 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 ... 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 ... I was initially
recruited while I was in business school back in the late '60s
by the National Security Agency, the nation's largest and least
understood spy organization ... and then [it] send[s] 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 ...
I became its chief economist. I ended up having 50 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 90% of that loan back to a
US company, or US companies ... a Halliburton or a Bechtel ... A
country today like Ecuador owes over 50% 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 your oil companies your Amazon rain
[forests], 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 ...
[We work] 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 IMF.
Last but not least, oil producers also put their savings in
Uncle Sam. With the "shock" of oil that restored its
real price after the dollar valuation had fallen in 1973,
ever-cleverer-by-half Henry Kissinger made a deal with the world's
largest oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, that it would continue to
price oil in dollars, and these earnings would be deposited with
Uncle Sam and partly compensated by military hardware. That deal
de facto extended to all of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) and still stands, except that before
the war against Iraq that country suddenly opted out by switching
to pricing its oil in euros, and Iran threatened do the same.
North Korea, the third member of the "axis of evil", has
no oil but trades entirely in euros. (Venezuela is a major oil
supplier to Uncle Sam and also supplies some at preferential rates
as non-dollar trade swaps to poor countries such as Cuba. So Uncle
Sam sponsored and financed military commandos from its Plan
Colombia next door, promoted an illegal coup and, when that
failed, pushed a referendum in his attempt at yet another
"regime change"; and now along with Brazil all three are
being baptized as yet another "axis of evil").
After writing this, I found that the good (hit) man Mr Perkins
was in Saudi Arabia too:
Yes, it was a fascinating time. I remember well ... the Treasury
Department hired me and a few other economic hit men. We went to
Saudi Arabia ... And we worked out this deal whereby the Royal
House of Saud agreed to send most of their petrodollars back to
the United States and invest them in US government securities.
The Treasury Department would use the interest from these
securities to hire US 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 CIA-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.
To return to the main issue and call a spade a huge spade, all of
the above is part and parcel of the world's biggest-ever Ponzi-scheme
confidence racket. Like all others, its most essential
characteristic is that it can only continue to pay off dollars and
be maintained at the top as long as it continues to receive new
dollars at the bottom, voluntarily through confidence if possible
and by force if not. (Of course, the Clausewitz and Cromer
formulas result in the poorest paying the most, since they are
also the most defenseless: so that the ones sitting on/above them
pass much of the cost and pain down to them.)
What if confidence in the dollar runs out?
Things are already getting shakier in the House of Uncle Sam. The
declining dollar reduces the necessary dollar inflows, so
Greenspan needs to raise interest rates to maintain some
attraction for the foreign dollars he needs to fill the trade gap.
As a quid pro quo for being reappointed by President George W
Bush, he promised to do that only after the election. That time
has now arrived, but doing so threatens to collapse the housing
bubble that was built on low interest and mortgage - and
remortgage - rates.
But it is in their house values that most Americans have their
savings, if they have any at all. They and this imaginary wealth
effect supported over-consumption and the nearly as-high-as-GDP
household debt, and a collapse of the housing price bubble with
increased interest and mortgage rates would not only drastically
undercut house prices, it would thereby have a domino effect on
their owners' enormous second and third remortgages and
credit-card and other debt, their consumption, corporate debt and
profit, and investment. In fact, these factors would be enough to
plummet Uncle Sam into a deep recession, if not depression, and
another Big Bear deflation on stock and de facto on other prices,
rendering debt service even more onerous. (If the dollar declines,
even domestic price inflation is de facto deflationary against
other currencies, which Russians and Latin Americans discovered to
their peril, and which we observe below.)
Still lower real US investment would reduce its industrial
productivity and competitiveness even more - probably to a degree
lower than can compensated for by further devaluing the dollar and
making US exports cheaper, as is the confident hope of many,
probably including the good Doctor. Until now, the apparent
inflation of prices abroad in rubles and pesos and their
consequent devaluations have been a de facto deflation in terms of
the dollar world currency. Uncle Sam then printed dollars to buy
up at bargain-basement fire-sale prices natural resources in
Russia (whose economy was then run on $100 bills), and companies
and even banks, as in South Korea. True, now Greenspan and Uncle
Sam are trying again to get other central banks to raise their own
interest rates and otherwise plunge their own people into even
deeper depression.
But even if he can, thereby also canceling out the relative
attractiveness of his own interest-rate hike, how could that save
Uncle Sam? What remains the great unknown and perhaps still
unknowable is how a more wounded, Ponzi-less Uncle Sam would react
with more "Patriotic" acts at home and abroad with the
weapons - including the now almost ready "small" nukes -
he would still have, even if his foreign victims no longer paid
for new ones. So, to compensate for less bread and civil rights at
home, an even more patriotic, nay chauvinist, circus at the cost
of others abroad is the real danger of the current policies to
"defend freedom and civilization".
So, far beyond Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda and all the terrorists
put together, the greatest real-world threat to Uncle Sam is that
the inflow of dollars dries up. For instance, foreign central
banks and private investors (it is said that "overseas
Chinese" have a tidy trillion dollars) could any day decide
to place more of their money elsewhere than in the declining
dollar and abandon poor ol' Uncle Sam to his destiny. China could
double its per capita income very quickly if it made real
investments at home instead of financial ones with Uncle Sam.
Central banks, European and others, can now put their reserves in
(rising!) euros or even soon-to-be-revalued Chinese yuan. Not so
far down the road, there may be an East Asian currency, eg a
basket first of ASEAN + 3 (China, Japan, South Korea) - and then +
4 (India). While India's total exports in the past five years rose
by 73%, those to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
rose at double that rate and sixfold to China. India has become an
ASEAN summit partner, and its ambitions stretch still further to
an economic zone stretching from India to Japan. Not for nothing,
in the 1997 East Asian currency and then full economic crisis,
Uncle Sam strong-armed Japan not to start a proposed East Asian
currency fund that would have prevented at least the worst of the
crisis. Uncle Sam then benefited from it by buying devalued East
Asian currencies and using them to buy up East Asian real
resources, and in South Korea also banks, at bargain-basement
reduced-price fire sales. But now, China is already taking steps
toward such an arrangement, only on a much grander financial and
now also economic scale.
A day after writing the above, I read in The Economist (December
11-17, 2004) a report on the previous week's summit meeting of
ASEAN + 3 in Malaysia. That country's prime minister announced
that this summit should lay the groundwork for an East Asian
Community (EAC) that "should build a free-trade area,
cooperate on finance, and sign a security pact ... that would
transform East Asia into a cohesive economic block ... In fact,
some of these schemes are already in motion ... China, as the
region's pre-eminent economic and military power, will doubtless
dominate ... and host the second East Asia Summit." The
report went on to recall that in 1990, Uncle Sam shot down a
similar initiative for fear of losing influence in the region. Now
it is a case of "Yankee Stay Home".
Or what if, long before that comes to pass, exporters of oil
simply cease to price it in ever-devaluing dollars, and instead
make a mint by switching to the rising euro and/or a basket of
East Asian currencies? That would at one stroke vastly diminish
the world demand for and price of dollars by obliging anyone who
wants to buy oil to purchase and increase the demand price of the
euro or yen/yuan instead of the dollar. That would crash the
dollar and tumble Uncle Sam in one fell swoop, as foreign - and
even domestic - owners of dollars would sell off as many of them
as fast as they could, and other countries' central banks would
switch their reserves out of dollars and away from Uncle Sam's
no-longer-safe haven. That would drive the dollar down even more,
and of course halt any more dollar inflow to Uncle Sam from the
foreigners who have been financing his consumption spree. Since
selling oil for falling dollars instead of rising euros is
evidently bad business, the world's largest oil exporters in
Russia and OPEC have been considering doing just that. In the
meantime, they have only raised the dollar price of oil, so that
in euro terms it has remained approximately stable since 2000. So
far, many oil exporters and others still place their increased
amount of dollars with Uncle Sam, even though he now offers an
ever less attractive and less safe haven, but Russia is now buying
more euros with some of its dollars.
So also many countries' central banks have begun to put ever more
of their reserves into the euro and currencies other than Uncle
Sam's dollar. Now even the Central Bank of China, the greatest
friend of Uncle Sam in need, has begun to buy some euros. China
itself has also begun to use some of its dollars - as long as they
are still accepted by them - to buy real goods from other Asians
and thousands of tons of iron ore and steel from Brazil, etc.
(Brazil's president recently took a huge business delegation to
China, and a Chinese one just went to Argentina. They are going
after South African minerals too.)
So what will happen to the rich on top of Uncle Sam's Ponzi scheme
when the confidence of poorer central banks and oil exporters in
the middle runs out, and the more destitute around the world,
confident or not, can no longer make their in-payments at the
bottom? The Uncle Sam Ponzi Scheme Confidence Racket would - or
will? - come crashing down, like all other such schemes before,
only this time with a worldwide bang. It would cut the present US
consumer demand down to realistic size and hurt many exporters and
producers elsewhere in the world. In fact, it may involve a
wholesale fundamental reorganization of the world political
economy now run by Uncle Sam.
The
Naked Hegemon
PART 2: The center of
the doughnut
By Andre Gunder Frank
(PART
1: Why the emperor has no clothes )
All Ponzi schemes build a financial pyramid. Many who pay into
them also live in a financial world themselves, but others need to
derive their in-payment through earnings from production in the
real world. In today's world of financial transactions that every
day are a hundredfold more than all payments for real goods and
services put together, the financial ones put the real ones into
the shadow behind their brilliance.
Moreover, to oversimplify a very complex matter into more
intelligible layperson's language, options, derivatives, swaps and
other recent financial instruments have been ever much further
compounding already compounded interest on the real properties in
which their stake and debts are based, which has contributed to
the spectacular growth of this financial world. Nonetheless, the
financial pyramid that we see in all its splendor and brilliance,
especially in its center at Uncle Sam's home, still sits on top of
a real-world producer-merchant-consumer base, even if the
financial one also provides credit for these real-world
transactions.
Now, what if we look at the world as a doughnut, analogous to so
many cities in the US rust belt. The center is derelict and
hollowed out as production and consumption have moved to the
surrounding suburbs (in automobile capital Detroit, the windows of
the principal department store Hudson's have been boarded up for
years, even as the city has built an expensive "Renaissance
Center" to re-gentrify the center, a process that has
"succeeded" in some other cities). General Motors'
derelict Flint, Michigan, gave us Michael Moore, who featured it
in Roger and Me (a reference to GM chief executive officer
Roger Smith). We might look at the entire world in doughnut terms,
with the whole of Uncle Sam in the empty hole in the middle that
produces almost nothing it can sell abroad. The main exceptions
are agricultural goods and military hardware that are heavily
subsidized by the US government from its taxpayers and its
dollar-printing press, and even so Uncle Sam runs a
US$600-billion-plus budget deficit.
Should the dollar crash ...
The big difference in this US doughnut is that both the budget
deficit and the $600-billion-plus trade deficit are financed by
foreigners, as we have seen. Uncle Sam would exclude most of them
as persons, but gladly receives the real goods they produce. As
world consumer of last resort, as already suggested, Uncle Sam
performs this important function in the present global political
economic division of labor: everybody else produces and needs to
export, and Uncle Sam consumes and needs to import. The crash of
the dollar would (will?) crumble this entire world-embracing and
-organizing political economic doughnut and throw hundreds of
millions of people, not to mention zillions of dollars and their
owners, into turmoil, with unforeseen and perhaps unforeseeable
consequences.
Many people, high and low on the world totem pole, have a big
stake in avoiding that, even if it requires continuing to blow an
empty Uncle Sam up like a balloon. Or to refer to a well-know
metaphor, to continue to pretend that the emperor with no clothes
is dressed up. That still includes China, for which a financial
showdown with Uncle Sam would be a blessing in disguise: it would
oblige China to change its political economic course, and instead
of giving its goods away for free to Uncle Sam, to turn production
and consumption inward to its poor interior and outward to its
neighbors in East Asia, all of which it could and should be doing
already. (The latter China has recently begun to do, but not yet
the former.)
Of course, crashing the dollar would finally also in one fell
swoop wipe out, that is default, Uncle Sam's debt altogether.
Thereby, it would simultaneously also make all foreigners and rich
Americans lose the whole of their dollar-asset shirt, of which
they are still desperately trying to save as much as possible by
not so doing. In fact, this historically necessary transition out
from under the US-run doughnut world could bring the entire world
into the deepest depression ever - and in all of them the poorest
suffer the most. Only East Asia could save itself with greatest
ease, but also after paying a high cost for this transition -
toward itself! Thus, the Uncle Sam Ponzi Scheme poses the world's
biggest and craziest Catch-22 since MAD (mutually assured
destruction).
However, even this would not be historically new. Recall how much
the transition to Uncle Sam cost: another 30 Years' War from 1914
to 1945 with the intervening second Great Depression in a century
that cost 100 million lives lost to war, more than in all of
previous world history, not to mention the millions who suffered
and died from unnecessary starvation and disease. Or the previous
transition to Britain cost the Napoleonic Wars, the Great
Depression of 1873-95, colonialism and semi-colonialism, to name a
few, and their human costs, especially combined with the most
pronounced El Nino climatic changes in two centuries, which
ravaged Indians, Chinese and many others with famines. But these
were in turn magnified by the imperial colonial powers and used in
their own interests, eg increased export of wheat from India
especially during years of famine.
The parallels with today, including even again taking advantage a
century later of renewed stronger El Ninos, are too horrifying and
guilt-generating for hardly anybody to make with Uncle Sam's
International Monetary Fund-imposed "structural
adjustment" that obliges Mexican peasants to have already
eaten the belt that the IMF wants them to tighten still further.
And that is not to mention 3 million dead in Rwanda and Burundi,
and then some in neighboring Congo, first after IMF-imposed
strictures and the cancellation primarily by Uncle Sam of the
Coffee Agreement that had sustained its price for these producers.
And then we get the scramble for and production and sale there of
gold for Uncle Sam's Fort Knox, titanium so we can communicate by
mobile telephone, diamonds forever, and so on.
Yet there are also others in the world who do not (yet) feel all
caught in this trap. Just before the 2004 US election, one of them
said so out loud in a video broadcast to the world. It seems to
have been least publicly noted by its principal addressee, Uncle
Sam, who should have been the most interested party, for it was
none other than Osama bin Laden himself who announced that he was
"going to bankrupt the Uncle Sam". In view of Uncle
Sam's deliberate blindness to the shakiness of his real-world
foundation abroad, so massive a collapse may not be more difficult
to arrange than it was to topple its Twin Towers symbol.
How Uncle Sam spends your dollars
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, as the saying goes in Texas, what
does Uncle Sam himself blithely do with the world's hard-earned
savings and money? His consumers still over-consume it without
99.9% of them knowing what they are doing, since hardly anyone
tells them. And Uncle Sam's government uses much if not all of its
increased hundreds of billions of dollars for the Pentagon. It
does not, however, spend it to pay its poor professional soldiers,
who come mostly from small-town rural America and took the only
job they could get, and even less to its hapless reservists. No,
better increasingly to privatize war in Iraq as well as at home.
The military-industrial complex against which General Dwight
Eisenhower warned in his 1958 parting presidential address is
alive and kicking, more than ever under the stewardship of Vice
President Richard Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
(with their jobs disastrously well done, both are being kept on
for a second term. So is Douglas Feith, with Paul "Wolfowitz
of Arabia" one of the duo at the Pentagon who went to Israel
and who the commander of the Iraq invasion, Tommy Franks, has been
quoted as calling "the greatest total idiot that there is on
God's Earth, with whom I have to battle almost every day").
Between 1994 and mid-2003, Uncle Sam's Pentagon made more than
3,000 contracts valued at more than $300 billion with 12 US
private military companies (PMCs) out of the 35 estimated by the
New York Times, others of which are small and offer mercenary
services. But more than 2,700 of those contracts were given to
only two companies: Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR), a subsidiary
of Cheney-connected Halliburton, and Booz Allen Hamilton,
according to the Center for Public Integrity's International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists. In Iraq these PMCs now
have as many mercenaries as US and UK troops combined. But of
course that is still "small" potatoes, since the bulk of
Pentagon money is used to buy expensive weapons systems from only
four major US "defense" contractors and the likes of
Halliburton.
Uncle Sam then uses these arms unilaterally to twist others' arms
by blackmail, to lord it over and invade the world that provided
the money in the first place. After all, Uncle Sam has to do what
it must to keep it coming. US unilateralism is not so much, as
often mistakenly supposed, just going it alone. Yes, it is to
proclaim fighting for "freedom" (whose, we may ask?) and
"saving civilization", as President George W Bush and
his even more eloquent British mouthpiece Tony Blair proclaim
every day. The simplest way to "save" civilization was
by simply abolishing in a day its most precious gift of the whole
body of international law to keep the peace, which the West had
taken centuries to develop, admittedly also in its own imperial
interests. Still, it was the best and only international law we
had, and at the very least better than nothing at all. Now the
only "Law of the West" that remains is indeed "the
law of the west": The spaghetti-western vigilante law of
posses that, with or without a conniving judge, take the
"law" into their own hands to form a lynch party and go
after whomever and where and when they please, alas now on a much
grander scale than any spaghetti western ever imagined.
That also means disemboweling and paralyzing the institution of
the United Nations that was established to guard the peace, except
when Uncle Sam after its own wars always recycles the UN to pick
up the pieces he shattered in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and now
Iraq. But in so doing, it also means to dupe, threaten, cajole and
blackmail all others - friends and foes alike - to do his bidding
on every issue, big and small. He has trained a whole civilian
army of officials to do that. That way, Uncle Sam can
"unilaterally" always throw around his still-apparent
weight in all other international institutions that deal with
endeavors from agriculture and aviation to zoology. But Uncle Sam
extorts real unilateral favors for himself even more through his
bilateral relations. That is why the World Trade Organization was
dead on arrival. Indeed, Uncle Sam now prefers to use bilateral
relations unilaterally, as he increasingly isolates himself
internationally. Thus he can exercise even more military,
political and economic bargaining power over his bilateral
"partners" than he could over all or even many in
international institutions.
And when bargaining is not enough, or even if it could be, Uncle
Sam simply attacks when he feels like it, invading little Grenada
(population all of 300,000), Nicaragua (with the help of
arch-enemy Iran), Panama (7,000 civilians killed in one night to
capture one man only, Daddy Bush's onetime friend and ally Manuel
Noriega - there is an all-smiles photo of them shaking hands),
Iraq (that was even a money-making venture as Uncle Sam extorted
more dollars from his allies to pay for the war than it actually
cost him), Somalia, and Yugoslavia, which was attacked in part to
make an example out of what can happen when one is weak and yet in
abject defiance of Uncle Sam and his IMF, maintaining some state
ownership of important means of production and social-welfare
state protection of the population, like Belarus today, where
Uncle Sam also tried to get "regime change", but
military action is more difficult on the border of Russia, unless
it is an accord as against Afghanistan or bought off. Moreover,
Yugoslavia gave up only when Russia withdrew support after Uncle
Sam successfully blackmailed political economically and partly
bought it off in Berlin. Then there is Afghanistan (again with the
help of Iran and Russia), and now again Iraq. Who's next, Iran?
Syria? Not Libya, it is now obediently making oil deals with Uncle
Sam; and not North Korea, which made nukes to protect itself
against precisely that.
Simple inspection of the facts on the ground reveals that, except
for little Grenada, not a single one of these or any other US wars
was ever won by military force, unless it be the Pacific one
against Japan (World War II was won in Europe at Stalingrad in
1943 by Russian troops who would have reached Berlin even if Uncle
Sam had not arrived later). Nonetheless, Uncle Sam has now already
built 800 military bases around the world. Apart from that Bush
has a new "Plan for the Middle East", which now
stretches from Morocco beyond Pakistan - to Muslim Indonesia? Just
what this plan involves is not yet clear, other than that Israel
is to remain Uncle Sam's political and military stalking horse in
the region as it has always been. Only now it's assigned its own
reach and may also expand further. Bush himself went to Africa,
especially West Africa, to look at its oil. In the Americas, his
Plan Colombia (it has oil too) has been extended to the whole
Andean region (Ecuador also exports oil), he has yet another plan
for the Amazon (maybe some is to be found there and in the
meantime he built a huge base there, allegedly for NASA, which is
not unknown also to engage in military ventures), a plan to
"take care of" with World Bank help the world's largest
underground deposit of sweet water under Iguazu Falls, where
Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay meet, and is already again training
40,000 Latin American military personnel at a time on US bases.
All this is a giant global military-political economic foundation
on which to maintain Uncle Sam's financial Ponzi Scheme Confidence
Racket, and cheap at twice the price for those that end up with
the dollars and as long as he can pay for it all with the
self-made paper dollars that so far also maintains the global
Ponzi business. Well, to be honest, it's not only for the dollars.
After all, they are only useful if you can actually buy something
with them, especially the oil that keeps the foundation running.
All about oil
Not only does Uncle Sam have to buy ever more oil, today with
self-printed dollars, but perhaps tomorrow with euros or yuan, he
also has to try to make sure to have his hand on every spigot so
he can control who else can, and especially who cannot, buy it. So
that is why we now find him attempting political and financial
control of the oil spigots, wherever he still can, and going in
also for military presence as in Central Asia, or using military power
to go in, as Iraq. That is both to use it as a lever of
control and/or to warn its neighbors what may happen to them if
they fail to continue to play along with Uncle Sam. Fortunately
for him, most of East Asia and especially China also seem to be
obliged to buy foreign oil, even if tomorrow perhaps no longer
with dollars but with yuan/yen. On the other hand, sad but true,
the world's biggest seller of oil is Russia, whose spigots remain
beyond Uncle Sam's control. But how could Uncle Sam continue to
pay for and maintain all these bold ventures in defense of freedom
with those self-made paper dollars if nobody accepts them anymore?
The December 10 Financial Times (FT) offered some additional
tip-of-the-iceberg examples of Uncle Sam's Defense of Freedom in
Iraq. Though poor Iraq sits on top of the world's largest
still-unexploited pool of ever-more-precious oil, it remains in
the background or only at the bottom of this story that barely
mentions it and, like the present essay, focuses instead on
dollars. In two different reports, it relates how three
helicopters flew 14 tons of $100 bills in to the Kurds. The money,
much of the $1.8 billion US payoff to the Kurds, was part of
Iraq's earnings under the UN "oil for food" program.
Initially, of course, the bills simply were the product of the
self-same US printing press, for which Iraq had exported real oil.
It did not come from the $18 billion that Uncle Sam's Congress
appropriated for "reconstruction" of Iraq. As an FT
graph graphically shows, no more than $388 million - or 2.15% - of
that US money had yet been spent, and only $5 billion of it having
even been budgeted by Uncle Sam in Iraq by the time US proconsul L
Paul Bremer went home from a job well done. No, instead in his
wisdom the Good Uncle had thought it best to spend $13 billion of
the $20 billion of Iraqi funds. That was 65% of the Iraqi money
compared with the still only 2% of the nearly equivalent amount of
original US money.
By the time the new Iraqi government took over some tasks from
Uncle Sam, it discovered that a full $20 billion of their funds
had been spent, $11 billion from sales of oil, according to the
International Herald Tribune. Why? Simple, is the answer of the
"responsible" finance officer, Admiral David Oliver,
"I know we spent some money from [the Iraqi] fund. It was
purely the matter that we'd run out of US money" - of which
there was only another $17.5 billion-plus unspent. We might wonder
whether the good admiral was schooled in Clausewitz and happened
also to discover his good advice about making the conquered victim
pay for his own military occupation, in this case by Uncle Sam.
The Iraqi representative on the funding disbursement and oversight
committee attended all of one out of its 43 meetings; but then why
bother with more, when most expenditures were authorized without
any meeting at all. So although US funds were budgeted for all
sorts of projects, they were nonetheless paid out of Iraqi funds.
Of these, many disbursements were even made without any contract
whatsoever, in one case a mere $1.4 billion. Most others occurred
without any multiple competitive, nor even any previously vetted
or subsequently evaluated, bids. The US funds, on the other hand,
remained virtually unspent in Iraq. Maybe Admiral Oliver had
"run out of US money" in Iraq because it remained at
home in Washington; and if disbursed at all, it simply changed
hands and bank accounts right there. After all, that is much more
efficient than it would have been to send it back and forth, and a
bit of it might not even get back. After all, it has long since
been standard practice for the bulk of the dollars that Uncle Sam
lends or even "gives" to Third World countries to stay
at home, where it belongs and would return to anyway. No matter;
Congress has already appropriated another $30 billion to
"prepare for transition to elections" in Iraq this
month.
All that being the case, it would of course be altogether
undesirable for Iraqi, let alone Uncle Sam's, funds to be
squandered on any Iraqi service of old foreign debt to others. So
it was only logical to strong-arm "allies" who can't
help already losing US debt to them also to forgive the Iraqi
debt. This, as we may recall from above, while Uncle Sam still
insists that the rest of the Third World must continue servicing
their debts to him. For God forbid that any repayment of Iraqi
debt should go instead to those ungodly Russians, traitorous
Frenchmen or even to the Chinese best friend indeed, who most
invested in Iraq, a dastardly thing to do in the first place, when
Uncle Sam has much more worthy causes for the Iraqi money.
And what were and still are these grander, worthy causes? The
largest single payment of $1.4 billion was to whom else but the
self-same Vice President Cheney's Halliburton. Yet we now know
that at the same time it was also cheating even its generous
benefactor Uncle Sam out of hundreds of millions more dollars on
the side, buying petrol for $X in Kuwait and selling it in Iraq
for $5-10X and other shenanigans. Altogether, Halliburton got Iraq
contracts for a cool $10 billion plus change, according to the IHT.
Without the shadow of a doubt, most of the other Iraqi and US
dollars went to other crony US - and some crumbs off the table for
the UK - corporations and even to private and military individuals
who have their fingers in the till. But alas, we will never know
who they all are, since as per Uncle Sam's inspector general,
"I was, candidly, not interested in having army auditors
because I thought we had to slide into the Iraqi system as quickly
as possible."
Rewards of conquest
Frankly, being both non- and anti-military, I have not myself read
Clausewitz. So I do not know what, if any, good advice he gives
about relying on corruption as the first principle in cutting and
dividing up the conquered pie.
All of the above speculation was written before the UN
International Advisory and Monitoring Board for Development in
Iraq (IAMBDI) issued a report on its findings about US
stewardship. Before we get to the report, we should keep in mind
that the FT observes diplomatically that "the UN has been
reluctant to take the US to task publicly over its spending of
Iraqi funds". The FT quotes directly from the report:
"There were control weaknesses ... inadequate accounting
systems, uneven application of agreed-upon contracting procedures
and inadequate record keeping." The IHT also makes its own
summary of the same report: "There had been widespread
irregularities, including financial mismanagement, a failure to
cut smuggling [outward of oil and other Iraqi physical property;
nobody knows at what price and to whose benefit] and
over-dependence on no-bid contracts." The FT, for its part,
offers a few more specifics from the report: "Of particular
concern ... were contracts with sometimes billions of dollars that
were awarded to US companies such as Halliburton from Iraqi funds
without competitive tender."
Last month Bush gave Uncle Sam's highest civilian award, the Medal
of Freedom, to L Paul Bremer III, the US civilian proconsul who
oversaw it all, and to General Tommy Franks, who led the invasion
that made it all possible in the first place. George Tenet, the
director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that provided
all the bogus information to "legitimate" the whole
enterprise to begin with and has since been discredited and forced
to resign was not forgotten either and received the third award.
The IHT published a ceremonial photograph of the three, all smiles
with George W, who was smiling too. We may rest pretty well
assured that of the recipients of their beneficence and service to
"freedom" (for whom and what, we may ask?), 99.99% were
among the ones at whom the US Federal Reserve's Alan Greenspan had
already pointed his finger as the most privileged over-consumers
who are totally responsible for US under-saving and whom he
labeled simply as the upper 20% of US income earners. It is also
they, he said, who are the most responsible also for the growing
trade deficit about which the Doctor recently complained in
Berlin. If we examine US income distribution, we may well learn
also that among these 20%, the lion's share of this money, like
most of that from the Pentagon, ended up in the pockets or
accounts of the upper 2% most super-privileged, so they can
over-consume yet still more of the fat of the whole Earth. Who
would deny that this is a worthy cause?
But as Bush himself told the world, it is only right that
"we" exclude other countries from the trough and till in
Iraq. After all, he explained, when the Iraqis accepted his
invitation, it was "our boys who put their lives on the
line". Alas, the personification of Uncle Sam neglected also
to explain for what and for whom.
Copyright 2005 Andre Gunder Frank. All rights reserved.
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