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Under IMF's thumb: rich countries have decided to control Iraq the old-fashioned way.


A recent study in Iraq found that acute malnutrition in children under 5 has nearly doubled, from 4 to 7.7 percent--that's 400,000 kids suffering from severe "wasting," often because a contaminated contaminated,
v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material.
2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials.
3. an infective surface or object.
 water supply has given them chronic, life-threatening diarrhea. Among their parents, unemployment is rampant. And the desperate economic situation, along with unrestored water and electricity, helps feed Iraq's violence: When the Coalition Provisional Authority The Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) سلطة الائتلاف الموحدة was established as a transitional government following the invasion of Iraq by the United States,  (CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. ) closed down radical cleric Moqtada al Sadr's newspaper in March 2004, it cited an article accusing CPA head Paul Bremer of "starving the Iraqi people."

Instead of pragmatically working to get the lights, water, and jobs back on, the U.S.-led occupation immediately forced on Iraq what The Economist called "the kind of wish-list that foreign investors ... dream of": a smaller government workforce and no taxes or restrictions on corporations importing anything, buying anything but oil businesses, or taking any profit out of the country without reinvesting a dime. One of Bremer's economic advisers called Iraq "something like the California gold rush
The California Gold Rush 1848–1855) began on January 24, 1848, when gold was discovered at Sutter's Mill.
 and the Wild Wild West combined."

Iraqis could clearly see that such "shock therapy" was a recipe for throwing many people out of work fast. For example, Bremer planned to quickly sell Iraq's 200 state-owned enterprises (other than oil companies); an estimated 145,000 workers, each supporting an average of five family members, would have had to be fired to attract buyers. (To make things worse, because of its aversion to state-owned companies, the CPA steered reconstruction work away from them. For example, the Green Zone's cement blast walls are expensive imports, not products of Iraq's 17 cement factories.) And, as we've seen in the example of the former Soviet Union, economic "shock therapy" and fire-sale privatizations can lead to oligarchy oligarchy (ŏl`əgärkē) [Gr.,=rule by the few], rule by a few members of a community or group. When referring to governments, the classical definition of oligarchy, as given for example by Aristotle, is of government by a few, usually , corruption, and stagnation Stagnation

A period of little or no growth in the economy. Economic growth of less than 2-3% is considered stagnation. Sometimes used to describe low trading volume or inactive trading in securities.

Notes:
A good example of stagnation was the U.S. economy in the 1970s.
 rather than the promised economic boom.

A YEAR LATER, the corporate cowboys have been scared off--temporarily. First, Bremer was unable to sell state industries when trade lawyers pointed out that, as journalist Naomi Klein Naomi Klein is a Canadian journalist, author and activist well known for her political analyses of corporate globalization.

Klein was born in Montreal, Quebec. Her family has a history of activism, as does her husband's family.
 put it, "Bombing something does not give you the right to sell it." The subsequent U.S.--appointed puppet government Noun 1. puppet government - a government that is appointed by and whose affairs are directed by an outside authority that may impose hardships on those governed
pupet regime, puppet state
 could sell government assets, but prudently refrained from layoffs that could swell the ranks of violent militias.

So now rich countries have decided to control Iraq the old-fashioned way--by using claims of foreign debt to put the country under the IMF's thumb. The Paris Club Paris Club

A monthly meeting in Paris attended by creditors of 19 countries to discuss debt issues. Among other things, the Paris Club addresses the issue of coordinated debt relief for developing countries that cannot service their debt.
 (the United States, Japan, Russia, and various European countries) has offered to forgive 80 percent of Saddam's roughly $39 billion of debts to them--most of it after Iraq accepts a few modest proposals from the IMF IMF

See: International Monetary Fund


IMF

See International Monetary Fund (IMF).
. This "forgiveness" is mainly a favor from the creditors to themselves; Russia's finance ministry candidly called the Paris Club decision a strategy to "transfer this debt from the 'hopeless' into the 'being serviced' category."

Moreover, almost all of this debt is "odious"--incurred by a dictator who, with the knowledge of his creditors, used the money to oppress op·press  
tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es
1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny.

2.
 his own people. Iraq should not pay it; creditors should know that they lend to dictators at their own risk, not that of the victims.

All this has not stopped the IMF from seizing the chance to call for Iraq's government to limit spending to "the minimum adequate level of social support." History shows that IMF minimums are low enough to cause needlessly prolonged recessions, occasional riots, and widespread misery.

The United States must not abandon its recent efforts to negotiate debt cancellation for the world's poorest debtor nations (efforts that were motivated in large part by its agenda for Iraq). Iraq is an opportunity to reexamine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine  
tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines
1. To examine again or anew; review.

2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination.
 the entire debt system and the persistently wrongheaded advice of the IMF, not to mention rich countries' anemic foreign aid budgets.

The parable of the sheep and the goats (Matthew 25) tells us we are going to be judged based on how we care for the hungry and the vulnerable. If the rich nations of the West do not want to be counted

Elizabeth Palmberg is assistant editor of Sojourners. For the most recent news on debt in Iraq, visit www.jubileeiraq.org.

Under IMF's Thumb. by Elizabeth Palmberg. Sojourners Magazine, February 2005 (Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 10-11). Commentary.

(Source: http://www.sojo.net/ index.cfrn?action=magazine.article&issue--sojo0502&article=050241b)
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Title Annotation:Commentary
Author:Palmberg, Elizabeth
Publication:Sojourners
Geographic Code:7IRAQ
Date:Feb 1, 2005
Words:708
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