Michael Hudson on debt relief, inflation,
Ukraine disaster capitalism, petrodollar crisis
By Benjamin Norton
September 13, 2022:
Information Clearing House--BEN NORTON: Hey everyone,
this is Ben Norton of Multipolarista. I’m joined
by one of my favorite guests today, the
brilliant economist Michael Hudson. And there
are a lot of things that we plan on talking
about today.
We’re going to address the partial student
debt relief in the United States, and the
problem of debt, which is something that
Professor Hudson has written a lot about.
We’re going to talk about the inflation
crisis, and some of the history of responses to
the inflation that we’ve seen in the US. For
instance, I’m going to pick Professor Hudson’s
brain about Richard Nixon’s response. Nixon
imposed price controls and froze wages for the
first time since World War Two.
We’re also going to talk about the history of
the Volcker shock, when Paul Volcker, who was
the head of the Fed, raised interest rates to a
level never seen before.
We’re going to talk about neoliberalism. I’m
going to ask Professor Hudson about comments
that French President Macron made about the “end
of abundance.”
And I’m going to ask Professor Hudson about
disaster capitalism in Ukraine. Ukraine’s leader
Zelensky just did a virtual bell ringing to open
the New York Stock Exchange, and announced $400
billion of giveaways to foreign corporations,
mostly US corporations, who are salivating to
get access to Ukraine’s assets.
And then finally, I’m going to ask Professor
Hudson about the challenge of the petrodollar
that China has been carrying out, and the
potential emergence of the so-called petroyuan,
whether or not Saudi Arabia will list its oil in
the yuan.
So a lot of things are on the table to talk
about, today, Professor Hudson. I’m sure you
have a lot of thoughts about the madness going
on in the world today. It’s a pretty interesting
time.
But let’s just start with something closest
to home. You have lived and worked in the United
States for many decades. You worked on Wall
Street. You’ve been involved in advising
governments. You’re an economic expert.
For people who don’t know you, I hope
everyone listening and watching to this, they
should know you, they should read your work.
People can find that at
michael-hudson.com.
But let’s start with the recent decision by
the Biden administration, which announced that
it’s going to pardon up to $10,000 in student
debt.
This is estimated to impact around $300
billion of student debt in the United States.
But there’s a small problem. That’s a small
fraction of the $1.75 trillion worth of student
debt in the United States.
So I’m curious what you think about this
decision. Of course, the Republicans, Fox News,
they were attacking Biden and saying that this
is irresponsible because it’s $300 billion that
the government is supposedly going to lose –
although it’s actually just money that the
government could write off.
It’s not like you’re spending money; it’s
just debt they’re writing off. But clearly, this
is actually a tiny fraction of the amount of
debt in student debt in United States.
So what do you think about this decision by
Biden to forgive a little student debt?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Of all the
politicians in Congress, Biden has always been
the most pro-bank and pro-financial sector,
largely because he comes from Delaware, which is
the corporate headquarters for most companies in
the United States, including the credit card
companies.
Also, Biden has been the most hostile toward
students. He recently characterized students who
are going to college, saying, who needs a
college degree? A lot of them just get in the
humanities, and we really don’t need them.
So he has a kind of a visceral contempt for
students. And it was Biden who made sure that in
the bankruptcy law that was reformed, I think,
over a decade ago, that student debt could not
be wiped out from bankruptcy.
So of all the politicians, Biden has been the
most hostile, personally hostile, as well as
just serving the banking interests in opposing
the interests of students.
And this is what really sets American social
policy and economic policy more against other
countries than any other policy.
Basically for hundreds of years, and still in
many, many countries, Germany to China,
education is free, because you want the
population to be educated.
And in the United States, the whole structure
of the United States politically was to divide
it into school districts, because they all
realized the importance of of education.
Basically, if education should be free,
students shouldn’t have to run into debt to get
it. And in fact, I think in Germany, not only is
education free, but if you’re going to college,
you’re given a stipend for living costs, so that
you don’t have to take a separate job at
Starbucks or some other menial job to pay your
tuition.
So if education should be free, you shouldn’t
run into a debt; and if you shouldn’t have run
into debt in the first place, the debt should be
forgiven.
That I think should be, that is, the basic
moral ethic of most people. And it’s not in the
United States.
And you’re right, the amount that is
so-called forgiven is only a small fraction. And
Biden did not even forgive the penalty fees, the
late fees that have doubled and tripled the
amount of student debt for many people.
So Biden is still leaving, even for the
low-income people, debts that are two or three
times what it costs to get education in the
first place, just for the banks to get these
extra fees.
So this is a slap in the face – so typical of
his position, and of the Democratic Party’s
position – for students.
Biden is not alone in this. The Democrats
were backing him, saying, we want to make it
clear to our base, the campaign donors, the
donor class, that we’re going to forgive the
wealthy financial sector, their carried interest
charge, and make that free of the income tax,
but we’re not going to favor the working class.
Because the class war is back in business.
BEN NORTON: And Professor
Hudson, you’ve written a lot about debt. You’re
in fact an expert on the history of debt, and
debt forgiveness.
Going back to antiquity, and even before, for
thousands of years, debt forgiveness, debt
jubilees had been a key part of governance,
governing society, to maintain stability.
And in the United States, we’ve seen a
massive skyrocketing of debt in the past several
decades. Now, student loan debt is estimated now
at $1.75 trillion. And that is certainly
something unprecedented compared to other
countries, you know, imperialist, colonialist
countries at a similar level of development like
the U.S. and Europe.
But if you look at this graph here that shows
the total debt in the United States, the vast
majority is mortgage debt.
US household debt from 2000 to 2021, via
Statista
And you’ve written a lot about mortgage debt.
And you’ve emphasized that when we talk about
debt, we need to understand that the other side
of the balance sheet is the wealth of the debt
holders and the bond holders
There are $15 trillion in debt in the United
States, and most of that is mortgage debt. This
is something that is barely ever commented on.
Can you talk about how the finance capitalist
model that the United States has imposed around
the world is a model predicated on debt, not
only indebting other countries, but indebting
its own population with $15 trillion worth of
debt.
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, I’m
going to make one point: In Biden’s twisted
mind, there’s a silver lining for keeping the
student debt on the books and not canceling it.
By not canceling it, the students and the
young people won’t have enough money to qualify
for a mortgage. They’ll have to continue to live
at home with the parents. So that actually
alleviates the mortgage debt, by keeping
graduate students too poor to afford to take out
a mortgage, because they’ve already committed
their income to the student debt.
And that $1.7 trillion you mention has now
soared ahead – just in the last two years,
student debt has surged ahead of credit card
debt and ahead of automobile debt.
So it’s really become the fastest growing
largest debt, and it’s the fastest growing debt
because of all the penalties for late payments.
And of course, with the Covid crisis and limited
employment, you’re going to have this debt
growing even more.
And also the amount of paperwork that the
administration imposes on students trying to get
debt relief is so great that a lot of students
are simply not going to be able to get through
the maze and pierce the bureaucratic shell that
protects the banks and the debt. So I just want
to point that out.
Regarding the mortgage debt, the whole policy
of the Federal Reserve since the 2008 bank
crisis has been to bail out the banks by
inflating, re-inflating, the prices of houses so
that you have to take a larger, and larger, and
larger mortgage in order to buy a house.
And not only that, but now as of yesterday
(September 7), the mortgage rate is 6%. And I
think that’s the highest since the 1970s.
So you not only have to pay a very high price
for the house – the carrying charge in the
mortgage is basically, within a 10-year-period
at 6%, you actually have repaid as much as you
paid for the entire house, you have paid in the
form of interest charges.
And on the 30-year-mortgage, you have paid
three times as much to the banks for the house
than the owner of the house got who sold it to
you. So the banks end up getting much more than
the actual seller of the home.
And the way the mortgage market has ended up
with increasing the debt ratio of mortgages,
Americans now own only about 40% of the value of
homes.
In other words, home equity has been
shrinking, and shrinking, and shrinking for most
of the real estate sector as a portion of homes.
And of course, if you’re earning less than
$200,000 a year, you have much less equity in
the home.
Basically, buying a home is getting on a
financial treadmill, to the point that if you
either have a home, or now if you pay the
soaring rent rates, you’re not going to have
enough money to spend on the goods and services
that are being produced.
So the effect of debt is to leave less in the
budget for actual spending on goods and
services. It’s an austerity plan.
And the effect is very much like the kind of
austerity plan that the International Monetary
Fund imposes on Third World countries, or Global
South countries, as we say now.
So basically, you’re right, the economy is
being sacrificed. But there is a silver lining,
and that is 90% of the population owe this debt
to the 10%.
So there’s been a sucking up of income and
wealth to the top of the pyramid. And the
mortgage debt has been the single largest lever
that is shifting wealth and income from the 90%
to the 10%.
BEN NORTON: Very well said.
Professor Hudson, let’s talk about inflation.
The United States has been going through
decades-high level inflation.
I’ve asked you about this before and you’ve
emphasized that a lot of that that inflation
we’ve seen in the consumer price index recently
is because of monopolization of certain key
industries, because of the recovery from the
Covid pandemic, and bottlenecks in the supply
chain and all of that.
But a point that you’ve consistently pointed
out for many decades, Professor Hudson, unlike
other economists, is that this consumer price
index inflation that we’ve seen in 2021 and 2022
is certainly new, but in general, inflation is
by no means new.
We’ve seen massive asset price inflation over
the past few decades, which of course has been
intentionally pushed by the financial system in
the United States in order to push up the value
of real estate, of stocks and bonds.
Here’s a graph showing asset price inflation
in the United States. The green line is asset
price inflation, and the purple line are
interest rates set by the Fed.
And you can see really from the 1990s
forward, so in the neoliberal era going forward,
there’s been a massive skyrocketing of asset
price inflation.
So I’m curious if you can expand more on this
idea that inflation is something new, because
we’re now seeing it in the consumer price index,
and also its relationship to interest rates.
This is something in a bit here, I want to
ask you about some of the history of the Volcker
shock and all of that, Paul Volcker.
But let’s start with asset price inflation,
because this graph I almost never see mentioned
in kind of mainstream discussions of economics
in the business press. They act as though this
consumer price index inflation – some people
call it, you know, the Biden inflation or
whatever; and certainly Biden bears
responsibility for the sanctions on Russia,
which caused an energy crisis in Europe, which
led to skyrocketing prices of energy, and that
fueled the inflation – but why isn’t this
inflation, the asset price inflation that has
been consistent over decades, ever discussed?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, the
asset price inflation is the response to the
Obama depression that we’re still in.
In 2008, when the banks crashed, you had
Citibank being insolvent, a number of other
banks insolvent. The worry was that throughout
the whole U.S. economy, banks had made so many
junk mortgage loans and lost so much money on
derivative gambles that they had a negative net
worth.
Now, the problem was when Obama came in, the
problem was, who are you going to save, the
debtors in the economy, the victims of junk
mortgages or the crooks, or the crooks, the
victimizers, the banks that wrote the junk
mortgages?
And Obama came in and said, we’re not going
to save any of the homeowners who bought these
junk mortgages. Most of them are minorities
anyway. Most of them were Black and Hispanic
people, who the banks, especially through the
Countrywide lending company, had exploited more
than anyone else.
Obama invited the bankers to the White House
and said, I’m the only guy standing between you
and the mob with pitchforks – those being the
people who voted for him – and saying, don’t
worry, you contributed to my campaign; I’m
backing you.
And so he directed the Federal Reserve to
essentially re-inflate the real estate prices
and the stock market so much that the banks
wouldn’t have to be taken over into the public
domain for insolvency.
He wanted to rebuild the banks’ balance
sheet. And the reason he did it was to pump
money into the banks.
And the result has been $9 trillion,
essentially, of bank liquidity that the Federal
Reserve has pushed in.
Now, despite the fact that it is asset price
inflation, the fact is that asset price
inflation has all occurred on credit.
The asset price inflation has occurred when
the Federal Reserve makes basically repo swaps
with the banks, enabling the banks to deposit
some of their packaged mortgage loans, or bonds,
government bonds or even junk bonds, with the
Fed.
And they get a deposit with the Fed that
enables them to now turn around, as if the Fed
was depositing money in the bank like a
depositor, letting it lend more, and more, and
more for real estate, which has pushed up the
price.
Real estate is worth whatever a bank will
lend against it. And the banks have been
lowering the margin requirements, easing the the
terms of the loan.
So the banks have inflated the real estate
market, and also the stock and bond market.
The bond market from 2008 today has had the
biggest bond rally in history. You can imagine
the bond prices going down to below 0%. This is
a huge capitalization of the bond rate.
So it has been a bonanza for people who held
bonds, especially bank bonds. And it has
inflated the top of the pyramid.
But if you inflate it on debt, then somebody
has to pay the debt. And the debt, as I just
said, is the 90% of the population.
So the fact is that asset price inflation and
debt deflation go together, because the wealth
part of the economy, the ownership part, has
been vastly inflated, the price of wealth
relative to labor.
But the debtor part has been has been
squeezed by families having to pay much more of
their income on mortgages, or credit cards, or
student debt, leaving less and less to purchase
goods and services.
So if there is a debt deflation, then why do
we have a price inflation now? Well, the price
inflation is largely a result of the war [in
Ukraine], the sanctions that the United States
has imposed on Russia.
Russia was, as you know, a major gas
exporter, oil exporter, and also the largest
agricultural exporter in the world.
So if you exclude Russian oil, Russian gas,
Russian agriculture from the market, you’re
going to have a shortage of supply, and you’re
going to have the prices way up.
So the oil, energy, and food have been a key
element.
And also, under the Biden administration and
certainly the Trump administration, there has
been no enforcement of monopoly prices.
So essentially companies have been using
their monopoly power to charge whatever they
want.
And even though there wasn’t really a
shortage of gas or of oil earlier this year
(2022), you had a huge spike in the price, for
no other reason than the fact that the oil
companies could charge it.
Partly this was done by financial
manipulations in the forward markets. The
financial markets had bid up the price of oil
and gas. But also other companies have.
And right across the board, if you have a
company in a commanding position of being able
to control the market, you have essentially
permitted monopolies to take place.
Well, Biden had appointed a number of
anti-monopoly officials that were going to try
to impose anti-monopoly legislation. But they’re
not supported by the Democratic Party or the
Republican Party enough to really empower them
to have had much effect so far.
And you warned that there are signs that
there’s going to be a depression, an economic
depression. And certainly after raising interest
rates there typically have been recessions in
the past.
I want to talk about some of that history.
Because a name that’s come up a lot in this
discussion of inflation in the United States is
Paul Volcker, who was the head of the Fed.
And he was actually appointed by Jimmy
Carter. He is more often associated with Ronald
Reagan, but he was first appointed by Jimmy
Carter and then continued with Reagan, and
reappointed by Reagan.
In the ’70s, there was a similar crisis of
consumer price index inflation, like what we
have seen in the past year. And Volcker had this
famous Volcker shock. He raised interest rates
to as high as 20%, and then gradually dropped
them.
The way that Volcker is discussed in the
business press, the financial press, is they say
that he’s this admirable man who was unpopular
in his day, but that’s because he was giving
people the medicine they needed, right, and he
was he was willing to do the hard thing and be
unpopular in order to bring consumer price index
inflation down.
Can you reflect on why there was consumer
price index inflation in the United States in
the ’70s, what was causing it?
And this portrayal of Paul Volcker as like
this great economic wiseman who saved the U.S.
economy – I’m curious what you think about the
Volcker shock and his decision to raise interest
rates so high and why he’s so beloved today.
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well,
Volcker was my boss’s boss at Chase Manhattan in
the early- and mid-1990s. And once a week or so,
there would be a meeting of the economists and
the policymakers at Chase. And because I was in
the economic research department and knew how to
do speedwriting, I often took the notes for
these meetings, so I had a chance to watch him.
And just before he was appointed, I had to be
at the White House for some reason and was asked
by a member of the Council of Economic Advisors,
what was it like working for Volcker?
And I said, well, at the meetings, a number
of officers would give their impression of what
was going to happen, and Volcker would say,
well, so-and-so says this, and that’s that
position, and you say this, and that’s this
position. So let me state what the argument is
all about.
By doing that, everybody thought, oh, he
understands my position. So he was very popular.
Because he didn’t make any enemies. He could
state everybody’s position and basically be
neutral and not take a position.
Well, the Council of Economic Advisors person
said, that’s the guy we want. And he was
appointed about a month later for the the job.
And his own view was that of a banker. He had
gone back and forth. He had begun at Chase; he
moved to the Treasury; and then he actually went
back to Chase, and that was something that
wasn’t often done at the time.
And when he went back to the Treasury again,
he met with the Carter people. And Carter –
people don’t realize because he’s a sort of a
nice old man now – but he was viciously,
viciously neoliberal, much more right-wing than
anybody could have expected at the time.
I think Volcker sensed where Carter was at.
And Volcker said that he carried around a piece
of paper, an article with him, a chart, and the
chart was the wage levels in the construction
industry.
And Volcker would say the job of the Federal
Reserve is to keep down wage rates. He said,
although the nominal purpose of the Federal
Reserve is to prevent inflation and support full
ployment, it’s actually the opposite – it’s to
make sure there is not full employment so that
there will be a reserve army of enough
unemployed that wages are not going up.
And of course it’s to inflate asset prices,
which is just what the federal Reserve has done.
So Volcker was quite aware of what to do.
Today you would say what he did was – I
guess, what the current Federal Reserve head
would say – well, we’re going to have to impose
a depression to cure the inflation.
And for Volcker, curing inflation was an
excuse to lower the wage levels and to bring
about a recession.
And by increasing the interest rates to 20% –
I think 20.5% was the bank discount rate – you
had lowered bond prices, and packaged mortgage
prices, and housing prices to such a low level
that once you changed course, which of course
happened from the 1980s on, you would have a
huge explosion of capital gains for anybody who
bought the bonds at those prices.
By pushing interest rates to 20%, Volcker
made a buying opportunity, a guaranteed path to
doubling, tripling, quadrupling your capital on
the capital gains from the rise in bond prices.
Well, most people don’t think of the bond
prices as being the most important thing to talk
about in the news. But actually, as Bill Clinton
said when Robert Rubin explained the facts of
life to him, he said, oh, it’s all about the
bondholders. Well, he got it.
And that’s exactly what Sheila Bair said when
she was working for Obama. She said she found
out it was all about the bondholders, especially
the bondholders of the banks, that led Obama to
support the banks and do all of that.
So what Volcker was doing was using the
Vietnam War inflation that had been a bonanza
for the working class because it had created
basically a drive for employment – the
guns-and-butter economy had created rising wage
levels. You did have guns, but you also had a
lot of butter.
And that was really what was ended. You did
keep the guns part of the economy. But Volcker’s
action, while keeping the guns part, squeezed
down the butter part.
And that was the idea, that in order to make
the industrial economy thrive and make profits,
he thought, you need low wages. And by keeping
interest rates high, lowering employment to the
point that wages went down, you were creating
enough of a profit that you would somehow create
a re-industrial economy.
Well, we all know what happened: the economy
was de-industrialized under the financialization
policies of the Reagan and Bush administrations,
and the Clinton administration that was coming
up.
But that was at least the idea at that time.
I don’t think that anyone, even Volcker himself,
had an idea that what was going to come after
him was going to be de-industrialization.
He thought lower wage rates would make
industrial profits and help America regain its
industrial power.
BEN NORTON: Professor
Hudson, can you talk about what caused the
consumer price index inflation in the ’70s?
This is a graph showing CPI inflation,
changes in price. And you can see that there was
a big peak in the ’70s, into the ’80s. And it’s
been relatively low since then, until past the
past year.
Of course, people probably know from the
interviews that I’ve done with you and from
reading your amazing books like “Super
Imperialism” and others, you have talked a
lot about the Nixon shock and how important that
was to understand the financial system today,
when in 1971, Richard Nixon took the dollar off
gold.
And at the beginning of the Nixon shock,
there was an inflation crisis. And he responded
in an interesting way – in a way that you can’t
even discuss today; it’s no longer on the table
for discussion.
Nixon imposed price controls, and froze wages
as well, but he imposed price controls.
Now, in this most recent inflation crisis, I
didn’t see anyone in the mainstream calling for
Biden to impose price controls. Of course they
would all say that if the government imposes
price controls, it would lead to a shortage of
goods, and scarcity, and all this.
So can you talk about Nixon’s response to the
inflation?
And then you mentioned that Jimmy Carter,
really even before Reagan, ushered in
neoliberalism.
Why, after Nixon imposed those policies, the
inflation came back – so why did the inflation
come back in the 1970s and ’80s?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well,
remember, I think that Kennedy also imposed
price controls on steel. There were early price
controls on the steel industry.
The inflation of the ’70s was the result of
America’s military spending in Southeast Asia.
Copper – every soldier in Vietnam used an
average one ton of copper per year in bullets.
So there was a huge copper increase that went
up. I think the price tripled.
BEN NORTON: Sorry to cut you
off, Professor Hudson – and that was of course a
factor in the 1973 CIA coup against Salvador
Allende, Chile being one of the world’s leading
producers of copper, the Anaconda Corporation
wanting to get access to that copper.
MICHAEL HUDSON: The Anaconda
already had been producing the copper.
BEN NORTON: Well Allende
nationalized the copper.
MICHAEL HUDSON: That’s
another long story that I was very involved in,
but it’s another story.
Basically the [U.S.] government was spending
so much on military that you couldn’t have guns
and butter. And that’s where the guns and butter
phrase came from. I think it may have come from
Terence McCarthy using it. At least he was the
main expounder of that theory, along with
Seymour Melman of Columbia University.
And it was very clear that the military and
the consumer economy was pushing up demand so
much that there was a shortage. And there was a
shortage of labor, because of the labor that was
being diverted, that was needed for the
military.
So there was a military inflation in the
’70s. That’s quite different from today’s
inflation.
Today’s inflation is much more – well, the
companies can do it, we’re now in a much more
highly monopolized economy. We’re in a
deregulated economy.
Back in the ’70s under Nixon, his policies
actually, when you look back, they were much
more liberal than the policies of anybody who
has come after him, simply because he was
pragmatic.
It wasn’t because he was a liberal, but
because it was accepted by Republicans and
Democrats that when you have inflation stemming
from companies using purely monopoly power, the
right thing to do is to prevent them from
raising their prices, so that the economy will
not be bled by super rents, monopoly rents that
are paid to the monopolies.
Well, that was before the monopoly lobbyists
fought back. And basically the Republicans and
the whole attempt to put [Robert] Bork on the
Supreme Court, and later to control the Supreme
Court, has been very largely an attempt by the
monopolists to do to the Supreme Court what
they’ve done to the Democratic Party and the
other political parties, to basically have
privatized the political process and the legal
process, to give a free rein to the monopolists
at the top of the pyramid.
[It is] to make their money, not by employing
labor to produce goods and services for a
profit, but simply by charging more for what
they’re doing, simply by getting monopoly rent,
and financial rents, and natural resource rents,
which is where most of the money is made today,
along with capital gains, the asset price
inflation, which are euphemized as capital
gains, but it’s certainly not industrial capital
gains; it’s finance capital gains.
BEN NORTON: Professor
Hudson, I have a kind of complicated question
and I really want to pick your brain on this.
The issue of interest rates is something that
I’ve been researching a lot because there has
been this debate about it in the past year or
two about the Fed interest rates.
And I’m curious if you think if it’s
correlation or causation in that, with the rise
of the neoliberal era – excluding, you know,
after the Volcker shock, in this neoliberal era
– in general, there has been a tendency toward
dropping interest rates.
And of course we have seen that after the
financial crash of 2008 and the policy of
quantitative easing, interest rates were zero or
even technically below zero.
And there was this extremely loose monetary
policy, basically, the government just investing
in all of these junk bonds, giving this massive
cash infusion to the financial sector.
I’m curious if you think that that’s just
correlation or causation – do you think that, if
you look at this graph just from an ignorant
perspective, not knowing anything about fiscal
policy, that in the Keynesian era, in that ’50,
’60s, and ’70s, there was a general tendency
toward gradually increasing the Federal
Reserve’s interest rates.
And in the neoliberal era, there has been a
tendency toward dropping those rates all the way
to zero. Is that correlation or causation?
Obviously raising the interest rates can
cause a depression, which hurts working people.
But at the same time, you’ve pointed out that,
while there there are negatives to raising
interest rates, like we’re seeing now, in that
it’s going to make average consumers have to pay
a little bit more on their mortgages and car
loans.
But it seems to me that the people who
benefit most from low interest rates are not
average working people who are trying to buy a
house; it seems like it’s actually stockholders,
and bondholders, and corporations.
And there has been this big bubble in the
past 10, 20 years where there’s such a loose,
expansionary monetary policy, that there was
this big bubble of all these corporations and
start-ups that basically made no money.
Uber, Twitter, all these big tech companies
in Silicon Valley, they’ve never really made
money. They basically were able to thrive
because they were surviving on free money and
all these zero interest loans. And now that
bubble is kind of bursting.
So do you think that in some ways, even
though there could be a depression in the short
term, raising interest rates can in some ways be
better for working people, because it’s the
financial sector that benefits most from low
interest rates.
I don’t know. It’s a difficult question. I’m
curious what you think.
MICHAEL HUDSON: That chart
is very important, but it’s very misleading the
way you put it by itself. What should be
alongside of it, the [Fed] interest rate chart,
would be the interest rate on credit cards and
late fees.
At the same time, you had 0.1% of interest
rates all toward the end there, you had credit
card rates of 19%. And if you’re late on your
credit card, as most people have become, the
interest rate is 29%.
So you have a steady rise in the rates that
debtors have to pay, that the 99% of the
population have to pay.
So the interest rates that fell were the
interest rates that banks had to pay to the
Federal Reserve and to each other, and that bank
customers, financial customers had to pay for,
say, borrowing from a bank at maybe 1%, and
buying corporate stock that could pay dividends
of 3%, 4%, or 5%.
So the low interest rates created what’s
called arbitrage for the financial sector –
borrow cheap from the banks, and buy a higher
yielding asset. You could borrow at less than 1%
and buy a foreign bond that is yielding more.
That’s called the carry trade. That’s what
Japan did so much in the 1990s.
Or, mainly, you could borrow at 1% and buy
junk bonds that would pay much, much higher
prices.
And so much borrowing from the banks was done
to buy junk bonds, that the interest rates on
junk bonds actually came down, even though the
risk didn’t come down.
It turns out that interest rates don’t really
reflect risk at all. Interest rates reflect the
opportunity to make an arbitrage trade or
straddle in the financial sector.
So you’re right, the people who benefited
from the interest rates were corporate raiders
and speculators, and the people who were
borrowing at low interest rates to buy real
estate.
Now, in the past, before 2008, the way to
make a profit in real estate was, you take out a
loan, and you buy real estate, and the real
estate value will go up, and the price will go
up.
Well, what happened with private capital is
they said, well, we can borrow from the banks at
a very low price and we can buy the houses as
absentee owners. And we can make much more money
in rent than the low interest rates we have to
pay.
So the low interest rates helped finance
large real estate private capital companies to
come in and begin to become absentee owners of a
rising amount of housing in the United States,
which is what has turned the home ownership
rates way down.
At the point Obama took office, about 59% of
Americans were homeowners. Now it’s under 50%.
It’s fallen by about 10 percentage points as a
result of the Obama evictions and the rules that
Obama put in, the anti-Black rules, the
anti-Hispanic rules, the anti-minority rules,
and the anti-consumer rules that Obama put in.
[These] have essentially transformed the real
estate market away from a home-ownership economy
into a rental economy, where you’re recreating a
landlord class financed by the banking class,
and merging between the finance, insurance, and
real estate sector, the FIRE sector.
It’s the FIRE sector that has really taken
off since 2008. And it’s not simply that the
economy has polarized, it’s that the shape of
the economy has shifted away from an industrial,
manufacturing, agriculture economy into a
rentier economy, into a FIRE sector economy.
It’s not even an agricultural economy in the
sense that farmers, and dairy people are making
money off the farms. It’s the trading companies,
Archer Daniels Midland, and the other companies
that are essentially the marketing choke points
that have made money.
So you’ve had the American economy since 2008
turned into a chokepoint economy.
You need housing; you need food; you need
medical care. And all of these have become
monopoly rent-gouging opportunities that have
essentially paid the wealthy 1% or 10% very,
very highly, but squeezed out of the rest of the
economy.
BEN NORTON: So this might be
a very simplistic question: is a looser monetary
policy in general better for the financial
sector and the speculators, and a tighter
monetary policy is in general better for working
people? Or is that just one factor among many
and it’s more complicated?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Look, the
key is who is going to be the debtor and who is
going to be the creditor.
If a looser monetary policy would lower your
credit card rates from 19% to 1%, at which that
the banks get to borrow, fine. Then you can pay
off your credit card debt. Instead of paying 29%
with a penalty fee, you’d be paying 1%.
That kind of loose monetary policy would be
great. A monetary policy of forgiving student
debt would be a great.
But what’s called a loose monetary policy has
been a very, very tight monetary policy for most
of the population, but not for Wall Street, not
for the financial sector.
So you have to think of the American economy
as divided into two sectors: the productive
economy, of goods and services, production and
consumption; and then the wealth economy, of
assets and debts, the real estate sector, the
financial sector, stocks and bonds, and
ownership of monopoly companies.
BEN NORTON: Very well said,
very well said. I want to pivot a bit and talk
about the situation in Europe.
Professor Hudson, you have said in the past
that the economic war on Russia that the U.S.
and the EU are waging – which has caused an
energy crisis inside Europe, as winter is soon
approaching – you have said that this is
basically going to turn the eurozone into a dead
zone, economically speaking.
We have seen that German industry, German
capitalists, are in fact protesting against the
government, saying that they really need cheap
Russian energy. We have seen German labor unions
warning that their industry could go bankrupt
and could be offshored, like we saw with the
deindustrialization of the U.S.
And French President Macron – who of course
is an investment banker; we should always keep
in mind his own class interests – he gave this
very interesting, you could say, historic
speech, in which Macron announced the “end of
abundance.”
And I just want to read one quote from this
from The Guardian here: “Macron said France
and the French felt they were living through a
series of crises, ‘each worse than the last.'”
And the French president said, “What we are
currently living through is a kind of major
tipping point or a great upheaval … we are
living the end of what could have seemed an era
of abundance … the end of the abundance of
products of technologies that seemed always
available … the end of the abundance of land and
materials including water.”
Now, I basically interpreted this as Europe,
acknowledging that neoliberalism – this
financial, parasitic phase of capitalism that
you have spent so much time analyzing and
writing about – it is collapsing essentially in
on itself.
But I guess you disagree. So what do you take
of of Macron’s speech on the “end of abundance”?
MICHAEL HUDSON: When he said
the “end of abundance,” what he really meant was
the beginning of an IMF austerity program
applied to Europe.
And the end of abundance for the 90% is a
bonanza of abundance for the 1%, for the
financial sector. They’re making huge, huge
gains in all of this.
For instance, the electric companies in
Europe are allowed to charge electricity in
proportion to the highest priced marginal input.
Well, the highest price input now of course is
natural gas.
So even though most of the electric companies
will make their electricity in the usual way –
through atomic energy, or oil, or other sources
of energy – they have had a huge marginal
increase in energy prices for all of this.
The end of abundance means, when you look at
it and say, what’s on the other side of the
balance sheet? Austerity for the population
means we are now going to put the class war in
business here.
We’re going to show you what European
“socialism” is. European “socialism” is the same
as it is in the United States with the
Democratic Party.
It’s lower wages, enabling higher profit
opportunities for the companies. It’s going to
be the end of abundance for wage earners, but
it’ll be a bonanza for the monopoly owners and
for the banks.
In England, for instance, you can see this
energy crisis. They announced the last week that
I think the average electricity bill per family
is going to go up by about £5,000, which means
about $6,000 a year, just to heat the home, just
for families.
And for businesses like pubs, banks have
asked for a $10,000 deposit so that the pubs, if
they go bankrupt, can’t wipe out the amount of
money that they give to the banks.
So the banks have right away said, well,
we’re going to make sure that as energy prices
go up, we don’t have to suffer the end of
abundance. Certainly the large companies aren’t.
And from the US point of view – and basically
the sanctions of Europe are a US policy – this
is a bonanza for American companies that are
replacing the German industrial companies in
Europe.
You had Germany’s Foreign Minister Baerbock
go to the Czech Republic and said, my job is to
support Ukraine; it’s not to represent my
voters. I don’t care what my voters want. I know
that they’re unhappy, as you just pointed out,
but I’m going to support the sanctions on
Russia. The most important thing is to keep up
the sanctions on Russia.
So you’re basically having almost all of the
European Union officials and English officials
are acting as local proxies for NATO.
NATO is really running European politics. And
it shows that Macron could have said – when he
said we’re at the end of abundance and the
beginning of austerity, he meant we’re at the
end of democratic politics. We’re at the end of
social democracy.
Social democracy wouldn’t do what they’re
doing. And socialist policy wouldn’t do what
they’re doing.
He said, we’ve turned the “socialism” into
neoliberalism, just as Tony Blair did in
England, and [Keir] Starmer is doing it today
with the British Labour Party.
You’ve had the end of any kind of
social-democratic politics, and basically a
concentration of policy – I guess you could call
it the Davos class, the neoliberal class – it
has really been centralized, largely under US
direction and US financing.
That’s why the United States, in discussions
with Europe, has said these sanctions and the
Ukraine war are only the opening overture for
what’s going to go in 20 years.
What’s at issue is how we are going to
restructure the entire world economy. And in
order to restructure the entire world economy,
in the way that we want and that the Davos crowd
wants, is you have to make sure that it is
indeed a unipolar economy, not a multipolar
economy.
We first have got to knock out Russia, so
that it can’t support China. Then we’ve got to
oppose China, India, Iran, the rest of Asia.
We’ve got to make sure that the United
States, with our European partners, can impose
this neoliberal, financialized economy over the
entire world, and make sure that the dream of
the 19th-century classical economists, of social
democracy and socialism, was only a nightmare
from our point of view.
BEN NORTON: Yeah, well,
maybe I was much too optimistic saying this is
the end of neoliberalism, I guess. I think
you’re right that what we’re now seeing is that
this is the end of the last vestiges of European
social democracy. And the very same policies
that the IMF and World Bank, the structural
adjustment and Washington consensus policies,
that they imposed on the Global South for
decades, are now coming home to Europe itself.
But I do want to talk about something very
related. I’m glad you mentioned German Foreign
Minister Baerbock’s comments at this conference
in the Czech Republic, where she said, what’s
important for us is this war on Russia and
supporting Ukraine, regardless of what voters
want.
A conference was held this July in
Switzerland called the Ukraine Recovery
Conference, in which a bunch of Western
governments and corporate leaders met together
to plan neoliberal shock therapy to impose on
Ukraine.
And we couldn’t have seen a more blatant
symbol of this than the fact that Ukraine’s
Western-backed leader Zelensky, on September 6,
he rang the opening bell, digitally, at least
via Zoom, in the morning at the New York Stock
Exchange.
I mean, it’s really incredible. It says so
much. With the hashtag #AdvantageUkraine and the
slogan, “We are free. We are strong. We are open
for business.”
It notes there are $400 billion in investment
options. It spans “public private partnerships,
privatization and private ventures.” And “a
USAID-supported project team of investment
bankers and researchers appointed by Ukraine’s
Ministry of Economy will work with businesses
interested in investing.”
They quote the president of the New York
Stock Exchange Group who said: “we stand for
freedom, investor protection and unfettered
access to capital. We are pleased to welcome
President Zelenskyy virtually to the NYSE bell
podium, a symbol of the freedom and opportunity
our U.S. capital markets have enabled around the
globe.”
So this, to me, it says everything. It points
out that Ukraine has been working with the G7 in
the EU to reform the country’s tax system – that
is, cut taxes on corporations and the rich – to
create a new legal framework and to adopt “rules
and legislations to allow companies to build a
transparent corporate structure, attract foreign
investment more easily, and use additional
mechanisms to protect intangible assets.”
So, I mean, honestly, what they’re announcing
is a massive corporate giveaway. What do you
think about this policy of Ukraine being “open
for business”?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well it
certainly didn’t say everything. The day after
Labor Day, significantly, Tuesday, on September
6, the day that Zelensky rang the bell at the
stock exchange, he had an editorial in the Wall
Street Journal that did say everything.
He said, what we’ve done is abolish the right
of labor to join labor unions. We have abolished
the right of collective bargaining. Every wage
agreement is going to be an individual choice
between the worker and the employer. That’s a
fair market.
We are abolishing all of labor’s rights that
are in the constitution. We are rejecting the
European Union labor laws. We are rejecting
everything that the UN International Labor
Organization said.
Labor, we have reduced labor, under the new
law that I just passed, to absolute abject
dependency. So if you work in Ukraine, not only
are we going to give you whatever you can buy
from the kleptocrats, giving them an appropriate
markup and owning it, but you will have a
completely docile labor force such as no country
has seen since the era of Pinochet.
You’ve got to read the Wall Street Journal
editorial. It’s jaw dropping. It is absolutely –
it’s like a parody of what a socialist would
have written about how the class war would be
put in into action by a fascist government. This
is literally what fascism is.
So of course he was welcomed on the stock
exchange for abolishing labor’s rights. You
could not have a more black-and-white example
from what you just pointed out.
BEN NORTON: Yeah, and I
mean, it’s really sad considering that Ukraine
already is the poorest country in Europe. And
it’s one of the most corrupt countries in
Europe, even according to these metrics of
Western-government backed organizations.
So we have seen that, after the overthrow of
the Soviet Union in 1991, that, in Russia in
particular, there was this brutal neoliberal
shock therapy.
Gorbachev just died. You know, he helped
bring this in. Gorbachev did this famous Pizza
Hut commercial, basically showing that he sold
out his country for Pizza Hut.
And we saw that under Yeltsin, this alcoholic
US puppet, in Russia, the life expectancy of
Russians decreased by several years. According
to UNICEF, millions of Russians died excess
deaths because of the neoliberal shock therapy
imposed on Russia.
And of course, Ukraine suffered, but the
neoliberal shock therapy imposed on Ukraine
wasn’t as severe as it was on Russia. And there
still are some state-owned assets in Ukraine
that all of these Western corporations are just
frothing at the bit, they’re salivating about
trying to get their hooks into and to privatize
all of these assets.
So this is a country that is already the
poorest in Europe. It’s already one of the most
corrupt countries on Earth. It has a massive
problem with far-right extremism.
I mean, this seems like such a massive powder
keg. I can’t even imagine how disastrous it will
be, considering the effect of the neoliberal
shock therapy imposed on Chile, you mentioned,
under Pinochet, and the neoliberal shock therapy
imposed on Russia and the disastrous
consequences.
I mean, what do you think this is going to
do, not only to Ukraine, but to Europe?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, this
is exactly what Mr. Macron said when he said the
‘end of abundance.’ The Ukrainian labor force
has just experienced the end of affluence,
neoliberal style.
And as Mr. Zelensky said, it may be the end
of affluence for the labor force, but it’s going
to be a bonanza for you investors in the New
York Stock Exchange. Come on in and join the
party!
Somebody’s loss is turned into somebody
else’s game. And that’s what happens in a class
war. It’s a zero-sum game. There is no attempt
at all to raise living standards.
And the problem – you said Ukraine is the
poorest country in Europe – but Zelensky said
it’s not poor enough. He said, you think this is
something, wait until our new law takes effect.
That’ll really show you what it means to be the
poorest country in Europe.
But it’ll also be the richest country in
Europe for the 1%. Because, as you just pointed
out, the kleptocrat class there was the most
corrupt. I’ve met some of them, and it’s an
experience.
BEN NORTON: Professor
Hudson, I mentioned at the beginning of this
episode that I also wanted to ask you about the
petrodollar.
There have been signs that the petrodollar,
which Saudi Arabia established in the 1970s, by
selling its oil in the dollar, that era might be
coming to a close – or if not ending, at least
it has a new challenger.
There was a
report in the Wall Street Journal that Saudi
Arabia is now considering selling its oil in the
yuan. And it probably will continue selling it
in dollars. But maybe it will have a joint
system where you can buy it in either yuan or
dollars. This is from March of this year.
And since then, there have been other
developments. There are reports that Chinese
President Xi Jinping is actually going to take a
trip soon to Saudi Arabia, which would be
historic, because this is going to be one of his
first trips abroad since the Covid pandemic.
And this also explains why President Joe
Biden of the U.S. recently just visited Saudi
Arabia. Clearly he was trying to pressure Riyadh
and Mohammed bin Salman, the crown prince, to
cut ties with China and Russia.
Saudi Arabia has been increasing military
ties with Russia as well. And actually Saudi
Arabia is buying Russian oil for domestic
consumption, below market price, and then
selling its own oil on the market.
So anyway, the point is that there are there
are more and more reports now that the
petrodollar could be challenged by the
petroyuan. What do you think about this? And
China’s increasing relations with Saudi Arabia?
MICHAEL HUDSON: I think
we’re seeing a multipolar financial system. This
is part of the de-dollarization of the whole
rest of the world.
I think that Saudi Arabia felt under attack
for two reasons. Number one, the United States
criticizing the fact that it killed a foreign
critic. To Saudi Arabia, this is America’s
interference with its philosophy, where if
somebody disagrees with you, you kill them.
Secondly, America was protesting the Saudi
Arabia’s butchering of Yemen, of Yemenis. And
Saudi Arabia thought, well, they’re threatening
not to sell us arms if we’re going to use them
to kill Yemenis. We better diversify.
Most of all, though, all of the wealthy
sovereign funds of the world were shocked by how
the United States announced this year that, if a
country does something we don’t like, and that
would include Saudi Arabia, we’re going to grab
all of its reserves.
We grabbed Afghanistan’s reserves, because we
don’t like the way they treat women. We grabbed
Russia’s reserves, because they want to have a
multipolar world. We grabbed Venezuela’s
reserves.
Well, what’s going to stop them from all of a
sudden grabbing Saudi Arabia’s reserves?
Any multibillionaire is going to diversify
their investments and diversify the assets. And
I think Saudi Arabia thought, well, we’re going
to be doing a lot of trade with China, because
who else are we going to buy our manufacturers
from?
We’re not going to buy them from Europe,
because that’s finished. We’re not going to buy
them from America, because that’s
de-industrialized. We’re going to have to make
our own pivot to Asia.
And that means that they’re going to want to
be paid in their own currency. So, of course,
we’re going to want to begin selling or pricing
our oil in their currency so that there can be a
mutual trade.
And we’re not going to suffer from ups and
downs and squiggles in the foreign exchange rate
that’s caused by US intervention or US
sanctions.
The United States is driving Saudi Arabia and
driving every country out of the dollar, by its
statements that, if you have dollars invested in
Treasury bonds or in US banks, we can grab them.
And that’s how we can control the world.
Well, if you’re going to tell the world that,
this is not a way – everybody had thought of the
dollar as being something nonpolitical and
objective, and they were closing their eyes to
the fact that holding dollars is a loan to the
US government, that basically is debt that is
created by America’s military policy and
military spending abroad.
So all of a sudden they realized the whole
dollarized financial system is an extension of
the Pentagon and the military-industrial
complex.
And they’re becoming more and more bossy.
We’ve seen what they’ve just done to Europe.
What if America would do to us in Saudi Arabia
and other Arab countries what they just did to
Germany, and to England, and to their friends,
and to Russia and Venezuela?
We don’t want, we can’t afford to take the
risk of depending on America.
So to use Putin’s phrase, America is no
longer agreement capable. That means that it’s
no longer safe as an investment place.
BEN NORTON: Professor
Hudson, I actually I had one other question,
because we mentioned Chile earlier. And I don’t
want to keep you too long; I know you’re a busy
man.
We just saw that Chile had a referendum to
vote on a new constitution. And in that new
constitution, it wouldn’t have necessarily
nationalized the natural resources and minerals
of Chile, but it would have been a step toward
protecting them and at least putting some slight
restrictions on foreign corporations from
exploiting the huge copper and lithium reserves
in Chile.
And there was a massive campaign by
right-wing oligarchs, multimillionaires and
billionaires, and the media to demonize this new
constitution. And it was voted down; it was not
passed.
And there of course is a long history of
Chile being exploited by foreign powers because
of its large mineral reserves. You mentioned
your time working in the banking sector and the
role of U.S. corporations in trying to get the
copper in Chile, after Salvador Allende, the
socialist president who was elected, after he
nationalized the copper, which which was a
significant factor in the CIA coup in Chile in
1973.
Before we talk about that really quickly, I
just want to point out that Jeff Bezos, who is
of course the founder of Amazon, one of the
richest people in human history, estimated at
$200 billion in wealth, he also owns the
Washington Post.
And what was incredible about this article is
the first paragraph is not about democracy; it’s
not about the horrible crimes against humanity
committed by Pinochet; it’s actually about
lithium.
The first word in this editorial board
article from the Washington Post is lithium, and
about how “Chile sits atop the world’s largest
lithium reserves,” which is “reason enough to
pay attention to Chile’s impending Sept. 4
referendum.”
So I’m curious if you can talk about the
history of US corporations trying to exploit
Chile’s copper and lithium. And maybe you can
respond to this this media propaganda demonizing
a mild attempt at not even nationalizing the
minerals, but just putting restrictions on
foreign corporations.
MICHAEL HUDSON: It’s not
really about lithium or copper itself. It’s
about the pollution that is caused by the
mining.
If a company comes in and mines lithium, it’s
going to create a lot of environmental problems,
very much like an oil slick, like the American
oil companies that went into Ecuador and other
countries and had a big oil spill, and the
countries were not allowed, were not able, to
recover the cost of cleaning up the oil spill
and the damage to the economy done by the oil
companies.
Same thing in lithium. The proposed
constitution basically says, if make a contract
with a foreign investor developing lithium,
they’re going to want just to dig the mine, take
it out, and leave a mess behind – sort of like
drilling an oil well and then capping it, and
then the oil well is going to leak more and more
as the pipe rusts, and you’re going to have oil
in the water supply.
Well, you’re going to have lithium being a
huge environmental disaster. You’re also going
to need a huge government expenditure on
infrastructure of transportation, and
electrification, and power, and roads to the
lithium.
Who is going to pay for all of this
infrastructure? Chile might get some dollars in
foreign exchange for the lithium, but it would
have to have a huge, it’s called external
economy, external to the balance sheet, or
off-balance sheet costs of this.
Who is going to be liable for the off-balance
sheet costs and the clean-up costs of the
lithium? That’s what it’s all about.
Chile would be quite happy to sell lithium,
as it’s quite happy to sell its copper, as long
as it can make a national benefit from selling
the raw material. And really that’s what it has,
the raw material.
But the problem is, when you’re dealing with
a messy mineral – sort of like the rare-earth
minerals, that also create a lot of problems,
which is why China is one of the few countries
that has dominated the rare-earth market,
because it’s willing to tolerate all of the
environmental destruction that the mines create.
Well, other countries don’t want to take a risk
on the environmental destruction.
So it’s really, how do you think about
corporate investment? Do you think of just
what’s on the balance sheet for the company,
what it spends, and the sales price and the
profit it makes? Or do you think of the minerals
industry as involving all of these external
economies?
That was the whole disaster of the World
Bank, and why the World Bank has been so
destructive since the time it was formed and
began to make loans to Global South countries.
It would tell Global South countries to make
exports, and the loans it would make would be
roads for export, ports for export. The
countries would take over all of the cost of
producing the raw materials and the agricultural
crops, the plantation crops for export, leaving
all of the profits for the companies that
invest.
And the countries are stuck with the foreign
debt, at inflated prices, to hire US companies
to build the ports, and the roads, and all of
the infrastructure loans that the World Bank
would would lend for.
They’re finally becoming aware in South
America that the cost, including the foreign
exchange cost, of building infrastructure costs
much more than the export proceeds that they
get. It’s the tail wagging the dog.
And they realized that they economic doctrine
that they have been told that excludes all of
the social costs from the balance sheet of
national income, and exports, and the profit, is
a tunnel vision.
And they’re trying to break away from the
tunnel vision. And of course, the companies back
the economic profession, which is all tunnel
vision.
The economic profession says ignore the
external costs; ignore the clean-up costs;
that’s not what economics is all about.
Well, the fact is, that’s what it should be
all about. And more and more of the countries
are realizing that you have to think of
economics as a whole system that includes the
environment, which it used to be, already in the
1840s, 170 years ago, the United States was
developing a national income analysis to take
environmental destruction into consideration.
But all of that has been rejected by
free-market economics. The free market says a
free market is one where all of the profits go
for the exporter, and all of the external costs
and pollution are stuck with the host country.
Well, it turns out it’s the host the host
parasite relationship, basically. So there’s an
argument in Chile over what the economics is all
about.
BEN NORTON: Well, I know
we’re running out of time here. I just want to
ask a brief question here from the chat
comments. This is from a Babylon, they wrote,
“Please ask Michael to explain why the US dollar
continues to be so strong.” Obviously this is a
very open-ended question, but go ahead.
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well it’s
strong because of we talked about at the very
beginning of this show. It’s strong because
Europe has created an economic suicide.
If Europe is unable to produce industrial
exports, if the European steel companies are
closing down, the fertilizer companies are
closing down, the Italian glass companies are
closing down because you need gas to make glass
and all of a sudden the price goes up, they’re
not going to be making much money.
And the dollar is going up against the pound
sterling. It’s not that the dollar is rising;
it’s that the sterling is going down. And the
yen is going down, by holding Japanese interest
rates low. And the euro is going down, by
following the NATO sanctions policy.
So this is really a policy of other countries
mismanaging their economy, not that the United
States is actively doing everything positive,
except positively disrupting Europe and England.
BEN NORTON: And speaking of
England, a lot of people in the comments have
been pointing out the latest news that Queen
Elizabeth has died. While we were doing this
interview today, on this stream, they announced
that she had died. I don’t know if you have any
thoughts on that.
MICHAEL HUDSON: No, I mean,
she had pretty much played out, stayed out of
politics, and just played a ceremonial role that
I think certainly helped their tourist trade. I
don’t know what the royal family does except a
sort of pose for tourists.
It will be very interesting. Prince Charles
always had much more of a concern for the
environment, and was much more broad-minded and
probably activist than Queen Elizabeth was.
So he has a chance to really make his point
of view more open, and perhaps play some kind of
much more active political role than the the
monarch did, where Queen Elizabeth thought she
should stay out of economic and political
affairs, not be activist.
We’ll have to wait and see whether Charles
puts some of his personal views and convictions.
BEN NORTON: Yeah, and I’ll
say, Elizabeth really represented a certain
generation. Let’s not forget, when Elizabeth was
a child, she was taught by her uncle, who was an
avowed Nazi, to Nazi salute. And there’s this
famous photo of her as a child Nazi saluting.
For me, it says a lot about the British royal
family and its attempt to rebrand, as you said,
to appeal to tourists, erasing this ugly history
of support for fascism, of genocidal
colonialism, and all of that.
So the British monarchy moves into a new era.
We see the new, ultra-neoliberal Conservative
Prime Minister Liz Truss. So there’s a lot
there’s a lot to say there.
But Professor Hudson, as we wrap up, what
projects are you working on now? Is there
anything that you want to plug? I will link in
the description to your website
michael-hudson.com, and encourage everyone
to check it out.
What are you working on right now?
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, I’m
finishing a book that I have been working on for
20 years, the sequel “And Forgive Them Their
Debts.” And the book is “The Collapse of
Antiquity.”
It’s about how Greece and Rome basically
collapsed as a result of the failure to cancel
the debts, and the class war of the creditor
oligarchy.
And the big point is that what made Western
civilization different, what made Greece and
Rome break from the Near East, is the fact that
democracies are not very good at resisting
financial oligarchies.
And in Greece and Rome, especially Rome, the
oligarchy took over at the point where it
overthrew the kings and established an oligarchy
from the very beginning, ruling by terror, and
by force, and violence, and political
assassination.
So this essentially is an economic history of
not only why Greece and Rome ended, but why the
pro-creditor laws, the legal system, the whole
economic system that Rome bequeathed to the
West, when it collapsed, we’re still in it.
And what is happening today, with the debt
crisis we’re talking about, is really a process
of how Greece and Rome shifted the West onto a
completely different way of organizing society
than had existed earlier in the Near East and
which survived and many parts of Asia.
So we’re just doing the index and typesetting
of that book now. It’ll be out in a few months.
BEN NORTON: Great. Well, I
look forward to seeing that. Professor Hudson’s
books are always amazing. I’ve learned so much
from them. They have really influenced my
economic and political worldview.
With that, I want to remind everyone that
every time I do an interview with Professor
Hudson, we always publish a transcript of the
interview. You can find that over at
multipolarista.com. And it will also be on
his website, michael-hudson.com.
As I wrap up here, I want to thank everyone
who joined in the chat. It was a very lively
discussion. I wish I had more time to respond to
questions. But I want to be respectful of
Professor Hudson’s time.
Professor Hudson, I’m sure I’ll have you back
sometime soon to talk about all of the the
latest developments. Things are changing pretty
rapidly these days. So I know you’re always
writing about what’s going on in the world.
You’re always doing great interviews.
Anyone who wants to find your writings can go
to
michael-hudson.com. There’s always a wealth
of knowledge. So thank you so much for joining
me today.
MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, thanks
for having me. It was a good discussion. And we
touched on all the important topics of this
week.
BEN NORTON: Thanks,
Professor Hudson. And thanks to everyone who
watched or listened. If you want to support this
show, you can go to
patreon.com/multipolarista. And I’ll see you
all next time. Thanks a lot.
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