Michael Hudson Interview
Here are my
questions:
(1.) You made some
predictions in our last interview for “Four”
magazine which became true.
You talked about
crisis for German companies in the production of
fertilizer. This just hit the headlines weeks
after our interview.
You also said: “What
you characterize as “blocking Nord Stream 2” is
really a Buy-American policy.” This now also
became more than clear after the destroyed Nord
Stream pipelines.
Could you comment
that?
MH: U.S.
foreign policy has long concentrated on control
of the international oil trade. This trade is a
leading contributor to the U.S. balance of
payments, and its control gives U.S. diplomats
the ability to impose a chokehold on other
countries.
Oil is the key supplier
of energy, and the rise in labor productivity
and GDP for the leading economies tends to
reflect the rise in energy use per worker. Oil
and gas are not only for burning for energy, but
are also a basic chemical input for fertilizers,
and hence for agricultural productivity, as well
as for much plastic and other chemical
production.
So U.S. strategists
recognize that cutting countries off from oil
and its derivatives will stifle their industry
and agriculture. The ability to impose such
sanctions enables the U.S. to make countries
dependent on compliance with U.S. policy so as
not to be “excommunicated” from the oil trade.
U.S. diplomats have been
telling Europe for many years not to rely on
Russian oil and gas. The aim is twofold: to
deprive Russia of its major trade surplus, and
to capture the vast European market for U.S. oil
producers. U.S. diplomats convinced German
leaders not to approve the Nord Stream 2
pipeline, and finally used the excuse of the
NATO war with Russia in Ukraine to act
unilaterally to arrange the destruction of both
Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines.
(2.) For our
audience, our listeners: In your new book “The
Destiny of Civilization: Finance Capitalism,
Industrial Capitalism, or Socialism”
You state that the
world economy is now fracturing between two
parts, the United States and Europe is the
dollarized part.
And this Western
neoliberal unit is driving Eurasia and most of
the Global South into a separate group. You just
stated this in an interview from November.
https://michael-hudson.com/2022/11/the-rentier-economy-is-a-free-lunch/
Could you explain
this for our outlet?
MH: The
split is not only geographic but above all
reflects the conflict between Western
neoliberalism and the traditional logic of
industrial capitalism. The West has
deindustrialized its economies by replacing
industrial capitalism with finance capitalism,
initially in an attempt to keep its wages down
by moving abroad to employ foreign labor, and
then to try and establish monopoly privileges
and captive markets or arms (and now oil) and
high-technology essentials, becoming rentier
economies.
A century ago, industrial
capitalism was expected to evolve into
industrial socialism, with governments providing
subsidized basic infrastructure services (such
as health care, education, communication,
research and development) to minimize their cost
of living and doing business. That is how the
United States, Germany and other countries built
up their industrial power, and it also is how
China and other Eurasian countries have done so
more recently.
But the West’s choice to
privatize and financialize its basic
infrastructure, dismantling the role of
government and shifting planning to Wall Street,
London and other financial centers, has left it
with little to offer other countries – except or
the promise not to bomb them or treat them as
enemies if they seek to keep their wealth in
their own hands instead of transferring it to
U.S. investors and corporations.
The result is that when
China and other countries build up their
economies in the same way that the United States
did from the end of its Civil War to World War
II, they are treated as enemies. It is as if
U.S. diplomats see that the game is lost, and
that their economy has become so debt-ridden,
privatized and high-cost that it cannot compete,
that it simply hopes to keep making other
countries dependent tributaries for as long as
it can until the game finally is over.
If the U.S. succeeds in
imposing financial neoliberalism on the world,
then other countries will end up with the same
problems that the United States is experiencing.
(3.) Now the first
terminals for LNG from the US are opened in
Germany. How will this effect trade and
interdependence / dependency between Germany and
United States?
MH: The
U.S. sanctions and destruction of Nord Stream 1
and 2 have made Europe dependent on U.S.
supplies, at so high a cost of LNG gas (about
six times what Americans and Asians have to pay)
that Germany and other countries have lost their
ability to compete in steel making, glass
making, aluminum and many other sectors. This
creates a vacuum which U.S. affiliates home to
fill from their investments in other countries
or even from the U.S. itself.
The expectation is that
German and other European heavy industry,
chemical and other manufacturing will have to
move to the United States to obtain oil and
other essentials that they are told not to buy
from Russia, Iran or other alternatives. The
assumption is that they can be blocked from
relocating in Russia or Asia by imposing
sanctions, fines and political meddling European
politics by U.S. NGOs and National Endowment for
Democracy satellites in, as has been the case
since 1945. We can expect a new Operation Gladio
to promote politicians willing to sustain this
Global Fracture and the shift of European
industry to the United States.
One question is whether
Germany’s skilled labor will follow. That
typically is what occurs in such situations.
This kind of demographic shrinkage is what the
Baltic states have experienced. It is a
byproduct of neoliberal policies.
(4.) What is your
view on the current military situation in the
Russian/Ukrainian war?
MH: It
looks like Russia will easily win in February or
March. It probably will create a Demiliarized
Zone to protect the Russian-speaking areas
(probably incorporated into Russia) from the
pro-NATO West in order to prevent sabotage and
terrorism.
Europe will be told to
continue to boycott Russia and its allies
instead of seeking mutual gains by reciprocal
trade and investment. The U.S. may urge Poland
and other countries to “fight to the last Pole”
or Lithuanian, emulating Ukraine. It will put
pressure on Hungary. But most of all, it will
insist that Europe spend an immense sum to
re-arm, mainly with U.S. arms. This expense will
crowd out social spending to help Europe cope
with its spreading industrial depression or
subsidies to revive its industry. So a
militarized economy will become a rising
overhead – while consumer and industrial debt
increase, along with government debt.
As this occurs, Russia
may demand that NATO roll back its borders to
pre-1991 boundaries. That is the most likely
flash point of conflict.
(5.) What is your
view on the current financial situation in this
war. The G7 and EU governments talk already
about rebuilding and reconstruction of Ukraine
after the war. What does this mean for Western
businesses and finance capitalism?
MH:
Ukraine hardly can be rebuilt. First of all,
much of its population has left, and is unlikely
to return, given the destruction of housing and
infrastructure – and husbands.
Second, Ukraine is owned
mainly by a narrow group of kleptocrats – who
are trying to sell out to Western agricultural
investors and other vultures. (I think you know
who they are.)
Ukraine is already
debt-ridden, and has become a fiefdom of the IMF
(meaning in practice, of NATO). Europe will be
asked to “contribute,” and the foreign reserves
seized from Russia may be spent on hiring U.S.
companies to make a financial killing rebuilding
a pretense of an economy in Ukraine – leaving
the country even more debt ridden.
A new Democratic Party
secretary of state will echo Madeline Albright
and say that the killing of Ukraine’s economy,
children and soldiers “was all worth it” as the
cost of spreading democracy U.S.-style.
(6.) I’ve read lots
of background reports on the sanctions against
Russia. It seems more and more the sanctions hit
Russia hard, because they cannot produce all
products, esp. technology, by themselves. On the
other hand Russia have now more stable business
and buyers with and in China, India.
What real effect do
the sanctions have according to your analysis?
MH: The
U.S. sanctions have turned out to be an
unanticipated godsend for Russia. In
agriculture, for instance, sanctions against
Lithuanian and other Baltic dairy exports has
led to a flowering of a domestic Russian cheese
and dairy sector. Russia is now the world’s
largest grain exporter, thanks to the Western
sanctions that have had much the same effect as
protective tariffs and import quotas of the sort
that the United States used in the 1930s to
modernize its agricultural sector.
If President Biden were a
secret Russian agent, he hardly could have
helped Russia more. Russia needed the economic
isolation of protectionism, but was still too
entranced by neoliberal free-trade policy to do
this by itself. So the U.S. did it for it.
Sanctions oblige
countries to become more self-reliant, at least
in basic needs such as food and energy. This
self-reliance is the best defense against U.S.
economic destabilization to force regime change
and similar compliance.
One effect is that Russia
will need to buy much less from Europe even
after the fighting in Ukraine ends. So there
will be less need for Russia to export raw
materials to Europe. It can work these up
themselves. The industrial core that was Europe
may end up more in Russia and its Asian allies
than in the United States.
That is the ironic result
of NATO’s new Iron Curtain.
(7.) How would you
describe China, Russia and India: Do you see
Industrial Capitalism or Socialism there?
MH: RIC
was the original core of the BRICS, now greatly
extended to include Iran and much of Central
Asia and the roads involved with China’s Belt
and Road initiative. The goal is for Eurasia no
longer to have to rely on Europe or North
America.
Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld often referred to “Old Europe”
as a shrinking dead zone. It failed to follow
its plans a century ago to evolve into an
increasingly socialized economy with government
subsidy of rising living standards and labor
productivity, science and industry. Europe
rejected not only Marxism but the basis of
Marxist analysis in the classical economics of
Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill and their
contemporaries. That path has been followed in
Eurasia, while the right-wing anti-government
liberalism of the Austrian and Chicago Schools
has destroyed the NATO economies from within.
As the locus of
industrial and technological leadership moves
eastward, European investment and labor probably
will follow.
The Eurasian countries
will still visit Europe as tourists, as
Americans like to visit England as a kind of
theme park of post-feudal gentry, the posting of
the palace guards and other quaint memories of
the days of knights and dragons. European
countries will look more like that of Jamaica
and the Caribbean, with hotels and hospitality
becoming the main growth sectors, with Frenchmen
and German waiters dressed in their quaint
quasi-Hollywood costumes. Museums will do a
thriving business as Europe itself turns into a
kind of museum of post-industrialism.
(8.) Currently we saw
the collapse and bankruptcy of the crypto
exchange FXT. The management of this company
seems to be highly criminal. How do you judge
that?
MH:
Crime is what made crypto a growth sector for
the past few years. Investors bought crypto
because it is a vehicle for the fortunes being
made in international drug dealing, the arms
trade, other crime and tax evasion. These are
the great post-industrial growth sectors in
Western economies.
Ponzi schemes often are
good investment vehicles in their take-off stage
– the pump-and-dump stage. It was inevitable
that criminals would not only use crypto
to transfer funds, but actually set up their own
currencies “free of oppressive government
regulation.” Criminals are the ultimate Chicago
School free market libertarians.
Anyone can create their
own currency, much as U.S. wild-west banks did
in the mid-19th century, printing
currency at will. When one went shopping in the
early 20th century, the stores still
had lists of the shifting valuations of various
bank notes. The best designed ones tended to be
the most successful.
(9.) Do you have any
knowledge about business relations between FTX
and Ukraine, the government in Kyiv? There were
some rumours and press articles in the
alternative media about it?
MH: The
IMF and Congress have paid large amounts of
money to the Ukraine government and its
kleptocrats in charge. Newspapers report that
much of this money has been turned over to FTX –
which has become the second largest funder of
the Democratic Party (behind George Soros, who
also is said to be trying to buy up Ukrainian
assets). So a circular flow seems to be at work:
U.S. Congress votes for funding for Ukraine,
which puts some of this money in FTX crypto to
pay or the political campaign of pro-Ukrainian
politicians.
(10.) Some months ago
there were articles in the US press about plans
by the FED: They are planning to establish a
digital Dollar, a Central Bank Digitcal Currency
(CBDC). Also in Europe ECB president Madame
Lagarde and the German minister for finance,
Lindner, talk about an introduction of the
digital Euro.
Here in Germany some
critical experts are warning this will only push
the total surveillance of the population and
customers.
What is your take on
digital currencies?
MH: It’s
not my department. All banking is electronic, so
what does “digital” mean? To libertarians, it
means no government oversight, but in government
hands, the government will have a record of
everything that anyone spends.
(11.) What is your
view on the current weakness or strength of the
US dollar, the Euro, the British Pound, Gold and
Silver?
MH: The
dollar will remain in demand, thanks to its
success in making the Eurozone dependent on it.
The British pound has little means of support,
and little reason for foreigners to invest in
it. The euro is a junior satellite currency to
the dollar.
Without a dollar or other
currency to hold their monetary reserves in,
governments will continue to increase the
proportion held in gold, because it doesn’t have
government liabilities attached to it – so U.S.
officials can’t simply grab it, as they did with
Russia’s foreign reserves. Eurozone countries
cannot be trusted not to follow U.S. orders to
grab foreign countries’ reserves, so it will be
shunned.
As the euro’s exchange
rate declines against the dollar, foreign
investment will decline, because investors will
not want to invest in (1) a shrinking market,
and (2) companies that earn domestic euros that
are worth fewer and fewer dollars or other hard
currency for head offices.
Of course, gold will have
to be kept at home, so that it can’t simply be
grabbed, as the Bank of England grabbed
Venezuela’s gold and gave it to the right-wing
U.S. proxy. Germany would be wise to accelerate
its airlift of its own gold supply from the U.S.
Federal Reserve Bank vaults in New York City.
(12.) What is your
current analysis of the energy and financial
crises in the world?
MH: No
real crisis as much as a slow crash. Rising
prices paid for what America exports: oil, food
and IT monopoly goods, with living costs for
consumers rising faster than wages. So there
will be a tightening squeeze or most families.
The middle class will discover that it really is
the wage-earning class after all, and will go
deeper into debt – especially if it tries to
protect itself by taking out a mortgage to buy a
home.
I’ve been studying the 11th
and 12th centuries for my history of
debt, and I came across a story that may have
relevance to the questions that you’ve asked.
NATO keeps claiming that it is a defensive
alliance. But Russia has no desire to invade
Europe. The reason is obvious: No army can
invade a major country. More important, Russia
does not even have a motive to destroy Europe as
a U.S.-puppet adversary. Europe already is
self-destructing.
I am reminded of the
battle of Manzikert in 1071, when the Byzantine
Empire lost to the Seljuk Turks (largely because
its general on whom the emperor had depended,
Andronikos Doukas, defected, and then overthrew
the Emperor. Crusade of Kings, a game
supplement, covers the battle extensively, and
claims the following conversation took place
between Alp Arslan and Romanos:
Alp Arslan:
“What would you do if I were brought before
you as a prisoner?”
Romanos: “Perhaps I’d
kill you, or exhibit you in the streets of
Constantinople.”
Alp Arslan: “My
punishment is far heavier. I forgive you,
and set you free.”
That is the punishment
that Europe will receive from Eurasia. Its
leaders have made their choice: to be a U.S.
satellite.
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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