The IMF
Changes its Rules to Isolate China and Russia
By Michael Hudson
December 18, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- The
nightmare scenario of U.S. geopolitical strategists
seems to be coming true: foreign economic
independence from U.S. control. Instead of
privatizing and neoliberalizing the world under
U.S.-centered financial planning and ownership, the
Russian and Chinese governments are investing in
neighboring economies on terms that cement Eurasian
economic integration on the basis of Russian oil and
tax exports and Chinese financing. The Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) threatens to
replace the IMF and World Bank programs that favor
U.S. suppliers, banks and bondholders (with the
United States holding unique veto power).
Russia’s 2013 loan to Ukraine, made at the request
of Ukraine’s elected pro-Russian government,
demonstrated the benefits of mutual trade and
investment relations between the two countries. As
Russian finance minister Anton Siluanov points out,
Ukraine’s “international reserves were barely enough
to cover three months’ imports, and no other
creditor was prepared to lend on terms acceptable to
Kiev. Yet Russia provided $3 billion of much-needed
funding at a 5 per cent interest rate, when
Ukraine’s bonds were yielding nearly 12 per
cent.”[1]
What especially annoys U.S. financial strategists is
that this loan by Russia’s sovereign debt fund was
protected by IMF lending practice, which at that
time ensured collectability by withholding new
credit from countries in default of foreign official
debts (or at least, not bargaining in good faith to
pay). To cap matters, the bonds are registered under
London’s creditor-oriented rules and courts.
On December 3 (one week before the IMF changed its
rules so as to hurt Russia), Prime Minister Putin
proposed that Russia “and other Eurasian Economic
Union countries should kick-off consultations with
members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO)
and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) on a possible economic partnership.”[2]
Russia also is seeking to build pipelines to Europe
through friendly instead of U.S.-backed countries.
Moving to denominate their trade and investment in
their own currencies instead of dollars, China and
Russia are creating a geopolitical system free from
U.S. control. After U.S. officials threatened to
derange Russia’s banking linkages by cutting it off
from the SWIFT interbank clearing system, China
accelerated its creation of the alternative China
International Payments System (CIPS), with its own
credit card system to protect Eurasian economies
from the shrill threats made by U.S. unilateralists.
Russia and China are simply doing what the United
States has long done: using trade and credit
linkages to cement their geopolitical diplomacy.
This tectonic geopolitical shift is a Copernican
threat to New Cold War ideology: Instead of the
world economy revolving around the United States
(the Ptolemaic idea of America as “the indispensible
nation”), it may revolve around Eurasia. As long as
the global financial papacy remains grounded in
Washington at the offices of the IMF and World Bank,
such a shift in the center of gravity will be fought
with all the power of the American Century (indeed,
American Millennium) inquisition.
Imagine the following scenario five years from now.
China will have spent half a decade building
high-speed railroads, ports power systems and other
construction for Asian and African countries,
enabling them to grow and export more. These exports
will be coming on line to repay the infrastructure
loans. Also, suppose that Russia has been supplying
the oil and gas energy needed for these projects.
To U.S. neocons this specter of AIIB
government-to-government lending and investment
creates fear of a world independent of U.S. control.
Nations would mint their own money and hold each
other’s debt in their international reserves instead
of borrowing or holding dollars and subordinating
their financial planning to the IMF and U.S.
Treasury with their demands for monetary
bloodletting and austerity for debtor countries.
There would be less need for foreign government to
finance budget shortfalls by selling off their key
public infrastructure privatizing their economies.
Instead of dismantling public spending, the AIIB and
a broader Eurasian economic union would do what the
United States itself practices, and seek
self-sufficiency in basic needs such as food,
technology, banking, credit creation and monetary
policy.
With this prospect in mind, suppose an American
diplomat meets with the leaders of debtors to China,
Russia and the AIIB and makes the following
proposal: “Now that you’ve got your increased
production in place, why repay? We’ll make you rich
if you stiff our New Cold War adversaries and turn
to the West. We and our European allies will help
you assign the infrastructure to yourselves and your
supporters, and give these assets market value by
selling shares in New York and London. Then, you can
spend your surpluses in the West.”
How can China or Russia collect in such a situation?
They can sue. But what court will recognize their
claim – that is, what court that the West would pay
attention to?
That is the kind of scenario U.S. State Department
and Treasury officials have been discussing for more
than a year. The looming conflict was made immediate
by Ukraine’s $3 billion debt to Russia falling due
by December 20, 2015. Ukraine’s U.S.-backed regime
has announced its intention to default. U.S.
lobbyists have just changed the IMF rules to remove
a critical lever on which Russia and other
governments have long relied to enforce payment of
their loans.
The IMF’s role as enforcer of inter-government
debts
When it comes down to enforcing nations to pay
inter-government debts, the International Monetary
Fund and Paris Club hold the main leverage. As
coordinator of central bank “stabilization” loans
(the neoliberal euphemism for imposing austerity and
destabilizing debtor economies, Greece-style), the
IMF is able to withhold not only its own credit but
also that of governments and global banks
participating when debtor countries need
refinancing. Countries that do not agree to
privatize their infrastructure and sell it to
Western buyers are threatened with sanctions, backed
by U.S.-sponsored “regime change” and “democracy
promotion” Maidan-style.
This was the setting on December 8, when Chief IMF
Spokesman Gerry Rice announced: “The IMF’s Executive
Board met today and agreed to change the current
policy on non-toleration of arrears to official
creditors.” The creditor leverage that the IMF has
used 2KillingTheHost_Cover_ruleis that if a nation
is in financial arrears to any government, it cannot
qualify for an IMF loan – and hence, for packages
involving other governments. This has been the
system by which the dollarized global financial
system has worked for half a century. The
beneficiaries have been creditors in US dollars.
In this U.S.-centered worldview, China and Russia
loom as the great potential adversaries – defined as
independent power centers from the United States as
they create the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as
an alternative to NATO, and the AIIB as an
alternative to the IMF and World Bank tandem. The
very name, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank,
implies that transportation systems and other
infrastructure will be financed by governments, not
relinquished into private hands to become
rent-extracting opportunities financed by
U.S.-centered bank credit to turn the rent into a
flow of interest payments.
The focus on a mixed public/private economy sets the
AIIB at odds with the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
and its aim of relinquishing government planning
power to the financial and corporate sector for
their own short-term gains, and above all the aim of
blocking government’s money-creating power and
financial regulation. Chief Nomura economist Richard
Koo, explained the logic of viewing the AIIB as a
threat to the US-controlled IMF: “If the IMF’s rival
is heavily under China’s influence, countries
receiving its support will rebuild their economies
under what is effectively Chinese guidance,
increasing the likelihood they will fall directly or
indirectly under that country’s influence.”[3]
Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov accused the
IMF decision of being “hasty and biased.”[4] But it
had been discussed all year long, calculating a
range of scenarios for a long-term sea change in
international law. The aim of this change is to
isolate not only Russia, but even more China in its
role as creditor to African countries and
prospective AIIB borrowers. U.S. officials walked
into the IMF headquarters in Washington with the
legal equivalent of financial suicide vests, having
decided that the time had come to derail Russia’s
ability to collect on its sovereign loan to Ukraine,
and of even larger import, China’s plan for a New
Silk Road integrating a Eurasian economy independent
of U.S. financial and trade control. Anders Aslund,
senior fellow at the NATO-oriented Atlantic Council,
points out:
The IMF staff started contemplating a rule change in
the spring of 2013 because nontraditional creditors,
such as China, had started providing developing
countries with large loans. One issue was that these
loans were issued on conditions out of line with IMF
practice. China wasn’t a member of the Paris Club,
where loan restructuring is usually discussed, so it
was time to update the rules.
The IMF intended to adopt a new policy in the spring
of 2016, but the dispute over Russia’s $3 billion
loan to Ukraine has accelerated an otherwise slow
decision-making process.[5]
The Wall Street Journal concurred that the
underlying motivation for changing the IMF’s rules
was the threat that Chinese lending would provide an
alternative to IMF loans and its demands for
austerity. “IMF-watchers said the fund was
originally thinking of ensuring China wouldn’t be
able to foil IMF lending to member countries seeking
bailouts as Beijing ramped up loans to developing
economies around the world.”[6] In short, U.S.
strategists have designed a policy to block trade
and financial agreements organized outside of U.S.
control and that of the IMF and World Bank in which
it holds unique veto power.
The plan is simple enough. Trade follows finance,
and the creditor usually calls the tune. That is how
the United States has used the Dollar Standard to
steer Third World trade and investment since World
War II along lines benefiting the U.S. economy.
The cement of trade credit and bank lending is the
ability of creditors to collect on the international
debts being negotiated. That is why the United
States and other creditor nations have used the IMF
as an intermediary to act as “honest broker” for
loan consortia. (“Honest broker” means in practice
being subject to U.S. veto power.) To enforce its
financial leverage, the IMF has long followed the
rule that it will not sponsor any loan agreement or
refinancing for governments that are in default of
debts owed to other governments. However, as the
afore-mentioned Aslund explains, the IMF could
easily change its practice of not lending into
[countries in official] arrears … because it is not
incorporated into the IMF Articles of Agreement,
that is, the IMF statutes. The IMF Executive Board
can decide to change this policy with a simple board
majority. The IMF has lent to Afghanistan, Georgia,
and Iraq in the midst of war, and Russia has no veto
right, holding only 2.39 percent of the votes in the
IMF. When the IMF has lent to Georgia and Ukraine,
the other members of its Executive Board have
overruled Russia.[7]
After the rules change, Aslund later noted, “the IMF
can continue to give Ukraine loans regardless of
what Ukraine does about its credit from Russia,
which falls due on December 20. [8]
Inasmuch as Ukraine’s official debt to Russia’s
sovereign debt fund was not to the U.S. Government,
the IMF announced its rules change as a
“clarification.” Its rule that no country can borrow
if it is in default to (or not seriously negotiating
with) a foreign government was created in the
post-1945 world, and has governed the past seventy
years in which the United States Government,
Treasury officials and/or U.S. bank consortia have
been party to nearly every international bailout or
major loan agreement. What the IMF rule really meant
was that it would not provide credit to countries in
arrears specifically to the U.S. Government, not
those of Russia or China.
Mikhail Delyagin, Director of the Institute of
Globalization Problems, understood the IMF’s double
standard clearly enough: “The Fund will give Kiev a
new loan tranche on one condition that Ukraine
should not pay Russia a dollar under its $3 billion
debt. Legally, everything will be formalized
correctly but they will oblige Ukraine to pay only
to western creditors for political reasons.”[9] It
remains up to the IMF board – and in the end, its
managing director – whether or not to deem a country
creditworthy. The U.S. representative naturally has
always blocked any leaders not beholden to the
United States.
The post-2010 loan packages to Greece are a
notorious case in point. The IMF staff calculated
that Greece could not possibly pay the balance that
was set to bail out foreign banks and bondholders.
Many Board members agreed (and subsequently have
gone public with their whistle-blowing). Their
protests didn’t matter. Dominique Strauss-Kahn
backed the US-ECB position (after President Barack
Obama and Treasury secretary Tim Geithner pointed
out that U.S. banks had written credit default swaps
betting that Greece could pay, and would lose money
if there were a debt writedown). In 2015, Christine
Lagarde also backed the U.S.-European Central Bank
hard line, against staff protests.[10]
IMF executive board member Otaviano Canuto,
representing Brazil, noted that the logic that
“conditions on IMF lending to a country that fell
behind on payments [was to] make sure it kept
negotiating in good faith to reach agreement with
creditors.”[11] Dropping this condition, he said,
would open the door for other countries to insist on
a similar waiver and avoid making serious and
sincere efforts to reach payment agreement with
creditor governments.
A more binding IMF rule is that it cannot lend to
countries at war or use IMF credit to engage in
warfare. Article I of its 1944-45 founding charter
ban the fund from lending to a member state engaged
in civil war or at war with another member state, or
for military purposes in general. But when IMF head
Lagarde made the last IMF loan to Ukraine, in spring
2015, she made a token gesture of stating that she
hoped there would be peace. But President Porochenko
immediately announced that he would step up the
civil war with the Russian-speaking population in
the eastern Donbass region.
The problem is that the Donbass is where most
Ukrainian exports were made, mainly to Russia. That
market is being lost by the junta’s belligerence
toward Russia. This should have blocked Ukraine from
receiving IMF aid. Withholding IMF credit could have
been a lever to force peace and adherence to the
Minsk agreements, but U.S. diplomatic pressure led
that opportunity to be rejected.
The most important IMF condition being violated is
that continued warfare with the East prevents a
realistic prospect of Ukraine paying back new loans.
Aslund himself points to the internal contradictions
at work: Ukraine has achieved budget balance because
the inflation and steep currency depreciation has
drastically eroded its pension costs. The resulting
lower value of pension benefits has led to growing
opposition to Ukraine’s post-Maidan junta. “Leading
representatives from President Petro Poroshenko’s
Bloc are insisting on massive tax cuts, but no more
expenditure cuts; that would cause a vast budget
deficit that the IMF assesses at 9-10 percent of
GDP, that could not possibly be financed.”[12] So
how can the IMF’s austerity budget be followed
without a political backlash?
The IMF thus is breaking four rules: Not lending to
a country that has no visible means to pay back the
loan breaks the “No More Argentinas” rule adopted
after the IMF’s disastrous 2001 loan. Not lending to
countries that refuse in good faith to negotiate
with their official creditors goes against the IMF’s
role as the major tool of the global creditors’
cartel. And the IMF is now lending to a borrower at
war, indeed one that is destroying its export
capacity and hence its balance-of-payments ability
to pay back the loan. Finally, the IMF is lending to
a country that has little likelihood of refuse
carrying out the IMF’s notorious austerity
“conditionalities” on its population – without
putting down democratic opposition in a totalitarian
manner. Instead of being treated as an outcast from
the international financial system, Ukraine is being
welcomed and financed.
The upshot – and new basic guideline for IMF lending
– is to create a new Iron Curtain splitting the
world into pro-U.S. economies going neoliberal, and
all other economies, including those seeking to
maintain public investment in infrastructure,
progressive taxation and what used to be viewed as
progressive capitalism. Russia and China may lend as
much as they want to other governments, but there is
no international vehicle to help secure their
ability to be paid back under what until now has
passed for international law. Having refused to roll
back its own or ECB financial claims on Greece, the
IMF is quite willing to see repudiation of official
debts owed to Russia, China or other countries not
on the list approved by the U.S. neocons who wield
veto power in the IMF, World Bank and similar global
economic institutions now drawn into the U.S. orbit.
Changing its rules to clear the path for the IMF to
make loans to Ukraine and other governments in
default of debts owed to official lenders is rightly
seen as an escalation of America’s New Cold War
against Russia and also its anti-China strategy.
Timing is everything in such ploys. Georgetown
University Law professor and Treasury consultant
Anna Gelpern warned that before the “IMF staff and
executive board [had] enough time to change the
policy on arrears to official creditors,” Russia
might use “its notorious debt/GDP clause to
accelerate the bonds at any time before December, or
simply gum up the process of reforming the IMF’s
arrears policy.”[13] According to this clause, if
Ukraine’s foreign debt rose above 60 percent of GDP,
Russia’s government would have the right to demand
immediate payment. But no doubt anticipating the
bitter fight to come over its attempts to collect on
its loan, President Putin patiently refrained from
exercising this option. He is playing the long game,
bending over backward to accommodate Ukraine rather
than behaving “odiously.”
A more pressing reason deterring the United States
from pressing earlier to change IMF rules was that a
waiver for Ukraine would have opened the legal
floodgates for Greece to ask for a similar waiver on
having to pay the “troika” – the European Central
Bank (ECB), EU commission and the IMF itself – for
the post-2010 loans that have pushed it into a worse
depression than the 1930s. “Imagine the Greek
government had insisted that EU institutions accept
the same haircut as the country’s private
creditors,” Russian finance minister Anton Siluanov
asked. “The reaction in European capitals would have
been frosty. Yet this is the position now taken by
Kiev with respect to Ukraine’s $3 billion eurobond
held by Russia.”[14]
Only after Greece capitulated to eurozone austerity
was the path clear for U.S. officials to change the
IMF rules in their fight to isolate Russia. But
their tactical victory has come at the cost of
changing the IMF’s rules and those of the global
financial system irreversibly. Other countries
henceforth may reject conditionalities, as Ukraine
has done, and ask for write-downs on foreign
official debts.
That was the great fear of neoliberal U.S. and
Eurozone strategists last summer, after all. The
reason for smashing Greece’s economy was to deter
Podemos in Spain and similar movements in Italy and
Portugal from pursuing national prosperity instead
of eurozone austerity. Opening the door to such
resistance by Ukraine is the blowback of America’s
tactic to make a short-term financial hit on Russia
while its balance of payments is down as a result of
collapsing oil and gas prices.
The consequences go far beyond just the IMF. The
fabric of international law itself is being torn
apart. Every action has a reaction in the Newtonian
world of geopolitics. It may not be a bad thing, to
be sure, for the post-1945 global order to be broken
apart by U.S. tactics against Russia, if that is the
catalyst driving other countries to defend their own
economies in the legal and political spheres. It has
been U.S. neoliberals themselves who have catalyzed
the emerging independent Eurasian bloc.
Countering Russia’s ability to collect in
Britain’s law courts
Over the past year the U.S. Treasury and State
Departments have discussed ploys to block Russia
from collecting under British law, where its loans
to Ukraine are registered. Reviewing the repertory
of legal excuses Ukraine might use to avoid paying
Russia, Prof. Gelpern noted that it might declare
the debt “odious,” made under duress or corruptly.
In a paper for the Peterson Institute of
International Economics (the banking lobby in
Washington) she suggested that Britain should deny
Russia the use of its courts as an additional
sanction reinforcing the financial, energy, and
trade sanctions to those passed against Russia after
Crimea voted to join it as protection against the
ethnic cleansing from the Right Sector, Azov
Battalion and other paramilitary groups descending
on the region.[15]
A kindred ploy might be for Ukraine to countersue
Russia for reparations for “invading” it, for saving
Crimea and the Donbass region from the Right
Sector’s attempt to take over the country. Such a
ploy would seem to have little chance of success in
international courts (without showing them to be
simply arms of NATO New Cold War politics), but it
might delay Russia’ ability to collect by tying the
loan up in a long nuisance lawsuit.
To claim that Ukraine’s debt to Russia was “odious”
or otherwise illegitimate, “President Petro
Poroshenko said the money was intended to ensure
Yanukovych’s loyalty to Moscow, and called the
payment a ‘bribe,’ according to an interview with
Bloomberg in June this year.”[16] The legal and
moral problem with such arguments is that they would
apply equally to IMF and US loans. Claiming that
Russia’s loan is “odious” is that this would open
the floodgates for other countries to repudiate
debts taken on by dictatorships supported by IMF and
U.S. lenders, headed by the many dictatorships
supported by U.S. diplomacy.
The blowback from the U.S. multi-front attempt to
nullify Ukraine’s debt may be used to annul or at
least write down the destructive IMF loans made on
the condition that borrowers accept privatizations
favoring U.S., German and other NATO-country
investors, undertake austerity programs, and buy
weapons systems such as the German submarines that
Greece borrowed to pay for. As Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov noted: “This reform, which they are
now trying to implement, designed to suit Ukraine
only, could plant a time bomb under all other IMF
programs.” It certainly showed the extent to which
the IMF is subordinate to U.S. aggressive New Cold
Warriors: “Essentially, this reform boils down to
the following: since Ukraine is politically
important – and it is only important because it is
opposed to Russia – the IMF is ready to do for
Ukraine everything it has not done for anyone else,
and the situation that should 100 percent mean a
default will be seen as a situation enabling the IMF
to finance Ukraine.”[17]
Andrei Klimov, deputy chairman of the Committee for
International Affairs at the Federation Council (the
upper house of Russia’s parliament) accused the
United States of playing “the role of the main
violin in the IMF while the role of the second
violin is played by the European Union. These are
two basic sponsors of the Maidan – the symbol of a
coup d’état in Ukraine in 2014.”[18]
Putin’s counter-strategy and the blowback on
U.S.-European and global relations
As noted above, having anticipated that Ukraine
would seek reasons to not pay the Russian loan,
President Putin carefully refrained from exercising
Russia’s right to demand immediate payment when
Ukraine’s foreign debt rose above 60 percent of GDP.
In November he offered to defer payment if the
United States, Europe and international banks
underwrote the obligation. Indeed, he even “proposed
better conditions for this restructuring than those
the International Monetary Fund requested of us.” He
offered “to accept a deeper restructuring with no
payment this year – a payment of $1 billion next
year, $1 billion in 2017, and $1 billion in 2018.”
If the IMF, the United States and European Union
“are sure that Ukraine’s solvency will grow,” then
they should “see no risk in providing guarantees for
this credit.” Accordingly, he concluded “We have
asked for such guarantees either from the United
States government, the European Union, or one of the
big international financial institutions.” [19]
The implication, Putin pointed out, was that “If
they cannot provide guarantees, this means that they
do not believe in the Ukrainian economy’s future.”
One professor pointed out that this proposal was in
line with the fact that, “Ukraine has already
received a sovereign loan guarantee from the United
States for a previous bond issue.” Why couldn’t the
United States, Eurozone or leading commercial banks
provide a similar guarantee of Ukraine’s debt to
Russia – or better yet, simply lend it the money to
turn it into a loan to the IMF or US lenders?[20]
But the IMF, European Union and the United States
refused to back up their happy (but nonsensical)
forecasts of Ukrainian solvency with actual
guarantees. Foreign Minister Lavrov made clear just
what that rejection meant: “By having refused to
guarantee Ukraine’s debt as part of Russia’s
proposal to restructure it, the United States
effectively admitted the absence of prospects of
restoring its solvency. … By officially rejecting
the proposed scheme, the United States thereby
subscribed to not seeing any prospects of Ukraine
restoring its solvency.”[21]
In an even more exasperated tone, Prime Minister
Dmitri Medvedev explained to Russia’s television
audience: “I have a feeling that they won’t give us
the money back because they are crooks. They refuse
to return our money and our Western partners not
only refuse to help, but they also make it difficult
for us.”[22] Adding that “the international
financial system is unjustly structured,” he
promised to “go to court. We’ll push for default on
the loan and we’ll push for default on all Ukrainian
debts.”
The basis for Russia’s legal claim, he explained was
that the loan was a request from the Ukrainian
Government to the Russian Government. If two
governments reach an agreement this is obviously a
sovereign loan…. Surprisingly, however,
international financial organisations started saying
that this is not exactly a sovereign loan. This is
utter bull. Evidently, it’s just an absolutely
brazen, cynical lie. … This seriously erodes trust
in IMF decisions. I believe that now there will be a
lot of pleas from different borrower states to the
IMF to grant them the same terms as Ukraine. How
will the IMF possibly refuse them?
And there the matter stands. As President Putin
remarked regarding America’s support of Al Qaeda, Al
Nusra and other ISIS allies in Syria, “Do you have
any idea of what you have done?”
The blowback
Few have calculated the degree to which America’s
New Cold War with Russia is creating a reaction that
is tearing up the world’s linkages put in place
since World War II. Beyond pulling the IMF and World
Bank tightly into U.S. unilateralist geopolitics,
how long will Western Europe be willing to forego
its trade and investment interest with Russia?
Germany, Italy and France already are feeling the
strains. If and when a break comes, it will not be
marginal but a seismic geopolitical shift.
The oil and pipeline war designed to bypass Russian
energy exports has engulfed the Near East in anarchy
for over a decade. It is flooding Europe with
refugees, and also spreading terrorism to America.
In the Republican presidential debate on December
15, 2015, the leading issue was safety from Islamic
jihadists. Yet no candidate thought to explain the
source of this terrorism in America’s alliance with
Wahabist Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and hence with Al
Qaeda and ISIS/Daish as a means of destabilizing
secular regimes seeking independence from U.S.
control.
As its allies in this New Cold War, the United
States has chosen fundamentalist jihadist religion
against secular regimes in Libya, Iraq, Syria, and
earlier in Afghanistan and Turkey. Going back to the
original sin of CIA hubris – overthrowing the
secular Iranian Prime Minister leader Mohammad
Mosaddegh in 1953 – American foreign policy has been
based on the assumption that secular regimes tend to
be nationalist and resist privatization and
neoliberal austerity.
Based on this fatal long-term assumption, U.S. Cold
Warriors have aligned themselves not only against
secular regimes, but against democratic regimes
where these seek to promote their own prosperity and
economic independence, and to resist neoliberalism
in favor of maintaining their traditional mixed
public/private economy.
This is the back story of the U.S. fight to control
the rest of the world. Tearing apart the IMF’s rules
is only the most recent chapter. The broad drive
against Russia, China and their prospective Eurasian
allies has deteriorated into tactics without a
realistic understanding of how they are bringing
about precisely the kind of world they are seeking
to prevent – a multilateral world.
Arena by arena, the core values of what used to be
American and European social democratic ideology are
being uprooted. The Enlightenment’s ideals of
secular democracy and the rule of international law
applied equally to all nations, classical free
market theory (of markets free from unearned income
and rent extraction by special vested interests),
and public investment in infrastructure to hold down
the cost of living and doing business are to be
sacrificed to a militant U.S. unilateralism as “the
indispensible nation.” Standing above the rule of
law and national interests, American neocons
proclaim that their nation’s destiny is to wage war
to prevent foreign secular democracy from acting in
ways other than submission to U.S. diplomacy. In
practice, this means favoring special U.S. financial
and corporate interests that control American
foreign policy.
This is not how the Enlightenment was supposed to
turn out. Classical industrial capitalism a century
ago was expected to evolve into an economy of
abundance. Instead, we have Pentagon capitalism,
finance capitalism deteriorating into a polarized
rentier economy, and old-fashioned imperialism.
The Dollar Bloc’s financial Iron Curtain
By treating Ukraine’s nullification of its official
debt to Russia’s Sovereign Wealth Fund as the new
norm, the IMF has blessed its default on its bond
payment to Russia. President Putin and foreign
minister Lavrov have said that they will sue in
British courts. But does any court exist in the West
not under the thumb of U.S. veto?
What are China and Russia to do, faced with the IMF
serving as a kangaroo court whose judgments are
subject to U.S. veto power? To protect their
autonomy and self-determination, they have created
alternatives to the IMF and World Bank, NATO and
behind it, the dollar standard.
America’s recent New Cold War maneuvering has shown
that the two Bretton Woods institutions are
unreformable. It is easier to create new
institutions such as the A.I.I.B. than to retrofit
old and ill-designed ones burdened with the legacy
of their vested founding interests. It is easier to
expand the Shanghai Cooperation Organization than to
surrender to threats from NATO.
U.S. geostrategists seem to have imagined that if
they exclude Russia, China and other SCO and
Eurasian countries from the U.S.-based financial and
trade system, these countries will find themselves
in the same economic box as Cuba, Iran and other
countries have been isolated by sanctions. The aim
is to make countries choose between impoverishment
from such exclusion, or acquiescing in U.S.
neoliberal drives to financialize their economies
and impose austerity on their government sector and
labor.
What is lacking from such calculations is the idea
of critical mass. The United States may use the IMF
and World Bank as levers to exclude countries not in
the U.S. orbit from participating in the global
trade and financial system, and it may arm-twist
Europe to impose trade and financial sanctions on
Russia. But this action produces an equal and
opposite reaction. That is the eternal Newtonian law
of geopolitics. The indicated countermeasure is
simply for other countries to create their own
international financial organization as an
alternative to the IMF, their own “aid” lending
institution to juxtapose to the U.S.-centered World
Bank.
All this requires an international court to handle
disputes that is free from U.S. arm-twisting to turn
international law into a kangaroo court following
the dictates of Washington. The Eurasian Economic
Union now has its own court to adjudicate disputes.
It may provide an alternative Judge Griesa‘s New
York federal court ruling in favor of vulture funds
derailing Argentina’s debt negotiations and
excluding it from foreign financial markets. If the
London Court of International Arbitration (under
whose rules Russia’s bonds issued to Ukraine are
registered) permits frivolous legal claims (called
barratry in English) such as President Poroshenko
has threatened in Ukrainian Parliament, it too will
become a victim of geopolitical obsolescence.
The more nakedly self-serving and geopolitical U.S.
policy is – in backing radical Islamic
fundamentalist outgrowths of Al Qaeda throughout the
Near East, right-wing nationalist governments in
Ukraine and the Baltics – the greater the catalytic
pressure is growing for the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, AIIB and related Eurasian institutions
to break free of the post-1945 Bretton Woods system
run by the U.S. State, Defense and Treasury
Departments and NATO superstructure.
The question now is whether Russia and China can
hold onto the BRICS and India. So as Paul Craig
Roberts recently summarized my ideas along these
lines, we are back with George Orwell’s 1984 global
fracture between Oceanea (the United States, Britain
and its northern European NATO allies) vs. Eurasia.
Michael Hudson is President of The
Institute for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trends
(ISLET), a Wall Street Financial Analyst,
Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the
University of Missouri, Kansas City and author of
Killing the Host (2015), The
Bubble and Beyond (2012), Super-Imperialism: The
Economic Strategy of American Empire (1968 & 2003),
Trade, Development and Foreign Debt (1992 & 2009)
and of The Myth of Aid (1971), amongst
many others. -
http://michael-hudson.com
Notes.
[1] Anton Siluanov, “Russia wants fair rules on
sovereign debt,” Financial Times, December 10, 2015.
[2] “Putin Seeks Alliance to Rival TPP,” RT.com
(December 04 2015),
https://www.rt.com/business/324747-putin-tpp-bloc-russia/
. The Eurasian Economic Union was created in 2014 by
Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan, soon joined by
Kyrgyzstan and Armenia. The SCO was created in 2001
in Shanghai by the leaders of China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
India and Pakistan are scheduled to join, along with
Iran, Afghanistan and Belarus as observers, and
other east and Central Asian countries as “dialogue
partners.” ASEAN was formed in 1967, originally by
Indonesia, Malaysia the Philippines, Singapore and
Thailand. It subsequently has been expanded. China
and the AIIB are reaching out to replace World Bank.
The U.S. refused to join the AIIB, opposing it from
the outset.
[3] Richard Koo, “EU refuses to acknowledge mistakes
made in Greek bailout,” Nomura, July 14, 2015.
Richard Koo, r-koo@nri.co, jp
[4] Ian Talley, “IMF Tweaks Lending Rules in Boost
for Ukraine,” Wall Street Journal, December 9, 2015.
[5] Anders Aslund, “The IMF Outfoxes Putin: Policy
Change Means Ukraine Can Receive More Loans,”
Atlantic Council, December 8, 2015. On Johnson’s
Russia List, December 9, 2015, #13. Aslund was a
major defender of neoliberal shock treatment and
austerity in Russia, and has held up Latvian
austerity as a success story rather than a disaster.
[6] Ian Talley, op. cit.
[7] Anders Åslund, “Ukraine Must Not Pay Russia
Back,” Atlantic Council, November 2, 2015 (from
Johnson’s Russia List, November 3, 2015, #50).
[8] Anders Aslund, “The IMF Outfoxes Putin,” op.
cit.
[9] Quoted in Tamara Zamyantina, “IMF’s dilemma: to
help or not to help Ukraine, if Kiev defaults,” TASS,
translated on Johnson’s Russia List, December 9,
2015, #9.
[10] I provide a narrative of the Greek disaster in
Killing the Host (2015).
[11] Reuters, “IMF rule change keeps Ukraine
support; Russia complains,” Dec 8, 2015.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-crisis-imf-idUSKBN0TR28Q20151208#r8em59ZOcIPIkqaD.97
[12] Anders Aslund, “The IMF Outfoxes Putin,” op.
cit.
[13] Anna Gelpern, “Russia’s Bond: It’s Official! (…
and Private … and Anything Else It Wants to Be …),”
Credit Slips, April 17, 2015.
http://www.creditslips.org/creditslips/2015/04/russias-ukraine-bond-its-official-and-private-and-anything-else-it-wants-to-be-.html
[14] Anton Siluanov, “Russia wants fair rules on
sovereign debt,” Financial Times, December 10, 2015.
He added: “Russia’s financing was not made for
commercial gain. Just as America and Britain
regularly do, it provided assistance to a country
whose policies it supported. The US is now
supporting the current Ukrainian government through
its USAID guarantee programme.”
[15] John Helmer: IMF Makes Ukraine War-Fighting
Loan, Allows US to Fund Military Operations Against
Russia, May Repay Gazprom Bill,” Naked Capitalism,
March 16, 2015 (from his site Dances with Bears).
[16] “Ukraine Rebuffs Putin’s Offer to Restructure
Russian Debt,” Moscow Times, November 20, 2015, from
Johnson’s Russia List, November 20, 2015, #32.
[17] “Lavrov: U.S. admits lack of prospects of
restoring Ukrainian solvency,” Interfax, November 7,
2015, translated on Johnson’s Russia List, December
7, 2015, #38.
[18] Quoted by Tamara Zamyantina, “IMF’s dilemma,”
op. cit. [fn 8].
[19] Vladimir Putin, “Responses to journalists’
questions following the G20 summit,” Kremlin.ru,
November 16, 2015. From Johnson’s Russia List,
November 17, 2015, #7.
[20] Anton Tabakh, “A Debt Deal for Kiev?” Carnegie
Moscow Center, November 20, 2015, on Johnson’s
Russia List, November 20, 2015, #34. Tabakh is
Director for regional ratings at “Rus-Rating” and
associate professor at the National Research
University Higher School of Economics, Moscow.
[21] “Lavrov: U.S. admits lack of prospects of
restoring Ukrainian solvency,” November 7, 2015,
translated on Johnson’s Russia List, December 7,
2015, #38.
[22] “In Conversation with Dmitry Medvedev:
Interview with five television channels,”
Government.ru, December 9, 2015, from Johnson’s
Russia List, December 10, 2015, #2
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