More
Confessions of an Economic Hitman: This Time They’re
Coming for Your Democracy
By Sarah van
Gelder
April 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Huffington
Post"-
Twelve
years ago, John Perkins published his book,
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, and it
rapidly rose up The New York Times’
best-seller list. In it, Perkins describes his
career convincing heads of state to adopt economic
policies that impoverished their countries and
undermined democratic institutions. These policies
helped to enrich tiny, local elite groups while
padding the pockets of U.S.-based transnational
corporations.
Photo by Paul Dunn for
YES! Magazine
Perkins was
recruited, he says, by the National Security Agency
(NSA), but he worked for a private consulting
company. His job as an undertrained, overpaid
economist was to generate reports that justified
lucrative contracts for U.S. corporations, while
plunging vulnerable nations into debt. Countries
that didn’t cooperate saw the screws tightened on
their economies. In Chile, for example, President
Richard Nixon famously called on the CIA to “make
the economy scream” to undermine the prospects of
the democratically elected president, Salvador
Allende.
If economic
pressure and threats didn’t work, Perkins says, the
jackals were called to either overthrow or
assassinate the noncompliant heads of state. That
is, indeed, what happened to Allende, with the
backing of the CIA.
Perkins’
book has been controversial, and some have disputed
some of his claims, including, for example, that the
NSA was involved in activities beyond code making
and breaking.
Perkins has
just reissued his book with major updates. The basic
premise of the book remains the same, but the update
shows how the economic hit man approach has evolved
in the last 12 years. Among other things, U.S.
cities are now on the target list. The combination
of debt, enforced austerity, underinvestment,
privatization, and the undermining of democratically
elected governments is now happening here.
I couldn’t
help but think about Flint, Michigan, under
emergency management as I read The New Confessions
of an Economic Hit Man.
I
interviewed Perkins at his home in the Seattle area.
In addition to being a recovering economic hit man,
he is a grandfather and a founder and board member
of Dream Change and The Pachamama Alliance,
organizations that work for “a world that future
generations will want to inherit.”
Sarah van Gelder:
What’s changed in our world since you wrote the
first Confessions of an Economic Hit Man?
John Perkins:
Things have just gotten so much worse in the last 12
years since the first Confessions was written.
Economic hit men and jackals have expanded
tremendously, including the United States and
Europe.
Back in my
day we were pretty much limited to what we called
the third world, or economically developing
countries, but now it’s everywhere.
And in
fact, the cancer of the corporate empire has
metastasized into what I would call a failed global
death economy. This is an economy that’s based on
destroying the very resources upon which it depends,
and upon the military. It’s become totally global,
and it’s a failure.
van Gelder:
So how has this switched from us
being the beneficiaries of this hit-man economy,
perhaps in the past, to us now being more of the
victims of it?
Perkins:
It’s been interesting because, in the past, the
economic hit man economy was being propagated in
order to make America wealthier and presumably to
make people here better off, but as this whole
process has expanded in the U.S. and Europe, what
we’ve seen is a tremendous growth in the very
wealthy at the expense of everybody else.
On a global
basis we now know that 62 individuals have as many
assets as half the world’s population.
We of
course in the U.S. have seen how our government is
frozen, it’s just not working. It’s controlled by
the big corporations and they’ve really taken over.
They’ve understood that the new market, the new
resource, is the U.S. and Europe, and the incredibly
awful things that have happened to Greece and
Ireland and Iceland, are now happening here in the
U.S.
We’re
seeing this situation where we can have what
statistically shows economic growth, and at the same
time increased foreclosures on homes and
unemployment.
van Gelder:
Is this the same kind of dynamic about debt that
leads to emergency managers who then turn over the
reins of the economy to private enterprises? The
same thing that you are seeing in third-world
countries?
Perkins:
Yes, when I was an economic hit man,
one of the things that we did, we raised these huge
loans for these countries, but the money never
actually went to the countries, it went to our own
corporations to build infrastructure in those
countries. And when the countries could not pay off
their debt, we insisted that they privatize their
water systems, their sewage systems, their electric
systems.
Now we’re
seeing that same thing happen in the United States.
Flint, Michigan, is a very good example of that.
This is not a U.S. empire, it’s a corporate empire
protected and supported by the U.S. military and the
CIA. But it is not an American empire, it’s not
helping Americans. It’s exploiting us in the same
way that we used to exploit all these other
countries around the world.
van Gelder:
So it seems like Americans are
starting to get this. What is your sense about where
the American public is in terms of readiness to do
something?
Perkins:
As I travel around the U.S., as I travel around the
world, I see that people are really waking up. We’re
getting it. We’re understanding that we live on a
very fragile space station, and it’s got no
shuttles; we can’t get off. We’ve got to fix it,
we’ve got to take care of it, and we’re in the
process of destroying it. The big corporations are
destroying it, but the big corporations are just run
by people, and they’re vulnerable to us. If we
really consider it, the market place is a democracy,
if we just use it as such.
van Gelder:
I want to push back on that one a
little bit because so many corporations don’t sell
to ordinary consumers, they sell to other companies
or to governments, and so many corporations have
such an entrenched reward system where if one person
doesn’t perform by exploiting the earth they’ll
simply get replaced with somebody else who does.
Perkins:
I’ve recently been speaking at a number of corporate
conferences. I hear time after time after time that
many of them want to leave a green legacy. They’ve
got children, they’ve got grandchildren, they
understand we can’t go on like this.
The big
corporations are destroying it, but the big
corporations are just run by people, and they’re
vulnerable to us.
So what they say is, “Go out there, start consumer
movements. What I want is to receive a hundred
thousand emails from my customers saying, ‘Hey, I
love your product but I’m not going to buy it
anymore until you pay your workers a fair wage in
Indonesia, or wherever, or clean up the environment,
or do something.’ And then I can take that to my
board of directors and my big stockholders, to the
people who really control whether I get hired or
fired.”
van Gelder:
Those campaigns, as you know, have been going on for
decades now, and sometimes they result in small
changes around the edge. But there’s enormous
resistance from corporate executives because of the
profits to be made in continuing the system as is.
Perkins:
I think we’ve seen tremendous changes, though. Just
in the last few years, we’ve seen organic foods
become very big. Twenty years ago they couldn’t make
a go of it. We’ve seen women having bigger positions
in corporations, and minorities, and we need to get
better at this.
We’ve seen
the labeling of many foods. GMOs aren’t included
yet, but nutrition and calories and so forth are.
And what we really need to do is convince
corporations that they’ve got to have a new goal.
We’ve got
to let corporations know what their job is: It’s to
serve a public interest, and make a decent rate of
return for investors. We need investors, but beyond
that, every corporation should serve a public
interest, should serve the earth, should serve
future generations.
van Gelder:
I want to ask you about the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, and other trade deals. Is
there any way that we can beat these things back so
they don’t continue supercharging the corporate
sphere at the expense of local democracies?
Perkins:
They’re devastating; they give sovereignty to
corporations over governments. It’s ridiculous.
We’ve got
to let corporations know what their job is: It’s to
serve a public interest, and make a decent rate of
return for investors.
We’re
seeing terrible desperation from people in Central
America trying to get away from a system that’s
broken, primarily because our trade agreements and
our policies toward Latin America have broken them.
And we’re seeing, of course, those similar things in
the Middle East and in Africa, these waves of
immigrants that are swarming into Europe from the
Middle East. These terrible problems that have been
created because of the greed of big corporations.
I was just
in Central America and what we talk about in the
U.S. as being an immigration problem is really a
trade agreement problem.
They’re not
allowed to impose tariffs under the trade
agreements—NAFTA and CAFTA—but the U.S. is allowed
to subsidize its farmers. Those governments can’t
afford to subsidize their farmers. So our farmers
can undercut theirs, and that’s destroyed the
economies, and a number of other things, and that’s
why we’ve got immigration problems.
van Gelder:
Can you talk about the violence that people are
fleeing in Central America, and how that links back
to the role the U.S. has had there?
Perkins:
Three or four years ago the CIA
orchestrated a coup against the democratically
elected president of Honduras, President Zelaya,
because he stood up to Dole and Chiquita and some
other big, global, basically U.S.-based
corporations.
He wasn’t
assassinated but he was overthrown in a coup and
sent to another country.
He wanted to raise the minimum wage to a reasonable
level, and he wanted some land reform that would
make sure that his own people were able to make
money off their own land, rather than having big
international corporations do it.
The big
corporations couldn’t stand for this. He wasn’t
assassinated but he was overthrown in a coup and
sent to another country, and replaced by a terribly
brutal dictator, and today Honduras is one of the
most violent, homicidal countries in the hemisphere.
It’s
frightening what we’ve done. And when that happens
to a president, it sends a message to every other
president throughout the hemisphere, and in fact
throughout the world: Don’t mess with us. Don’t mess
with the big corporations. Either cooperate and get
rich in the process, and have all your friends and
family get rich in the process, or go get overthrown
or assassinated. It’s a very strong message.
van Gelder:
Tell me about your time spent in
Ecuador with indigenous people. I’m wondering if you
could talk about how that experience has changed
you?
Perkins:
Many years ago when I was a Peace
Corps volunteer in the Amazon with the Shuar
indigenous people there, I was dying. I got very
ill, and my life was saved in one night by a shaman.
I’d come out of business school this is 1968, ‘69,
and I had no idea what a shaman was, but it changed
my life by helping me understand that what was
killing me was a mindset—what they would call the
dream.
I spent
many years studying all this, and working with many
different indigenous groups, and what I saw was the
power of the mindset.
The shamans
teach us—the indigenous people teach us—once you
change the mindset, then it’s pretty easy to have
the objective reality change around it. So, instead
of the kind of economy we have now, a death economy,
if we can change the mindset we can very quickly
move into a life economy.
van Gelder:
So what are the mechanisms by which a change in
consciousness actually shifts things on the ground?
Perkins:
Well, in my opinion the biggest
catalyst that needs to go forward to change this is
we’ve got to change the corporations. We’ve got to
move from that goal that was stated by Milton
Friedman in the 1970s, that the only responsibility
of corporations is to maximize profits regardless of
social and environmental costs.
We change
the big corporations by telling them we’re not going
to buy from you anymore unless you change your goal.
No longer should your goal be to maximize profits
regardless of social and environmental costs. Make a
decent rate of return for your investors, but serve
us, we the people, or we’re not buying from you.
van Gelder:
You quote Tom Paine in your book: “If
there must be trouble let it be in my day that my
child may have peace.” Why did you decide to use
that quote?
Perkins:
Well, I think Tom Paine was brilliant
in that statement. He understood how that would
impact people. And he wrote that statement in
December 1776.
Washington
had lost just about every battle he ever fought; he
wasn’t getting any support from the Continental
Congress; they weren’t giving his men guns or
ammunition or even blankets and shoes, and he was
bogged down at Valley Forge. Paine realizes that
he’s got to somehow write something that will rally
people, and there’s nothing that rallies people more
than to think about their children
That to me
is where we’re at right now. I’ve got a daughter and
I’ve got an 8-year-old grandson. Bring on the
trouble for me, OK, but let’s create a world they’re
going to want to live in. And let’s understand that
my 8-year-old grandson cannot have an
environmentally sustainable and regenerative,
socially just, fulfilling world unless every child
on the planet has that.
And this is
new. It used to be all we had to worry about was our
local community, maybe our country. But we didn’t
have to worry about the world. But what we know now
is that we can’t have peace anywhere in the world,
we can’t have peace in the U.S., unless everybody
has peace.
Sarah
van Gelder wrote this article for
YES! Magazine. Sarah is co-founder and editor at
large of YES! Follow her on Twitter @sarahvangelder. |