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Bankers go to Baghdad

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Bankers go to Baghdad


October 25, 2004
By Patrick Bond

The World Bank and International Monetary Fund's annual meeting in Washington earlier this month witnessed the members' rejection of two big ideas - debt cancellation and institutional democratisation. No surprise. There wasn't much pressure from either Third World finance ministers or the US branch of the global justice movement (apparently in hibernation until 3 November).

However, important financial developments are now unfolding, reflective of Washington's geopolitical imperatives in Iraq. Bank and IMF activity there was relegitimised at the annual meeting, but in a contradictory and untenable manner.

A recent IMF report on Iraq claimed that 'macroeconomic stability' has been achieved and the economy will have grown 52% in 2004. This was in part justification for the IMF's recent $436 million loan to the Washington-imposed Baghdad regime. The report also revealed that the IMF has been coordinating macroeconomic technical assistance, drawing together a team from the Bank, US Treasury, US AID, the British Department for International Development and the Bank of England.

Another IMF justification was that after the invasion, 'A number of important policy reforms then began to be implemented to facilitate progress toward a more market-oriented economy. These reforms included the completion of a national currency exchange, the approval of new central bank and commercial bank laws, the liberalization of interest rates, approval of a foreign direct investment law, the establishment of the Trade Bank of Iraq, the passage of the Financial Management Law and a new tax law, and the simplification of the trade regime.'

These measures, introduced by viceroy Paul Bremer, not only represent legalized looting, but also appear totally ineffectual for the attraction of foreign investment, as is brilliantly documented in Naomi Klein's new Harpers magazine article 'Baghdad Year Zero: Pillaging Iraq in pursuit of a neocon utopia' (http://www.harpers.org/BaghdadYearZero.html).

Also last week, speaking at the UN Economic Commission on Africa in Addis Ababa, Bank president James Wolfensohn predicted his institution would push more than $400 million to the US-imposed Baghdad regime by the end of 2004: 'Obviously all of this is to some extent held up by the situation on the ground because it is not easy to operate. So far as the lending from the Bank is concerned, which will be $5 billion, the Iraqis are looking at grants first because if they can get grants, it is money for nothing and does not increase the debt burden, which is already very high at about $120 billion.'

As an aside, that vast debt burden was being unevenly reduced by the efforts of US special envoy James Baker - until, that is, Klein blew the whistle through her investigative report in Britain's Guardian newspaper, also last week. Baker's Carlyle Group was then forced to withdraw from a consortium which sneakily offered to help Kuwait reclaim $27 billion from the Iraqi people at the same time Baker was trying to get French, German and Russian debt relief for Iraq. A more blatant scam could hardly be found, outside a Paul Erdman novel.

Does the Bank have anyone as unethical and hardnosed as a Baker, Richard Armitage or John Negroponte to guide the vast sums of new loans to their primary destination: US contractor profits? And will a future democratic government in Baghdad have the guts to formally declare today's Bank and IMF loans 'odious' - just as odious as Saddam's debts - and hence not liable for repayment?

(Notwithstanding South African president Thabo Mbeki's stance against reparations for odious apartheid-era lending, the country's Jubilee campaigners continue making the same plea, in the ongoing lawsuits against US and European bankers.)

Hypocrisy on debt relief - Iraq gets waves, Africa only trickles - worries not only excellent groups like Jubilee South and the 50 Years is Enough network, who insist on 100% cancellation. In early October even Malawi's neoliberal finance minister Goodal Gondwe complained of double standards during the IMF/Bank meetings: 'What I am afraid of is that putting Nigeria together with Iraq we may emphasize for sentimental reasons that are currently in the air politically, that talking about Iraq could be at the expense of Nigeria.'

The man the Bank chose for loan-pushing in a highly risky Baghdad environment is Christiaan Poortman, vice president for the Middle East and North Africa region, and a former Bank country director in the Balkans. I came across Poortman in Zimbabwe, and am compelled to pass along some warnings to Iraqi readers of ZNet about his work there as Resident Representative during the early 1990s, especially if the Bank also takes on more 'donor coordination' functions.

Poortman, after all, already runs the multi-donor Iraq Trust Fund and disbursed $60 million in grants for school building and repair last week. He pledged $150 million in resources for water and sanitation, and, according to the Bank press office, 'also said he wants to turn some of the money pledged into financing for electrical and water projects that will be left unfunded because of the transfer of funds earmarked by the US for reconstruction to security spending.'

A year ago, the Bank and United Nations estimated that $35.8 billion would be required to meet Iraqi needs. Typical advice in their 'Joint Iraq Needs Assessment' was 'to  encourage private sector participation in the State Owned Enterpises (SOEs) along with separating the ownership responsibilities of government from its policy and operating responsibilities. SOEs that are internationally viable will eventually be able to shoulder higher input prices as trade liberalization frees controls on their output prices. Other

SOEs will ultimately face adjustment pressures from the hardened budget constraints.'

Zimbabweans will recognise this sort of language. The country's health minister during the 1990s, Dr Timothy Stamps, reported that spending on health was down by 37% per person from 1990-93, because Poortman considered health a social expenditure which 'had to be cut'. The government of Robert Mugabe had become 'so miserly that we are killing ourselves because we want to save a few cents,' Stamps admitted.

This was just one of several problems Poortman faced winning hearts and minds in Harare. When the IMF and World Bank insisted on tighter monetary policy in 1991, interest rates on certain government securities rose from 27% to 44% in a single day, which shattered business confidence and caused stock market and property sector crashes.

Hence even conservatives grew fed up with the ineffectual 'economic structural adjustment policy' (termed ESAP) imposed from Washington. Financial Times correspondent Tony Hawkins - also head of the local university's business school - condemned Poortman's dubious macroeconomic analysis in 1993:  'Every year, the World Bank officials dutifully prepare invariably over-optimistic assessments designed to show the worst is past and that the client state, whose economy is under the microscope, is on the brink of sustained recovery.'

Hawkins renewed his criticism in 1995: 'The World Bank's conduct in the Zimbabwean case raises a very serious issue. If the Bank had done its job properly, then Zimbabwe's budget and public sector crises need not have reached the dimensions that they have since. The debt burden would be less; the new taxes to be imposed would be less severe and the public spending cuts less drastic... The Bank has needlessly delivered 11 million Zimbabweans into the hands of harsher austerity than should have been necessary'.

The editor of a local business paper, Iden Wetherell, agreed: 'Everybody repeats the official mythology that the recent drought has slightly derailed ESAP, while insisting (the wish being father to the thought) that economic reform is otherwise on course. The most notable representative of this starry-eyed approach is the World Bank's chief in Harare, Mr Christiaan Poortman. His emollient statements over the past 18 months reflect the devotion of a faith unmoved by facts.'

Myopically, in a review of the Bank's impact during Poortman's stint, an internal reported boasted that Poortman had 'fostered an awareness of the need for a broad-based economic policy reform'. Indeed, 'informal work and advice provided by the Resident Mission was instrumental' in shaping ESAP even prior to Poortman's arrival.

The following promises were extracted from Mugabe by the Bank and IMF in the 1991 design of ESAP: by the end of 1995 there would be a 25% cut in the civil service, and the demise of all labour restrictions, price controls, exchange controls, interest rate controls, investment regulations, import restrictions, and government subsidies. Most were accomplished. By 1995 'rapid privatisation of the key parastatals' providing telecommunications, electricity, water and transportation had become one of the Bank's central demands.

The Bank's 1995 Project Completion Report for ESAP gave the best possible final grade for the first stage of the utterly failed programme:  'highly satisfactory.' The Bank acknowledged playing 'a key role in the dissemination of the programme and in building support amongst the wider donor community.' Hence Bank staff also rated their own performance as 'highly satisfactory' (again, top marks) for identification and appraisal, and 'satisfactory' for preparation assistance and supervision.

In the book Zimbabwe's Plunge (Merlin Press, 2003), my coauthor Simba Manyanya and I looked back a decade on Poortman's role, and argued that ESAP fatally weakened the state's developmental capacities. Social desperation worsened - Poortman's reign included the first of several major 'IMF Riots' in Harare - and ESAP was, in any case, unsuccessful in stimulating investment and capital accumulation.

All indicators of economic activity and social progress worsened during Poortman's stay. Zimbabwe's exemplary social policy during the 1980s - reducing infant mortality from 86 to 49 per 1,000 live births, raising the immunisation rate from 25% to 80% and life expectancy from 56 to 62 years, doubling primary school enrollment, etc - witnessed ominous reversals.

In turn, Poortman and his colleagues created the conditions under which an official opposition based on the urban poor and workers emerged finally in 1999, leading Mugabe to zig-zag into left-rhetorical authoritarianism in early 2000, as he desperately sought to retain power and patronage within a crumbling economy.

Simba was chief economist in Zimbabwe's finance ministry but by the end of the 1990s became so fed up with Mugabe's blunders and awful 'advice' imposed from Washington that he quit to work for Morgan Tsvangirai's Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Union Unions. (Framed by Mugabe allies in early 2002, Tsvangirai was acquitted on a trumped up treason charge last week. But his Movement for Democratic Change appears still intent on boycotting the March 2005 parliamentary vote due to Zimbabwe's Florida-style electoral conditions.)

What was the popular reaction to Poortman and ESAP? Sidney Malunga, a progressive ruling-party MP until his suspicious 1994 death in a car accident, was brutally honest:  'To the masses of Zimbabwe, the poor people of Zimbabwe, the sum total of ESAP can best be described as a loathsome economic monster which is ravaging and destroying decent lives by incapacitating the poor and further condemning them to abject poverty.'

According to a survey of 200 poor people by the Africa Community Publishing and Development Trust at the end of Poortman's Harare gig, 'ESAP was listed as a cause of poverty even more often than drought and the shortage of land. The combination of retrenchment on a large scale, with a sharp increase in the price of basic goods and having to pay for health and education, has driven many families into poverty.'

'Deep down,' Zimbabwe's great novelist Chengerai Hove divulged in 1994, 'I harbour fear, a persistent fear which, like an ominous shadow, refused to abandon me. There is the smell of the Structural Adjustment Programme in the wind, with its flags swamping those of political independence. "Sure Advice to Poverty" local pub humorists have nicknamed this World Bank-IMF economic beverage. It tastes sour from the beginning, a cartoonist once wrote as he watched friends and foes losing jobs in Harare's industries under the banner of die today so as to live tomorrow.'

It's a fear that the wretched people of Iraq can now add to so many others.

* * *

Patrick's new base is the University of KwaZulu-Natal Centre for Civil Society in Durban (http://www.ukzn.ac.za/ccs).
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2004-10/25bond.cfm




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