Book
Review: Failed, what the ”experts” got
wrong about the global economy
By Mark
Weisbrot
The world
economy is, by any measure, resting on shaky foundations. With the Eurozone and
Britain facing a lost decade and the US in the middle of a recovery that only
seems to affect the stock markets, you would have to look at China and other
countries in the developing world to see any meaningful growth. Conventional
wisdom, peddled by the likes of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), The
World Bank and the World Trade organization (WTO), has it that governments need
to start tightening their belts and live within their means, Budget deficits
has to be brought under control, inflation kept stable and markets have to be
opened up to international trade. This is to be achieved by adopting neoliberal
agenda of tax cuts, deregulation and privatization of public utilities. For the
countries that do all this, growth will come, eventually. At least that is what
they are told. In Failed, Mark
Weisbrot, Co-director for the Center of Economic and Policy research in Washington
D.C, questions the core principles of this policy approach and show the countries
that have enjoyed solid growth during the last decades are those that have done
the exact opposite.
The preface
to Failed brilliantly sets the tone
for what is to follow. A prominent South Korean economist from Cambridge
University explains that his country started out in the 1960s as a poor and
rural backwater, yet has now managed to achieve living standards comparable to
those in the West. If South Korea had followed the recipe I describe in the
previous paragraph, his people would still be living in mud huts. South Korean
prosperity was not created by austerity or opening the country to free trade
and volatile capital flows. Instead the government invested in their own
production base and infrastructure, erecting trade barriers to promote domestic
industries capable of developing new technology and providing highly skilled
jobs. Without this there wouldn’t have been any Samsung or Hyundai. He even goes
so far as to call the IMF, the World Bank and the WTO “the unholy trinity”.
The
chapters that follow takes a closer look at some of the most glaring economic
policy failures of recent years and seeks to cure what the author refers to as
amnesia within in the field of economic study, where the hard-earned wisdom of past
scholars has been replaced by a rigid neoliberal doctrine and a Washington
consensus. A great portion of the book is dedicated to South America’s economic
development during the last fifty or so years. The lessons learned by that
region serves as an excellent summary of the central message in Failed, and charts a blueprint for a way
forward for troubled countries in Europe and beyond.
During
1960-1980, Per Capita GDP in Latino America grew by a healthy 3,3%, and poverty
rates declined. During the following 20-year period, 1980-2000, Per Capita GDP
grew by a paltry 0,4%, while poverty rates increased slightly. What was the
cause behind the two lost decades? According to Weisbrot, America has long
exerted its influence in the region to suppress or remove governments it
doesn’t like, and make sure that their own interests are well cared for. The US
has long viewed left wing governments in Latin America with barely disguised
hostility, on occasion going so far as to overthrow them in a coup, like
Richard Nixon did in 1973 when the Chilean military with the aid of the CIA
overthrew Chile’s socialist president, Salvador Allende. He was succeeded by
Augusto Pinochet, an authoritarian dictator amenable to Western interests.
According to Weisbrot, quiescent leaders peddling neoliberal politics and
paying fealty to the IMF were the main causes for the lost decades between 1980
and 2000.
When the Latin American people had finally had
enough by the turn of the millennium and decided to change things, their
situation improved markedly. During the last twenty or so years several left
leaning governments have been elected in landslide victories across the region,
with the effect of poverty rates and inequality being reduced. When Lula da
Silva ran as the Workers Party candidate for president in the 2002 Brazilian
election, he campaigned against neoliberalism and a US backed free trade deal,
the Free Trade Area of the Americas. The American investment bank Goldman Sachs
were so afraid of the former factory worker that they developed a special
“Lulameter” where they calculated his chances of winning the election in
real-time. Lula proceeded to win the election and form a progressive government
that heralded a sharp break with the neoliberal policies of the past and
provided solid economic growth for Brazil after decades of stagnation. This
story was repeated in several Latin American countries during the 2000s, to the
barely disguised dismay of many western countries and institutions. This I can
attest to personally. The Economist magazine, which I read every week, seems to
have an almost pathological aversion to any government in Latin America which
is even remotely left of center, while they savor Venezuela’s current woes with
barely contained glee. Its editorials lambast reckless spending and excessive
government debt, in effect proposing the same failed remedies that led to the
lost decades of 1980-2000.
It is
startling, writes Weisbrot, when you consider that the positive economic development
Latin America saw during last two decades or so have either gone completely
unreported in the West or been dismissed as a “commodities boom”. What’s
especially painful to adherents of the Washington consensus, according to
Weisbrot, is that Latin America managed to recover by kicking the IMF to the
curb, which has led to their influence being drastically reduced and the region
becoming more independent. This standoff between the Latin American nations and
foreign creditors was apparent when then president of Argentina, Néstor
Kirchner, purposefully defaulted on the country’s sovereign debt. Argentina’s
citizens enjoyed one of the highest living standards in Latin America, until
the country was struck by an exceptionally nasty recension during the years
1998-2002. Those who looked to the IMF for help were soon disappointed, all the
organization had to offer were stringent demands for paying down the country’s national
debt. This was a blatant attempt to get a better deal for its creditors, at a
time when Argentina was engulfed in crisis. Refusing the IMF’s draconian
demands, Kirchner made the bold move of defaulting on the debt, something that
only “failed” nations like Congo and Somalia had done before. The experts predicted
a calamity, but the IMF folded and Argentina went on to make an exceptionally
strong recovery that the editorial staff of The Economist refuses to
acknowledge to this day.
It is with
great sadness that Weisbrot notes Europe has been unable to what most of Latin
America did and send the IMF packing. The recession that was sparked by the
financial crisis in the US could have been much less severe if European
institutions had acted decisively to stimulate the economy and create more
aggregate demand. Greece might have needed a bit of structural reform, he
admits, but the kind of abject misery that the country has been subjected to by
the unelected troika of the IMF, the European Commission and the European
Central Bank was completely unnecessary. The Eurozone crisis unmasks the IMF,
according to Weisbrot, as little more than a creditors cartel attempting to
strong-arm its hapless debtors into ever more concessions. Worst of all, so
called Article IV consultations, internal documents by the IMF, reveal that the
fund and the rest of the troika used the Eurozone crisis to force policy changes on the affected nations that their electorates would probably never
have voted for had they been on the ballot. These unwelcome initiatives included reducing labor protection
and lowering the pension age. What’s unique when it comes to Europe’s woes, Weisbrot writes,
is that this kind of financial shock treatment used to be reserved for poor and
middle income countries, and had never previously been used against wealthy
nations with high standards of living. As a European I read his chapter on
Europe with resignation, our continent is no doubt in great financial and
political trouble, and the outlook for the EU and its member states mostly seem
to get worse each day. Around the world, Europe has become a byword for
stagnation and failed policies. It is staggering, Weisbrot asserts, that
policymakers, economists and the general public have not thoroughly
investigated the causes of the Eurozone crisis and come up with anything else
than austerity, a cure that seems to have been as effective as a medieval
doctor using leeches to bleed his patient. Just one more concession, one more
cut to public services, and a recovery will be around the corner, we keep
hearing, yet the situation keeps getting worse and worse.
Failed offers a fresh perspective on the economic
woes that plague Europe and many other parts of the developed world, and points
to tried and tested policies that could offer a way out of stagnation and
lackluster growth.
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