More bombs were dropped on that
small Third World nation than were used in the
latest world war. Millions of people were killed or
maimed. The suspension of the gold standard turned
the US dollar into a hard currency that could be
printed at will by the US government without the
backing of a regular value.
The Treasury bonds and bills
continued to circulate as convertible hard
currencies. The states’ reserves continued feeding
on that paper money that, on the one hand, could be
used to buy raw material, properties, goods and
services anywhere in the world while on the other
favored American exports with respect to the rest of
the economies of the world. Both, politicians and
academics repeatedly mention the true cost of that
genocidal war admirably portrayed in Oliver Stone’s
film. Sometimes in their calculations people tend to
overlook the fact that the millions of dollars of
1971 are not the same as the millions of dollars of
2009.
One million of dollars today, when
the price of gold –a metal whose value has been the
most stable through centuries-- exceeds one thousand
dollars a troy ounce, is worth about 30 times its
value when Nixon suspended the convertibility.
Therefore, 200 billion dollars of 1971 amount to 6
trillion dollars of 2009. If this is not taken into
account the new generations will not have an idea of
the imperialist barbarity.
Likewise, when reference is made to
the 20 billion dollars invested in Europe after the
end of WWII --through the Marshall Plan to rebuild
and control the economies of the main European
powers which had the necessary labor force and
technical culture for a fast development of
production and services—people usually do not take
notice of the fact that the real value of what the
empire invested at that time amounts to 600 billion
dollars at the current international value. They
don’t realize that 20 billion dollars would hardly
cover today the construction of three large oil
refineries with a capacity of 800 thousand barrels
of gasoline a day, in addition to other oil by-products.
The consumer societies and the
absurd and whimsical waste of energy and natural
resources that today threaten the survival of the
human species could not be explained in such a short
historical period without knowing the irresponsible
way in which developed capitalism, in its highest
stage, has governed the destiny of the world.
Such amazing waste explains why the
debt of the two most industrialized countries in the
world, the United States of America and Japan,
amounts to approximately 20 trillion dollars.
Of course, the US economy is
reaching an annual Gross Domestic Product of 15
trillion dollars. The capitalist crises are cyclical
as the history of the system unequivocally shows but
this time it is something else: it is a structural
crisis, as Professor Jorge Giordani, Venezuelan
minister of Planning and Development, explained last
night to Walter Martinez in his Telesur program.
The press dispatches released today,
Friday October 9, bring some additional irrefutable
data. An AFP dispatch from Washington indicates that
the US budget deficit for fiscal year 2009 amounts
to 1.4 trillion dollars, that is, 9.9% of the GDP, "something
unseen since 1945, after World War II," it added.
In the year 2007, the deficit had
already been one-third of that figure, and high
deficits are expected in 2010, 2011 and 2012. That
huge deficit has practically been mandated by the US
Congress and government to bailout that country’s
large banks, to prevent unemployment from rising
beyond 10% and to release the United States from the
recession. It is only natural that if they inundate
the nation with dollars, the big stores will sell
more goods, the industries will increase their
outputs, less people will lose their housing, the
wave of unemployment will subside and the Wall
Street stocks will see their value grow. It was the
classical way to solve the crisis. But, the world
will never be the same. Paul Krugman, a celebrated
Nobel laureate in Economics, has just said that
international commerce has sustained its worst fall,
worse even than that of the Great Depression, and
expressed his doubts of a speedy recovery.
It is not possible to also inundate
the world with dollars and believe that the paper
money without a gold backing can retain its value.
Other sounder economies have emerged. The US dollar
is no longer the hard currency reserve of every
state; actually, those who still have it wish to
distance from it albeit trying, as much as possible,
to prevent its devaluation before they can get rid
of it.
The European Union Euro, the Chinese
Yuan, the Suisse Franc, the Japanese Yen –despite
this country’s debt—and even the Pound Sterling and
other hard currencies have come to take the place of
the US dollar in international commerce. Once again
the metal gold is becoming a significant
international reserve currency.
This is not a whimsical personal
opinion, nor do I wish to slander that currency.
Another Nobel laureate in Economics,
Joseph Stiglitz, has said --according to a press
dispatch-- that it is most likely that the green
bill continues to be downcast, that politicians do
not determine the exchange rates neither do speeches.
He said this on October 6, at the IMF and World Bank
Joint Annual Assembly held in Istanbul. The meeting
was received with smashed shop windows and fires
caused by Molotov cocktails.
Other news related that the European
countries were afraid of the negative effect of the
dollar’s weakness with respect to the Euro and its
consequences for the European exports. The US
secretary of the Treasury said that his country was
interested in a strong dollar. Stiglitz laughed at
the official statement and said --according to EFE--
that in the case of the United States the money has
been wasted and the reason has been the multimillion
bailout of banks and wars like that of Afghanistan.
Again according this press agency, the Nobel
Laureate insisted that instead of investing 700
billion to help the bankers, the US could have used
part of that money to help the developing countries
and this would have encouraged global demand.
The president of the World Bank,
Robert Zoellick, had sounded an alarm a few days
before and warned that the dollar would not be able
to endlessly preserve its status as the reserve
currency.
An outstanding professor of
Economics at Harvard University, Kenneth Rogoff, has
said that the next big financial crisis will be that
of the public deficits.
The World Bank has stated that the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) had showed that
the world central banks had accumulated fewer
dollars during the second semester of 2009 than at
any other time during the past ten years while
increasing the amount of Euros.
On October 6, the AFP published that
gold had reached the record figure of 1,045 dollars
for one ounce due to the weakening of the dollar and
fear of inflation.
The London daily Independent
reported that a group of oil-producing countries
were considering the replacement of the dollar in
commercial transactions by a pool of hard currencies
including the Yen, Yuan, Euro, gold and a future
common currency.
The news, either leaked or deduced
with impressive logic, was denied by some of the
countries supposedly interested in that protective
measure. They do not want it to collapse, but they
neither want to continue to accumulate a currency
that has lost 30 times its value in less than three
decades.
I cannot avoid mentioning a dispatch
from EFE, that cannot be accused of being anti-imperialist
press agency and that in the present circumstances
carries especially interesting opinions:
"Experts in economics and finances
agreed in New York today that the worst crisis since
the Great Depression has resulted in a less
significant role for that country in world economy."
"Recession has changed the way in
which the world looks at the US. Now our country is
less significant than before and this is something
we should admit, said David Rubenstein, president
and founder of the Carlyle Group, the largest risk
capital firm in the world, in his address to the
World Business Forum."
"The financial world will be less
focused in the US. (…) New York will never again be
the financial capital of the world, a role it will
have to share with London, Shanghai, Dubai, Sao
Paulo and other cities, he said."
"…he described the problems the US
will face once it leaves behind a major recession
that will still be around for a couple of months."
"…the huge public debt, inflation,
unemployment, the dollar’s loss of value as a
reserve hard currency, the energy prices…"
"The government should reduce public
expenses to cope with the debt problem and do
something it does not like much: raise taxes."
"Columbia University economist and
special UN advisor Jeffrey Sachs has agreed with
Rubenstein that the US economic and financial
predominance is fading."
"We have left a system focused on
the United States for one which is multilateral…"
"…twenty years of irresponsibility,
first by Bill Clinton’s administration and then by
George W. Bush’s, caved in to Wall Street pressures…"
"…the banks negotiated with ‘toxic
assets’ to obtain easy money, Sachs explained."
"What is important now is to
recognize the unprecedented challenge of achieving a
sustainable economic development that is consistent
with the basic rules of physics and biology on this
planet…"
On the other hand, the reports
coming directly from our delegation in Bangkok,
capital of Thailand, were absolutely not encouraging:
Our ministry of Foreign Affairs
literally reported that "what was under discussion
was basically whether or not to ratify the concept
of common but differentiated responsibilities among
the industrial nations and the so-called emerging
economies, essentially China, Brazil, India and
South Africa, and the underdeveloped countries.
"China, Brazil, India, South Africa,
Egypt, Bangladesh, Pakistan and the ALBA countries
are the most active. In general, most nations in the
Group of 77 are holding correct and firm positions.
"The figures of carbon emissions
reductions under discussion do not correspond with
those scientifically calculated to keep the rise in
temperature under 2 degrees Celsius, 25-40%. At the
moment, the negotiation is moving around a reduction
of 11-18%.
"The United States is not making any
real effort but accepting just a 4% reduction with
respect to the year 1990."
In the morning of this Friday 9, the
world woke up to the news that "the good Obama" of
the riddle –as explained by Bolivarian President
Hugo Chavez Frias at the United Nations—had been
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. I do not always agree
with the positions of that institution but I must
admit that, at this moment it was, in my view, a
positive action. It compensates the setback
sustained by Obama in Copenhagen when Rio de
Janeiro, and not Chicago, was chosen as the venue of
the 2016 Olympics, a choice that elicited heated
attacks from his right-wing adversaries.
Many will feel that he has yet to
earn the right to receive such an award. Rather than
a prize to the President of the United States, we
choose to see that decision as a criticism of the
genocidal policy pursued by more than a few
presidents of that country who took that nation to
the crossroads where it is today. That is, as a call
for peace and for the pursuit of solutions conducive
to the survival of the species.
Fidel Castro Ruz
October 9, 2009
6:11 PM