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JAISAL NOOR: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Jaisal Noor in Baltimore.
The IMF has just released a report admitting serious mistakes in its bailout of Greece.
Our guest today has just returned from Zambia and Tanzania, where people are asking when
will the IMF admit its mistakes in Africa.
Now joining us is John Weeks. He's a professor emeritus at the University of London School
of Oriental and African Studies. He is an author of the recently released book The Economics
of the 1 Percent: 1 Percent Economics, 99 Percent Ideology. He is founder and contributor
of JWeeks.org. And he now joins us from London.
Thank you for joining us, John.
JOHN WEEKS: Thank you very much for having me on.
NOOR: John, what is your reaction to this IMF report admitting serious mistakes in its
bailout of Greece?
WEEKS: Well, the first thing to realize [incompr.] the IMF is the organization least likely to
say, I made a mistake. So their saying that they made a mistake is quite important.
The second thing is that this is not a minor thing. I mean, why should the people watching
this, why should they care? The IMF makes a mistake. Slightly embarrassing. So what?
Significance of this is that this mistake led to the poverty and the deprivation of
hundreds of thousands of people. And the same thing happened on a larger scale in Africa
over the last 15 to 20 years. We're talking about major international transgressions,
crimes, if I could use that term.
And [incompr.] briefly I'll explain what the IMF says the errors were and what the significance
is. The IMF, when it extends credit to a country, it makes what it calls a debt sustainability
analysis. And in layman's language, street language, what's that mean? [incompr.] an
estimation to see whether or not the country is likely to be able to repay the money that
the IMF lends to them.
Now, whether or not a country can do that will be determined by what its exports will
be, because the way you pay the IMF is you have to pay in a foreign currency. You have
to pay in U.S. dollars or yen or whatever, euros. So you have to export. So the IMF has
to make an export estimate. And that's what they did in Greece. And it was excessively
optimistic.
What the IMF was saying was that if all these cuts occur, you can follow these austerity
policies, then the Greek economy will grow and they will export and they will recover
and the debt ratio to GDP, debt ratio to national income will decline, not because the debt
will go down, but because the economy will grow. The economy will grow. You'll export.
You'll be able to pay off. None of that happened.
What the IMF admitted was that its estimate of Greek growth and Greek exports were excessively
optimistic. You might say that is the understatement of the decade. They were predicting growth
of 2, 3, 4 percent, and the Greek economy for the last four years has declined at an
annual rate of about 5 to 7 percent.
So what the IMF and the European Union and the German government were doing [incompr.]
called the troika, who basically run this austerity roadshow that's ravaged through
all of Europe, what they basically were saying is, you cut expenditures for your hospitals,
for your schools, fewer repairing of roads, and you will recover. But they didn't. And
so Greece just went more and more into debt. And because output was declining, you don't
have to be a mathematician to see if the IMF condition, the troika condition for Greece
was that they had to get the ratio of debt to national income down--if national income
was declining, you're very unlikely to do that.
So that's what was going on in Greece. But it's a lot bigger than Greece. It's been going
on in Africa for 20 years, as I said. And it was particularly pernicious in Zambia,
where the IMF was forcing draconian cuts on the Zambian government in the 1990s and into
the new century. And as result of that, the Zambian economy contracted, and their debt
situation became worse and worse.
And there is a back story to this. The back story is that the reason the IMF was doing
that in Zambia was because in the late 1980s, Zambia had a great very famous president in
Kenneth Kaunda. And when Zambia economy was in difficulty in the late 1980s, Kaunda said
that he would never agree to the cuts demanded by the IMF. And when the economy began to
decline and Kaunda was thrown out of power, the IMF decided it would spend the next ten
to 15 years reminding Zambians of the sins of their president for confronting the IMF
in a courageous way. And the way they did that was that they refused repeatedly to give
Zambia debt relief. And Zambia was one of the last countries to receive debt relief
under the highly indebted countries initiative.
NOOR: Professor Weeks, you just returned from Zambia and Tanzania. Talk about what the reaction
is on the ground there to this latest news from the IMF and what people are calling for
on the ground in these countries directly impacted by this these IMF policies.
WEEKS: I would be delighted to do that.
First, in Zambia, in Lusaka, which is the capital of Zambia, I was working with the
Zambian central bank, and the people of Zambian central bank were saying, we had to swallow
these same policies that are grinding the Greeks down, and we did it for 15 years. When
is Christine Lagarde, the head of the IMF, going to admit the errors made that caused
us such suffering? And the NGOs, even the private sector are saying the same thing.
Yes, they made a mistake. [incompr.] Oh, gosh, so embarrassed. You know. We stunted your
growth for 15 years. We're sorry we did it. But now, you know, let's move on and put that
behind us. No, no. I mean, this is with the level of a crime.
Over in Tanzania I was at a meeting on capital flight, and there there were a collection
of people from about ten or 11 sub-Saharan countries--officials, NGOs, and others. The
purpose of that meeting was to try to develop policies to reduce capital flowing out of
Africa. The organizer of it was one person that you've interviewed a number of times,
L�once Ndikumana from the University of Massachusetts.
And their people were saying, why hasn't the IMF done anything about capital flight either
in Greece or in Africa? It is the International Monetary Fund, after all. And what has it
been preaching for the last 15 years? It has been preaching open markets, unregulated capital
account, and money has been flowing out. When is it going to apologize for that? When is
it going to apologize for the tens of billions of dollars--yes, tens of billions of dollars--that
are flowing out of the poorest region in the world into the United States, into the European
Union, into Japan? When is it going to apologize for that? And if it did, what difference would
it make? When is it going to change its policies? That's what the people there were saying.
NOOR: Professor Weeks, I wanted to get your reaction to the Greeks' government response
to the IMF report. I'm going to quote the Associated Press here. "Greece's conservative
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras ... insisted that Greece remained committed to meeting
its ambitious deficit reduction targets, and argued that past errors in the bailout program
had been corrected."
WEEKS: The back story in the case of Greece is that Greece is in the situation that it
is in because the IMF, the German government, the European Commission--the European Commission
is basically the executive organization of the European Union, but in fact it is very
much under the influence of the Germans--what those three are saying--the European Union,
the IMF, and the German government, they're saying is continue with the austerity. And
when the IMF has apologized, they were attacked savagely by the head of the European Commission
and said--they said, in it together, out of it together. In other words, IMF, you came
in with us. You supported these policies in Greece. If not--it's not fair for you to bail
out and say we're a mistake. You have to stick with it.
Why are the Greeks sticking with it? Why does a government continue to implement cuts which
lead to--we're talking about major declines. I mean, what we've seen in the United States
is nothing compared to what the Greeks have had to go through. I mean, hospitals without
medicines, schools about books, schools having to close because teachers are fired. Why are
they going through it? It is because the powerful people in Greece--financial interests, business
interests--see it in their interest to continue in the European Union, and they--because they
can borrow cheap in Germany, there are markets in Europe that they can take advantage of.
The irony is that I suspect [incompr.] increasingly reports coming out of Berlin that the Germans
actually want the Greeks to drop out of the European Union. They actually want this. They
actually want this failure that is developing as a, you might say, example to Italy, Spain,
Portugal, the other countries that are in trouble.
So the Greek government is faced with the situation that either they go out voluntarily--and
when I say go out, that means abandon the euro--or they're going to be forced out. If
they're going to be forced out--if they go out voluntarily, it will be a disaster. If
they go out--if they're forced out, it will be a catastrophe. That is basically what the
Greek people are looking at. They should have pulled out three years ago, but they didn't.
So that's where we are in Greece. You have a reactionary government that has happily--well,
not happily, probably--what--they are faithfully pursuing policies being put forward by the
Germans and the European Commission, no longer the IMF, and with the hope that that will
eventually bring benefits to the Greek private sector. They have no interest in the 99 percent
in Greece.
NOOR: What lessons should be learned from this episode?
WEEKS: I think the first lesson that should we should learn is that the European--I was
a supporter--I mean, I'm American, but I'm also a British citizen. I was born in Texas,
but I live in London. I consider myself a European as well as an American. I think the
lesson is--I regret to say that the lesson is that the European Union has run its course,
and it has now become such a reactionary organization dominated by reactionary elements in Europe
that it is no longer something that any progressive can support. I regret to say that.
On Thursday I'm going to Dublin, where on Friday and Saturday there is a conference
on can the European Union be reconstructed, and I'll be giving one of the keynote talks.
And I'll say I--no, I don't think it can be reconstructed under existing circumstances.
That is a very sad thing to say, let me say, because for the last hundred years at least,
140 years, the history of Western and Central Europe has been how to present a united Germany
from dominating Europe. That's what the Franco-Prussian War was about. That's what World War I was
about. That's what World War II was about. And now it's come to pass. The united Germany
is economically dominating Europe to the detriment of the other countries. And it will not change
if Merkel is replaced by the Social Democrats. It'll be softer, but it will be the same story.
So I think that the only way forward in a progressive way is a, you might say, rebooting
the European Union. We've come to a point where it can no longer be reconstructed under
its present rules.
NOOR: Professor John Weeks, thank you for joining us.
WEEKS: Thank you for having me.
NOOR: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.