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OUR VIEWPOINT
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Another world is possible … without International Financial Institutions
Until the 1950s, countries
were just that: countries. During the US presidency of Harry Truman,
countries were classified into “developed” and “underdeveloped”,
depending on how close or distant they were from the US model. Since
then, the negative adjective “underdeveloped” has been replaced
by the more positive “developing”. The fact that most of
the so-called “developing” countries are now in a worse
social, economic and environmental situation than they were when they
were classified as such is not even a matter of much debate.
What’s important
– for the “developed” countries – is to maintain
the illusion that “developing” countries CAN become similar
to Western countries. That is also one of the illusions International
Financial Institutions (IFIs) seek to maintain.
The IFIs’ unstated
aim, of course, is different: to ensure that “developing”
countries’ resources keep flowing to the economically rich “developed”
nations, which in the process become even richer –while the “developing”
become poorer. Unfortunately, IFIs have until now been highly successful
both in achieving this aim and in maintaining the illusion of a Western
future for the South.
The two best known
IFIs are the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. They are
assisted by the regional African, Asian and Inter-American Development
Banks, as well as by the European Investment Bank and a large number
of Northern Export Credit Agencies.
Funding from all those
institutions – falsely claimed to be assisting countries to “develop”
– has resulted in widespread impoverishment and environmental
destruction, while at the same time increasing foreign debt and dependence
in Southern countries. That dependency is then used by IFIs to impose
favourable conditions – which clearly affect the countries’
sovereignty – for northern investment and resource appropriation.
The footprint of IFIs
is visible in most processes leading to deforestation. Take the case
of the Amazon. Deforestation was first made possible through IFI lending
for road-building deep into the forest. This made industrial logging,
cattle-ranching, large-scale agriculture, mining, dams and oil exploitation
possible, resulting in extensive forest destruction and human rights
violations. Most of those activities were themselves made possible through
IFI lending. In spite of the plunder of their resources, Amazon countries
became indebted and IFI conditionalities forced them to increase resource
exploitation for export still further in order to service the external
debt. At the same time, structural adjustment programmes opened up the
countries’ riches to northern corporations even further. A similar
pattern can be easily identified in tropical Africa and Asia.
Even now, when the
finance ministers of the world’s seven richest nations have recently
promised to cancel the debts the poorest countries owe to the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund, they are pursuing the same
aims as before. This is made clear in paragraph 2 of the finance ministers'
statement (11 June 2005), which says that to qualify for debt relief,
developing countries must "… boost private-sector development"
and eliminate "impediments to private investment, both domestic
and foreign". This means opening up the doors even wider to transnational
corporations as well as privatizing whatever can be privatized, including
basic peoples’ needs (such as water, health care, social security,
education), state-owned assets of all types and even the atmosphere
(through climate change-related carbon trading).
It is clear that what
people and the environment need is exactly the opposite: among other
things, to boost community development, to establish clear impediments
to destructive private investment, to ensure free access by people to
water, health care, social security, education. While pushing in the
opposite direction, IFIs are thus clearly not part of the solution to
the world’s problems but a major actor in increasing them. They
are tools used by the powerful against the disempowered. Their funding
and conditionalities result in socially and environmentally destructive
activities. Another world is possible without these institutions.
World Rainforest
Movement – Friends of the Earth International
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