Tuesday, November 12, 2013

684 Escaping the dollar: Michael Hudson and Leo Panitch debate BRICS

Escaping the dollar: Michael Hudson and Leo Panitch debate BRICS

Newsletter published on 8 October 2014

http://michael-hudson.com/2014/07/escaping-the-dollar/

Escaping the dollar

July 19, 2014

By Michael

Is the New BRICS Bank a Challenge to US Global Financial Power?

Michael Hudson and Leo Panitch discuss and debate the significance of
the new international development bank created by Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa – 6 min ago

Michael Hudson is a Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the
University of Missouri, Kansas City. His two newest books are “The
Bubble and Beyond” and “Finance Capitalism and its Discontents,”
available on Amazon.

Leo Panitch is the Canada Research Chair in Comparative Political
Economy and a distinguished research professor of political science at
York University in Toronto. He is the author of many books, the most
recent of which include UK Deutscher Memorial Prize winner The Making of
Global Capitalism: The Political Economy of American Empire and In and
Out of Crisis: The Global Financial Meltdown and Left Alternatives. He
is also a co-editor of the Socialist Register, whose 2013 volume is
entitled The Question of Strategy.

Transcript

PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I’m
Paul Jay in Baltimore.

Will a new international bank challenge American global financial
hegemony? Well, at recent meetings in Brazil, the five BRICS
countries–that’s Brazil, Russia,India, China, and South Africa–have
created a new international bank called the NDB or New Development Bank,
and it’s been given $50 billion in initialcapital. The BRICS bank works
on an equal-share voting basis, with each of the five signatories
contributing $10 billion. The capital base is used to finance
infrastructure and, quote, sustainable development projects in BRICS
countries initially, but other low- and middle-income countries will be
able to buy in and apply for funding.

BRICS countries have also created a $100 billion contingency reserve
arrangement (CRA), meant to provide additional liquidity protection to
member countries during balance-of-payments problems and other financial
shocks. The CRA, unlike the pool of contributing capital to the BRICS
bank, which is equally shared, is being funded 41 percent by China, 18
percent by Brazil, India, and Russia, and 5 percent from South Africa.

The new bank is being described as a challenge to the IMF and the World
Bank, that is, a challenge to American global financial power. But is
it, as Vijay Prashadwrote, neoliberalism with southern characteristics?

Now joining us to discuss all of this first of all, in Toronto, is Dr.
Leo Panitch. He’s the Canada research chair in comparative political
economy and a distinguished researcher professor of political science at
York University. He’s the author of The Making of Global Capitalism: The
Political Economy of American Empire.

And also joining us is Michael Hudson.

Michael, are you in New York?

MICHAEL HUDSON, PROF. ECONOMICS, UMKC: Yes, I am.

JAY: You’re in New York.

Michael, joining us from New York, is a distinguished research professor
of economics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Newest book is
two newest books: The Bubble and Beyond and Finance Capitalism and Its
Discontents.

Thank you both for joining us.

LEO PANITCH, PROF. POLITICAL SCIENCE, YORK UNIV.: Glad to be here, Paul.

JAY: So, Michael, kick us off. How significant a development is this?

HUDSON: I think it’s much more significant than the press has said. The
press treats it almost as if, well, they’re very small, and what do
these countries have in common? At the most optimistic, the BRICS will
do on the government level what Occupy Wall Street has been advocating.
When they say a new development bank, they don’t mean they want to be
like the World Bank or the IMF. They want a different kind of development.

But also it’s not only a development bank, but it’s the $100 billion
currency clearing system. They’ve been driven into a mutual economic
defense alliance by the U.S. sanctions against Russia, and by threats
against China, not letting it invest in the U.S. on national security
grounds. They’ve forced other countries really into “Let us do whatever
we want with you, there is no alternative, and we’re going to do to you
what we did to Ireland and Greece.” And that’s it.

Well, basically what the BRICS are saying in their new bank and their
clearing house is, yes, there is an alternative. We don’t have to be
like neoliberalism. Their critique of the World Bank and the IMF isn’t
that they’re not given big enough quotas; it’s that they disagree with
the philosophy of the World Bank and the IMF subsidizing economic
dependency, food dependency, and anti-labor parties that result in
budget deficits. Then governments are told, well, in order to finance
your foreign debt and your budget deficit, you have to sell off your
water, your natural resources, your privatization. The BRICS banks are
not going to go to the member countries and saying, you have to sell off
your water supply and raise prices in order to pay us.

JAY: Right. Let me bring Leo in here.

So, Leo, what do you make of Michael’s take? How significant is all this?

PANITCH: Well, I think it’s very significant, and it is designed to give
these large developing capitalist countries more room for maneuver
vis-à-vis the American state and the European Central Bank and the IMF
and the World Bank. But I think the significance he’s attaching to it is
remarkably overblown. There’s no evidence that their purposes are indeed
not to apply conditionality to loans. There’s loads of evidence with the
nonoperationability of the Bank of the South, which was the bank created
inLatin America that the Brazilians–which have made it nonoperational by
insisting it be a very conventional development bank which in fact goes
to the markets and therefore is constrained by the markets in terms of
interest rates to be charged, etc., conditionalities, as opposed to
Bolivia and Venezuela that wanted it to operate on very different, not
market principles. The Brazilians don’t want that and don’t want it for
the new bank. And I don’t think it’s just a matter of the Brazilians.
The Chinese don’t want it either. There’s a much deeper factor why it’s
not so significant, although it does give them some room for maneuver in
their operations. But the main reason is that it’s embedded in
countries, even with China, that don’t have the very, very, very–as
Michael knows very well–deep financial markets that is needed for this
kind of bank to play that kind of role.

JAY: Okay. Leo, hang on one second. That’s sort of a second point. Let
Michael respond to your first point. Your first point is that this is
not something against a neoliberal strategy; this is some independent
maneuver of countries that do work within a neoliberal strategy. So what
do you make of that?

PANITCH: Well, let me just to emphasize that look at who was just
elected as the government of India. Look at the extent to which even the
Workers Party has been keen to integrate further into global capitalism.
Let’s look at the way in which China has just begun to remove some of
its financial restriction. And let’s look at what the ANC now
represents. So, sure, they want more room for maneuver, but within the
framework of buying into capitalist globalization and being extremely
dependent on it.

JAY: Okay, Michael, you can respond.

HUDSON: Neoliberalism is not simply an economic philosophy. It’s
interwoven with American foreign policy. Take the case of Ireland when
it bailed out the banks a few years ago. Europe was coming to an
agreement, and the IMF also, with Ireland to write down the debts until
Tim Geithner called from the Treasury and said, wait a minute, you can’t
write down the debts, because American banks have written credit default
insurance, and American banks will take a bath because we’ve be that
Ireland will pay; so don’t bail it out. So Europe and Ireland both
surrendered and said, okay, we’re going to follow you. Same thing in
Greece. The IMF even got into an argument with the E.U., saying, you
can’t be that bad against Greece, you can’t really force it into so deep
a recession. The U.S. got on the phone and said, wait a minute, the
American banks have written default insurance. You can’t write it down.
If you do, we’re all going to have to pay through the nose, and we’re
not going to take the loss. So at issue isn’t bank profits or
capitalism; it’s specifically the United States. And it’s the United
States that has the veto on the IMF, theUnited States that has the veto
on the World Bank.

And basically I think what’s motivated the BRICS, these countries
together, is they have one thing in common: they’re all under attack by
the United States economically, and in Russia’s case militarily, with
sanctions. And so what Russia is trying to do is say, look, right now
the United States can make athreat against us. They can say, if you
don’t do what we want militarily orpolitically or economically, we can
block your currency payments, we can block the banks, and we can
strangle you.

So what Putin in his press conference for the BRICS said was that we’re
not putting in dollars into these banks, we’re putting in our own
currencies, and the loans will be made in our own currencies. And the
fact is that governments can create as much of their own currency as
they want. They don’t have to go to the market in principle.

Now, what Leo says is absolutely true. If Brazil, which is still run
pretty much by the banks, insists in having the banks go to the market,
then it will be tied in a knot. But if Russia, China, and the other
countries use modern monetary theory and say, okay, our treasuries are
going to print the money to develop and we don’t need Wall Street, then
you’ll have a [crosstalk]

JAY: Okay, let Leo jump in.

Leo, go ahead.

PANITCH: Well, Michael, if you were advising them theymight, although
there would there would be very, very heavy, as you would admit,
sacrifices that they then would have to bear. But these are states that
reflect their class structures, these are states that like the United
States reflect powerful forces within it. And what you’re proposing is
not something that any of the dominant capitalists in any of these
countries, whether, you know, foreign mining companies in South Africa
or ambitious Chinese multinationals, want to happen.

Moreover, the notion that they’re not interested in convertibility into
American dollars–I mean those particular domestic capitalists in those
countries–is absurd. Sure, Putin can spout off all he wants about the
ludicrous notion of the ruble as a international reserve currency with
none of the infrastructural capacity to make it such, but this is not a
practical alternative. That’s not to say it isn’t designed to do is you
say, to give them some both rhetorical and maybe institutional room for
maneuver. But let’s not overblow this, forheaven’s sake.

HUDSON: There was no attempt by Russia to make the ruble a global
reserve currency. What Russia wants to do is to nominate its trade in
rubles, just as China’s denominating its trade in yuan, so that the
United States cannot use its banks to do what they’ve done in the case
of Argentina and say, we can block any payment going through the banking
system just like after the Shah was overthrown in Iran, Iran tried to
pay its foreign debts, the new regime, and Chase Manhattan acted on
behalf of the U.S. government and blocked Iran’s payment, forcing it
into default, causing a crisis.

Now, Iran is an observer member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
that’s part of the BRICS, and the whole attempt is to make an
alternative, is to avoid the dollar. It’s not to make the ruble an
international currency; it’s to get free of the dollar and hence free of
the kind of sanctions that the United States has just escalated against
Russia today, free of the monetary sanctions, and free of the ability of
the U.S. to use the dollarized system as a political solution.

PANITCH: I know that’s their objective. I don’t disagree with you that
that’s their objective. I think we if we’re assessing the significance
of this, I think we have to assess the likelihood of this. We have to
assess what the most powerful forces inside their own countries wanted
this respect, how many eggs they’re going to put in this basket, what is
the capacity of these countries to operate outside of international
financial markets in which the dollar–by which we really mean very
powerful financial institutions headquartered in the West with the
states that represent them–of continuing to exist.

HUDSON: You’re right. This is a dialectic at work, and it’s the
dialectic between national interests and the vested interests within the
country. You’re seeing that in the United States right now over the
Argentine crisis, where the banks and the Treasury Department and the
White House all wanted the Supreme Court to overrule Judge Griesa’s
ruling about the debt defaults. And these class interests are themselves
in conflict, and very often, just as American foreign policy has been
captured by the neoliberals and neocons, this can hurt many of the most
vested interests here, same thing in Russia and China. So it’s a whole
dialectic [crosstalk]

JAY: Michael, I want to just refocus this, ’cause the first part of the
argument was whether the strategic objective of this bank is actually
anti-neoliberal, ’cause it seems to me there’s two different issues
here. If they want to have more room for their own sovereign interests
within this whole neoliberal financial system, that’s one thing. It’s
another thing to say that they want that, plus they want that to avoid
things like structural readjustments and all the various privatizations
and attack on Social Security net and lowering wages. I mean, it seemed
to me at the beginning you were suggesting they want to go against those
kinds of policies, and Leo asked or said there’s no evidence of that. So
what’s the evidence of that?

HUDSON: If you read Putin’s press conferences that he has given
explaining his aims – and they’re available on Johnson’s Russia List
that has both his and Lavrov’s, the foreign minister’s comments – you
see that they’ve spelled this out exactly, that the neoliberalism is not
only privatization, but it’s the idea that what’s really at issue is are
economies going to be planned by Wall Street and financial interests, or
are they going to be planned by governments,–

PANITCH: Come on.

HUDSON: –with a view towards raising living standards–.

PANITCH: Michael, no country has privatized more, no ruling class has
privatized more than the oligarchy around Putin. They’ve taken that
country’s wealth and put it in their back pockets. And even if it is
officially still owned by the states, it’s in their back pockets. Let’s
not turn Putin and his cronies into the vanguard of a new socialist
society, for heaven’s sake.

HUDSON: I cannot argue with that, Leo. You’re absolutely right.

PANITCH: It’s very important we not do this.

HUDSON: The question is: what’s the evidence that there is a break from
the neoliberalism? I mean, another break that they’ve all said is, well,
neoliberalism really means the dollar standard and it means lending
money in dollars for imports. For instance, one of the things that the
BRICS conference said was, we will be lending money in domestic
currency. Now, that’s very important, because the World Bank doesn’t
lend money in domestic currency. That means it doesn’t lend money for
land reform, for agriculture, for all of the expenses that are met
domestically for labor to develop agriculture, todevelop industry. It
only lends dollars, basically to buy U.S. exports of infrastructure,
U.S. engineering exports–and European. So making loans in domestic
currencies for domestic development–for instance, China would love to
see Latin America, instead of producing hard cash plantation crops, it
would love to see it produce wheat and food. This would have a
byproduct: it could feed itself, as Argentina’s now doing, and it could
export. So a shift [crosstalk] financing to wheat away from other things
would be a big change.

PANITCH: Again, I don’t know what evidence you have that China has not
played an enormously massive role in producing export-oriented
monocultures in South America. In fact, the Landless People’s Movement,
whose main theme is that, you know, we have such a massive population,
we need a diversified agriculture to feed it, it doesn’t target any
longer the United States as imposing that upon Brazil, for heaven’s
sake! Brazil, sure, is looking for room for maneuver in terms of
diversifying its exports by concentrating on monocultures, as is
Argentina with soy, to be sent to China. I mean, I don’t think that one
should look at these ruling classes in the Global South with
rose-colored glasses, even though we want to be able to recognize the
extent to which the American state is indeed the imperial state
governing, superintending this global capitalism, and we need to, of
course, be critical of it. But that doesn’t mean we need to be naive
about what these other states are.

HUDSON: No, what I said is that the exports that China is trying to
develop–and you’re absolutely right; of course it’s promoting exports to
itself–are different from the kind of development exports the United
States wants. Their economies are asymmetrical. The United States
doesn’t want food exports, because it wants the world to become
dependent on American grain and American agriculture. That’s been the
basis of American foreign policy since World War II. So just shifting to
grain and to food grains, as opposed to other cash crops, is something
that at least in emergency thecountries will be able to feed themselves,
which they’re not able to do under the current system.

JAY: Okay. Leo, let’s dig in a little further just how significant,
this. Now, the size of the economies we’re talking about are massive. My
understanding is South-to-South trade is now larger than North-to-South
trade by $2 trillion, and that’s about a quarter of global trade. So is
thepotential here of these countries seeking to build some kind of a
more independent financial structure significant? I mean, you said
earlier there’s a deeper issue here, and I kind of cut you off. What’s
the deeper significance here?

PANITCH: Well, obviously, these are very important developing capitalist
countries. Unfortunately, they’re developing capitalist countries rather
than developing socialist countries. That’s what’s happened even with
the Workers Party in Brazil and the ANC and the South African Communist
Party. All the more so it now happened with the right-wing-led India.
And it’s happening with a vengeance with a Communist Party that is very
venally turning its elite into a capitalist class. So it’s a developing
capitalist country. That’s significant historically. It certainly
undermines the old notion that capitalism was underdeveloping the Global
South. The people used to blame the United States for that. We now see
that there’s a rapid development, which the United States has encouraged
through free-trade and neoliberalism, very much so. That said, it’ll be
much more difficult to integrate those countries within the American
empire than it was to integrate the former imperial countries of Europe
and Japan, for reasons that have to do with the lack of military
occupation, that have to do with differences in religion, culture,
history, language, etc. That’s certainly true and it’s significant.

But the important thing that’s going on now that’s much, much more
significant is the participation of these countries in guaranteeing, in
the wake of this crisis through the G20 and through their very active
cooperation in this, that thecrisis would not lead to the re-imposition
of tariff protection, it would not lead to the imposition of and
extension of capital controls, all of the things that occurred during
the depression in the 1930s when there was a breakdown of capitalist
globalization. These countries are opposed to this.

Now, insofar as we might see a break from Russia under pressure from the
United States, that would take much more the form of a right-wing
nationalism led by this Russian oligarchy than it would be something
progressive, unfortunately, given the balance of forces in Russia.

But the main thing is that these countries are not getting off the
capitalist globalization bandwagon. They’re looking for more room for
maneuver within it.

JAY: Okay. So, Michael, if I understand, your main argument is–in some
ways it’s not that different, in some respects, from what Leo was
saying. You’re not saying they’re getting off the whole capitalist
bandwagon. What you’re saying they’re doing is buying themselves a
little more room interms of their foreign policy.

HUDSON: There is a very broad range over what they can do. And if you
look at what is the most likely of common denominator, it’s exactly what
Leo said. The common denominator is it’s their capitalists against the
U.S. capitalists, it’s their saying, what can we do to be free of the
U.S. banks and Wall Street and the City of London and the financial
extractive loans. At least the neoliberal plans today have gone beyond
trying to finance infrastructure development. The financial system in
the West is almost entirely extractive now, not productive. The
capitalist class in the countries that Leo’s mentioned want at least
some bank to do some productive loans that they can benefit from, rather
than having the U.S. come in and grab everything for itself like a
privatization on behalf of the U.S. You see this kind of fight going on
in Greece right now, where the eurozone said, Greece as to privatize its
natural resources to pay the debt. Half the privatization last year was
to be the sale of its gas rights.

PANITCH: And you know who’s buying [crosstalk]

HUDSON: Well, it turned out that Gazprom [incompr.] And Europe said,
never mind; don’t sell them. We don’t want Russia. Only us, not Russia.

PANITCH: But do you know who’s buying the Port of Piraeus,–

HUDSON: The Chinese.

PANITCH: –one of the largest and more–. China.

HUDSON: China.

PANITCH: Chinese capitalists.

HUDSON: Right.

PANITCH: So, I’m sorry, I don’t see the world in terms of competition
amongst the capitalist classes of the world in the sense you’respeaking
of. I think there is a very deep integration on the part of the leading
capitalists in these countries, including the domestic ones, into
globalization. I think that’s true of Vale in Brazil.

JAY: That’s the world’s largest iron ore company.

PANITCH: That’s the world’s largest iron ore company, which, sure, is
competing with other iron ore companies. But it doesn’t see itself as
aligned against the American bourgeoisie or the American capitalist
class. This is not right.

And moreover, I think that these capitalist classes very much want
access to the deep financial markets of London and New York. They don’t
want to leave them; they want to be part of them. They want access to
them. Indeed, they’ve been floating bond us in those
markets–dangerously, in terms of volatility. So I think–and it has to be
said the reason they do so is that their financial markets, their bond
markets, even the European bond market relative to the London/New York
access, remain extremely weak, extremely vulnerable. So it’s also a
matter of where the deep institutional strength of capitalism is.

I would make one other point. I don’t think that finance, even Wall
Street and London–the City of London finance is merely parasitic. I
think it facilitates, it underwrites, it’s very important in terms of
hedging for all of the integrated production that goes on between China
and the United States, between South Africa and Europe. This plays a
functional role for all these value chains. Of course there’s loads of
speculation in this, but it means that industry is linked up with this
speculation. These aren’t separated compartments. And you can’t
unscramble them.

HUDSON: I see that Escapmuch more than you. Nobody’s talking about
Brazil and other countries not interacting with the London and New York
money markets. What they don’t want to do is to have the U.S. government
and U.S. banks act as a threat, a threat against their countries. And of
course they’re trying to keep their–have other options apart from being
tied into the U.S. as a system of control. They want to break free of
U.S. control, basically, and European control is a satellite of the
United States.

PANITCH: Yeah. But since politics and economics aren’t so easily
separated, their continuing interest and increased interest in
beinglinked economically and financially means that the American state,
given its superintending role of Wall Street and the City of London,
will continue tohave power vis-à-vis them. They would like to, as we’ve
agreed, they’d like to have more room for maneuver in the face of that
enormous power of the American Empire, but they are not interested in
breaking from it.

JAY: Okay, guys, this is a wonderful beginning to a very complicated
subject, and we are going to pick this up again. So I’d like tojust say
to you our viewers, if you have questions you’d like me to ask, ’cause
we’ll ask both these gentlemen to come back and carry on this
discussion, below the video make your comment, or you can just write to
contact (at) therealnews (dot) com, or you can go @therealnews on
Twitter, send in your questions and comments, and we will pose them to
our guests.

Leo, Michael, thank you very much for joining us.

PANITCH: Glad to be here, Paul.


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