International Finance
Background
The international financial system must be reformed. We cannot go on lurching
from crisis to crisis with ever larger bailouts that benefit the rich at the
expense of the poor. The burden of external debt must be lifted, as it continues
to cause a perverse transfer of wealth from impoverished peoples to their creditors.
Over the years 1981 through 1987, less developed countries paid US$1.5 trillion
more in debt service than they received in new loans. In 1995, the countries
of Latin America had a total external debt burden of more than $600 billion.
These debt payments, and the structural adjustment conditions imposed by creditors,
exacerbate inequalities among nations and distort development. The rise in financial
speculation at the expense of investment in production threatens the well-being
of working people everywhere, North and South. NAFTA's investment rules, the
proposed MAI, and proposals for changing the articles of agreement of the International
Monetary Fund are all designed to allow investors to take any kind of capital
in or out of member countries in any amount at any time. We can only expect
that FTAA negotiators will pursue similar objectives.
Our vision of international financial regulation has a different logic.
Guiding Principles:
- The international financial system should ensure stability and allocate
capital for productive purposes.
- National and international measures must be taken to minimize the disruptive
consequences of speculation and fly-by-night capital flows.
- International financial institutions must promote sustainable economic and
social development instead of austerity and structural adjustment policies
that impoverish peoples and erode health care, education and the environment.
- External debts contracted by repressive military dictatorships are illegitimate,
"odious debts" that should be written off
- The remaining debt for many nations is so high that it renders sustainable
development impossible. Unsustainable external debts that accumulated due
to high interest rates must be renegotiated and partially written off, with
the remainder payable over longer terms at low interest rates.
Specific Objectives:
- New ways of regulating speculative capital should be agreed upon multilaterally
to avoid instability and vulnerability for national economies and for the
international financial system.
- In as much as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank have failed
to oversee the international financial system in a manner that supports sustainable
and productive development, they should either be fundamentally restructured
or new institutions put in their place.
- National authorities must have the ability to regulate flows of "hot" money
into and out of their countries. There are several proposals at the international
level for confronting this problem that should be evaluated and discussed.
At the same time, there is a consensus on the need to give priority to direct
and productive investments, assure that investments are long-term, and prevent
instability that can cause their rapid flight. Such measures should include
taxes on speculative profits, laws requiring portfolio investments to remain
within the country for a minimum period, and incentives for direct and productive
investments.
- Any agreement in the Americas must include provisions to allow governments
to channel foreign investment into productive purposes instead of speculation.
The North American Free Trade Agreement must be amended to this end. Any other
agreement for the Americas or under the World Trade Organization, where they
may attempt to integrate the worst aspects of the proposed Multilateral Agreement
on Investment, must also share this orientation.
- A tax on foreign exchange transactions, as proposed by James Tobin, a prominent
monetary economist and Nobel Laureate, should be instituted to slow down currency
speculation and enable national governments to exercise more control over
their monetary policies. The revenues from a Tobin tax (conservatively estimated
at US$302 billion a year from a 0.25% tax) should be administered by an independent
United Nations agency and used for social and economic development.
- Every agreement between countries at different levels of development must
include compensatory financing to allow for achieving the competitiveness
that integration implies, and to fund social programs. This approach has been
followed within the European Union, where the richer countries have funneled
development aid into Spain, Portugal, Greece, and Ireland to lift up their
living standards closer to the level of other EU nations. In the Western Hemisphere,
the most effective way to level the playing field would be through a substantial
reduction of the debts owed by low-income countries. Therefore, the FTAA should
include the negotiation of a reduction of the principal owed, lower preferential
interest rates, and longer repayment terms.
- Orthodox structural adjustment conditions demanded by the World Bank and
the IMF should be abandoned, as they have manifestly failed to resolve the
debt crisis and have caused enormous hardship for the poorest sectors of the
population. Instead, countries should adopt economic development policies
like those proposed by the UN Economic Commission for Africa in its African
Alternative Framework to Structural Adjustment Programs for Socio-Economic
Recovery and Transformation.
- Central banks and other national regulatory bodies should be strengthened
to assure that they are not subordinate to national and international banking
oligopolies. Central banks and monetary authorities should be free from the
short-term electoral interests of parties or groups. Therefore, they must
have a certain autonomy from the executive branch of government. However,
in no way should these financial institutions be completely autonomous bodies
free from social control through democratically elected legislatures.
- Central banks and national monetary authorities must take concerted international
action to lower interest rates, stimulate demand for goods and services, and
channel investment into production instead of speculation. International cooperation
is also necessary to combat money laundering.
- No international agreement should diminish the capacity of states to establish
monetary and financial policies for the development and well-being of their
peoples.
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