April 4, 2003   E-mail story    Print  
 

Iraq Debts Add Up to Trouble
 Economists say Bush administration officials are
wrong to assume that petroleum revenue will pay for
postwar reconstruction.

By Warren Vieth, LA Times Staff Writer

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-war-iraqdebt4apr04.story

WASHINGTON -- To hear some Bush administration
officials tell it, the reconstruction of Iraq will
largely pay for itself, thanks to a postwar gusher of
petroleum revenue.

"The one thing that is certain is Iraq is a wealthy
nation," White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer
said.

A look at the national balance sheet tells a different
story.

Iraq will emerge from the war a financial shambles,
many economists say, with a debt load bigger than that
of Argentina, a cash flow crunch rivaling those of
Third World countries, a mountain of unresolved
compensation claims, a shaky currency, high
unemployment, galloping inflation and a crumbling
infrastructure expected to sustain more damage before
the shooting stops.

And the more oil Iraq produces to pump up its
earnings, the more likely it becomes that prices will
fall, leaving it no better off than before.

"Clearly, it's a basket case," said Dean Baker,
co-director of the liberal Center for Economic and
Policy Research in Washington. "Once you start talking
about it, you see what an impossible situation it is.
I don't think the Bush administration is anxious to
have that conversation."

Bathsheba Crocker, director of the Post-War
Reconstruction Project at the centrist Center for
Strategic & International Studies, said Iraq's oil
money is not the panacea many Bush officials seem to
think it is.

"It's unreasonable to think that oil is going to
finance all of the needs of the country," Crocker
said. "All told, there's just not enough money to go
around."

Baker and Crocker are among a small but vocal
contingent of nongovernment economists and foreign
policy analysts who say it is time for the United
States to stop pretending that life in Iraq after the
war will resemble something out of "The Beverly
Hillbillies."

The reality, they say, will look more like Chapter 11.
In their view, the only satisfactory solution is an
international aid and debt relief program as ambitious
as the Marshall Plan that helped Europe recover from
the ravages of World War II.

"Unless debt and reparations are dealt with properly,
Iraq is basically bankrupt," said Rubar Sandi, an
Iraqi American investment banker who is pressing
administration officials to embrace a major debt
relief initiative.

"I know they might not like what I'm saying," said
Sandi, whose Washington-based Corporate Bank Business
Group has investments in several developing countries.
"But I am a businessman, and it's simple mathematics."

Although the debt write-offs would be spread far and
wide, some of the biggest hits would be taken by
countries such as Russia and France, which supplied
Saddam Hussein with military gear and other goods
before the 1991 Persian Gulf War and have been staunch
opponents of the current conflict.

Even then, experts say, Iraq's oil revenue probably
would fall short of what is needed to pay for postwar
reconstruction, and much of the immediate shortfall
would wind up being financed by U.S. Treasury bonds.

So far, the administration seems not to have noticed.
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told Congress
last week that Iraq would be able to pick up much of
the tab for postwar rebuilding.

"We're dealing with a country that can really finance
its own reconstruction relatively soon," he said.

Office of Management and Budget Director Mitchell
Daniels Jr. asserted that oil and gas revenue and
confiscated Iraqi assets would provide abundant
resources for reconstruction.

Some members of Congress agree. "I don't think it
makes sense to ask U.S. taxpayers to pay the full cost
of rebuilding Iraq when the Iraqi state has plenty of
resources to do so itself," said Sen. Byron L. Dorgan
(D-N.D.), who introduced a resolution Thursday calling
for the use of oil proceeds to finance the rebuilding
effort.

However, Bush administration officials have declined
to make specific estimates of the long-term costs of
rebuilding Iraq.

Without question, Iraq possesses assets any country
would covet.

It sits atop the world's second-biggest pool of proven
oil reserves, some 112 billion barrels, as well as
huge deposits of natural gas and petroleum yet to be
discovered.

But wealth in the ground does not necessarily
translate into money in the bank, at least not
immediately. Iraq's oil infrastructure has
deteriorated badly during Hussein's reign, and most
experts say it would take up to two years and $5
billion to restore production to its pre-Gulf War
level.

Estimates of Iraq's potential oil earnings during the
first year or two after the war range from about $15
billion to $20 billion, depending on price and
production assumptions.

>From that income, at least $11 billion would be needed
initially for routine government spending on state
employees' salaries, public health, safety, education,
agriculture and welfare programs, Sandi said.

That would leave $4 billion to $9 billion to finance
repairs, infrastructure development, humanitarian
assistance, debt payments, claim settlements and war
reparations.

And that's where the numbers stop making sense.

Estimates of Iraq's reconstruction needs start at
about $25 billion and run as high as $100 billion. The
Council on Foreign Relations predicts that
reconstruction will consume about $20 billion a year
for several years.

Iraq's external debt � loans from foreign countries
and international creditors � totals at least $60
billion and as much as $130 billion.

Sandi, who has contacted a number of governments to
discuss Iraq's financial situation, said his best
estimate is about $115 billion.

At 10% interest, as low a rate as indebted countries
can expect to pay, Iraq's interest payments alone
could cost more than $10 billion a year.

Iraq also faces thousands of compensation claims
totaling more than $200 billion.

Nearly $100 billion is being sought by Iran as a
result of the eight-year war instigated by Hussein.

As well, many claims were filed by Kuwaiti interests
in connection with the 1990 invasion that triggered
the Gulf War.

The United Nations, which is arbitrating a portion of
the claims, already is deducting about $4 billion a
year from Iraq's oil revenue to pay claimants. If the
rest of the pending claims were resolved, the payments
could increase substantially.

In addition, Russia, France, China and several other
countries have signed contracts with Iraq totaling
about $60 billion. Russia, in particular, is insisting
that a new Iraqi government must honor those deals.

Iraq's debt burden is several times the size of its
entire economy, which means it is more heavily
leveraged than most of the countries qualifying for
the World Bank's Third World debt relief program. Its
financial obligations amount to more than $16,000 for
every man, woman and child in Iraq, a country whose
per capita gross domestic product has fallen to
$2,500.

A number of economists say the only practical solution
is for creditor countries and commercial lenders to
write off a substantial portion of the debt, perhaps
as much as 80%, and to allow a moratorium on all
payments and reparations for five years or so after
the war. The United States and other members of the
Paris Club creditor group did that for Yugoslavia
after the war in Kosovo in 2001.

"There's a very good argument for a massive
restructuring or writing off of debt," said Crocker,
of the Center for Strategic & International Studies.
"The international community has certainly done that
in the past. The problem is, it needs to be dealt with
now. This is not a longer-term issue. The minute
Saddam is gone, people are going to start demanding
the money."

The United States may be reluctant to take the lead on
debt relief.

Not only would it focus attention on the substantial
costs associated with the war effort, it would require
asking Russia, France, Saudi Arabia and other war
skeptics to swallow a disproportionately large share
of the debt forgiveness.

"It's going to be hard for them to say, 'OK, Iraq, you
don't have to pay your debts,' especially when they're
insisting that everyone else has to pay all their
debts all of the time," said Baker, of the Center for
Economic and Policy Research.

Philip K. Verleger Jr., an energy economist and senior
fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said
Iraq's postwar financial stability � and the United
States' future expense tab � would depend in large
part on the Saudis, who hold $25 billion of Iraq's
external debt.

Any increase in Iraqi oil output is likely to drive
down oil prices, currently about $29 a barrel, unless
the Saudis are willing to throttle back their own
production to keep supply and demand in sync, Verleger
said. Whether they would be willing to do so is an
open question.

"Most calculations suggest that if Saudi Arabia does
not cut production and we put the Iraqi oil back in
the market, we're going to be dealing with a price
back in the teens," Verleger said. "If the Saudis so
choose, they can make life very, very difficult and
very, very expensive for the United States."

But Sandi, the investment banker, said it is only fair
for foreign creditors to wipe the slate clean so Iraq
doesn't suffer the same financial fate as Germany
after World War I, when crushing debts and
hyper-inflation helped set the stage for World War II.

"The whole world knows they gave that money to Saddam.
The international community has to come together and
discharge Iraq's debt, if not all of it, then at least
a portion," said Sandi, who is circulating a "Phoenix
Plan" for repairing Iraq's economy.

"Why? To have a good neighbor, a peaceful neighbor, a
stable neighbor. It's a good price to pay, I think."

Times staff writer Richard Simon contributed to this report.

=====
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John D. Giorgis               -                  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Tonight I have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq:
 Your enemy is not surrounding your country � your enemy is ruling your  
 country. And the day he and his regime are removed from power will be    
           the day of your liberation."  -George W. Bush 1/29/03

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