I think the following fwd is pertinent to the thread on Argentina.
Also, let's not forget how the IMF ruined Yugoslavia and pulled it into
bloody civil wars.  Keith suggesting that the IMF will pull Argentina out
of this is like assigning the gardener's job to the wild boar.  Carmen, you
better don't listen to Keith's PR, no matter how sweet and flattering --
you saw in the Falklands war how well-meaning those sweet-talkers really are.

Greetings from Switzerland,
Chris




_____http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert_reviews/2001/10/102601.html_____

LIFE AND DEBT
*** (Not rated)
October 26, 2001
New Yorker Films presents a documentary produced and directed by Stephanie
Black. Narration written by Jamaica Kincaid. Running time: 86 minutes. No
MPAA rating.

BY ROGER EBERT

Most Americans have been bewildered by the anti-globalization protesters at
recent meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Isn't
free trade a good thing? Isn't a global economy great for everyone? What
could the protesters possibly be objecting to?

''Life and Debt,'' a documentary by Stephanie Black, with a commentary
written by Jamaica Kincaid, looks at the effect of the International
Monetary Fund on the economy of Jamaica. The result, she argues, has been
the destruction of Jamaican industry and agriculture, the end of Jamaica as
a self-sufficient economic entity, and its conversion into a market for
North American goods and a source of underpaid labor.

A harsh indictment, but the film is persuasive, showing how powdered milk
from America, (purchased from subsidized American dairy farmers and dumped
at a loss) has destroyed the Jamaican fresh milk industry, and how even the
one remaining market for Jamaican bananas--England--is threatened by the
Chiquita-Dole-Del Monte forces, who think one Jamaican banana not sold by
them is too many. Latin American banana workers earn $1 a day; Jamaicans
can't live on that. Other markets reflect the same policies: Subsidized
Idaho potatoes have bankrupted Jamaican potato farmers, McDonald's refuses
to buy local meat; sweet Jamaican onions are underpriced by American onions
sold at a loss, and so on.

One scheme to help the Jamaican economy, the film says, has been the
establishment of ''free zones,'' fenced-in manufacturing areas where workers
are paid $30 a week to assemble goods which arrive and leave by container
ship without legally being on Jamaican soil. Labor unions are banned,
working conditions are subhuman, strikers are forced back to work at
gunpoint, and paychecks are taxed for health and retirement schemes that
don't seem to exist. The Hanes clothing division of Chicago's Sara Lee
company was one of the beneficiaries, until, the movie says, it pulled out
to find even cheaper workers elsewhere.

The IMF ideally lends money, which can be used to help local businesses, but
as former Jamaican prime minister Michael Manley observes, it charges twice
the world rate for interest and forbids the country from charging its own
lenders less. An IMF-backed small business loan in Jamaica might carry 25
percent interest.

''You ask, whose interest is the IMF serving?'' Manley says. "Ask--who set
it up?''

IMF policies can be changed only by an 80 percent vote. The United States,
Japan, Germany, England, Canada and Italy control more than 80 percent of
the votes. The bottom line: Developing economies of the Third World are
deliberately destroyed and turned into captive markets for the rich nations,
while their once self-sufficient inhabitants become cheap labor and local
competition is penalized.

Are these charges true? I do not have the expertise to say. I only bring you
the news that this documentary, which has played twice on PBS and is now at
the Music Box, exists. If you're curious about why the demonstrators are so
angry, this is why they're so angry.

Copyright � Chicago Sun-Times Inc.

http://www.lifeanddebt.org/

http://www.jahworks.org/music/movies/life_debt.html

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0124/tate.php


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