RECESSION
By Pierre Ivorra
  




Original source: l'Humanite 

In what hidey-hole is economic growth going to take refuge, amid this 
unprecedented financial crisis? France is now in a recession according to the 
latest figures from the French National Institute for Statistics and Economic 
Studies, and the forecasts for 0.6 to 1.1 percent growth in 2009 are certainly 
over-optimistic. The euro zone is not expected to experience more than one 
percent growth in 2009 according to the official figures. As for American 
leaders and economists, they make no secret of their fears. Just about 
everywhere there are more and more signs that the economic situation is 
worsening. The emerging markets seem to be resisting better, but this is likely 
to be only temporary. 

And yet, the above is probably still an underestimation of the impact that this 
financial crisis may have on economic life. For example, the United States’ 
effort to pour or inject hundreds of billions of dollars to prop up shaky banks 
and financial institutions is no sure bet. The American authorities are 
financing the resulting “hole” by issuing Treasury bonds, which the Japanese 
and Chinese central banks, in particular, have been buying. One cannot rule out 
the possibility that, at some point, these central banks will want to get rid 
of some of the colossal dollar reserves that they have accumulated – triggering 
a collapse of the dollar and devastating knock-on effects. 






 
We’ve already underlined the fact that, in our opinion, this crisis expresses 
the contradiction between the insufficiency of the means devoted to human 
development and the enormous accumulation, on a world scale, of capital devoted 
to speculation and finance. But it remains for us to insist on the role of 
credit in both the exacerbation of this contradiction and the role that it 
could play in solving it, so that we can begin to get out of this crisis. 

It can’t be repeated enough that the banks financed, and with a vengeance, the 
external growth operations, the securitization of debt, and the leveraged 
buy-outs that whipped up speculation like some diabolical soufflé. They did so 
by granting credit, to the applause both of the central banks and of right-wing 
and certain left-wing governments, in Europe notably thanks to a “strong” euro. 

Now they’re telling us that the house is on fire and we can’t just stand around 
doing nothing, we’ve got to come together in a veritable “sacred union” (1) to 
put out the fire and consequently shell out even more billions of dollars, 
euros and yens to avoid going over the brink. In the United States, they’ve 
bullied through the adoption of the federal government plan to create a $700 
billion fund to buy up all the toxic assets that are lying about. But is it a 
question of cleaning the poison out of the system just so the same people, or 
their blood brothers, can go back into dealing toxic assets? Obviously we can’t 
just stand around doing nothing, we’ve got to act fast, but to do so, we’ve got 
to define the conditions and review the rules governing the financing of the 
economy by the banks, and right away. Before doing anything else. 

Obviously, that means big changes. Thus, particularly in France, the 
government’s 2009 budget looks like a worst-case scenario, it seems to be 
specially-designed to worsen the expected fall in growth. For its part, the 
French Socialist Party has taken the opposite tack and is demanding 
reflationary measures. Of course – but what is to be reflated? Financial 
growth, or helping the French electric company to buy out another big energy 
company, after having gobbled up British Energy? As concerns bank credit, it’s 
not just a question of the amount that’s needed. It’s a question of pushing 
through demands regarding the nature of these credits, their object, their 
goals, in order to favor investment, production, research and training rather 
than finance profits. That’s a crucial question, if we are to put out the fire. 

(1) The Sacred Union is the name given to the French left’s support for 
imperialism and its betrayal of proletarian internationalism during World War 
I. 

--Translated by Gene Zbikowski.  



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