http://www.alternet.org/story/149793/

The Egyptian Uprising Is a Direct Response to Ruthless Global 
Capitalism
By Nomi Prins, AlterNet

The revolution in Egypt is as much a rebellion against the painful 
deterioration of economic conditions as it is about opposing a 
dictator, though they are linked. That's why President Hosni 
Mubarak's announcement that he intends to stick around until 
September was met with an outpouring of rage.

When people are facing a dim future, in a country hijacked by a 
corrupt regime that destabilized its economy through what the CIA 
termed, "aggressively pursuing economic reforms to attract foreign 
investment” (in other words, the privatization and sale of its 
country’s financial system to international sharks), waiting 
doesn’t cut it.

Mohamed Bouazizi, the 26-year-old Tunisian who catalyzed this 
revolution, didn’t set himself on fire in protest of his inability 
to vote, but because of anguish over his job status in a country 
with 15.7 percent unemployment. The six other men in Algeria, 
Egypt and Mauritania who followed suit were also unemployed.

Tunisia’s dismal economic environment was a direct result of its 
increasingly “liberal” policy toward foreign speculators. Of the 
five countries covered by the World Bank’s, Investment Across 
Sectors Indicator, Tunisia had the fewest limits on foreign 
investment. It had opened all areas of its economy to foreign 
equity ownership, except the electricity sector.

Egypt adopted a similar come-and-get-it policy, on steroids. From 
2004 to 2008, as the world economic crisis was being stoked by the 
U.S. banking system and its rapacious toxic asset machine, 
Mubarak’s regime was participating in a different way. Mubarak 
wasn’t pushing subprime loans onto Egyptians; instead, he was 
embarking on an economic strategy that entailed selling large 
pieces of Egypt’s banks to the highest international bidder.

The result was a veritable grab-fest of foreign bank takeovers in 
the heart of Cairo. The raid began with Greek bank, Piraeus, 
taking a 70 percent stake in the Egyptian Commercial Bank in 2005, 
and included the sale of Bank of Alexandria, one of the four 
largest state-run banks, to the Italian bank, Gruppo Sanpaolo IMI 
in 2006. For the next two years, "hot" money poured into Egypt, as 
international banks muscled into Egypt and its financial system, 
before the intensity leveled off in 2008.

While foreign banks were setting up shop, Egypt also eliminated 
the red tape that came with foreign property investment, through 
decree number 583. This transformed the country, already a tourist 
hotspot, into a magnet for global real estate speculation. 
(Something that worked out really well for Ireland.) Even one of 
Goldman Sachs’ funds got in on the game, buying a $70 million 
chunk of Palm Hills Development SAE, a luxury real estate developer.

Other countries in the region, such as Jordan, where the 
unemployment rate is 13.4 percent, and the poverty rate 14.2 
percent (as in the U.S.), tried to mimic Egypt’s “open” policies, 
in varying degrees. That’s why eight of the 21 banks operating in 
Jordan are now foreign-owned, and its insurance market is 
dominated by U.S.-based, MetLife American Life Insurance Company. 
But it was Egypt that did it best.

 From 2004 to 2009, Egypt attracted $42 billion worth of foreign 
capital into its borders, as one of the top investment 
“destinations” in the Middle East and Africa. “Hot” money entry 
was made easy, with no restrictions on foreign investment or 
repatriation of profits, and no taxes on dividends, capital gains 
or corporate bond interest. As a result, volume on the Egyptian 
stock market swelled more than twelve-fold between 2004 and the 
first half of 2009.

Egypt and the United Arab Emirates even eliminated minimum capital 
requirements for investment, meaning that speculators could buy 
whatever they wanted, with no money down, a practice that didn’t 
exactly impel them to stick around for long.

But, as we learned in the U.S., what goes up with artificial 
helium plummets under real gravity. Starting in the second half of 
2009, oil prices fell and foreign banks slashed their capital 
holdings in Arabic nations. The hot money was cooling off. Even in 
the oil-rich UAE, the speed of capital outflow set foreign capital 
levels back to where they were in 2004, demonstrating how 
temporal, deceptive, fickle and irresponsible international 
speculative capital is. When hot money gets cold, it moves on, 
leaving vast economic devastation in its wake.

Not surprisingly, those foreign speculation strategies didn’t 
bring less poverty or more jobs either. Indeed, the insatiable 
hunt for great deals, whether by banks, hedge funds, or private 
equity funds, as it inevitably does, had the opposite effect.

Whenever hot money hones in on a geographical location or 
financial product, it creates the appearance of economic 
enhancement (such as with our GDP growth based on financial 
services, for instance). But, on its way out the door, that mirage 
is replaced with harsh decline.

In March 2010, in an effort to keep foreign capital coming in, 
Egypt’s Ministry of Investment presented the country's virtues to 
investors in a glossy “Invest in Egypt” brochure. The document 
proudly cited Egypt as being one of the world’s top 10 
“Reformers,” as reported by the World Bank and International 
Finance Corporation’s (IFC).  The World Bank’s definition of 
"reformer" has nothing to do with conditions for citizens, and 
everything to do with the degree and speed to which “hot” 
international money can zoom in and out of a country. Egypt had 
made the top 10 “Reformers” list for four out of the past five 
years (a distinction shared with Colombia, where urban 
unemployment has risen to over 13 percent).

Ironically, the Ministry’s brochure touted the large college 
graduate population entering the job market each year -- 325,000. 
The same graduates are the core of the current revolution. They 
failed to find adequate jobs and are faced with an official 
unemployment rate of just below 10 percent (though, similar to the 
U.S., that figure doesn’t account for underemployment, poor job 
quality or long-term prospects). Meanwhile, 20 percent of Egypt 
lives in poverty (compared to 14 percent and growing in the U.S.) 
and 10 percent of the population controls 28 percent of household 
income (compared to 30 percent in the U.S.).

When a country relinquishes its financial system and population's 
economic well-being to everyone else’s pursuit of "good deals," 
the fallout will be substantial. Sub-prime lending may not have 
been one of Egypt's problems as it was in the United States, but 
soured foreign real estate investment was. Also, foreign banks 
persuaded Egypt to issue complex securities with crazy derivatives 
in them (shades of Greece). Those securities plummeted in value as 
foreign speculators shunned them. Today, credit default swap 
spreads on Egyptian debt (and that of other Arabic countries) have 
substantially dropped in value, as international speculators are 
betting on further upheaval, targeting Egypt like just another 
number on a dartboard.

Citizens protesting in the streets from Greece to England, and 
more demonstrably, from Tunisia to Egypt, may be revolting for 
national reasons and against individual governments, but they 
share a common bond. They are revolting against a world that lines 
the pockets of rich deal-makers while sticking the tab to ordinary 
people. That bond is global. Related protests could reach Colombia 
and Ghana -- and maybe someday, the United States.

For in the United States, economic statistics are no better. By 
certain measures, like income inequality, they are worse than in 
Egypt. But we have no evil dictator to be a common focus for, say, 
an American economic revolution. Here, we freely elect the 
politicians who campaign with corporate funds and deregulate our 
financial system, who bail out entire banks instead of individual 
mortgage holders, and who keep corporate tax receipts low while 
increasing audits on small businesses and struggling individuals. 
Here, we elect the leaders who govern our growing income 
inequality, and wonder how Wall Street can pay itself another 
round of record bonuses.

In that respect, as difficult as conditions are in the Middle 
East, there may be more hope for economic change to rise from 
those revolting populations. It may not come from simply 
overthrowing the current regime, given the entrenched 
“liberalization” strategies, but it is certainly an excellent start.

Nomi Prins is a senior fellow at the public policy center Demos 
and author of It Takes a Pillage: Behind the Bailouts, Bonuses, 
and Backroom Deals from Washington to Wall Street.
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