Actually, there is not much of a "versus" from the standpoint of 
Marxism. This should be a good reminder that a state owned sector 
is in and of itself progressive.

---

NY Times February 17, 2011
Egyptians Say Military Discourages an Open Economy
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK

CAIRO — The Egyptian military defends the country, but it also 
runs day care centers and beach resorts. Its divisions make 
television sets, jeeps, washing machines, wooden furniture and 
olive oil, as well as bottled water under a brand reportedly named 
after a general’s daughter, Safi.

 From this vast web of businesses, the military pays no taxes, 
employs conscripted labor, buys public land on favorable terms and 
discloses nothing to Parliament or the public.

Since the ouster last week of President Hosni Mubarak, of course, 
the military also runs the government. And some scholars, 
economists and business groups say it has already begun taking 
steps to protect the privileges of its gated economy, discouraging 
changes that some argue are crucial if Egypt is to emerge as a 
more stable, prosperous country.

“Protecting its businesses from scrutiny and accountability is a 
red line the military will draw,” said Robert Springborg, an 
expert on Egypt’s military at the Naval Postgraduate School. “And 
that means there can be no meaningful civilian oversight.”

Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, the minister of defense and 
military production who now leads the council of officers ruling 
Egypt, has been a strong advocate of government control of prices 
and production. He has consistently opposed steps to open up the 
economy, according to diplomatic cables made public by WikiLeaks.

And already there are signs that the military is purging from the 
cabinet and ruling party advocates of market-oriented economic 
changes, like selling off state-owned companies and reducing 
barriers to trade.

As the military began to take over, the government pushed out 
figures reviled for reaping excessive personal profits from the 
sell-off of public properties, most notably Mr. Mubarak’s younger 
son, Gamal, and his friend the steel magnate Ahmed Ezz. On 
Thursday, an Egyptian prosecutor ordered that Mr. Ezz be detained 
pending trial for corruption, along with two businessmen in the 
old cabinet — former Tourism Minister Zuhair Garana and former 
Housing Minister Ahmed el-Maghrabi — as well as former Interior 
Minister Habib el-Adli.

But the military-led government also struck at advocates of 
economic openness, including the former finance minister Youssef 
Boutros-Ghali, who was forced from his job, and the former trade 
minister Rachid Mohamed Rachid, whose assets were frozen under 
allegations of corruption. Both are highly regarded 
internationally and had not been previously accused of corruption.

“That mystified everybody,” said Hisham A. Fahmy, chief executive 
of the American Chamber of Commerce in Egypt.

In an interview, Mr. Rachid said he felt like a scapegoat. “People 
who have been supporting liberal reforms or an open economy are 
being caught up in the anticorruption campaign,” he said. “My case 
is one of them.”

“Now there are a lot of voices from the past talking about 
nationalization — ‘Why do we need a private sector?’ ” he added. 
He declined to talk specifically about the military but said that 
in general within the government, “some people have tried to say 
that the cause of the revolution was simply economic reform.”

Though some Western analysts have guessed that the military’s 
empire makes up as much as a third of Egypt’s economy, Mr. Rachid 
said it was in fact less than 10 percent. But economists say that 
because of its vested interests they still worry that the military 
will impede the continuation of the transition from the 
state-dominated economy established under President Gamal Abdel 
Nasser to a more open and efficient free market that advanced 
under Mr. Mubarak.

Moreover, the military’s power to guide policy is, at the moment, 
unchecked. The military has invited no civilian input into the 
transitional government, and it has enjoyed such a surge in 
prestige since it helped usher out Mr. Mubarak that almost no one 
in the opposition is criticizing it.

“We trust them,” said Walid Rachid, a member of the April 6 Youth 
Movement that helped set off the revolt. “Because of the army our 
revolution has become safe.”

Some of the young revolutionaries at the vanguard of the revolt 
identify themselves as leftists or socialists. And the idea of 
liberalizing the economy was thrown into disrepute because of the 
corrupt way that the Mubarak government carried out privatization, 
bestowing fortunes on a small circle around the ruling party while 
leaving most Egyptians struggling against grinding poverty and 
rampant inflation.

“People think that liberalization creates corruption,” said Abdel 
Fattah el-Gibaly, director of economic research at Al-Ahram Center 
for Political and Strategic Studies. “I think we will go back, not 
exactly to socialism, but maybe halfway.”

And the Egyptian military, said Mr. Springborg of the Naval 
Postgraduate School, is happy to go along. “The military is like 
the matador with the red cape attracting the bull of resentment 
against the corruption of the old regime,” he said, “and they are 
playing it very successfully.”

Gen. Fathy el-Sady, a spokesman for the Ministry of Defense 
Production, declined to comment, saying the minister in charge was 
tied up dealing with strikes at military-run companies.

The military has used its leverage in times of crises to thwart 
free market reforms before, most notably during the 1977 bread 
riots set off after President Anwar el-Sadat cut subsidies for 
food prices to move toward a free market. The military agreed to 
quell the unrest only after extracting a promise from Mr. Sadat 
that he would reinstate the subsidies, said Michael Wahid Hanna, 
who studies Egypt’s military at the Century Foundation in Washington.

Field Marshal Tantawi, the defense minister, and other senior 
officers were all commissioned before Mr. Sadat switched Egypt’s 
allegiance to the West in 1979. They trained in the former Soviet 
Union, where sprawling business empires under military control 
were not uncommon.

“In the cabinet, where he still wields significant influence, 
Tantawi has opposed both economic and political reforms that he 
perceives as eroding central government power,” the American 
ambassador at the time, Francis J. Ricciardone Jr., wrote in one 
2008 cable released by WikiLeaks.

“On economic reform, Tantawi believes that Egypt’s economic reform 
plan fosters social instability by lessening G.O.E. controls over 
prices and production,” the ambassador added, referring to the 
government of Egypt and calling Field Marshal Tantawi “aging and 
change-resistant.”

In a cable later that year describing the tensions pitting the 
military against the businessmen around Gamal Mubarak, the new 
ambassador, Margaret Scobey, wrote: “The military views the 
G.O.E.’s privatization efforts as a threat to its economic 
position, and therefore generally opposes economic reforms. We see 
the military’s role in the economy as a force that generally 
stifles free market reform by increasing direct government 
involvement in the markets.”

Mr. Mubarak, scholars and Western diplomats say, allowed the 
military to expand its empire, ensuring the allegiance of its 
officers and quieting discontent by dismantling other state-owned 
businesses. And with so many businesses under their control, the 
military’s top officials have doled out chief executive jobs and 
weekends at military-owned resorts to cultivate loyalty. Though 
deprivation and inequality were major complaints leading to the 
uprising, economists credit the Mubarak government with expanding 
the economy and increasing its growth rate by loosening state 
controls and attracting foreign investment.

But the Mubarak government carried out reforms from the top, 
without changing burdensome regulations that made it hard for 
small businesses to compete, and the benefits flowed mainly to a 
few. Most Egyptians felt, if anything, more impoverished, watching 
new Mercedeses and BMWs zip by donkey carts hauling garbage 
through the streets.

“The Mubarak government privatized basically by offering state 
properties to their cronies,” said Ragui Assaad, an economist who 
studies Egypt at the University of Minnesota.

Paul Sullivan, an expert on Egypt and its military at Georgetown 
University, said the military leaders were farsighted enough to 
see that stability would now require continued economic as well as 
political liberalization. But he also acknowledged the possibility 
of a return to the past. “There is a witch hunt for corruption, 
and there is a risk that the economy might go back to the days of 
Nasser,” the apex of centralized state control, he said.
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