Beware the IMF's ‘social justice’ promises

The Mercury, 11 October 2011

http://themercury.newspaperdirect.com/epaper/viewer.aspx?issue=64032011101100000000001001&page=9&article=207261113&q=Patrick+Bond

By Patrick Bond

In these days of dire economic and environmental crisis, with political 
elites under attack from Athens to Washington, the establishment is 
desperate for legitimacy. Even International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff 
now publicly endorse ‘social justice’ at the same time they tighten 
austerity screws.

Recall the context. The 2008-09 financial meltdown was supposedly solved 
by throwing money at bankers in Wall Street, the City of London, 
Frankfurt, Paris and Tokyo. But it didn’t work, and on BBC’s Newsnight 
last Friday, Robert Shapiro of the Georgetown University Business School 
blew the whistle on the European debt crisis.

“If they cannot address it in a credible way I believe within perhaps 
two to three weeks we will have a meltdown in sovereign debt which will 
produce a meltdown across the European banking system,” warned Shapiro. 
“We are talking about the largest banks in the world, the largest banks 
in Germany, the largest banks in France, that will spread to the United 
Kingdom, it will spread everywhere.”

Shapiro also happens to be a consultant to the IMF. Facing a new 
meltdown of reputational confidence, the institution’s panicked press 
office quickly tweeted, “IMF notes Shapiro is not IMF Adviser on 
European activities.” Instead, said the IMF with typical blind 
arrogance, “Europe’s growth potential is remarkable. With steady 
implementation of the right policies, it can be achieved.”

South Africans should pay attention because Finance Minister Pravin 
Gordhan last week offered our tax monies as an emergency R2 billion 
bailout loan from Pretoria to Brussels via the IMF. This comes on the 
heels of his R2.4 billion bailout offer to Swazi dictator King Mswati, 
in spite of widespread opposition by civil society in Swaziland and 
South Africa.

What Gordhan explained to SAfm about the European emergency credits last 
week was chilling, especially because I will never forget the Natal 
Indian Congress classes on revolutionary politics he gave at the Gandhi 
settlement in Phoenix a quarter century ago.

SAfm’s Alec Hogg asked, “Even if it is only a small amount, relatively 
speaking, that we are putting in, many African countries went through 
hell in the seventies and eighties because of conditionality according 
to these loans. Are you going to try and insist that there is similar 
conditionality now that the boot is on the other foot, as it were?”

“Absolutely,” replied Gordhan, “The IMF must be as proactive in 
developed countries as it is in developing countries. The days of this 
unequal treatment and the nasty treatment, if you like, for developing 
countries and politeness for developed countries must pass.”

Gordhan’s call for more proactive nastiness by the IMF and its Brussels 
allies against the Greek, Spanish, Portuguese and Irish poor and working 
people, throws African National Congress traditions of international 
solidarity into disrepute, of course. (Are you listening, ANC 
Disciplinary Committee chairman Derek Hanekom, or is it only Botswana’s 
corrupt, Pentagon-linked elite that is worth protecting from Julius 
Malema’s proactive nastiness?)

The same attacks are underway in Egypt, where tens of billions of 
dollars were funneled to the ultra-corrupt Hosni Mubarak regime from the 
State Department, Pentagon and IMF/World Bank. In June, the IMF offered 
a $3 billion loan to Egypt so that it could repay the IMF and other 
lenders the interest coming due on Cairo’s $33 billion foreign debt. A 
genuinely free democracy would have grounds to default on that debt, 
because of its ‘Odious’ nature in legal and technical terms.

But as if to whitewash over decades of illegitimacy, acting IMF Managing 
Director John Lipsky proclaimed on June 5, “We are optimistic that the 
programme’s objectives of promoting social justice, fostering recovery, 
and maintaining macroeconomic stability and generating jobs will bring 
positive results for the Egyptian people.”

Added the IMF’s Egypt mission head, Ratna Sahay, “Following a revolution 
and during a challenging period of political transition, the Egyptian 
authorities have put in place a home-grown economic program with the 
overarching objective of promoting social justice.”

The following week, Cairo’s military government began implementing a 
controversial law banning strikes and the finance minister not only 
promised a continuation of neoliberal policies but canceled a proposed 
capital gains tax.

In addition to IMF staff, another man who spent nearly three decades 
causing immense suffering at the World Bank, Ismail Serageldin, was 
recently invited to deliver the Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture, which he 
titled, “The Making of Social Justice.”

At Durban High School’s Seabrooke Theatre at 5pm today, at a videoed 
repeat of his speech, you can hear Serageldin calling social justice 
“the foundation of the modern Republic of South Africa… The light 
shining from South Africa has finally reached the northern part of the 
continent, where I live.”

Shining light? Does Serageldin not know that inequality, unemployment 
and environmental devastation have soared since 1994, thanks mainly to 
Pretoria’s adoption of World Bank and IMF policies?

He may simply not care. In an interview with the NGO Share International 
a few years ago, Serageldin was asked, “The World Bank has received a 
fair amount of criticism in recent years for its policies toward the 
poor and the environment. How have those policies changed during your 
tenure at the bank?”

The answer was as chilling as Gordhan’s: “I totally reject the criticism 
that's being brought forward against the Bank.”

The follow-up question: “One of the most controversial areas of 
involvement for the Bank has been its structural adjustment programs. 
Some people argue they hurt the poor by forcing governments to reduce or 
eliminate subsidies for basic goods in exchange for getting World Bank 
loans. Is that still something that the bank is involved with?” Replied 
Serageldin, “Sure.”

Serageldin is best known for his prophetic 1995 statement, “Many of the 
wars this century were about oil, but those of the next century will be 
over water.”

As if to ensure this would be true, Serageldin became a leader of the 
water privatization lobby’s World Water Council. Under his tutelage its 
main commission aimed “to help formulate global water policies.”

The World Bank push to end operating subsidies and privatise water was 
relentless, with Serageldin’s commission arguing that governments should 
“treat water like any other commodity and open its management to free 
market competition.” As he explained in 2003, “We pay for food. Why 
should we not pay for water?”

In Johannesburg as well as Argentina, Bolivia and many other sites, this 
philosophy ensured the early 2000s witnessed water wars of World Bank 
projects run by French, British and US multinational corporations 
against poor people.

If, as it seems, the Mandela Foundation and a Johannesburg audience were 
fooled by Serageldin, this only makes it more important for civil 
society in Durban, Egypt and everywhere else to ask tough questions to 
bankers who talk ‘social justice’ but who walk with a stick that always 
applies ‘nasty’ economic pain to society’s most vulnerable.


Patrick Bond directs the UKZN Centre for Civil Society.

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