Controlling the Global Economy: Bilderberg, the Trilateral Commission
and the Federal Reserve Part2
Politics / Market Manipulation
Aug 11, 2009 - 11:54 AM

part 1 is here
The Bilderberg Group and the European Union Project
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article12509.html
http://www.911forum.org.uk

By: Global_Research
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article12666.html

Controlling the Global Economy: Bilderberg, the Trilateral Commission
and the Federal Reserve Part2

Continues from Part 1 Here

Globalization: A Liberal-Mercantilist Economic Order?

Neo-Liberals Take the Forefront

Andrew Gavin Marshall


In 1971, Jimmy Carter, a somewhat obscure governor from Georgia had
started to have meetings with David Rockefeller. They became connected
due to Carter’s support from the Atlanta corporate elite, who had
extensive ties to the Rockefellers. So in 1973, when David Rockefeller
and Zbigniew Brzezinski were picking people to join the Trilateral
Commission, Carter was selected for membership. Carter thus attended
every meeting, and even paid for his trip to the 1976 meeting in Japan
with his campaign funds, as he was running for president at the time.
Brzezinski was Carter’s closest adviser, writing Carter’s major
campaign speeches.[73]

When Jimmy Carter became President, he appointed over two-dozen
members of the Trilateral Commission to key positions in his cabinet,
among them, Zbigniew Brzezinski, who became National Security Adviser;
Samuel P. Huntington, Coordinator of National Security and Deputy to
Brzezinski; Harold Brown, Secretary of Defense; Warren Christopher,
Deputy Secretary of State; Walter Mondale, Vice President; Cyrus
Vance, Secretary of State; and in 1979, he appointed David
Rockefeller’s friend, Paul Volcker, as Chairman of the Federal Reserve
Board.[74]

In 1979, the Iranian Revolution spurred another massive increase in
the price of oil. The Western nations, particularly the United States,
had put a freeze on Iranian assets, “effectively restricting the
access of Iran to the global oil market, the Iranian assets freeze
became a major factor in the huge oil price increases of 1979 and
1981.”[75] Added to this, in 1979, British Petroleum cancelled major
oil contracts for oil supply, which along with cancellations taken by
Royal Dutch Shell, drove the price of oil up higher.[76]

However, in 1979, the Federal Reserve, now the lynch-pin of the
international monetary system, which was awash in petro-dollars (US
dollars) as a result of the 1973 oil crisis, decided to take a
different action from the one it had taken earlier. In August of 1979,
“on the advice of David Rockefeller and other influential voices of
the Wall Street banking establishment, President Carter appointed Paul
A. Volcker, the man who, back in August 1971, had been a key architect
of the policy of taking the dollar off the gold standard, to head the
Federal Reserve.”[77]

Volcker got his start as a staff economist at the New York Federal
Reserve Bank in the early 50s. After five years there, “David
Rockefeller’s Chase Bank lured him away.”[78] So in 1957, Volcker went
to work at Chase, where Rockefeller “recruited him as his special
assistant on a congressional commission on money and credit in America
and for help, later, on an advisory commission to the Treasury
Department.”[79] In the early 60s, Volcker went to work in the
Treasury Department, and returned to Chase in 1965 “as an aide to
Rockefeller, this time as vice president dealing with international
business.” With Nixon entering the White House, Volcker got the third
highest job in the Treasury Department. This put him at the center of
the decision making process behind the dissolution of the Bretton
Woods agreement.[80] In 1973, Volcker became a member of Rockefeller’s
Trilateral Commission. In 1975, he got the job as President of the New
York Federal Reserve Bank, the most powerful of the 12 branches of the
Fed.

In 1979, Carter gave the job of Treasury Secretary to Arthur Miller,
who had been Chairman of the Fed. This left an opening at the Fed,
which was initially offered by Carter to David Rockefeller, who
declined, and then to A.W. Clausen, Chairman of Bank of America, who
also declined. Carter repeatedly tried to get Rockefeller to accept,
and ultimately Rockefeller recommended Volcker for the job.[81]
Volcker became Chairman of the Federal Reserve System, and immediately
took drastic action to fight inflation by radically increasing
interest rates.

The world was taken by shock. This was not a policy that would only be
felt in the US with a recession, but was to send shock waves around
the world, devastating the Third World debtor nations. This was likely
the ultimate aim of the 1970s oil shocks and the 1979 Federal Reserve
shock therapy. With the raising of interest rates, the cost of
international money also rose. Thus, the interest rates on
international loans made throughout the 1970s rose from 2% in the
1970s to 18% in the 1980s, dramatically increasing the interest
charges on loans to developing countries.[82]

In the developing world, states that had to import oil faced enormous
bills to cover their debts, and even oil producing countries, such as
Mexico, faced huge problems as they had borrowed heavily in order to
industrialize, and then suffered when oil prices fell again as the
recession occurring in the developed states reduced demand. Thus, in
1982, Mexico declared that it could no longer pay its debt, meaning
that, “they could no longer cover the cost of interest payments, much
less hope to repay the debt.” The result was the bursting of the debt
bubble. Banks then halted their loans to Mexico, and “Before long it
was evident that states such as Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, and many
sub-Saharan African countries were in equally difficult financial
positions.”[83]

The IMF and World Bank entered the scene newly refurnished with a
whole new outlook and policy program designed just in time for the
arrival of the debt crisis. The IMF “negotiated standby loans with
debtors offering temporary assistance to states in need. In return for
the loans states agreed to undertake structural adjustment programs
(SAPs). These programs entailed the liberalization of economies to
trade and foreign investment as well as the reduction of state
subsidies and bureaucracies to balance national budgets.”[84] Thus,
the neoliberal project of 1973 in Chile was expanded into the very
functioning of the International Financial Institutions (IFIs).

Neoliberalism is “a particular organization of capitalism, which has
evolved to protect capital(ism) and to reduce the power of labour.
This is achieved by means of social, economic and political
transformations imposed by internal forces as well as external
pressure,” and it entails the “shameless use of foreign aid, debt
relief and balance of payments support to promote the neoliberal
programme, and diplomatic pressure, political unrest and military
intervention when necessary.”[85] Further, “neoliberalism is part of a
hegemonic project concentrating power and wealth in elite groups
around the world, benefiting especially the financial interests within
each country, and US capital internationally. Therefore, globalization
and imperialism cannot be analysed separately from neoliberalism.”[86]

Joseph Stiglitz, former Chief Economist of the World Bank, wrote in
his book, Globalization and its Discontents, “In the 1980s, the Bank
went beyond just lending for projects (like roads and dams) to
providing broad-based support, in the form of structural adjustment
loans; but it did this only when the IMF gave its approval – and with
that approval came IMF-imposed conditions on the country.”[87] As
economist Michel Chossudovsky wrote, “Because countries were indebted,
the Bretton Woods institutions were able to oblige them through the so-
called ‘conditionalities’ attached to the loan agreements to
appropriately redirect their macro-economic policy in accordance with
the interests of the official and commercial creditors.”[88]

The nature of SAPs is such that the conditions imposed upon countries
that sign onto these agreements include: lowering budget deficits,
devaluing the currency, limiting government borrowing from the central
bank, liberalizing foreign trade, reducing public sector wages, price
liberalization, deregulation and altering interest rates.[89] For
reducing budget deficits, “precise ‘ceilings’ are placed on all
categories of expenditure; the state is no longer permitted to
mobilize its own resources for the building of public infrastructure,
roads, or hospitals, etc.”[90]

Joseph Stiglitz wrote that, “the IMF staff monitored progress, not
just on the relevant indicators for sound macromanagement – inflation,
growth, and unemployment – but on intermediate variables, such as the
money supply,” and that “In some cases the agreements stipulated what
laws the country’s Parliament would have to pass to meet IMF
requirements or ‘targets’ – and by when.”[91] Further, “The conditions
went beyond economics into areas that properly belong in the realm of
politics,” and that “the way conditionality was imposed made the
conditions politically unsustainable; when a new government came into
power, they would be abandoned. Such conditions were seen as the
intrusion by the new colonial power on the country’s own
sovereignty.”[92]

“The phrase ‘Washington Consensus’ was coined to capture the agreement
upon economic policy that was shared between the two major
international financial institutions in Washington (IMF and World
Bank) and the US government itself. This consensus stipulated that the
best path to economic development was through financial and trade
liberalization and that international institutions should persuade
countries to adopt such measures as quickly as possible.”[93] The debt
crisis provided the perfect opportunity to quickly impose these
conditions upon countries that were not in a position to negotiate and
with no time to spare, desperately in need of loans. Without the debt
crisis, such policies may have been subject to greater scrutiny, and
with a case-by-case analysis of countries adopting SAPs, the world
would become quickly aware of their dangerous implications. The debt
crisis was absolutely necessary in implementing the SAPs on an
international scale in a short amount of time.

The effect became quite clear, as the result “of these policies on the
population of developing countries was devastating. The 1980s is known
as the ‘lost decade’ of development. Many developing countries’
economies were smaller and poorer in 1990 than in 1980. Over the 1980s
and 1990s, debt in many developing countries was so great that
governments had few resources to spend on social services and
development.”[94] With the debt crisis, countries in the developing
world were “[s]tarved of international finance, [and] states had
little choice but to open their economies to foreign investors and
trade.”[95] The “Third World” was recaptured in the cold grasp of
economic colonialism under the auspices of neo-liberal economic
theory.

A Return to Statist Theory

Since the 1970s, mercantilist thought had re-emerged in mainstream
political-economic theory. Under various names such as neo-
mercantilism, economic nationalism or statism, they hold as vital the
centrality of the state in the global political economy. Much
“Globalization” literature puts an emphasis on the “decline of the
state” in the face of an integrated international economic order,
where borders are made illusory. However, statist theory at least
helps us understand that the state is still a vital factor within the
global political economy, even in the midst of a neo-liberal economic
order.

Within the neo-liberal economic order, it was the powerful western
(primarily US and Western European) states that imposed neo-
mercantilist or statist policies in order to protect and promote their
interests within the global political economy. Some of these methods
were revolved around policy tools such as export subsidies, imposed to
lower the price of goods, which would make them more attractive to
importers, giving that particular nation an advantage over the
competition.

For example, the US has enormous agriculture export subsidies, which
make US agriculture and grain an easily affordable, attractive and
accessible commodity for importing nations. Countries of the global
south (the Lesser-Developed Countries, LDCs), subject to neo-liberal
policies imposed upon them by the World Bank and IMF were forced to
open their economies up to foreign capital. The World Bank would bring
in heavily subsidized US grain to these poor nations under the guise
of “food aid,” which would have the affect of destabilizing the
nation’s agriculture market, as the heavily subsidized US grains would
be cheaper than local produce, putting farmers out of business. Most
LDCs are predominantly rural based, so when the farming sector is
devastated, so too is the entire nation. They plunge into economic
crisis and even famine.

With the statist approach, theorists examine how the state is still
relevant in shaping economic outcomes and still remains a powerful
entity in the international arena. One theorist who is prominent
within the statist school is Robert Gilpin. Gilpin, a professor at the
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at
Princeton, is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. In
his book, Global Political Economy, Gilpin postulated that
multinational corporations were an invention of the United States, and
indeed an “American phenomenon” upon which European and Asian states
responded by internationalizing their own firms. In this sense, his
theory postulated to a return to the competitive nature of
mercantilist economic theory, in which one state gains at the expense
of another. He also addresses the nature of the international economy,
in that both historically and presently, there was a single state
acting as the main enforcer and manager of the global economy.
Historically, it was Britain, and presently, it was the United
States.

One cannot deny the significance of the state in the global political
economy, as it has been, and still remains very relevant. The events
of 1973 are exemplary of this, however, more must be examined in order
to better understand the situation. Though states are still prominent
actors, it is vital to address in whose interest they act.
Mercantilist and statist theorists tend to focus on the concept that
states act in their own selfish interest, for the benefit of the
state, both politically and economically. However, this is somewhat
linear and diversionary, as it does not address the precise structure
of the state economy, specifically in terms of its monetary and
central banking system.

States, most especially the large hegemonic ones, such as the United
States and Great Britain, are controlled by the international central
banking system, working through secret agreements at the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS), and operating through national
central banks (such as the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve).
The state is thus owned by an international banking cartel, and though
the state acts in such a way that proves its continual relevance in
the global economy, it acts so not in terms of self-interest for the
state itself, but for the powerful interests that control that state.
The same international banking cartel that controls the United States
today previously controlled Great Britain and held it up as the
international hegemon. When the British order faded, and was replaced
by the United States, the US ran the global economy. However, the same
interests are served. States will be used and discarded at will by the
international banking cartel; they are simply tools.

In this sense, interdependence theory, which presumes the decline of
the state in international affairs, fails to acknowledge the role of
the state in promoting and undertaking the process of interdependence.
The decline of the nation-state is a state-driven process, and is a
process that leads to a rise of the continental state and the global
state. States, are still very relevant, but both liberal and
mercantilist theorists, while helpful in understanding the concepts
behind the global economy, lay the theoretical groundwork for a
political economic agenda being undertaken by powerful interests. Like
Robert Cox said, “Theory is always for someone and for some purpose.”

Hegemonic-Stability Theory

In his book, Global Political Economy, Gilpin explained that, “In
time, if unchecked, the integration of an economy into the world
economy, the intensifying pressures of foreign competition, and the
necessity to be efficient in order to survive economically could
undermine the independence of a society and force it to adopt new
values and forms of social organization. Fear that economic
globalization and the integration of national markets are destroying
or could destroy the political, economic, and cultural autonomy of
national societies has become widespread.”[96]

However, Gilpin explains that the “Creation of effective international
regimes and solutions to the compliance problem require both strong
international leadership and an effective international governance
structure.” Yet, he explains, “Regimes in themselves cannot provide
governance structure because they lack the most critical component of
governance – the power to enforce compliance. Regimes must rest
instead on a political base established through leadership and
cooperation.”[97] This is where we see the emergence of Hegemonic
Stability Theory.

Gilpin explains that, “The theory of hegemonic stability posits that
the leader or hegemon facilitates international cooperation and
prevents defection from the rules of the regime through use of side
payments (bribes), sanctions, and/or other means, but can seldom, if
ever, coerce reluctant states to obey the rules of a liberal
international economic order.” As he explained, “The American hegemon
did indeed play a crucial role in establishing and managing the world
economy following World War II.”[98]

The roots of Hegemonic Stability Theory (HST) lie within both liberal
and statist theory, as it is representative of a crossover theory that
cannot be so easily placed in either category. The main concept
champions the liberal notion of the open international economic
system, guided by liberal principles of open-markets and free trade,
while bringing in the statist concept of a single hegemonic state
representing the concentration of political and economic power, as it
is the enforcer of the liberal international economy.

The more liberal-leaning theorists of HST argue that a liberal
economic order requires a strong, hegemonic state to maintain the
smooth functioning of the international economy. One thing this state
must do is maintain the international monetary system, as Britain did
under the gold standard and the United States did under the Dollar-
Wall Street Regime, following the end of the Bretton-Woods dollar-gold
link.

Regime Theory
Regime Theory is another crossover theory between liberal and
mercantilist theorists. Its rise was primarily in reaction to the
emergence of Hegemonic Stability Theory, in order to address the
concern of a perceived decline in the power of the US. This was due to
the rise of new economic powers in the 1970s, and another major
purveyor of this theory was Robert Keohane. They needed to address how
the international order could be maintained as the hegemonic power
declined. The answer was in the building of international
organizations to manage the international regime.

In this sense, Regime Theory has identified an important aspect of the
global political economy, in that though states have upheld the
international order in the past, never before has there been such an
undertaking to institutionalize the authority over the international
order through international organizations. These organizations, such
as the World Bank, IMF, UN, and WTO, though still controlled and
influenced by states, predominantly the international hegemon, the
United States, represent a changing direction of internationalization
and transnationalism. Regime Theorists tend to justify the formation
of a more transnational apparatus of power, beyond just a single
hegemonic state, into a more internationalized structure of
authority.

Notes

[1]  CBC, Informal forum or global conspiracy? CBC News Online: June
13, 2006: http://www.cbc.ca/news/background/bilderberg-group/

[2]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. (South End Press: 1980), 161-171

[3]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. (South End Press: 1980), 161-162

[4]  CFR, The First Transformation. CFR History:
http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/first_transformation.html

[5]  Glen McGregor, Secretive power brokers meeting coming to Ottawa?
Ottawa Citizen: May 24, 2006:
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=ff614eb8-02cc-41a3-a42d-30642def1421&k=62840

[6]  William F. Jasper, Rogues' gallery of EU founders. The New
American: July 12, 2004: 
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0JZS/is_14_20/ai_n25093084/pg_1?tag=artBody;col1

[7]  Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Euro-federalists financed by US spy
chiefs. The Telegraph: June 19, 2001:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/1356047/Euro-federalists-financed-by-US-spy-chiefs.html

[8]  Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, Euro-federalists financed by US spy
chiefs. The Telegraph: June 19, 2001:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/1356047/Euro-federalists-financed-by-US-spy-chiefs.html

[9]  Bilderberg Group, GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN CONFERENCE. The
Bilderberg Group: September 23-25, 1955, page 7:

http://wikileaks.org/leak/bilderberg-meetings-report-1955.pdf

[10]  Who are these Bilderbergers and what do they do? The Sunday
Herald: May 30, 1999: 
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4156/is_19990530/ai_n13939252

[11]  Andrew Rettman, 'Jury's out' on future of Europe, EU doyen says.
EUobserver: March 16, 2009: http://euobserver.com/9/27778

[12]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
page 110

[13]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
page 107

[14]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
pages 107-108

[15]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
page 108

[16]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
page 108

[17]  George T. Crane, Abla Amawi, The Theoretical evolution of
international political economy. Oxford University Press US, 1997:
pages 50-51

[18]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. South End Press: 1980: page 65

[19]  Robert O’Brien and Marc Williams, Global Political Economy:
Evolution and Dynamics, 2nd ed. Palgrave Macmillan: 2007: page 215

[20]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. South End Press: 1980: pages
66-67

[21]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. South End Press: 1980: page 67

[22]  C. Fred Bergsten, The New Economics and US Foreign Policy.
Foreign Affairs: January, 1972: page 199

[23]  Richard H. Ullman, Trilateralism: “Partnership” For What?
Foreign Affairs: October, 1976: pages 3-4

[24]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
Elite Planning for World Management. South End Press: 1980: pages
76-78

[25]  Richard H. Ullman, Trilateralism: “Partnership” For What?
Foreign Affairs: October, 1976: page 3

[26]  Richard H. Ullman, Trilateralism: “Partnership” For What?
Foreign Affairs: October, 1976: page 5

[27]  Congressional Research Service, TRILATERAL COMMISSION. The
Library of Congress: pages 13-14: 
http://www.scribd.com/doc/5014337/Trilateral-Commission

[28]  CFR, Joseph S. Nye, Jr.. Board of Directors:
http://www.cfr.org/bios/1330/joseph_s_nye_jr.html

[29]  Annual Report, The Council on Foreign Relations. Historical
Roster of Directors and Officers, 2008: page 78

[30]  Peter Gowan, The Globalization Gamble: The Dollar-Wall Street
Regime and its Consequences. Page 19-20

[31]  William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics
and the New World Order. (London: Pluto Press, 2004), 130-132

[32]  William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics
and the New World Order. (London: Pluto Press, 2004), 286-287, 134

[33]  CFR, “X” Leads the Way. CFR History: 
http://www.cfr.org/about/history/cfr/x_leads.html

[34]  Robert Dallek, The Kissinger Presidency. Vanity Fair: May 2007:
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2007/05/kissinger200705

[35]  Ibid.

[36] David Stout, William P. Rogers, Who Served as Nixon's Secretary
of State, Is Dead at 87. The New York Times: January 4, 2001:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B02E5D6113BF937A35752C0A9679C8B63

[37]  TC, Tributes to David Rockefeller, Founder and Honorary
Chairman. The Trilateral Commission: December 1, 1998:
http://www.trilateral.org/nagp/regmtgs/98/1201tribs.htm

[38]  John Loftus and Mark Aarons, The Secret War Against the Jews:
How Western Espionage Betrayed the Jewish People. St. Martin’s
Griffin: 1994: pages 304-307

[39]  John Loftus and Mark Aarons, The Secret War Against the Jews:
How Western Espionage Betrayed the Jewish People. St. Martin’s
Griffin: 1994: pages 308-310

[40]  John Loftus and Mark Aarons, The Secret War Against the Jews:
How Western Espionage Betrayed the Jewish People. St. Martin’s
Griffin: 1994: pages 310-311

[41]  Robert Dallek, The Kissinger Presidency. Vanity Fair: May 2007:
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2007/05/kissinger200705

[42]  John Loftus and Mark Aarons, The Secret War Against the Jews:
How Western Espionage Betrayed the Jewish People. St. Martin’s
Griffin: 1994: pages 312-313

[43] F. William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics
and the New  World Order. London: Pluto Press, 2004: pages 130-132

[44]  F. William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil
Politics and the New  World Order. London: Pluto Press, 2004: pages
136-137

[45]  The Observer, Saudi dove in the oil slick. The Guardian: January
14, 2001: 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2001/jan/14/globalrecession.oilandpetrol

[46]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: page 24

[47]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: pages 31-33

[48]  IPC, James Akins. Iran Policy Committee: Scholars and Fellows:
http://www.iranpolicy.org/scholarsandfellows.php#1

[49]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: pages 35-36

[50]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: pages 37-38

[51]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: page 44

[52]  Time, The Cast of Analysts. Time Magazine: March 12, 1979:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,948424,00.html

[53]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: page 48

[54]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: pages 50-51

[55]  V.H. Oppenheim, Why Oil Prices Go Up (1) The Past: We Pushed
Them. Foreign Policy: No. 25, Winter, 1976-1977: page 53

[56]  F. William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil
Politics and the New  World Order. London: Pluto Press, 2004: page 137

[57]  The Observer, Saudi dove in the oil slick. The Guardian: January
14, 2001: 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2001/jan/14/globalrecession.oilandpetrol

[58]  Peter Gowan, The Globalization Gamble: The Dollar-Wall Street
Regime and its Consequences: marxsite.com/
Gowan_DollarWallstreetRegime.pdf: page 10

[59]  Dharam Ghai, ed., The IMF and the South: The Social Impact of
Crisis and Adjustment (London: United Nations Research Institute for
Social Development, 1991), 81

[60]  Dharam Ghai, ed., The IMF and the South: The Social Impact of
Crisis and Adjustment (London: United Nations Research Institute for
Social Development, 1991), 82

[61]  Robert O’Brien and Marc Williams, Global Political Economy:
Evolution and Dynamics, 2nd ed. Palgrave Macmillan: 2007: page 223

[62]  Gisela Bolte, et. al., Jumbo Loans, Jumbo Risks. Time Magazine:
December 3, 1984: 
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,923771,00.html

[63]  Allen B. Frankel and Paul B. Morgan, A Primer on the Japanese
Banking System. Board of Governors of the Federal reserve System,
International Finance Discussion Papers: Number 419, December 1991:
page 3

[64]  A. W. Mullineux, International Banking and Financial Systems: A
Comparison. Springer, 1987: page 63

[65]  Robert K. Schaeffer, Understanding Globalization: The Social
Consequences of Political, Economic, and Environmental Change. Rowman
& Littlefield, 2005: page 82

[66]  Peter Gowan, The Globalization Gamble: The Dollar-Wall Street
Regime and its Consequences: marxsite.com/
Gowan_DollarWallstreetRegime.pdf: page 12

[67]  David Rockefeller, Memoirs. New York: Random House: 2002: Page
431

[68]  Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire, and the
Future of America. University of California Press: 2007: page 39-40

[69]  Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire, and the
Future of America. University of California Press: 2007: page 41

[70]  Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire, and the
Future of America. University of California Press: 2007: pages 40-41

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[72]  Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster
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[73]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
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[74]  Holly Sklar, ed., Trilateralism: The Trilateral Commission and
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91-92

[75]  Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire, and the
Future of America. University of California Press: 2007: page 88

[76]  F. William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil
Politics and the New  World Order. London: Pluto Press, 2004: page 173

[77]  F. William Engdahl, A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil
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[78]  Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial
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[79]  Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial
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[80]  Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial
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[81]  Joseph B. Treaster, Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial
Legend. John Wiley and Sons, 2004: pages 57-60

[82]  Robert O’Brien and Marc Williams, Global Political Economy:
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[83]  Robert O’Brien and Marc Williams, Global Political Economy:
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[84]  Robert O’Brien and Marc Williams, Global Political Economy:
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[85]  A. Paloni and M. Zonardi, eds., Neoliberalism: A Critical
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[86]  A. Paloni and M. Zonardi, eds., Neoliberalism: A Critical
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[89]  Marc Williams, International Economic Organizations and the
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Evolution and Dynamics, 2nd ed. Palgrave Macmillan: 2007: page 225

[96]  Robert Gilpin, Global Political Economy: Understanding the
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97-98


Andrew Gavin Marshall is a Research Associate with the Centre for
Research on Globalization (CRG). He is currently studying Political
Economy and History at Simon Fraser University.

Andrew G. Marshall is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
Global Research Articles by Andrew G. Marshall
© Copyright Andrew G. Marshall, Global Research, 2009

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Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not 
discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political 
power they wield? 
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power 
mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the 
nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our 
souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony

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