Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar discuss rent and rent-seeking, i.e., unproductive economic activity, in the US and China mainly but including the Russian, Iranian and Brazilian economies.
In the first 15 minutes, an overview from Michael Hudson explains what happened in the US economy once jobs and manufacturing were offshored to mainly China. He proposes that even if China did not exist, the US economy has been changed to the extent that it is almost impossible to change back to a productive economy without material changes in the economic model.
Pepe keeps the conversation flowing quickly with incisive questions. The two esteemed gentlemen take a look at the Chinese view on a possible Biden administration and how the military hawks in Washington could be countered. Outlining the ‘conflict of systems’ between the US and China, Michael Hudson explains the thinking of the Pentagon and paying ‘protection money’ historically to fund oligarchies. It is a ‘war between systems’, Hudson explains with the thinking being: “If only China did not export to us, we could reindustrialize.”
“It’s over”: says Hudson, because “we’ve painted ourselves into such a debt corner. So much money flows to the top 5% that there is no money for investment, no money for growth.”
Hudson explains the concept of capitalism, how it was conceived to work against neo-liberalism, and how it has changed to systemic support for rentier economics.
A wealth of detail follows, around fictitious debt and wealth creation. Michael discusses the ‘brainwashing’ of Russia vis a vis economic policy and central bank to end up in a position where Russia was paying 100% interest for years under American advisors and privatized rentiers, “a bunch of gangsters.” Very interesting is the discussion on how the perpetrators, the leading university of the US in the destruction and looting of Russia, could not be brought to a court.
“You don’t need an army to destroy a country any longer. All you need to do is to teach it American economics.” Michael Hudson
A question from Pepe regarding the economies of North East Asia, South East Asia, the Asia Crisis and currently further integration with Russia, resulted in this very cogent quote from Michael Hudson.
“The current mode of warfare is to conquer the brains of a country, to shape how people think. If you can twist their view into unreality economics, to make them think you are there to help them and not to take money out of them, then you’ve got them hooked. You need to lend them money, and then crash it.” Michael Hudson.
The conversation ends with an extensive question from Pepe regarding the biggest myth regarding Belt and Road, the supposed ‘debt trap’. The difference in systems, non-rentier, and rentier, debt, and neo-liberalism again is illustrated in a crystal clear fashion.
Transcript :
December 16th, 2020
Henry George School of Social Science
Alanna: So, let’s formally start. Once we start to record Ibrahim is going to introduce the Henry George school and welcome everybody then I’m going to introduce from the bios; Michael and Pepe and then Michael will start with rent and rent seeking those who have comments or questions could put that in chat and then we’ll go to the chat at some point.
Ibrahima: Welcome, my name is Ibrahima Drame and I’m the director of education at the Henry George school of Social Science it’s a great honor to have you with us today for this joint webinar co-organized with the International Union for Land Value Taxation with two great thinkers, professor Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar to discuss rent and rent seeking. I’d like to thank Michael and Pepe for kindly accepting to share their insights and of course our good friend Alanna Hartzok co-founder of Earth Right Institute, she will be moderating this session.
So, before I hand it over to Alanna, I’d like to ask all attendees to keep their microphones muted until we open the Q & A in the meantime you are free to use the chat and please do so responsibly. Alanna please go ahead and introduce our speakers.
Alanna: Okay yes thank you so much to Michael and Pepe for joining us and having this conversation I know that you two have admired each other’s work and writings for many many years so this is your first time to actually, talk together so I’m going to introduce you both from your bios.
Michael Hudson is an American economist professor of economics at the university of Missouri Kansas City and a researcher at the Levy Economics Institute at Bard College he’s a former wall street analyst political consultant commentator and journalist. He identifies himself as a classical economist. Michael is the author of J is for Junk Economics, Killing the Host, the Bubble and Beyond, Super Imperialism subtitled the Economic Strategy of American Empire, Trade Development and foreign debt and the myth of aid among others his books have been published translated into Japanese, Chinese, German, Spanish and Russian.
Pepe Escobar, born in Brazil is a correspondent editor at large at Asia Times and columnist for consortium news Washington dc and strategic culture Moscow since the mid-1980s he’s lived and worked as a foreign correspondent in London Paris, Milan los Angeles, Singapore Bangkok. He has extensively covered Pakistan Afghanistan, Central Asia to China, Iran, Iraq and the wider middle east pepe is the author of Globalistan – How the Globalized world is dissolving into liquid war red zone blues, A Snapshot of Baghdad during the surge he was contributing editor to the empire and the crescent and tuto in 03:09 vendita in italy and his last two books are empire of chaos and 2030. Pepe is also associated with the Paris-based European academy of geopolitics when not on the road he lives between Sao Paulo, Paris and Bangkok so we’ll have Michael begin now then he’s going to describe what uh the meaning is of rent and rent seeking and we’ll just take it from there please put comments and questions in chat thank you let’s go.
Michael Hudson: Well, I’m honored to be here on the same show with Pepe and discuss our mutual concern. And I think you have to frame the whole issue that China is thriving, and the West has reached the end of the whole 75-year expansion it had since 1945.
So, there was an illusion that America is de-industrializing because of competition from China. And the reality is there is no way that America can re-industrialize and regain its export markets with the way that it’s organized today. Financialized and privatized and if China didn’t exist. You’d still have the rust belt rusting out. You’d still have American industry not being able to compete abroad simply because the cost structure is so high in the United States.
The wealth is no longer made here by industrializing. It’s made financially, mainly by making capital gains. Rising prices for real estate or for stocks and for bonds. In the last nine months, since the coronavirus came here, the top 1% of the U S economy grew by $1 trillion. It’s been a windfall for the 1%. The stock market is way up, the bond market is up, he real estate market is up while the rest of the economy is going down. Despite the tariffs that Trump put on, Chinese imports, trade with China is going up because we’re just not producing materials.
America doesn’t make its own shoes. It doesn’t make its own nuts and bolts or fasteners, it doesn’t make industrial things anymore because If money is to be made off an industrial company it’s to buy and sell the company, not to make loans to increase the company’s production. New York City where I live used to be an industrial city and, the industrial buildings, the mercantile buildings have all been gentrified into high-priced real estate and the result is that Americans have to pay so much money on education, rent and medical care that if they got all of their physical needs, their food, their clothing, all the goods and services for nothing, they still couldn’t compete with foreign labor because of all of the costs that they have to pay that are essentially called rent-seeking.
Housing in the United States now absorbs about 40% of the average worker’s paycheck. There’s a 15% taken off the top of paychecks for pensions, Social Security and for Medicare. Further medical insurance adds more to the paycheck, income taxes and sales taxes add about another 10%. Then you have student loans and bank debt. So basically, the American worker can only spend about one third of his or her income on buying the goods and services they produce. All the rest goes into the fire sector, the finance insurance, and real estate sector and other monopolies.
And essentially, we became what’s called a rent-seeking economy, not a productive economy. So, when people in Washington talk about American capitalism versus Chinese socialism this is confusing the issue. What kind of capitalism are we talking about? America used to have industrial capitalism in the 19th century. That’s how it got richer originally,but now it’s moved away from industrial capitalism towards finance capitalism. And what that means is that the mixed economy that made America rich. The government would invest in education and infrastructure and transportation and provide these at low costs so that the employers didn’t have to pay labor more to afford high financialized and privatized costs of living.
All of this has been transformed over the last hundred years. And we’ve moved away from the ethic of what was industrial capitalism. Before, the idea of capitalism in the 19th century – from Adam Smith to Ricardo, to John Stuart Mill to Marx – was very clear. Marx stated it quite clearly – Capitalism was revolutionary: It was to get rid of the landlord class. It was to get rid of the rentier class. It was to get rid of the banking class essentially, and just bear all the costs that were unnecessary for production, because how did England and America and Germany gain their markets?
They gained their markets basically by the government picking up a lot of the costs of the economy. The government in America provided low-cost education, not student debt. It provided transportation at subsidized prices. It provided basic infrastructure at low cost. And so, government infrastructure was considered a fourth factor of production.
And if you read what the business schools in the late 19th century taught like Simon Patten at the Wharton School, it’s very much like socialism. In fact, it’s very much like what China is doing. And in fact, China is following in the last 30 or 40 years pretty much the same way of getting rich that America followed.
It had its government fund basic infrastructure. It provides, low-cost education. It invests in high speed railroads and airports, in the building of cities. So, the government bears most of the costs and, that means that employers don’t have to pay workers enough to pay a student loan debt. They don’t have to pay workers enough to pay enormous rent such as you have in the United States. They don’t have to pay workers to save for a pension fund, to pay the pension later on[1]. And most of all the Chinese economy doesn’t really have to pay a banking class because banking is the most important public utility of all. Banking is what China has kept in the hands of government and Chinese banks don’t lend for the same reasons that American banks lend.
80% of American bank loans are mortgage loans to real estate and the effect of loosening loan standards and increasing the market for real estate is to push up the cost of living, push up the cost of housing. So, Americans have to pay more and more money for their housing, whether they’re renters or they’re buyers, in which case the rent is for paying mortgage interest.
So, all of this cost structure has been built into the economy. China’s been able pretty much, to avoid all of this, because its objective in banking is not to make a profit and interest, not to make capital gains and speculation. It creates money to fund actual means of production to build factories, to build research and development, to build transportation facilities, and to build infrastructure. Banks in America don’t lend for that kind of thing.
They only lend against collateral that’s already in place, because they won’t make a loan if it’s not backed by collateral. Well, China creates money through its public banks to create capital, to create the means of production. So, you have a diametric opposite philosophy of how to develop between the United States and China.
The United States has decided not to gain wealth by actually investing in means of production and producing goods and services, but in financial ways. China is gaining wealth and the old-fashioned way actually by producing it. And whether you call this, industrial capitalism or a state capitalism or a state socialism or Marxism, it basically follows the same logic of real economics, the real economy, not the financial overhead. So you have China operating as a real economy, increasing its production, becoming the workshop of the world as England used to be called. And America trying to draw in foreign resources, live off of foreign resources, live by trying to make money by investing in the Chinese stock market or now, moving investment banks into China and making loans to China, not in actual industrial-capitalism ways.
So, you could say that America has gone beyond industrial capitalism, and they call it the post-industrial society, but you could call it the neo-feudal society. You could call it the neo-rentier society, or you could call it debt peonage. But it’s not industrial capitalism.
And in that sense, there’s no rivalry between China and America. These are different systems going their own way. I better let the Pepe pick it up from there.
Pepe Escobar: Okay. Thank you, Michael, this is brilliant. And you did it in less than 15 minutes. You told the whole story in 15 minutes. Well, my journalistic instinct is immediately to start questions to Michael. So, this is exactly what I’m gonna do now. I think it is much better to basically illustrate some points of what Michael just said, comparing the American system, which has finance capitalism essentially with industrial capitalism that is in effect in China. Let me try to start with a very concrete and straight to the point question, Michael.
Okay. let’s says that more or less, if we want to summarize it, basically they try to tax the nonproductive rentier class. So, this would be the Chinese way to distribute wealth, right? Sifting through the Chinese economic literature, there is a very interesting concept, which is relatively new, correct me if I wrong, Michael, in China, which they call stable investment. So stable investment, according to the Chinese would be to issue special bonds as extra capital in fact, to be invested in infrastructure building all across China and, and they, choose these projects in what they call weak areas and weak links. So probably in some of the inner provinces, or probably in some parts of Tibet or Xingjian for instance. So, this is a way to invest in the real economy and in real government investment projects.
Right? So, my question in fact, is does this system create extra local debt, coming directly from this financing from Beijing. Is this a good recipe for sustainable development, the Chinese way and the recipe that they could expand to other parts of the global South?
Michael: Well, this is a big problem that they’re discussing right now. The localities, especially rural China, (and China is still largely rural) only cover about half of their working budget from taxation. So, they have a problem. How are they going to get the balance of the money? Well, there is no official revenue sharing between the federal government and its state banks and the localities.
So, the localities can’t simply go to central government and say, give us more money. The government lets the localities be very independent. And it is sort of the “let a hundred flowers bloom” concept. They’ve let each locality just go its own way, but the localities have run a big deficit.
What do they do? Well in the United States they would issue bonds on which New York is about to default. But in China, the easiest way for the localities to make money, is unfortunately to do something like Chicago did. They will sell their tax rights for the next 75 years for current money now.
So, a real estate developer will come in and say; look we will give you the next seventy-five years of tax on this land, because we want to build projects on this (a set of buildings). So, what this means is that now the cities have given away all their source of rent.
Let me show you the problem is what Indiana and Chicago did. Chicago also was very much like China’s countryside cities. So, it sold parking meters and its sidewalks to a whole series of Wall Street investors, including the Abu Dhabi Investment Fund for seventy-five years. And that meant that for 75 years, this Wall Street consortium got to control the parking meters.
So, they put up the parking meters all over Chicago raised the price of parking, raised the cost of driving to Chicago. And if Chicago would have a parade and interrupt parking, then Chicago has to pay, the Abu Dhabi fund and Wall Street company, what it would have made anyway. And this became such an awful disaster that finally Wall Street had to reverse the deal and undo it because it was giving privatization a bad name here. The same thing happened in Indiana.
Indiana was running a deficit and it decided to sell its roads to a Wall Street investment firm to make a toll road. The toll on the Indiana turnpike was so high that drivers began to take over the side roads. That’s the problem if you sell future tax revenues in advance.
Now what China and the localities there are discussing is that we’ve already, given the real estate tax at very low estimates to the commercial developers, so what do we do? Well, what I’ve advised them to do, Alanna didn’t say it, but I’ve been a professor of economics at the Peking University, School of Marxist studies for three years, and I’ve had discussions with Central Committee members. I also have an honorary position at Wuhan University. We’ve discussed how China can put an added tax for all of the valuable land, that’s gone up. How can it be done to let the cities collect this tax? Our claim is that the cities, in selling these tax rights for 75 years, have sold what in Britain would be called ground rent. i.e. what’s paid to the landed aristocracy and over and above that there’s the market rent. So, China should pass a market rent tax over and above the ground rent tax to reflect the current value. And there they’re thinking of, well, do we say that this is a capital gain in the land? Well, it’s not really a capital gain until you sell the land, but it’s value. It’s the valuation of the capital. And they’re looking to do whether they should just say that this is the market rent tax over and above the flat tax that has been paid in advance, or it’s a land tax on the capital gain for land.
Now, all of this requires that there be a land map of the whole country. And they are just beginning to create such a land map as a basis for how you calculate how much the rent there is. What I found in China is something very strange. A few years ago, in Beijing, they had the first, international Marxist conference where I was a main speaker and I was talking about Marx’s discussion of the history of rent theory in volume two and volume three of Capital where Marx discusses all of the classical economics that led up to his view; Adam Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, John Stuart Mill, and Marx’s Theories of Surplus Value was really the first history economic thought that was written, although it wasn’t published until after he died. Well, you could see that there was a little bit of discomfort with some of the Marxists at the conference. And so, they invited for the next time my colleague David Harvey to come and talk about Marxism in the West.
Well, David gave both the leading and the closing speech of the conference and said, you’ve got to go beyond volume one of Capital. Volume I was what Marx wrote as his addition to, classical economics saying that there was exploitation in industrial employment of labor as well as rent seeking and then he said, now that I’ve done my introduction here, let me talk about how capitalism works in Volumes II and III. Volumes II and III are all about rent and finance and David Harvey has published a book on Volume III of Capital and his message to Peking University and the second Marxist conference was – you’ve got to read volumes II, and III.
Well, you can see that, there’s a discussion now over what is Marxism and my friend and colleague at PKU Sasha Buzgalin said, Marxism is a Chinese word; It’s the Chinese word for politics. That made everything clear to me. Now I get it! I’ve been asked by members of the Academy of Social Sciences in China to create a syllabus of the history of rent theory and value theory. And essentially in order to have an idea of how you calculate rent, how do you make a national income analysis where you show rent, you have to have a theory of value and price and rent is the excess of price over the actual cost value. Well, for that you need a concept of cost of production and that’s what classical economics is all about. Post-classical economics denies all of this. The whole idea of classical economics is that not all income is “earned.”
Landlords don’t earn their income for making rent in their sleep as John Stuart Mill said. Banks don’t earn their income by just sitting there and letting debts accrue interest and compounding and doubling. The classical economists separated actual unearned income from the production and consumption economy.
Well, around the late 19th century in America, you had economists fighting against not only Marx, but also against Henry George, who at that time, was urging a land tax in New York. And so, at Columbia university, John Bates Clark developed a theory that everybody earns whatever they can get. That there was no such thing as unearned income. That has become the basis for American national income statistics and thought ever since. So, if you look at today’s GDP figures for the United States, they have a figure for 8% of the GDP for the homeowners rent. But homeowners wouldn’t pay themselves if they had to rent the apartment to themselves, then you’ll have interest at about 12% of GDP.
And I thought, well how can interest be so steady? What happens to all of the late fees; that 29% that credit card companies charge? I called up the national income people in Washington, when was there. And they said well, late fees and penalties are considered financial services.
And so, this is what you call a service economy. Well, there’s no service in charging a late fee, but they add all of the late fees. When people can’t pay their debts and they owe more and more, all of that is considered an addition to GDP. When housing becomes more expensive and prices American labor out of the market, that’s called increase in GDP.
This is not how a country that wants to develop is going to create a national income account. So, there’s a long discussion in China about, just to answer your question, how do you create an account to distinguish between what’s the necessary cost to production and what’s an unnecessary production cost and how do we avoid doing what the United States did. So again, no rivalry. The United States is an object lesson for China as to what to avoid, not only in de-industrializing the economy, but in creating a picture of the economy as if everybody earns everything and there’s no exploitation, no unearned income, nobody makes money in their sleep and there’s no 1%. Well, that’s what’s really at issue and why the whole world is splitting apart, as you and I are discussing what we’re writing.
Pepe: Thank you, Michael. Thank you very much. So just to sum it all up, can we say that Beijing’s strategy is to save especially provincial areas from leasing their land, their infrastructure for 60 years or 75 years? As you just mentioned, can we say that the fulcrum of their national strategy is what you define as the market rent tax. Is this the number one mechanism that they are developing?
Michael: Ideally, they want to keep rents as low as possible because rents is a cost of living and a cost of doing business. They don’t have banks that are lending to inflate the real estate market.
However, in almost every Western country, the US, Germany, England the value of stocks and bonds and the value of real estate is just about exactly the same. But for China, the value of real estate is way, way larger than the value of stocks.
And the reason is not because the Chinese central bank, the Bank of China lends for real estate; it’s because they lend to intermediaries and the intermediaries have financed a lot of housing purchases in China. And, this is really the problem for if they levy a land tax, then you’re going to make a lot of these financial intermediaries go bust.
That’s what I’m advocating, and I don’t think that’s a bad thing. These financial intermediaries shouldn’t exist, and this same issue came up in 2009 in the United States. You had the leading American bank being the most crooked and internally corrupt bank in the country, Citibank making junk mortgage, and it was broke.
Its entire net worth was wiped out as a result of its fraudulent junk mortgages. Well, Sheila Bair, the head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) wanted to close it down and take it over. Essentially that would have made it into a public bank and that would be a wonderful thing. She said, look Citibank shouldn’t be doing what it’s doing. And she wrote all this up in the in an autobiography. And, she was overruled by president Obama and Tim Geithner saying, but wait a minute, those are our campaign contributors. So, they were loyal to the campaign contributors, but not the voters; and they didn’t close Citibank down.
And the result is that the Federal Reserve ended up creating about $7 trillion of quantitative easing to bail out the banks. The homeowners weren’t bailed out. 10 million American families lost their homes as a result of junk mortgages in excess of what the property was actually worth.
All of this was left on the books, foreclosed and sold to a private capital companies like Blackstone. And the result is that home ownership in America declined from 68% of the population down to about 61%. Well, right where the Obama administration left off, you’re about to have the Biden administration begin in January with an estimated 5 million Americans losing their homes. They’re going to be evicted because they’ve been unemployed during the pandemic. They’ve been working in restaurants or gyms or other industries that have been shut down because of the pandemic. They’re going to be evicted and many homeowners and, low-income homeowners have been unable to pay their mortgages.
There’s going to be a wave of foreclosures. The question is, who’s going to bear the cost. Should it be 15 million American families lose their homes just so the banks won’t lose money, or should we let the banks that have made all of the growth since 2008. 95% of American GDP of the population has seen its wealth go down. All the wealth has been accumulating for the 5% in statistics. Now the question is should this 5% that’s got all the wealth lose or should the 95% lose. The Biden administration says the 95% should lose basically. And you’re going to see a wave of closures that the question in China should be that, these intermediate banks (that are near banks) they’re not really banks they are sort of like payday loan lenders, should they come in and, bear the loss or should Chinese localities and the people bear the loss. Somebody has to lose when you’re charging, you’re collecting the land’s rent that was paid to the creditors, and either the creditors have to lose or, the tax collector loses and that’s the conflict that exists in every society of the world today. And, in the West, the idea is the tax collectors should lose and whatever the tax collector relinquishes should be free for the banks to collect. In China obviously, they don’t want that to happen and they don’t want to see a financial class developing along US lines.
Pepe: Michael, there’s a quick question in all this, which is the official position by Beijing in terms of helping the localities. Their official position is that there won’t be any bail outs of local debt. How do they plan to do that?
Michael: What they’re discussing, how are you not going to do it? They think they sort of let localities go their own way. And they think, well you know which ones are going to succeed, and which ones aren’t, they didn’t want to have a one size fits all central planning. They wanted to have flexibility. Well, now they have flexibility. And when you have many different “let a hundred flowers bloom”, not all the flowers are going to bloom at the same rate. And the question is, if they don’t bail out the cities, how are the cities going to operate? Certainly, China has never let markets steer the economy, the government steers the markets. That’s what socialism is as opposed to finance capitalism. So, the question is, you can let localities go broke and yet you’re not going to destroy any of the physical assets of the localities, and all of this is going to be in place. The question is, how are you going to arrange the flow of income to all of these roads and buildings and land that’s in place? How do you create a system? Essentially, they’re saying well, if we’re industrial engineers, how do we just plan things? Forget credit, forget property claims, forget the rentier claims. How are we just going to design an economy that operates most efficiently? And that’s what they’re working on now to resolve this situation because it’s got fairly critical.
Pepe: Yes, especially in the countryside. Well, I think, a very good metaphor in terms of comparing both systems are investment in infrastructure. You travel to China a lot so, you’ve seen. You’ll travel through a high-speed rail. You’ll see those fantastic airports in Pudong or the new airport in Beijing.
And then you’ll take the Acela to go from Washington and New York city, which is something that I used to do years ago. And the comparison is striking. Isn’t it? Or if you go to France, for instance, when France started development of the TGV, which in terms of a national infrastructure network, is one of the best networks on the planet. And the French started doing this 30 year ago, even more. Is there……, it’s not in terms of way out, but if we analyze the minutia, it’s obvious that following the American finance utilization system, we could never have something remotely similar happening in United States in terms of building infrastructure.
So, do you see any realistic bypass mechanism in terms of improving American infrastructure, especially in the big cities?
Michael: No, and there are two reasons for that. Number one let’s take a look at the long-term railroads. The railroads go through the center of town or even in the countryside, all along the railroads, the railroads brought business and all the businesses had been located as close to the railroad tracks as they could. Factories with sightings off the railroad, hotels and especially right through the middle of town where you have the railway gates going up and down. In order to make a high-speed rail as in China, you need a dedicated roadway without trucks and cars, imagine a car going through a railway gate at 350 miles an hour.
So, when I would go from Beijing to Tienjin, here’s the high-speed rail, there’s one highway on one side. One highway on the other side, there’ll be underpasses. But there it goes straight now. How can you suppose you would have a straight Acela line from Washington up to Boston when all along the line, there’s all this real estate right along the line that has been built up? There’s no way you can get a dedicated roadway without having to tear down all of this real estate that’s on either side and the cost of making the current owners whole would be prohibitive. And anywhere you would go, that’s not in the center of the city, you would also have to have the problem that there’s already private property there.
And there there’s no legal constitutional way for such a physical investment to be made. China was able to make this investment because it was still largely rural. It wasn’t as built up along the railways. It didn’t have any particular area that was built up right where the railroad already was.
So certainly, any high-speed rail could not go where the current railways would be, and they’d have to go on somebody’s land. And, there’s also, what do you do if you want to get to New York and long Island off from New Jersey. 60 years ago, when I went into Wall Street, the cost of getting and transporting goods from California to Newark New Jersey was as large as from Newark right across the Hudson river to New York because not only because of the mafia and control of the local labor unions, but because of the tunnels. Right now, the tunnels from New Jersey to New York are broke, they are leaking, the subways in New York city where I am continually break down because there was a hurricane a few years ago and the switches were made in the 1940s. The switches are 80 years old. They had water damage and the trains have to go at a crawl. But the City and State, because it is not collecting the real estate tax and other taxes and because ridership fell on the subways to about 20%, the City’s broke. They’re talking about 70% of city services being cut back.
They’re talking about cutting back the subways to 40% capacity, meaning everybody will have to get in and, when there’s still a virus and not many people are wearing masks, and there was no means of enforcing masks here. So, there’s no way that you can rebuild the infrastructure because, for one thing the banking system here has subsidized for a hundred years junk economics saying you have to balance the budget. If the government create credit it’s inflationary as if when banks create credit, it’s not inflationary. Well, the monetary effect is the same, no matter who creates the money. And so, Biden has already said that president Trump ran a big deficit, we’re going to run a bunch of surpluses or a budget balance. And he was advocating that all along. Essentially Biden is saying we have to increase unemployment by 20%, lower wages by 20%, shrink the economy by about 10% in order to, in order for the banks not to lose money.
And, we’re going to privatize but we are going to do it by selling the hospitals, the schools, the parks, the transportation to finance, to Wall Street finance capital groups. And so, you can imagine what’s going to happen if the Wall Street groups buy the infrastructure. They’ll do what happened to Chicago when it sold all the parking meters, they’ll say, okay, instead of 25 cents an hour, it’s now charged $3 an hour. Instead of a $2 for the subway, let’s make it $8. You’re going to price American economy even further out of business because they say that public investment is socialism.
Well, it’s not socialism. It’s industrial capitalism. It’s industrialization, that’s basic economics. The idea of what, and how an economy works is so twisted academically that it’s the antithesis of what Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill and Marx all talked about. For them a free market economy was an economy free of rentiers. Free of rent, it didn’t have any rent seeking. But now for the Americans, a free market economy is free for the rentiers, free for the landlords free, for the banks to make a killing. And that is basically the class war back in business with a vengeance. That blocks and is preventing any kind infrastructure recovery. I don’t see how it can possibly take place.
Pepe: Well, based on what you just described, there is a process of turning the United States into a giant Brazil. In fact, this is what the Brazilian finance minister Paulo Guedes, a Pinochetista, as you know Michael, has been doing with the Brazilian economy for the past two years, privatizing everything and selling everything to big Brazilian interests and with lots of Wall Street interests involved as well. So, this is a recipe that goes all across the global South as well. And it’s fully copied all across the global South with no way out now.
Michael: Yes, and this is promoted by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. And when I was brought down to Brazil to meet with the council economic advisors under Lula, they said, well the whole problem is that Lula’s been obliged to let the banks do the planning.
So, basically free markets and libertarianism is adopting central planning, but with central planning by the banks. America is a much more centrally planned economy than China. China is letting a hundred flowers bloom; America has concentrated the planning and the resource allocation in Wall Street. And that’s the central planning that is much more corrosive than any government planning, could be. Now the irony is that China’s sending its students to America to study economics. And, most of the Chinese I had talked to say, well we went to America to take economics courses because that gives us a prestige here in China.
I’m working now, with Chinese groups trying to develop a “reality economics” to be taught in China as different from American economics.
Pepe: Exactly because of what they study at Beijing university, Renmin or Tsinghua
is not exactly what they would study in big American universities. Probably what they study in the US is what not to do in China. When they go back to China, what they won’t be doing. It’s an object lesson for what to avoid.
Michael, I’d like to go back to what the BRICS had been discussing the 2000s when Lula was still president of Brazil and many of his ideas deeply impressed, especially Hu Jintao at the time, which is bypassing the US Dollars. Well, at the moment obviously we’re still at 87% of international transactions still in US Dollars. So, we are very far away from it, but if you have a truly sovereign economy, which is the case of China, which we can say is the case of Russia to a certain extent and obviously in a completely different framework, Iran.
Iran is a completely sovereign, independent economy from the West. The only way to try to develop different mechanisms to not to fall into the rentier mind space would be to bypass the US Dollars.
Michael: Yes, for many reasons. For one thing the United States can simply print the Dollars and lend to other countries and then say, now you have to pay us interest. Well, Russia doesn’t need American Dollars. It can print its own Rubles to provide labor. There’s no need for a foreign currency at all for domestic spending, the only reason you would have to borrow a foreign currency is to balance your exchange rate, or to finance a trade deficit. But China doesn’t have a trade deficit. And in fact, if China were to work to accept more Dollars, Americans would love to buy into the Chinese market and make a profit there, but that would push up China’s exchange rate and that would make it more difficult for her to make its exports because the exchange rate would come up not because it’s exporting more but because it’s letting American Dollars come in and push it up. Well, fortunately, president Trump as if he works for the Chinese national committee said, look, we don’t want to really hurt China by pushing up its currency and said we want to keep it competitive. So, I’m going to prevent American companies from lending money to China, I’m going to isolate it and so he’s helping them protect their economy. And in Russia he said, look Russia really needs to feed itself. And, there’s a real danger that when the Democrats come in, there are a lot of anti-Russians in the Biden administration. They may go to war. They may do to Russia what they tried to do to China in the fifties. Stop exporting food and grain. And only Canada was able to break the embargo. So, we’re going to impose sanctions on Russia. So immediately, what happened is Russia very quickly became the largest grain exporter in the world. And instead of importing cheese from the Baltics, it created its own cheese industry. So, Trump said look, I know that Russians followed the American idea of not having protective tariffs, they need protective tariffs. They’re not doing it. We’re going to help them out by just not importing from them and really helping them.
Pepe: Yeah. Michael, what do you think Black Rock wants from the Chinese? You know that they are making a few inroads at the highest levels? Of course, I’m sure you’re aware of that. And also, JP Morgan, City Bank, etc.…. What do they really want?
Michael: They’d like to be able to create Dollars to begin to buy and make loans to real estate; let companies grow, let the real estate market grow and make capital gains.
The way people get wealthy today isn’t by making an income, it’s been by making a capital gain. Total returns are current income plus the capital gains. As for capital gains each year; the land value gains alone are larger than the whole GDP growth from year to year. So that’s where the money is, that’s where the wealth is. So, they are after speculative capital gains, they would like to push money into the Chinese stock market and real estate market. See the prices go up and then inflate the prices by buying in and then sell out at the high price. Pull the money out, get a capital gain and let the economy crash, I mean that’s the business plan.
Pepe: Exactly. But Beijing will never allow that.
Michael: Well, here’s the problem right now, they know that Biden is pushing militarily aggressive people in his cabinet. There’s one kind of overhead that China is really trying to avoid and that’s the military overhead because if you spend money on the military, you can’t spend it on the real economy. They’re very worried about the military and they say, how do we deter the Biden administration from actually trying a military adventure in the China sea or elsewhere. They said well, fortunately America is multilayered. They don’t think of America as a group. They realize there’s a layer and they say, who’s going to represent our interests.
Well, Blackstone and Wall Street are going to represent their interests. Then I think one of the, Chinese officials last week gave a big speech on this very thing, saying look, our best hope in stopping America’s military adventurism in China is to have Wall Street acting as our support because after all, Wall Street is the main campaign contributor and the president works for the campaign contributors.
The politician works for the campaign contributors. They’re in it for the money! So fortunately, we have Wall Street on our side, we’ve got control of the political system and they’re not there to go to war so that helps explain why a month ago they let a wholly owned US banks and bankers in. On the one hand, they don’t like the idea of somebody outside the government creating credit for reasons that the economy doesn’t need. If they kind of needed it, the bank of China would do it. They have no need for foreign currency to come in to make loans in domestic currency, out of China.
The only reason that they could do it is number one, it helps meet the world trade organization’s principles and, number two especially during this formative few months of the Biden administration, it helps to have Wall Street saying; we can make a fortune in China, go easy on them and that essentially counters the military hawks in Washington.
Pepe: So, do you foresee a scenario when Black Rock starts wreaking havoc in the Shanghai stock exchange for instance?
Michael: It would love to do that. It would love to move things up and down. The money’s made by companies with the stock market going up and down; the zigzag. So of course, it wants to do a predatory zigzag. The question is whether China will impose a tax to stop this all sorts of financial transactions. That’s what’s under discussion now. They know exactly what Black Rock wants to do because they have some very savvy billionaire Chinese advisers that are quite good. I can tell you stories, but I better not.
Pepe: Okay. If it’s not okay to tell it all, tell us part of the story then.
Michael: The American banks have been cultivating leading Chinese people by providing them enough money to make money here, that they think that, okay they will now try to make money in the same way in China and we can join in. It’s a conflict of systems again, between the finance capital system and industrial socialism. You don’t get any of this discussion in the U S press, which is why I read what you write because in the US press, the neocons talk about
the fake idea of Greek history and fake idea of the Thucydides’ problem of a country jealous of another country’s development. There’s no jealousy between America and China. They’re different, they are own way. We are going to destroy them. And if you look at what the analogy that the Americans draw, and this is how the Pentagon thinks with the war between Athens and Sparta. It’s hard to tell, which is which. Here you have Athens, a democracy backing other democracies and having the military support of the democracies and the military in these democracies all had to pay Athens protection money for the military support and that’s the money that Athens got to ostensibly support its Navy and protection that built up all of the Athenian public buildings and everything else. So, that’s a democracy exploiting its allies, to enrich itself via the military. Then you have Sparta, which was funding all of the oligarchies, and it was helping the oligarchies overthrow democracies. Well, that was America too. So, America is both sides of the Thucydides war. If the democracy is exploiting the fellow democracies and is the supporter of oligarchies in Brazil, Latin America, Africa, and everyone else.
So, you could say the Thucydides problem was between two sides, two aspects of America and has nothing to do with China at all except, for the fact that the whole war was a war between economic systems. And that’s what’s they’re acting as if somehow if only China did not export to us, we could be re-industrialized and somehow export to Europe and the Third World.
And as you and I have described, it’s over. We Americans painted ourselves into such a debt corner that without writing down the debts, were in the same position that the Eurozone is in. There’s so much money that goes to the creditors to the top 1% or 5% that there is no money for capital investment, there is no money for growth. And, since 1980 as you know, real wages in America have been stable. All the growth has been in property owners and predators and the FIRE sector, the rest of the economy is in stagnation. And now the coronavirus has simply acted as a catalyst to make it very clear that the game is over; it’s time to move away from the homeowner economy to rentier economy, time for Blackstone to be the landlord. America wants to recreate the British landlord class and essentially what we’re seeing now is like the Norman invasion of England taking over the land and the infrastructure. That’s what Blackstone would love to do in China.
Pepe: Wow. I’m afraid that they may have a lot leeway by some members of the Beijing leadership now, because as you know very well, it’s not a consensus in the political arena.
Michael: We’re talking about Volume II and III of Capital.
Pepe: Exactly. But you know, you were talking about debt. Coming back to that, in fact I just checked this morning, apparently global debt as it stands today is $277 trillion, which is something like 365% of global GDP. What does that mean in practice?
Michael: Yeah, well fortunately this is discussed in the 19th century and there was a word for that – fictitious capital – it’s a debt that can’t be paid, but you’ll keep it on the books anyway. And every country has this. You could say the question now, and the Financial Times just had an article a few days ago that China’s claims on Third World countries on the Belt and Road Initiative is fictitious capital, because how can it collect. Well, China’s already thought of that. It doesn’t want money. It wants the raw materials. It wants to be paid in real things. But a debt that can’t be paid, can only be paid either by foreclosing on the debtors or by writing down the debts and obviously a debt of can’t be paid won’t be paid.
And so, you have not only Marx using the word fictitious capital. At the other end of the spectrum, you had Henry George talking about fictive capital. In other words, these are property claims that have no real capital behind them. There’s no capital that makes profit. That’s just a property claim for payment or a rentier claim for payment.
So, the question is, can you make money somehow without having any production at all, without having wages without having profits without any capital? Can you just have asset grabbing and buying and selling assets. And as long as you have the Federal Reserve in America, come in, Trump’s $10 trillion COVID program gave 2 trillion to the population at large with these $1,200 checks, that my wife and I got and 8 trillion all just to buy stocks and bonds. None of this was to build infrastructure. None of this 8 trillion was to build a single factory. None of this 8 trillion was to employee a single worker. It was all just to support the prices of stocks and bonds, and to keep the illusion that the economy had not stopped growing. Well, it’s growing for the 5%. So, it’s all become fictitious. And if you look at the GDP as I said, it’s fictitious.
Pepe: And the most extraordinary thing is none of that is discussed in American media. Absolutely, there’s not a single word about what you would have been describing.
Michael: And it’s not even discussed in academia. Our graduates at the University of Missouri at Kansas City are all trained in Modern Monetary Theory. And to be hired as professors, they have to be able to publish in the refereed journals and the refereed journals are all essentially controlled by the Chicago school. So, you have a censorship of the kind of ideas that we’re talking about. You can’t get it into the economic journals, so you can’t get it into the economics curriculum. So, where on earth you’re going to get it. If you didn’t have the internet you wouldn’t be discussing at all. Most of my books sell mainly in China, more than in all the other countries put together so I can discuss these there. I stopped publishing in orthodox journals so many years ago because it’s talking to the deaf.
Pepe: Absolutely. Yeah. Can I ask you a question about Russia, Michael? There is a raging, debate in Russia for many years now between let’s say the Eurasianists and the Atlanticists. It involves of course, economic policy under Putin, industrial capitalism Russian style, and the Eurasianists basically say that the central problem with Russia is how the Russian central bank is basically affiliated with all the mechanisms that you know so well, that it is an Atlanticist trojan horse inside the Russian economy. How do you see it?
Michael: Russia was brainwashed by the West when the Soviet Union broke up in 1991. First of all, the IMF announced in advance that there was a big meeting in Houston with the IMF and the World Bank. And the IMF published all of its report saying, first you don’t want inflation in Russia so let’s wipe out all of the Russian savings with hyperinflation, which they did. They then said, well now to cure the hyperinflation the Russian central bank needs a stable currency and you need a backup for the currency. You will need to back it with US Dollars. So, from the early 1990s, as you know, labor was going unpaid. The Russian central bank could have created the rubles to pay the domestic labor and to keep the factories in place. But, the IMF advisors from Harvard said, no you’ll have to borrow US Dollars. I met with people from the Hermitage Fund and the Renaissance Fund and others, we had meetings and, I met with the investors. Russia was paying 100% interest for years to leading American financial institutions for money that it didn’t need and could have created itself. Russia was so dispirited with Stalinism that essentially that it thought, what’s the opposite of Stalinism must be what they have in America.
They thought that America was going to tell it how America got rich, but America didn’t want to tell Russia how it got rich, but instead wanted to make money off Russia. They didn’t get it. They trusted the Americans. They really didn’t understand that, industrial capitalism that Marx described had metamorphosized into finance capitalism and was completely different.
And that’s because Russia didn’t charge rent, it didn’t charge interest. I gave three speeches before the Duma, urging it to impose a land tax. Some of the people I noticed, Ed Dodson was there with us and we were all trying to convince Russia, don’t let this land be privatized. If you let it be privatized, then you’re going to have a such high rents and housing costs in Russia that you’re not going to be able to essentially compete for an industrial growth. Well, the politician who brought us there Vyatchislav Zvolinsky was sort of maneuvered out of the election by the American advisors.
The Americans put billions of Dollars in to essentially finance American propagandists to destroy Russia, mainly from the Harvard Institute of International Development. And essentially, they were a bunch of gangsters and the prosecutors in Boston were about to prosecute them.
So, the attorney general of Boston was going to bring a big case for Harvard against, the looting of Russia and the corruption of Russia. And I was asked to organize and to bring a number of Russian politicians and industrialists over to say how, this destroyed everything. Well, Harvard settled out of court and essentially that made the perpetrators the leading university people up there. I’m associated with Harvard Anthropology Department, not the Economics Department.
So, we never had a chance to bring my witnesses, and have our report on what happened, but I published for the Russian Academy of sciences a long study of how all of this destruction of Russia was laid out in advance at the Houston meetings by the IMF. America went to the leading bureaucrats and said; look, we can make you rich why don’t you register the factories in your own name, and if you’re registered in your own name, you know, then you’ll own it. And then you can cash out. You can essentially sell, but obviously you can’t sell to the Russians because the IMF have just wiped out all of their savings.
You can only cash out by selling to the West. And so, Russia’s stock market became the leading stock market in the world from 1994 with the Norilsk Nickel and the seven bankers in the bank loans for shares deal through 1997. And, I had worked for a firm Scudder Stevens and, the head advisor, a former student of mine didn’t want to invest in Russia because she said, this is just a rip off, it’s going to crash. She was fired for not investing. They said look, we know that’s going to crash. That’s the whole idea it’s going to crash. We can make a mint off it before the crash. And then when it crashes, we can make another mint by selling short and then all over again. Well, the problem is that the system that was put in with the privatization that’s occurred, how do you have Russia’s wealth used to develop its own industry and its own economy like China was doing. Well, China has rules for all of this, but Russia doesn’t have rules, it’s really all centralized it’s president Putin that keeps it this way.
Well, this was the great fear of the West. When you had Yevgeny Primakov, beginning to plan, to do pretty much what is done today, to restrain private capital, the IMF said hold off is that we’re not going to make any loans to stabilize the Russian currency until you remove Mr. Primakov.
The US said we won’t deal with Russia until you remove him. So, he was pushed out and he was probably the smartest guy at the time there. So, they thought the Putin was going to be sort of the patsy. And he sort of almost single-handedly holding the oligarchs in and saying, look, you can keep your money as long as you do exactly what the government would do. You can keep the gains as long as you’re serving the public interest, but none of this has resulted in a legal system, a tax system, and a system where the government actually does get most of the benefits. Russia could have emerged in 1990 as one the most competitive economy in Eurasia by giving all of the houses to its people instead of giving Norilsk Nickel and the oil companies to Yukos, it could have given everybody their own house and their own apartment, the same thing in the Baltics. And instead it didn’t give the land out to the people. And Russians were paying 3% of their income for housing in 1990. And rent is the largest element in every household’s budget. So, Russia could have had low price labor, it could have financed all of its capital investment for the government by taxing, collecting the rising rental value and instead, Russian real estate was privatized on credit and it was even worse in the Baltics. In Latvia, where I was research director for the Riga Graduate School of Law, Latvia borrowed primarily from Swedish banks. And so, in order to buy a house, you had to borrow from Swedish banks.
And they said, well, we’re not going to lend in the Latvian currency because it can go down. So, you have a choice; Swiss Francs or German Marks or US Dollars. And so, all of this rent was paid in foreign currency. There came an outflow that essentially drained all the Baltic economies, Latvia lost 20% of its population, Estonia, Lithuania followed suit.
And of course, the worst hit by neo-liberalism was Russia. As you know, president Putin said that neo-liberalism cost Russia more of its population than World War II. And you know that to destroy a country, you don’t need an army anymore. All you have to do is teach it American economics.
Pepe: Yes, I remember well, I arrived in Russia in the winter of 91 coming from China. So, I transited from the Chinese miracle. In fact, a few days after Deng Xiaoping’s famous Southern tour when he went to Guangzhou and Shenzhen. And that was the kick for the 1990’s boom, in fact now a few years before the handover and then I took the Trans-Siberian and I arrived in Moscow a few days after the end, in fact, a few weeks after the end of the Soviet Union.
But yeah, I remember the Americans arrived almost at the exact minute, wasn’t it, Michael? I think they already were there in the spring of 1992. If I’m not mistaken.
Michael: The Houston meeting was in 1990. But all before that already in, 1988 and 1989, there was a huge outflow of embezzlement money via Latvia. The assistant dean of the university, Gregor Lautchansky, who ended up creating Nordex. Essentially the money was all flying out because Ventspils in Latvia, was where Russian oil was exported and it was all fake invoicing. So, the Russian kleptocrats basically made their money off false export invoicing, ostensibly selling it for one price and having the rest paid abroad and, this was all organized through Latvia and the man who did it later moved to Israel and finally gave a billion Dollars back to Russia so that, he went on to live safely for the rest of his life in Israel.
Pepe: Well, the crash of the Ruble in 1998 was what, roughly one year after the crash of the Bath and the whole Asian financial crisis, no? it was interlinked of course, but let me see if I have a question for you, in fact, I’m just thinking out loud now. If the economies of Southeast Asia and Northeast Asia, the case of South Korea and Russia were more integrated at the time as they are trying to integrate now, do you think that the Asian financial crisis would have been preventable in 1997?
Michael: Well, look at what happened in Malaysia with Mohammed Mahathir. Malaysia avoided it. So of course, it was preventable. They had capital controls. All you would have needed was to do what Malaysia did. But you needed an economic theory for that.
And essentially the current mode of warfare is to conquer the brains of a country to shape how people think and how they perceive the economy from working. And if you can twist their view into an unreality economics, where they think that you’re there to help them not to take money out of them, then you’ve got them hooked. That was what happened in Asia. Asia thought it was getting rich off the Dollars inflows and then the IMF and all the creditors pulled the plug, crash the industry. And now that all of a sudden you had a crash, they bought up Korean industry and other South Asian industries at giveaway prices.
That’s what you do. You lend the money; you pull the plug. You then let them go under and you pick up the pieces. That’s what Blackstone did after the Obama depression began, when Obama saved the banks, not the constituency, the mortgage borrowers. Essentially that’s Blackstone’s modus operandi to pick up distressed prices at a bankruptcy sale, but you need to lend money and then crash it in order to make that work.
Pepe: Michael, I think we have only five minutes left. So, I would expect you to go on a relatively long answer and I’m really dying for it. It’s about debt, it about the debt that trap. And it’s about the New Silk Road, the Belt and Road Initiative, because I think rounding up our discussion and coming back to the theme of debt and global debt. The number one criticism apart from the demonization of China that you hear from American media and a few American academics as well against the Belt and Road is that it’s creating a debt trap for Southeast Asian nations, Central Asian nations and nations in Africa, etc…. Obviously, I expect you to debunk that, but the framework is there is no other global development project as extensive and as complex as Belt and Road, which as you know, very well was initially dreamed up by the ministry of commerce. Then they, sold it more or less to Xi Jinping who got the geopolitical stamp on it, announcing it, simultaneously, (which was a stroke of genius) in Central Asia in Astana and then in Southeast Asia in Jakarta. So, he was announcing that the overland corridors through the heartland and the Maritime Silk Road at the same time. At the time people didn’t see the reach and depth of all that. And now of course, finally the Trump administration woke up and saw what was in play, not only across Eurasia but reaching Africa and even selected parts of Latin America as well. And obviously the only sort of criticism and, it’s not even a fact-based criticism, that I’ve seen about the Belt and Road is it’s creating a debt wrap because as you know Laos is indebted, Sri Lanka is indebted, Kyrgyzstan is indebted etc…. So, how do you view Belt and Road within the large framework of the West and China, East Asia and Eurasia relations? And how would you debunk misconceptions created, especially in the U S that this is a debt trap.
Michael: There are two points to answer there. The first is how the Belt and Road began. And as you pointed out, the Belt and Road began, when China said, what is it we need to grow and how do we grow within our neighboring countries so we don’t have to depend upon the West, and we don’t have to depend on sea trade that can be shut down. How do we get to roads instead of seas in a way that we can integrate our economy with the neighboring economies so that there can be mutual growth? So, this was done pretty much on industrial engineering grounds. Here’s where you need the roads and the railroads. And then how do we finance it? Well, the Financial Times article, last week asked, Didn’t the Chinese know that railroad development, they’ve all gone broke. The Panama Canal went broke, you know, the first few times there were European railway investment in Latin America in the 19th century, that all went broke. Well, what they don’t get is China’s aim was not to make a profit off the railroads. The railroads were built to be part of the economy. They don’t want to make profit. It was to make the real economy grow, not to make profits for the owners of the railroad stocks. The Western press can’t imagine that you’re building a railroad without trying to make money out of it.
Then you get to the debt issue. Countries only have a debt crisis if their debt is in a foreign currency. The first way that the United States gained power was to fight against its allies. The great enemy of America was England and it made the British block their currency in the 1940s. And so, India and other countries, that had all these currencies holdings in Sterling, we’re able to convert it all into Dollars. The whole move of the US was to denominate, world debt in Dollars. So that number one US banks would end up with the interest in financing the debt. And number two, the United States could by using the debt leverage control domestic politics. Well, as you’re seeing right now in Argentina, for instance, Argentina is broke because it owes foreign Dollars debt. When I started the first third world bond fund in 1990 at Scudder Stevens, Brazil in China and Argentina, we’re paying 45% interest per year, 45% per year in Dollarized debt. Yet we tried to sell them in America, no American would buy. We went to Europe, no European buy this debt. And so, we worked with Merrill Lynch and Merrill Lynch was able to make an offshore fund in the Dutch West Indies and all of the debt was sold to the Brazilian ruling class in the central bank and the Argentinian bankers in the ruling class, we thought oh, that’s wonderful.
We know that they’re going to pay the foreign Yankee Dollars debt because the Yankee Dollars debt is owed to themselves. They’re the Yankees! They’re the client oligarchy. And you know, from Brazil client oligarchy is, you know, they’re cosmopolitan, that’s the word. So, the problem is that on the Belt and Road, how did these other countries pay the debt to China?
Well, the key there again is the de-dollarization, and one way to solve it is since we’re trying to get finance out of the picture, we’re doing something very much like, Japan did with Canada in the 1960s. It made loans to develop Canadian copper mines taking its payment, not in Canadian Dollars, that would have pushed up the Yen’s exchange rate but in copper. So, China says, you know you don’t have to pay currency for this debt. We didn’t build a railroad to make a profit and you want, we can print all the currency we want. We don’t need to make a profit. We made the Belt and Road because it’s part of our geopolitical attempt to create what we need to be prosperous and have a prosperous region. So, these are self-reinforcing mutual gain. Well, so that’s what the West doesn’t get – Mutual gain? Are we talking anthropology? What do you mean mutual? This is capitalism! So, the West doesn’t understand what the original aim of the Belt and Road was, and it wasn’t to make a profitable railroad to enable people to buy and sell railway stocks. And it wasn’t to make toll roads to sell off to Goldman Sachs, you know. We’re dealing with two different economic systems, and it’s very hard for one system to understand the other system because of the tunnel vision that you get when you get a degree in economics.
Pepe: Belt on Road loans are a long-term and at very low interest and they are renegotiable. They are renegotiating with the Pakistanis all the time for instance.
Michael: China’s intention is not to repeat an Asia crisis of 1997. It doesn’t gain anything by forcing a crisis because it’s not trying to come in and buying property at a discount at a distressed sale. It has no desire to create a distressed sale. So obviously, the idea is the capacity to pay. Now, this whole argument occurred in the 1920s, between Keynes and his opponents that wanted to collect German reparations and, Keynes made it very clear. What is the capacity to pay? It’s the ability to export and the ability to obtain foreign currency. Well, China’s not looking for foreign currency. It is looking for, economic returns but the return is to the whole society, the return isn’t from a railroad. The return is for the entire economy because it’s looking at the economy as a system.
The way that neoliberalism works, it divides the economy into parts, and it makes every part try to make a gain. If you do that, then you don’t have any infrastructure that’s lowering the cost for the other parts. You have every part fighting for itself. You don’t look in terms of a system the way China’s looking at it. That’s the great advantage of Marxism, you’ll look at the system, not just at the parts.
Pepe: Exactly and this is that at the heart of the Chinese concept of a community with a shared future for mankind, which is the approximate translation from Mandarin. So, we compare community with a shared future for mankind, which is, let’s say the driving force between the idea of Belt and Road, expanded across Eurasia, Africa and Latin America as well with our good old friends’, “greed is good” concept from the eighties, which is still ruling America apparently.
Michael: And the corollary is that non greed is bad
Pepe: Exactly and non-greed is evil.
Michael: I see. I think we ran out of time. I do. I don’t know if Alanna that one wants to step in to wrap it up.
Michael: There may be somebody who has a question.
Pepe: Somebody has a question? That’ll be fantastic.
Alanna: Okay. Alanna here. This has been just great guys. I mean, this is the only webinar I’ve been on where the attendance kept increasing with time instead of decreasing.
So, we had spam in the chat but there is a one question that was good from Ed Dodson. He wanted to know why there are these ghost cities in China and he who’s financing all this real estate that’s developed, but nobody’s living there. We’ve all been hearing about that. So, what is happening with that?
Michael: Okay. China had most of its population living in the countryside and it made many deals with Chinese landholders who have land rights, and they said, if you will give up your land right to the community, we will give you free apartment in the city that you could rent out.
So, China has been building apartments in cities and trading these basically in exchange for support what used to be called a rural exodus. China doesn’t need as many farmers on the land is it now has, and the question is how are you going to get them into cities? So, China began building these cities and many of these apartments are owned by people who’ve got them in exchange for trading their land rights. The deals are part of the rural reconstruction program.
Alanna: Do you think it was a good deal? Vacant apartments everywhere.
Pepe: You don’t have ghost cities in Xinjiang for instance, Xinjiang is under-populated, it’s mostly desert. And it’s extremely sensitive to relocate people to Xinjiang. So basically, they concentrated on expanding Urumqi. When you arrive in Urumqi is like almost like arriving in, Guangzhou. It’s enormous. It’s a huge generic sitting in the middle of the desert. And it’s also a high-tech Mecca, which is something that very few people in the West know. And is the direct link between the eastern seaboard via Belt and Road to Central Asia.
Last year I was on an amazing trip. I went to the three borders, the Tajik-Xinjiang border, Kirgiz-Xinjiang border and the Kazakh-Xinjiang border, which is three borders in one. It’s a fascinating area to explore and specially to talk to the local populations, the Kirgiz, the Kazakhs and the Tadjik’s how do they see the Belt and Road directly affecting their lives from now on. So, you don’t see something spectacular for instance, in the Xinjiang – Kazakh boarder, there is one border for the trucks, lots of them like in Europe, crossing from all points, from central Asia to China and bringing Chinese merchandise to central Asia.
There’s the train border, which is a very simple two tracks and the pedestrian boarder, which is very funny because you have people arriving in buses from all parts of Central Asia. They stop on the Kazakh border. They take a shuttle, they clear customs for one day, they go to a series of shopping malls on the Chinese side of the border. They buy like crazy, shop till it drops, I don’t know for 12 hours? And then they cross back the same day because the visa is for one day. They step on their buses and they go back. So, for the moment it’s sort of a pedestrian form of belt and road, but in the future, we’re going to have high-speed rail. We’re going to have, well the pipelines are already there as Michael knows, but it’s fascinating to see on the spot. You see the closer integration; you see for instance Uyghurs traveling back and forth. You know, Uyghurs that have families in Kirgizstan for instance, I met some Uyghurs in Kyrgyzstan who do the back and forth all the time. And they said, there’s no problem. They are seen as businessmen so there’s no interference. There are no concentration camps involved, you know, so but it’s you have to you have to go to these places to see how it works on the ground and with COVID, that’s the problem for us journalists who travel, because for one year we cannot go anywhere and Xinjiang was on my travel list this year, Afghanistan as well, Mongolia.
These are all parts of Belt and Road or future parts of Belt and Road, like Afghanistan. The Chinese and the Russians as well; they want to bring Afghanistan in a peace process organized by Asians themselves without the United States, within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, because they want Afghanistan to be part of the intersection of Belt and Road and Eurasian Economic Union. This is something Michael knows very well. You don’t see this kind of discussions in the American media for instance, you know integration of Eurasia on the ground, how it’s actually happening.
Michael: That’s called cognitive dissonance.
Alanna: To try to understand it gets you cognitive dissonance.
Pepe: Oh yeah, of course. And obviously you are a Chinese agent, a Russian agent. And so, I hear that all the time. Well, in our jobs we hear that all the time. Especially unfortunately from our American friends.
Alanna: Okay. I know you have other things to do. This has been fabulous. I want to thank you so much, both of you, uh, with so easy to get attendance for this webinar. There were 20 people in five minutes enrolled and in two days we were at capacity. So, I know there are many more people who would love to hear you talk another time, whenever you two are so willing. And I think you both got much out of your first conversation in person. Everybody listening knows these two wonderful gentlemen, they have written more than 10 books, and they have traveled all over the world. They are on the top of geopolitical and geonomic analysis, and they are caring, loving people. So, you can see that these are the people we need to be listening to and understanding all around the world.
So, thank you so much. Ibrahima Drame from the Henry George School is now going to say goodbye to you and will wrap this up. Thank you again.
Pepe: Michael it was a huge pleasure. Really, it was fantastic. Really nice, we’re on the same website. So, let’s have a second version of this.
Ibrahima: So, let’s have a second version of this two months from now. Thank you very much for participating and I really hope you liked this event. And, we also want to ask for your support by making a tax-deductible donation to the Henry George School. I believe I shared the link on the chat. Thank you. And see you soon.
Pepe: Thank you very much. Thanks Michael. Bye!
[1] When I said that China can pay lower wages than the U.S., what I meant was that China provides as public services many things that American workers have to pay out of their own pockets – such as health care, free education, subsidized education, and above all, much lower debt service.
When workers have to go into debt in order to live, they need much higher wages to keep solvent. When they have to pay for their own health insurance, they have to earn more. The same is true of education and student debt. So much of what Americans seem to be earning more than workers in other countries goes right through their hands to the financial sector, landlords and insurance companies – the Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sector. So, what seems to be “low wages” in China go a lot further than higher wages in the United States.
Thank You very much for posting and sharing this . I missed the appointment.
Always enlightening to hear Michael Hudson expound on the current state of American rentier economics. Thoughts:
“You don’t need an army to destroy a country any longer. All you need to do is to teach it American economics.”
No you don’t. But the army adds considerable value by first destroying the target country’s infrastructure, so that the rentiers can come in afterward and lend the country dollars at gunpoint to rebuild it, (employing American contractors at considerable markup, natch!) thereby creating a new round of debt slave victims to be exploited in perpetuity.
The whole debt slave mentality reminds me of the Popeye comic strip character of yesteryear, J. Wellington Wimpy’s somewhat paraphrased catchphrase: “I’ll gladly pay you principle plus rentier interest compounded daily Tuesday for a hamburger today.” Substitute water or air for the hamburger and I think this hints at where this is all going.
Agreed, Disaffected. It is not that hard to argue against or ignore the teachings of banker gangster economics. For example, Hudson and Escobar just did a phenomenal job of this.
But when this happens, the “teacher” raps us across the knuckles, so to speak, and the armies, assassins, etc. doing that are more difficult to argue against or ignore.
As I demonstrated earlier in a parallel video on the future of ‘art’ :
Sadly today the concept of art, music, fashion is that beauty can be ugly, songs can be without verse, fashion can be rags, good can be evil and common sense can be nonsence. Exploiting these concepts we eventually get to Epstein’s Island where the elite were busy testing such theories.
https://youtu.be/A2drSzBXYg0
It now seems after watching such an intelligent video that a similar process is in play with money and economics. I am no longer youthfull yet I sincerely have a belief in humanity to the extent that future generations after consideration and perhaps revolt will dispatch this sad degredation of a previously promising Ameriican era to the dustbin of history.
Yes, John, and George Orwell drew a similar connection in “1984:” “There will be no art, no literature, no science… There will be no distinction between beauty and ugliness.” And he wrote that around 1939. However, Orwell also predicted that the super-states around our corrupt oligarchs’ ideologies would continue indefinitely, something which did not happen considering how Orwell’s Eurasia, the Soviet Union collapsed, Christian Russia bounced back, and Marxism or Bolshevism in Orwell’s Eastasia, China is giving way to Confucianism.
Alous has a point below about the strength of the dollar, but that strength is not in the productivity and fruitfulness of people trading Federal Reserve Notes so much as the oligarchs’ ability to extort and bully people. It stands to reason that if Orwell’s Eurasia and Eastasia fell apart, his Oceania, the Americas and the UK are similarly unstable.
As long as the dollar stays strong, it can be printed at will for effective bribes.
Thanks for sharing.
I’ll watch soon.
About the American economics thinking, it is sold like a religion. If you do not believe and accept it is because you are under the devil’s (Marx) influence.
But they are BOTH wrong about the approach (before I watched, just from the introduction).
This is not how they sabotage countries. This is how they HIDE!
More than 90 minutes about economics without a single one getting boring. Not only a pleasure to watch but very comforting to see these reasonable men laughing about western economists, economies and all those western lunacies.
Our educational system is designed to make the subject boring. It is another form of mind control. It destroys interest in the subject matter so the students don’t dig too deeply. It reinforces obedience.
Wow, this is wonderful insight! Thanks to the Saker and Michael Hudson and Pepe for all your work.
What a Christmas gift!
Frohe Weihnachten!
Pepe the Prolific. Most of us mere mortals only have 24 hours in our day. But Pepe must have gotten a special deal from the higher authorities.
The discussion regarding the finances of China’s small towns and rural administrations was most interesting, as well the general outline of how the Chicago parking meter privatisation model has become the economic epidemic that is ruining Brazil and so much of the Global South was exceptional. More and more The Saker website is essential reading these days.
A critical comment. Michael Hudson hits the mark when he asserts that wars can be won by brainwashing university students the world over. Indoctrinate them into American economics and the task is nearly complete. Those of us who are seriously concerned about this triumph of propaganda are on the back foot, often trying to explain to anyone who will listen (itself a tall order) that the theory isn’t what it claims to be, doesn’t work as the gullible would expect, is really a shake down operation on the part of an international criminal elite and other arguments. We have to resort to arguments. We shouldn’t have to go so far. We should be able to denounce the whole affair as the evil we know it to be. But we are prevented from the power of such simplicity. I take the view that this is due to our modernist socio/scientific commitments. What is needed is not an improved Marxism, though I agree with both Michael and Pepe re what they have to say about differing focal points of the 3 volumes of Capital and the pertinent issues discussed. Sure, fine. But we need to reacquaint ourselves with the ancient language of the political. We need to use the term ‘oligarchy’ and make it stick. What’s wrong with the West is that it’s ruled by and for an oligarchy. Classical political philosophy understands that oligarchy is a corrupt regime that sacrifices the public good for the sake of private gain. It is a political disease actually and was always understood as such. The only thing people like us can do with our personal opinions is to delegitimise the so called authorities by constantly affirming their criminality. Learn how to pronounce the term ‘oligarchy’ and practice every day.
This is a timebomb waiting to go off, commercial operations and now big block chains leaving the big cities.
People and now real estate going bust all landing at the courts but worse the banks cant very well survive this w/o another trillion dollar bailout.
“Good” news: Last week, US Fed announced $120B monthly QE for the foreseeable future. That’s a $1.5T bank bailout. Every. Single. Year.
This is the “new normal”.
Merely excellent! The most useful conversation to overhear and take some notes.
Two minds of depth and expansiveness, attached to two garrulous fellows with no pretenses.
This was a wonderful webinar.
Thanks for posting it. It should bring much clarity to those who don’t understand China’s economic miracle.
What I liked most of all was it was bereft of ideology and jargon. Imagine, discussing Marx, monetary theory and Communist Party machinations without touch the ideologies that people assume are their essence.
I wanted to buy them a drink if they’d keep going, and later, dinner. Just keep conversing, fellas. It’s a session that was a joy.
Hudson and Escobar are valuable treasures of experience and erudition.
Pepe and Hudson together? Simply Wow!
I carry a 100.000 ruble note to show Americans what devaluation means. In 1995 it was worth about one hundred dollars. If one saw a hundred ruble note on the ground it wouldn’t be picked up. The average sov era pension was 100 rubles, the now price of a plastic shopping bag in a grocery store.
With trepidation I watch as the deck chairs on the titanic are being rearranged, the band plays o
This time the West is planning to sink the iceberg with it.
100,000 ruble note? Peace of cake :-( At the same time, 1992-93, in Yugoslavia, we had 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 dinars, maybe more, maybe 18 zeros. After 30 years mind refuses to remember stupendous stupidity.
My pay was good, about 10 DM ( EU) per month. In dinars , of course. Where I worked, the money would arrive 8 AM. We would all run out to buy DMs – about 10 if we were lucky. My wife was twice as much, in dinars, but, they were receiving their pay later – at 3 PM. By that time, she could buy exactly (zero, zilch) DM. Every weekend government printed new bank notes, with 3 or 6 zeros added. We almost run out of famous people from history to put on the notes. Once there was no more room for zeros to print, they would denominate the currency, by discarding 6-12 zeros.
I guess the only difference between serbs and Russians is the upside-down flags, red-blue-white versus white-blue-red.
More than one thing we had in common with Russia – same advisors from USA and IMF, privatization of everything imaginable and unimaginable, official civil wars so people were dying. Your war was not official, but you Russians were dying in numbers no fewer than Yugoslavs. Perhaps absolute number of deaths is greater, since Russia is greater than Serbia/Yugoslavia, proportionally I think we are about the same. We exchanged volunteers in wars – a few Russians fought for serbia and a handful of serbs fought for Donbas Republics. Igor Strelkov fought in both wars.
Sitar
Thanks for the info.
What an absolute Xmas treat seeing these two icons brainstorming together!
Just a quick comment on the 31-minute mark where MH is discussing the bailout of Citibank and how Sheila Blair [then Head of the US Federal Insurance Corporation], wanted to nationalize it and the fact that this was overruled by Obomber and Timothy Geithner.
To paraphrase they basically said…wait a minute this is one of our main campaign contributors…after all we are loyal to THEM not to our voters…and the end result…a $7 trillion bailout to this collective cartel of thieving private banksters.
What MH can’t mention, for fear of being JFK’d, is that it was obvious that the likes of JPM and Citibank would be bailed out and that 95% of Americans would lose wealth to the big banks and particularly the primary dealers for the FED.
Of course, it was all dressed up as QE…in reality, it was nothing of the kind. It was Robin Hood in reverse and because of the private ownership model of the FED with the corollary that the FED serves its owners…NOT Mainstreet USA.
And of course, he dare not mention the fact that Citibank is the largest owner of New York ‘Federal’ Reserve Bank shares at 87.9 million…or 42.8 percent of the total.
#2 stockholder is JP Morgan Chase Bank with 60.6 million shares and 29.5 percent of the total.
Shocking to think that 2 thieving private Banking Corporations together hold almost ¾’s of the capital shares! And were either of these banks ever going to be hung out to dry in this ongoing farcically dysfunctional plutocracy?
Ohhh yeah duuuh…and does the Pope reside in Rome?
Col
PS I can talk openly on this subject simply because I am a nobody who is not worth bumping off. The likes of Pepe and Michael have to stay well clear of this subject just as PCR does…its actually a matter of life or death…its the system that is in place and it will be impossible to displace without the breakup of the union.
The two appallingly inept candidates for POTUS 2020 were a tragic symptom of a broken model…same as it was in 2016…same as it will be indefinitely until the FED is dismembered…its guaranteed!…much the same as it is guaranteed that the easiest way to rob a bank is to own it!
All this is way beyond the average US persons comprehension. What the second and third volume of Marx’s works. Let’s get a little more down to earth, a bit more personal and look at where the power really evolves.
What is wrong with a little bit of corruption. The folk of the USA like and respect a family that takes a few bribes for some favours here and there. The whole US society is built on this type of operation. What is wrong with that? It has led the US to become one of the world’s greatest and wealthiest societies – and it is just human nature anyway.
Show me a Christian in politics in the US who does not want to steal a little from the church plate. The Bidens, Clintons and Trumps are just typical families like many others who enjoy showing others that a little corruption does no harm at all. So much so that American citizens admire those like Joe, HIllary and Donald who help themselves to a few favours for money ( I call it helpful assistance) and they will elect them to the highest office in the land although their combined IQ would scarcely make the average Chinese student concerned.
This is the way business is done in the US. Even Nancy knows that. So what if there are a few poor casualties with no food and no home. They are obviously too stupid to avail themselves of the many opportunities. Why go to school in the US if not to learn how to look after number one?
Oh … and Merry Christmas to all those who continue to look forward to still owning their own homes in the US after the new year.
John…I know you are tongue in cheek here, but I will answer your question anyway…
“So what if there are a few poor casualties with no food and no home.”
…the problem is these “few” number in the tens of millions, indeed this tragic trail of misery that these obscenely wealthy plutocrats leave is a global one…that’s all!
Best regards
Col
John…I know you are tongue in cheek here, but I will answer your question anyway…
“So what if there are a few poor casualties with no food and no home.”
…the problem is these “few” number in the tens of millions…indeed this tragic trail of misery that this collection of obscenely wealthy plutocrats leave is a global one…that’s all!
It’s not even capitalism anymore and it is most certainly not democracy. Its naked neo-feudalism pure and simple!
Best regards
Col
Great interview.
Clarified my understanding of Chinese local government debt.
Two men of the streets, each in their own way. Who understand that all wisdom (its glories and absurdities) arises not in the halls of academe or the boardrooms of business or the chambers of parliaments or the meeting rooms of think-tanks but in the streets, among the common people. This is what makes them so engaging. Great discussion. Thanks for posting it.
Dear Sir Andrey Raevsky,
This conversation between Pepe Escobar and Michael Hudson is by far the best Christmas gift to those who visit this forum.
God Bless,
Tikhon
These words from M H sound like an echo from Sophocles “The current mode of warfare is to conquer the brains of a country, to shape how people think. If you can twist their view into unreality economics, to make them think you are there to help them and not to take money out of them, then you’ve got them hooked.”
“τὸ κακὸν δοκεῖν ποτ᾽ ἐσθλὸν τῷδ᾽ ἔμμεν’ ὅτῳ φρένας θεὸς ἄγει πρὸς ἄταν” meaning that “evil appears as good in the minds of those whom god leads to destruction”.
However, the dictum applies in all directions. Thus I hear also an echo from the famous Wm Burroughs;
“Hustlers of the world, there is one mark you cannot beat: the mark inside.”
Note that both saying are unequivocal. Not “might lead to destruction”, not “difficult to beat”. Both promise doom.
Well, yeah. As we see.
Meantime…Hudson Escobar, and Marandi (and his sister Susan too) are specially good people, smart, and engaged.
Thank you so much the Saker for this addition to your website. Of course also many thanks to the speakers as well.
I actually had to rewind the video several times, not in order to understand what they were talking about, because it was very clear and in plain English, but in order to let the information actually sink in and ponder on the many points discussed in this video.
Very, very educational indeed, much better than what is taught in the top Western universities (educational system), and can actually be applied in international relations, business and commerce !!
Keep up the good work !
There is no ideal economic philosophy that has all the answers to providing the economic well being of all members of society, especially in the long term, and the reason for this is the existence of entropy. That is the tendency of all things created and built by man wear out and therefore need continual maintenance and repair in order to keep them functioning efficiently.
All Empires of the past have eventually failed, since it takes more energy to maintain them than it costs to build them in the first place. See “The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers” by historian Paul Kennedy that covers the last 500 years or so. Lately I have been listening to podcasts by Paul M. M. Cooper, who goes back 5,000 years and the same problem recurs over and over again from Ur to Rome.
No one wants to pay the cost of maintenance of their infrastructures, or they come under attack from external forces and are destroyed both from within and without.
The US is busy destroying itself in this way, since hardly anyone is capable of creative and constructive thought to build for the future. All the banks want to do is extract more and more money from the populace without building anything new or worthwhile, that leaves the workforce impecunious and debt ridden. Of course the ultimate aim of financial capitalism is to privatize everything, where corporations dictate to sovereign governments as described by Susan George.
Excellent comment. I did a short video that, without commentry, arrived at a similar conclusion…..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUm7Ze-6aYA&t=11s
Some battles still in progress.
On another note I must comment that in SE Asia still the main and essential unit is the family and in the villiage I stay perhaps 1000 folk and they all seem related while the village economy food, housing, schools, medical etc. relies little on external factors and …. taxes …. very little is known about such things. Every second house has a table in the front selling excess produce from their garden. Nothing is wasted.
Oh … I forgot to mention the ‘illegal’ rice whisky which is hidden somewhere in every household and consumed, usually two shots at the end of the day by all, including the police.
Happy to hear you are looking back 5000 years at rise and fall of great powers. I have done this research as well, and through a “land lens” discovered that civilizations rise when the land is fairly owned and distributed and fall when a few acquire the majority of the land and resources.
Excellent video, thanks for sharing.
I want to point out the “cultural” aspect of this interview, mentioned on the side as a half-joke: Chinese students attending economics studies in the US because of the prestige it carries when returning to China.
I think that there’s some “cultural colonialism” still permeating no only the emerging superpower but many other countries. Russia as well (“Western products/icons/consumer goods are better than ours”). This is an aspect that helps the West to keep its financial supremacy and to delay the overturn of the USD on a global scale.
Thomas Jefferson had all this figured out years ago.
“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.”
– Thomas Jefferson in the debate over the Re-charter of the Bank Bill (1809)
“I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.” –Thomas Jefferson
“… The modern theory of the perpetuation of debt has drenched the earth with blood, and crushed its inhabitants under burdens ever accumulating.” -Thomas Jefferson
America still makes. Not nuts and bolts and spoons. That’s all. It has moved on to things that cannot be copied, does not need a lot of labor, can be sold at a premium and more premiums the world over.
The reason America will never mass manufacture is the labor costs are untenable.
3D printing maybe the answer to high labor costs in the US. Even new housing can be built rapidly and cheaply this way.
Kap, before we discuss 3D printing and mechanization lowering labor costs, we also have to discuss the US’s high cost of living. What would happen if worker wages and production costs decreased but the price of housing, education, health care, etc. remained high? In reality, the banker gangsters’ twisted economics and ideologies can counteract the benefits of technological advancements.
“It has moved on to things that cannot be copied, does not need a lot of labor, can be sold at a premium and more premiums the world over.”
And that would be what? Poof Daddy and Beyonce? Weaponry? Software? Management skills? Education and health systems? Well, we must give credit to Beyonce – self made. But, Paris Hilton? Or Britney Spears? Everything else on the list is more or less distant past.
And no, the decline did not start in 1995 or 2003. It started in early sixties. Due to inertia, people did not see it. Even soviets were duped by propaganda. Propaganda is useful when applied externally. When all that is left is propaganda internally, that is not the end. The and has happened way before. This could be one of points of no return, one of infinite number of points on a line with starting points at early sixties and without end.
What is the solution to the ‘214 trillion’ dollar problem presented upon the flyer link below? Perhaps we could impose the ancient laws against usury, the laws which forbade the accrued interest from exceeding the original loan capital, the laws which would reduce the ‘214 trillion’ dollar debt to $2? Or perhaps we could decide that our world is a realm of ‘tooth and claw’, so it is natural for a financial aristocracy to rule our world? Perhaps we could void all our financial debts, in a Jubilee, as proceeds from fraud and crime? Or change our monetary system, for if the greatest treasure in any nation is the monetary supply, why then have we privatised our treasure, and why do we create money as debt?
Whatever we do, at some point we will have to face the primal monetary questions, for as Robert Hemphill, from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said, ‘If all the bank loans were paid up, no one would have a bank deposit, and there would not be a dollar of currency or coin in circulation. This is a staggering thought. We are completely dependent on the commercial banks for our money. Someone has to borrow every dollar we have in circulation, cash or credit. If the banks create ample synthetic money, we are prosperous; if not, we starve. We are absolutely without a permanent money system. When one gets a complete grasp upon the picture, the tragic absurdity of our hopeless position is almost incredible – but there it is. It is the most important subject intelligent persons can investigate and reflect upon. It is so important that our present civilization may collapse unless it is widely understood and the defects remedied very soon.’
http://theq1.org/index_htm_files/Banks%20and%20Mirrors%20shapes.pdf
It is time to end fractional reserve lending whereby private banks create money ex nihilo with a computer keystroke every time that they make a compound interest bearing loan.
Money creation should be the sole responsibility of the US Treasury. Private banks could still function as money lenders, rather than money creators.
A Bill before the US Congress HR 2990 proposed by Kucinich and Conyers has been studiously ignored.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-congress/house-bill/2990/text
Agreed, Kap, but the banker gangsters are pretty good at stopping that. For example, in 1941, US Congressman Wright Patman talked about the same thing as you: The banksters’ “idiotic system” of “the Federal Government borrowing the use of its own money.” He said, “I believe the time will come when people will demand that this be changed.”
About one month later, the attack on Pearl Harbor, which the banksters provoked via sanctions and aggressive maneuvers against Japan, ended those demands.
Aren’t the banksters doing the same thing now? Just instead of Japan, the target is Russia, China, Iran, etc.? “End fractional reserve lending” basically means beating a world war. I’m not saying that’s impossible, mind you, just that it’s hard.
The US Treasury is a government agency, whereas the Federal Reserve is a privately owned bank that is the lender of last resort to its private member banks such as Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Citibank, who create money out of thin air by making data entries on their computers very time they make a loan. The US Treasury has to BORROW this computer generated money at interest to make up the shortfall in federal taxes, that now total $26 trillion on which around $750 billion in yearly interest payment have to be paid to the private sector. If the US Treasury can print up US Treasury Bills that pay interest, it can just as easily create interest free US Treasury Notes equal in value to US Federal Reserve Notes.
The only function of taxation of any kind, whether state or federal, would then be to control the rate of inflation of the currency by deleting a proportion back out of existence, by the taxing authority as necessary.
The rate of inflation of Federal Notes is equal to the weighted average interest rate applicable to all money created as debt. This is because more money must be continually created by the banks in order for them to pay themselves the interest due, that must also be created as even more debt.
Great podcast… it saved my Xmas day… Congratulations to Michael Hudson & Pepe & Alana & Ibrahim…
The banks claim that the government cannot create its own monetary supply as this would be hyper-inflationary, and the politicians cannot be trusted with the machinery of finance. The banks demand then that the government must only borrow pre-existing bank capital, from the private marketplace, through the issuance of Bonds.
However, the Banks then simply create the bank capital for their loans, ex nihlo, by monetising the nation’s collateral, through their license to create bank credit. Astonishingly, the banks now own both the monetary supply, and the nation’s collateral! They have come to legally possess the world through a banking deception!
We need a people’s movement to challenge the banks on their operations, in a court of law, and when will Michael Hudson talk of these concepts, or does he do so already, and I am missing something? What a great figurehead he would be for such a movement, even if he would then require protection!
IMO there are several major shortcomings in the discussion. (Although I now understand better what a rentier economy is, I have no idea what really sustains it.)
First, the function/role of war and war (DoD) borrowing and spending in the US “economy” is not discussed. In short, if that annual DoD injection of money into the US economy did not take place, Great Depression 2.0 would soon ensue. Why would that happen? Not discussed.
Second, there is no discussion of the fact that the Fed and the US government truly believe that the former should be able to print a literally infinite number of USD, literally out of thin air, and then, literally two seconds later, hand all this “money” to primary dealers to use to “buy” literally anything and everything on Planet Earth. Quite obviously to me, but apparently to neither Pepe or Michael, this is a fatally flawed assumption that is going to pave a short road to WWIII with those nations that will not continue forever to accept USD in payment for their very real resources and products. Not only that, but just exactly what “backs up” the USD since Nixon “temporarily” closed the gold window in 1971? The petrodollar agreement with Saudi Arabia in 1974. That still-astronomically-important arrangement, especially when it comes to US ME policy, is also not discussed. Why not!?
Third, there is some brief discussion of China perhaps allowing some US banks into China to lend some USD to some entities in order to, essentially, “get wall street on the side of China” in an (IMO vain) attempt to prevent the US military from attacking China. Of course this is exactly what the US wants — China to allow this, China thinking that it can control the situation, but then the USD virus-infection starts wildly spreading. IMO China should be separating itself from the US, not cozying up. Not discussed very much.
And last, but certainly not least, the awful truth that economies that require perpetual growth are destined to kill the planet is not discussed. For example, why did China renounce its one-child policy? Why does the Russian government desire a much larger population? Why did Iran renounce its policy of small families? Why does “Canada” (AKA US vassal sate #2) need to import at least 350,000 (and rising) people, of a certain economic type, each and every year from here to eternity? What is the real goal of the BRI, OBOR or whatever else you want to call it? It all boils down to growth — the same God Growth (those ever-rising GDPs) that all modern economies and their “investors” worship. Just exactly what populations will finally “satisfy” Mr. Putin, Mr. Xi, Mr. Turdeau, Mr. Rouhani, Mr. MoronSon, Mr. Shinzo, Mr. Potato-Head, BoJo, Merkel, etc. etc.? They can’t and they certainly won’t give you a number because they don’t know what that “final” number would/should/could be! The one and only thing that “they” (the Oligarchic Transnational Elite Collective 0.01% that “privately” owns the vast majority of land, wealth and large scale capital equipment in this fatally flawed economic arrangement) know with certainty is that in order for the OTEC to remain the OTEC, the OTEC’s “economies” have to keep growing, and that means that their Bewildered Herds have got to keep increasing in number! The COVID pandemic SHOULD have provided the perfect opportunity for even semi-educated people to realize the similar economic effect of a shrinking population (lowering demand) would have in a growth-addicted economic system (that has, by vital necessity, created a human population of well over 7 billion people). Not discussed.
Ishkabibble, go and listen to something else rather. These two people did not set out to discuss what you like most to hear. They discussed what they discussed. Did you think this was tailor-made for you? It was not lol.
On the contrary, Amarynth, what Ishka mentioned about the “Western” banker gangsters and the military-industrial complex was discussed.
At about 51:40, Hudson says, “They [China’s officials] know that right now, Biden is pushing a militarily aggressive people in his cabinet. There is one kind of overhead that China is really trying to avoid and that’s the military overhead because if you spend money on the military, you can’t spend it on the real economy… They said, ‘Fortunately. America is multilayered.’ They don’t think of America as a group… They say, ‘Who [in America] is going to represent our interests?’ Well, Blackstone and Wall Street are going to represent their interests. One of the Chinese officials last week gave a big speech on this very thing, saying, ‘Look, our best hope in stopping America’s military adventures amidst China is to have Wall Street acting as our support,’ because after all, Wall Street is the main campaign contributor and the president works for the campaign contributors… They’re in it for the money.”
The banksters and their neo-slavery conflicts, their sanctioning and blowing up potential customers, dumbing down and weakening their own workers, crashing economies, etc. are terrible for making money long-term. Therefore, Hudson is saying that China waking up Americans to the banksters’ poisonous policies makes sense from a military perspective, too. As Sun Tzu said, “In the practical art of war, the best thing of all is to take the enemy’s country whole and intact; to shatter and destroy it is not so good… The skillful leader subdues the enemy’s troops without any fighting.”
Ishkabibble, you raise some very valid and relevant points. Both Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar are enjoying themselves in an intellectual debate, but they do not offer any real solutions to radically change anything for the better in the financial system, that enriches the rich at the expense of the less well off.
What sustains the economy in the US in the short term is the necessity of the workforce to keep working at a barely living wage, or be made homeless and destitute. Fear is a great driver. The Covid lock down has decimated the workforce, so that government intervention in the form of providing some income to the unemployed is the only thing keeping the economy afloat. And that buffoon Lawrence Summers, thinks that this will lead to inflation of the currency. What he really means is that the stock market should take precedence over the real economy (as usual).
The ultimate aim of the financial capitalists is to privatize everything and leave governments at its mercy as in TPP that Obama was trying so hard to to push though.
Re your: “Both Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar are enjoying themselves in an intellectual debate, but they do not offer any real solutions to radically change anything for the better in the financial system, that enriches the rich at the expense of the less well off.”
I assume you have in mind the US shituation (?) I believe Hudson is advising the Chinese as we speak, who have plenty of rich people exploiting their “system,” about real solutions to China’s tough real problems:
I love this discussion, and want to thank the Henry George School of Social Science for arranging to pull the two people together for the debate. It IS relevant that neither Michael or Pepe offered advise going forward. If you think about it, as good as their analysis is, it IS like political economic weatherman talk, or those football jocks analyzing the game you just saw. I think it is time for a national Labor Party of the type that was possible in January 1887 NYC before the coalition of workers, middle-class reformers (like George), and socialists fell apart. It will take some doing, but somebody needs to grab the Trump working class and fold them into the Squad’s socialism.
Very interesting discussion. I’m struck by one over righting thought. Central banking and fiat money are central and normalize with out any discussion of commodity based monetary system. Freedom, liberty, and honest market money is missing. Seems to me the discussion centered around the exploration of the economy for the benefit of the ruling elite with a few subtle differences. Without a market based monetary system based on the free exchange of goods and services we are only discussing which method of state enforced fraud is superior. All governments based monetary system are immoral and are nothing more than a legalized Ponzi scheme. When we can discuss a market based monetary system set by market forces with out legal tender laws forcing all transactions be made in fiat currencies only then we will a real debate on which system is superior and who benefits the most. Pareto principal would probably rule but it would be preferable to the system we have now.
Dale,
You need to go back and reread the portions of the discussion about American Economics. “You don’t need an army to destroy a country any longer. All you need to do is to teach it American economics.”
You have swallowed the economic nonsense ( or are a looney Libertarian) about markets, freedom, and liberty. Economic professors have no clue about markets and the economy. Twenty years ago, Ken Lay of Enron Energy corruption almost proved the reality of markets – “a market is the first step to monopoly!” He almost pulled it off for all to see, while the Fed Banks (Citi et al) hide behind the QE and all that monopoly rentier nonsense.
For those that believe that money is gold, the reason it hasn’t changed that much is because of the value of the labor to extract it. The child labor digging gold in slave labor conditions keeps it from inflating like the Fed money. http://thesaker.is/blood-gold/
“All governments based monetary system are immoral and are nothing more than a legalized Ponzi scheme.” Nonsense. Many are, but there are solutions to developing money without debt. Rather than being tied to gold or some politician’s will, it should be tied to energy usage (joules). We need enough money to pay for growing food for the labor force, energy to mine, design, make, sell products (food, education, transportation, houses, parks, recreation, etc). We only need enough money for the economy to meet existing and new population needs as well as covering increasing entropy of the economy. Tying the economy to the “GDP” only allows the 1% to expand their rent forever until the whole system collapses. “Money creation should be the sole responsibility of the US Treasury” and should be based on the energy needed to run the economy and not provide rents or debt growth.
Ishkabibble is right about population and growth. It is destructive and insane to grow the economy for the GDP because is destroying the climate and biodiversity and is causing the end of civilization, nature, and the earth.
If we take initiatives to restrict population growth around the world, the total population can begin dropping while living standards of the poor rise. The GDP and NDP have nothing to do with the development of the economy and living standards; they are only the accounting mechanism for the 1% and their banks.
Thanks to Michael and Pepe.
I believe in the division of labor and the free exchange of goods and services. Market based money acceptable to the parties involved. When you have fiat government money with legal tender laws you have fraudulent monopoly that will over time destroy the economy and the moral fiber of the market place. The exchange of goods and services in a free market is between the parties involved all acting in their own best interests independent of government interference. I’m open to what ever the free market decides is the universal commodity, money. The fiat monetary systems of the world are the root cause of our economy problems it centralized government and provides it with the means to create money for the benefit of the few at the expense of the many. To much dross ruins any commodity.
Here’s the thing, Dale: Right now, the banker gangsters manipulate markets via “first-world” military-industrial complexes, intelligence agencies, terrorist groups, etc., so what would people do to counteract this? Open Kickstarter campaigns for tanks and guided missiles? Accept private military contractors into small business co-ops?
Furthermore, should the market be completely “free”? As in, “free” to trade slaves, harvested organs, child porn, etc….?
Addressing bad governments, corrupt corporations, and similar organizations which “create money for the benefit of the few at the expense of the many” requires good governments and their fiat monies. If you know of any sensible alternatives, please share why those would work.
Dale, there is a distinct difference between a FIAT currency created by EDICT of a sovereign government ( as in China) and between the debt based currency created by private banks in the US such that no debts = no money
In the US, as the principal of a loan is paid down to the banks, the banks must delete it back out of existence, otherwise there would be massive inflation of the currency. But the rate of inflation of bank created federal reserve notes is roughly equal to the weighted average interest rate applicable to the debts. Thus the US dollar has lost 99% of its purchasing power since 1913, when the Federal Reserve was created, because more money must be created also as debt, in order to pay the accumulated interest due to the banks
Extractive, rent-seeking capitalism was long ago identified by David Ricardo and John Stuart Mill. This was in the days of classical liberalism unlike today’s neo-liberalism. Of course it was a class struggle between the aristocratic landowning and banking classes and the newly emerging industrial bourgeoisie with the working class playing a minor role. Newly arrived 20/21st neoliberalism is simply a reversion to a rent-seeking, financialised capitalism with a new financial, parasitic class at the helm. Of course the system won’t work in the long run since it is essentially parasitic in a process of devouring itself.
I can only repeat what others said: Thanks!!! A huge Christmas gift for all of us. Thanks to the Saker, Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar for this.
As interesting as this was there was no mention of The Great Reset and whether the Chinese model will be used as the foundation for The Great Reset.
It is of grave concern for me that this is indeed the beginning of the new world order and many around the world do not believe this to be the case. It may not but what if it is.. One aspect that grabbed me was the mention of Chinese landowners giving up their land for apartments. This has striking similarities with The Great Reset and philosophy of communitarianism.
Another concern is the coercion or the mandating of vaccines across the world, I believe that China mandated vaccines before the official outbreak. It is also becoming more a parent that the health passport will be rolled out across the world in the coming year.
If anyone could shed some light on why Russia or China wouldn’t join the new world order then please enlighten me.
Doctor Michael Hudson and Pepe Escobar are two well-respected persons in their fields of expertise, that being economics and independent journalism. The video presentation was an affirmation of some of the failings of a capitalistic economy to bring prosperity to the people of a country, especially in the United States.
Hudson presented a historical perspective on why U.S. capitalism has become diseased due to the overarching desire to make short-term profit through the machinations of capital financialization at the expense of funding industrialization to produce domestic goods for market exchange. Government is supposed to invest capital (via its taxing authority) in building and maintaining infrastructure projects (bridges, roadways, airports, seaports, etc), primary education and subsidize healthcare costs and housing.
He then goes on to explain the major difference between China and the U.S. with respect to managing the lending of domestic currency via the banking system. Communist China considers banking a public utility whose sole purpose is to lend money for the general welfare of the economy through industrialization projects, transportation improvements, etc. Of course American banking is privately held and allowed to make profit through its schemes of usury.
But then I read this from Doctor Hudson, ” China’s been able pretty much, to avoid all of this, because its objective in banking is not to make a profit and interest, not to make capital gains and speculation.”
Whoa, I think the good doctor hasn’t been paying attention. Here is an article from 2015 that explains how Chinese banks are making money on high interest baring loans that are repackaged and sold in the secondary markets just like the U.S. banks do.
See: https://asia.nikkei.com/Viewpoints-archive/Perspectives/Chinas-loan-shark-economy?source=content_type%3Areact%7Cfirst_level_url%3Aarticle%7Csection%3Amain_content%7Cbutton%3Abody_link .
I’m also troubled by Hudson’s comment about the benefits of Marxism and how it’s tied to the BRI project. There are approximately 138 countries that have expressed an interest in the BRI project and some of them are in various stages of implementation. Pepe Escobar asked Hudson about the accusation against China that it creates “debt traps” to snare lesser economic countries such as Laos, Sri Lanka, and Kyrgyzstan.
On the first point, Hudson said railroads are the preferred means of transporting goods across State boundaries instead of using sea-lanes to pickup and deliver goods. He says the Chinese view railroads as part of economic infrastructure and profit is not a consideration. This suggests the cost to build and maintain railways is born by the countries that are connected together and China would be dictating internal policies that may be in conflict with countries that are not socialist governments.
On the second point, Hudson speaks about debt and gave a quick history about the foreign currency abuses committed by the U.S. and Great Britain. In his example where China loaned money to develop Canadian copper mines, the repayment terms were in raw copper instead of Canadian dollars. The profit Canada would have earned on the sale of that copper in the international markets was lost to China instead of paying the lender in paper. I don’t think that was a good deal for Canada.
Sri Lanka is another example of how China obtains wealth that is more valuable than currency, which is control of a nation’s sovereignty. Here is a New York Times article that explains how China acquired the use of a Sri Lankan seaport including adjacent land on a 99 year lease.
See: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/25/world/asia/china-sri-lanka-port.html
Other countries are finding themselves in the same financial situation when dealing with the economically rich and powerful dragon.
Here is a podcast that explains the concerns that other nations have had in their negotiations with Communist Chinese State controlled lenders. The speaker gives a good example of a railway that China would build with Chinese labor between Hungary and Serbia (listen at the 21.00 minute mark).
See: https://merics.org/en/podcast/matt-ferchen-many-developing-countries-china-only-option-available
Professor Hudson glossed over the benefits that BRI offers to interested countries and their strategy of taking valuable natural resources and leased territory in lieu of principal and interest currency repayment. We know the history of U.S. imperialism and now we are seeing China’s version of imperialism that comes from selling debt obligations instead of the use of military force, which is expensive and unnecessary. China is going to surround the western hemisphere as it pursues its goal of economic and political domination across the globe and the BRI (Beijing’s Revolutionary Indoctrination) is the platform to accomplish it.
Sorry, PTT, but how is “China’s version of imperialism” supposed to work without “use of military force”? If the deals are huge scams like those from the “Western” banker gangsters, why would anyone agree to them when there is no force to make them agree? No force to blow up their alternatives?
And the problem with comparing China’s currency to the US’s currency is what countries can do with them. Take those Canadian copper mines you mentioned, for example. If Canada got some Chinese money for the mines, wouldn’t Canada be able to spend the money on Chinese goods and services to get the mines running? Trading mining equipment for copper sounds reasonable; the currency is just a medium of exchange for things with real use/value, as it should be.
On the other hand, could Canada do the same thing with American money while the US’s industrial production is increasingly outsourced? Or would the mining equipment largely come from other countries bullied into using the banksters’ debt slave currencies? If the banksters actually do allow US’s domestic production to increase again, it’s only going to be for the military-industrial complex, anyway.
The definition of Imperialism is, “The political and economic domination of one country, or countries, by another, which leads either to alien rule imposed by force, or to economic domination and exploitation.” The operative words are: political, force, economic, domination.
The western powers (i.e., U.S. Great Britain, E.U., Israel, etc.) use the full spectrum of imperialistic tactics to impose control over other nations. Some modern day examples :
1. Israel’s political control of the U.S. Congress and some State governments.
2. Israel’s ongoing martial law (a.k.a. “force occupation”) against the Palestinians.
3. U.S. dictatorial economic sanctions against Russia, Venezuela, China, etc.
4. U.S. military global force projection (e.g., Japan, South Korea, Iraq, Syria, Africa, etc.)
As I intimated in my first post, Communist China is taking the long, serpentine road to further its ambition of domination through global economic control. The CCP doesn’t need to strong-arm other countries by force; it employs the loan of fiat money, which is cheaper than the “shock and awe” of bullets.
You are correct, money is a medium of exchange but it’s also is a storehouse of value and a unit of measure. But that’s all it’s good for. Raw materials on the other hand, have a dual purpose (1) used for contract settlement (2) used in the manufacturing of goods.
China values raw materials more than Canadian dollars, which are subject to currency fluctuations on the FOREX exchange. Theoretically Canadian dollars can crash to zero and be of no use to anyone. But raw materials like copper can always be traded or used productively. Paper is just that, paper and Doctor Hudson alluded to that when he wrote, ” So, China says, you know you don’t have to pay currency for this debt. We didn’t build a railroad to make a profit and you want, we can print all the currency we want.”
PTT: Each of your other modern examples require force to implement. Even sanctions are backed up by arrests and blockades. So how can China’s “ambition of domination through… loan of fiat money” work without force?
This has never worked without force before. The US wanted out of the “Western” banker gangsters’ debt money scam, and the US was hit with wars and assassinated presidents. Germany wanted out and was hit with world wars. Oil-producing countries like Iraq and Libya wanted out of the Petrodollar and they were hit with wars. If China were actually running a similar scam, why would anyone accept or submit when there is no force? Where is the logic?
And what is important to note about Canadian dollars is that, like American dollars, they are loaned into existence from private banksters who care more about enslaving the market than benefiting the people as a whole. As such, requiring copper helps ensure that whatever goods and services are purchased from China to mine copper are actually used to mine copper, not doing whatever foolish thing the banksters want, such as more debt money wars. Isn’t that reasonable…?
That is what Hitler said to Joseph Chamberlain in1936: “We don’t need you money thank you, we print our own.” Chamberlain then declared war on Germany in 1939 at the behest of the US bankers, who were going to get stiffed on their Versailles “treaty” reparations.
Yes, Kap, something to that effect. We tend to focus on the pyramid scheme elements of the banksters’ debt money, but pyramid schemes are short-lived. Force, like in an extortion racket, is what really keeps people under the pyramid.
Now that I think about, a “good cop, bad cop” scenario might be possible between China and the US, but China and its allies are even getting in the way of that by delegitimizing the US’s force as a whole, including in front of Americans who are supposed to be the muscle-men.
Railroads? An interesting history lesson circa 1970 from a book by author Willard Cantelon The Day the Dollar Dies
On December 23, 1913, Woodrow Wilson influenced legislation which established the Federal Reserve Bank or the Federal Reserve System. With the establishment of the Federal Reserve System, the United States government forfeited the right to create its own money. The government retained the power only of issuing government bonds upon which the taxpayers paid interest to the Federal Reserve System which alone had the power to issue the currency known as Federal Reserve Notes. The attitude of government men toward the Federal Reserve System was interesting, to say the least. Some lauded its virtues, and others deplored its dangers. some referred to the Federal Reserve System as “the banks’ bank,’ and declared it was
necessary to safeguard the local bankers in times of crisis.
Financial Crisis, June 19-23, 1970
On June 19, 1970, the American people escaped a national economic crisis by a mere hairline. The sixth largest enterprise in the United States, the largest railroad of the country, the Pennsylvania Central, went bankrupt. The bankers were confident that the government would bail them out. They gathered in the northwest conference room of the tenth floor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to sign the papers as soon as the word came from Washington.
But Congressional disapproval had been hardening. Wright Patman, chairman of the House Banking Committee, refused to grant the $200 million loan, declaring it would be “only the beginning of a welfare program for the giant corporation.” What could be done? The Federal Reserve System had been criticized for cutting off money too abruptly in 1966 and of increasing it too fast in 1967 and early 1968.
If stockholders across the nation became concerned that their stocks in this or any other company were to lose their value, they could commence a run on banks in seeking to cash in their stocks that would deplete the reserves of the banks of America and throw the entire nation into chaos. Needless to say, tension was high, and furious action was taken to stave off a national panic that could have created havoc in those days between June 19 and 23. Bankers of the nation lined up for loans of $1.7 billion hoping to beable to meet the demands for money that would be brought to them by fearful stockholders wishing to exchange their paper stock for money.
Too few Americans realize that the banks of the nation operate much the same as the “Fractional Money Lenders” of the past. If a large number of people were to desire their money from the bank at one time, the banks would have only a fraction of the amount needed. A national scare like the collapse of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad could have started such a situation. This is why private banks strove to borrow extra money from the Federal Reserve in the face of such an impending crisis.
The World Bank
ln 1944 a World Bank was born, an infant that soon grew into a mighty giant. The national problems that had brought into existence a National Banking Act and the Federal Reserve System were identical in many respects to the problems that brought about the establishment of the World Bank. In the early pioneer days, men could do business with a local bank because few traveled far from home and seldom crossed the borders of another state. Even by the turn of the century, few men had traveled more than three hundred miles….
The Gold Standard please forward to Peter Koenig!
In 1870, America’s banks went on the gold standard. This meant that any American could come to the bank with his paper money and exchange it for gold. In 1933, however, this was changed. In the aftermath of the crash of ’29 and the depression that followed, the morale of the nation was such that it was willing to accept any revisions or suggestions which might point to a way out of their misery. Mr. Roosevelt asked the government to pass legislation demanding that the American people give up their gold. This they did, receiving in exchange paper money showing they had received $20.67 an ounce for their precious metal. Immediately, however, the government raised the price of gold to $35.00 an ounce, realizing a $3 billion
profit.
When asked his opinion on this particular action, Senator Carter Glass replied to President Roosevelt on Apnl 27, 1933, I think it is worse than anything Ali Baba’s forty thieves ever perpetrated.
Blood money yes?
Maybe we should go back to tobacco?
With the winning of the War of Independence, the colonists were free to create their own money. Naturally,
there was not enough gold in their reserves to represent sufficient backing for their paper currency. So, in states like Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina, tobacco was adopted as a money standard and became a legal tender. When plantation owners harvested their tobacco crops and placed them in the warehouses awaiting sale, the warehouse operators issued to the owners paper receipts for the tobacco. These receipts became transferable and were circulated from one hand to another and even from state to state. The tobacco receipts, indeed, became legal tender, and in a very true sense, a form of money. But when the price of tobacco rose and fell, the value of the paper rose and fell accordingly. When men held paper for any length of time, they might find the value of their tobacco receipts greatly altered from the time when they
were first issued.
Gold
The most intriguing and by far the most universal substance used as money through the centuries is gold. In
spite of the fact that gold does not pay interest to those who hoard it or possess it, a recent poll revealed that still 99.4% of the people of the world still crave gold. It is beautiful to the eye. It does not rust or tarnish. In the
hands of the craftsman, it is pliable. An ounce of gold will make a wire 50 miles long or may be pounded out in a film so thin it can cover 100 square feet. The ancient Egyptians knew how to hammer gold into leaves so thin that 367,000 made a pile only one inch high. No one knows when gold was first discovered by man.
At the site of Ur in Mesopotamia (now Iraq) archaeologists have discovered gold vessels made as early as 3500 B.C..