
Jayati Ghosh T HERE was a time, some decades ago, when analysts could write of aid as imperialism. Today, when official aid is all but defunct, it is more correct to describe the current tendency of debt-forgiveness as imperialism. There is much that is appalling about imperialism today the dastardly occupation ofWhat is even more obscene is when imperialism is not naked in its violence, but
disguised as charity and empathy for the oppressed, and when the rest of the world is made
to applaud the benevolent concern expressed by the great powers. This is what has been
happening around the recent G-8 Summit meeting, which made it a point to continue despite
the This was accompanied by a concert extravaganza of the trendiest feel-good
pop stars around, such as Bob Geldof and Bono, to provide entertainment to accompany the
good deed, as well as a media blitz supported by almost the entire worlds press and
television. So much so that even otherwise well-informed and progressive people in the
developing world were fooled into thinking that, for a change, the leaders of the
core capitalist countries were actually thinking about doing some good for people
desperately in need of it. Unfortunately, a more cynical perspective is actually the correct one. The G-8
debt relief deal is actually a paltry and niggardly reduction of a small part of a debt
that has grown to gigantic proportions more because of adding on unpaid interest than
because of any recent flows of fresh resources. And this pathetic amount is being traded
for yet more major concession made by the debtor countries, in terms of sweeping and
extensive privatization of public services and utilities, which is about all that is left
for governments to sell in these countries, as well as large increases in indirect
taxes which fall disproportionately on the poor. Consider the main elements of this generous deal. To begin with, only 18 countries are to benefit from the G8s so-called generosity. They are all countries that have been through this before most recently through the highly publicized HIPC initiative (for heavily indebted poor countries) launched in 1996. The HIPC initiative, which was greeted with similar if less musical fanfare, has since failed utterly, either in relieving the burden of debt or improving conditions in the countries concerned. Estimates by UNCTAD suggest that the 27 HIPC beneficiary countries, for example, will be making bigger debt repayments in 2005 than in 2003. Even for these 18 countries, the debt relief is very partial and is nowhere near
complete cancellation. It mainly concerns only some bilateral debt and the debt held by
the World Bank and the African Development Bank, which amounts to a very small proportion
of the total debt of the concerned countries. The British proposal only intended to take
over repayments between now and 2015. The total financial burden on the G-8 of the entire operation would amount to
some $2 billion a year, which should be compared to the estimated $350 billion annually
devoted by the G8 to farming subsidies or the $700 billion spent by the G-8 on military
expenditure. The annual amount spent by all these G-8 countries put together for the
announced cancellation is less than half of the amount the US government spends every
month on its continued illegal occupation of Iraq. Even this trivial amount for the It is true that the current deal is an improvement on the HIPC initiative in that
what has been agreed upon is a real cancellation that would bear on the principal of the
debt, rather than simply a financial contribution towards the debt service paid to
multilateral institutions. But even so, the announced cancellations would not even amount
to a complete cancellation of debt for these 18 countries, who would still have to deal
with a large amount of multilateral debt. What do the recipient countries have to provide in return for this munificence
which will not even be noticed in the budgets of the governments of rich countries? The
answer is that they will have to further sell their natural resources, their public
assets, and deprive their people of the basic conditions of a decent life, in order to
advance the profiteering by large corporations from the G-8 countries and elsewhere. The G8 decision represents a continuation of the HIPC initiative, which insisted
upon the imposition and intensification of heavily neoliberal policies that have already
ravaged poor debtor countries. Consuder some of the main elements of the conditionalities:
It is not hard to see that this is a deal designed to further the economic
interests of imperialism, which has once again been sold across the world as a huge
concession made to the worlds poor. In the words of the poet, After such
knowledge, what forgiveness? |