Date post: | 22-May-2015 |
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Reigning in Public !Debts or Challenging Democracies?
Ann Pettifor, PRIME (Policy Research in Macroeconomics) www.primeeconomics.org
Madariaga College of Europe Foundation Brussels 1st December, 2011
Private !Wealth needs Greece
• Greece does not need private wealth
Why should Greek & EU taxpayers shield private financial sector from risk?
Struggle between public & private interests
• Without taxpayer-backed bailouts (EFSE,ECB,IMF, the US FED), public guarantees, the privatisation of assets, private bankers face armageddon, as in 2008.
• Bankers challenging democracies - removing elected politicians
Imposing 'technocrats' Denying the people Voice
Total exposure of British private banks to Italian/Belgian/Greek public debt = $20bn (Bank for International Settlements, June, 2011)
Belgian private bank exposure to public debt of It/Gr/Ire = $19.47bn. (BIS June, 2011)
French private bank exposure to Italian/Greek/Irish public debt = $106bn (BIS, June, 2011)
Austerity marks final failure of existing arrangements between
private & public interests Financial liberalisation has failed
Next Steps
• Euro must be abandoned
• Not a currency of the peoples, but an ideal of private wealth
• Euro a perversion of greatest monies in history - which arose as a relation between people and the state
• Through development of central banks, domestic banks, state borrowing, paper currency, double-entry book-keeping and taxation, national monies have underpinned greatest societies in the world.
But Euro aimed at !interests of private!wealth • Divorced from nation states
• Statutes explicitly prohibit the support of state activity
• Through "swaps" "QE" etc.
• Its foundation in monetarist doctrine inhibits private economic activity, has led to financial monopolies
• Rather than encouraging convergence across EU, intensifies divergences
In 1931 Britain threw off the "fetters" of Gold
• Then as now the "Lords of Finance" demanded Austerity, and the impact of the Crash & Great Depression hammered the innocent.
• The UK, led by Keynes, threw off the equivalent of the Euro, and restrained the bankers - subordinating their interests to the broader interests of society
• Sterling was revived and protected from speculation
1934 Roosevelt freed the dollar
• Embarked on finest programme of public works expenditure in modern history
• Great public buildings erected, symphony orchestras established, writers - like John Steinbeck - sponsored, murals created, swimming pools built.
• In 1935 Socialist government in France did the same.
• Only the Fascist governments remained in thrall to Gold, and to private wealth