La historia se repite, una y otra vez. La nota que sigue es de Abayomi Azikiwe y apareció originalmente
en Pan-African News Wire. La reprodujo hoy Global Research. Nada que no sepan,
chicos, pero como Alfonso Prat-Gay insiste con el catecismo neoliberal, conviene
recordar cómo terminan estas cosas:
Título: The
Re-emerging African Debt Crisis. Renewed IMF “Economic Medicine”
Subtítulo: As
economies face structural challenges due to continuing dependency the cost of
borrowing is rising
Texto: During the
1970s-1990s much attention was focused on the rising debt crisis in
post-colonial Africa. Continental states after gaining national independence
realized that there could be no genuine development while financial obligations
to western-based lending institutions were rapidly escalating.
With the
balkanization of the continent during colonialism, the national independence
movements without political integration and economic unification faced
formidable challenges in setting priorities related to social spending and
sustainable planning.
Much of the
instability led to a further fracturing of the political landscape which found
its expression in military coups and other forms of anti-democratic practice.
These seizures of power by the armed forces and the police were often prompted
by economic crises engineered by the financial institutions and multi-national
corporations whom were seeking to maximize their profits at the expense of the
majority of workers, farmers and youth.
A Perfect Storm
is Coming Soon
A recently-held
Strategic Growth Forum in Johannesburg, South Africa examined these problems by
presenting data on the increasing debt-to-Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
ratios. This year, Africa’s sovereign
debt levels rose to 44 percent of GDP, a 10 percent rise from 2010 when
Africa’s debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 34 percent.
The Director of
Africa Research at Standard Charter Bank, Razia Khan, said of the expanding
debt bubble during the Forum that on the continent “African countries have had
notable access to capital markets, but the build-up of public debt in recent
years is troubling. To give you an example, the benchmark GDP-to-debt ratio for
African countries is generally 40 percent, but you have many countries like
Ghana for example who far surpass these levels.”
Quartz Africa
Weekly Brief covered the presentation made by Khan observing that “Until
recently, Ghana was lauded as one of Africa’s fastest growing economies. But
the West African country has had to battle with the depreciation of the Cedi,
its currency, increased power outages and low commodity prices.” (November 5)
Following the
patterns of previous years the same article recalls that “In April this year,
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a $918 million loan to help
Ghana to boost economic growth and job creation,” while ostensibly protecting
social spending. “To help refinance some of its existing debt, the country also
launched a $1.5 billion Eurobond last month. Khan predicts that the IMF will
increasingly play an extended role in African economies, as many will battle
with debt management strategies.”
Another article
published by Independent Online in South Africa pointed to both Ghana and
Zambia as states which have accepted the IMF and World Bank financial
prescriptions for dealing with the crisis of post-colonial states, with results
today which contradict the choruses of praise by western analysts as the volume
of debt in relations to GDP is growing exponentially. Zambia, a large-scale
producer of copper, has suffered from the fluctuation of commodity prices which
the government relies upon for its foreign exchange earnings.
According to
Independent Online,
“the Zambian
economy is under siege. The country is battling with a host of issues, both
domestic and external. On the external front, the slow-down in the Chinese
economy, emerging market risk aversion and a plunge in commodity prices have
taken their toll, while internally the country is facing a power crisis, fiscal
pressures and an election next year. The combination of these issues has seen
the Zambian kwacha become the worst performing currency over the past year,
losing more than 80 percent of its value. Zambia’s situation bears similarities
to those exhibited in Ghana around its 2012 election, which has raised alarm
that it could be heading down the same path.” (October 20)
The Crisis of
Neo-Colonialism Continues From the 1960s to the Present
The IMF and the
World Bank as early as the 1960s began to provide credit and consequent
economic plans for the reduction of African sovereign debt. In Ghana, after the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) backed military and police coup of February
1966, the IMF extended credit to the West African state setting the stage for
the reversal of the socialist experiment enacted under the First Republic led
by Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and the-then ruling Convention People’s Party (CPP), which
governed the country during the transition period of 1951-56 and independence
between 1957-1966.
Ghana Business
and Finance newsletter said of the period after the overthrow of Nkrumah that
“A long-standing
relationship has existed between Ghana and IMF dating back to 1966. From that
time, successive governments have signed separate loan arrangements with the
IMF. Indeed, the relationship has suffered bitter divorces and ambivalent
reconciliations over the years. For instance, when in 2006 the country was
exploring other financing options, it pulled out from the IMF loans arrangement.
But it came back in 2009 to borrow a whopping US$602 million from the
international financial institution, thus reaffirming the important role that
the Fund plays in the economic life of Ghana. “(April 24, 2015)
The hardships
engendered by the IMF role in the post-CPP imposed political construct in Ghana
created the social conditions which resulted in yet another military coup in
January 1972. Instability continued with successive military seizures of power
in 1978, 1979 and 1981.
By the
mid-to-late 1980s Ghana had gone further than any other African state in
adopting an Economic Recovery Program (ERP) as part of an overall Structural
Adjustment Program (SAP) framework that served as a blueprint for other
governments on the continent. Despite the progressive and revolutionary legacy
of the Nkrumah-CPP period, the country has largely remained within the orbit of
the western capitalist and imperialist systems.
These
developments in regard to Ghana have been evaluated from two different
perspectives. There are those who say that the IMF loans have provided
stability to the otherwise turbulent economic situation. On the other hand,
those within the country who have suffered from the impact of the imposition of
austerity say that the western-based financial institutions have strangled the
ability of Ghana to determine its own future in the interest of the majority of
people within society.
By the conclusion
of the 1990s, significant portions of the debt had been written off and
re-scheduled. Today this problem is re-emerging due to several factors
including the decline in commodity prices, growing class divisions and reliance
on foreign direct investment.
This financial
crisis emanates from Wall Street and other centers of borrowing throughout
capitalist states. Within the leading industrialized countries of the West,
there has still not been a full recovery from the economic crisis of 2007-2009.
Unemployment remains high and consumer spending is low due to the loss of wages
and household wealth.
Consequently, the
availability of credit to African states will be far more limited during the
second decade of the 21st century than what prevailed in the 1980s, 1990s and
the 2000s. Repressive measures by neo-colonial client states will intensify in
efforts to suppress mass demonstrations and strikes which are erupting as
workers and youth demand the enactment of government policies that are designed
to stem the tide of currency devaluations and the imposition of austerity.
Moreover, the
continuing dependency on the neo-colonial system will serve as an impediment to
not only national but regional and continental integration and economic
planning. These issues of course require more of a political response rather
than economic.
The genuine
political independence and sovereignty of African states must lead to the
rejection of the conditions established by the IMF and World Bank. Such a
position will place leaders and political parties on an automatic collision
course with the imperialist system of international finance capital.
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