Title: The International Debt Crisis
1The International Debt Crisis
2Discussion What do you think the term
International Debt Crisis means?
3Do these cartoons help to understand it?
4Try this video,Drop the Debt to see if it helps
make sense
http//www.makepovertyhistory.org/video
5It must make sense when you look at the
facts.right?
FACT From 1970-2002, Africa received some 540
billion in loans and paid back 550 billion in
principal and interest. Yet Africa remains today
with a debt stock of 295 billion. FACT Debt
relief is conditioned on requirements that
countries limit government spending, private
basic services, and/or change trade and
investment rules. FACT Much of the debt is a
result of "bad faith" lending including The
practice of pushing loans on developing nations
because banks had too much money and had to lend
it
6How do we define a developing country???
- 1. Common colonial history
- Most have been colonized by European nations,
either politically, economically, or both. - 2. Poverty
- Massive inequities between the countrys rich and
poor - 3. Stereotypes
- Often seen as disorderly and threatening.
- 4. Debt
7Colonialism / Imperialism
- Colonialism
- Domination of one country by another through
control of the countrys political system. - Imperialism
- Domination of one country by another through
territorial expansion or the control of the
markets.
8Reasons for colonialism
- 1. Business
- Need to gain overseas markets for manufactured
goods and to gather supplies of inexpensive raw
materials for factories. - 2. Religion
- Christian missionaries went to save souls, and
required military protection against resentful
natives.
9Cont
- 3. Strategic and Military Advantage
- i.e. Suez Canal (shortest route to India)
- 4. International pride and the search for
prestige - 5. Population settlement
- Colonies provided a good place to settle surplus
10European attitude towards colonialism in the 1800s
- Cecil Rhodes (1890)
- We must find new lands from which we can easily
obtain raw materials and at the same time exploit
cheap slave labor that is available from the
natives of the colonies. The colonies will also
provide a dumping ground for the surplus goods
produced in our factories.
11So why didnt the countries do well after the
colonizers left?
- What were the disadvantages that the colonies
began with once their colonial invaders left? - Empire nations picked up and left without leaving
any real infrastructure that could be managed by
the indigenous population. - Empire countries had, for the most part, stripped
and profited from their colonies resources. - Empires had provided all forms of governance and
expertise without allowing the education or
training of the occupied indigenous people.
12 Did you know????
- The term Third World Countries was coined in
the early 1950s to describe those countries that
did not belong to either the Western/Capitalist
bloc, or the Communist/Eastern bloc of countries
who were engaged in the Cold War. It also
suggests that the expanding split between rich
and poor nations was not as evident and obviously
less prominent prior to the 1950s
13Developed Countries
- There are only 26 countries in the world that are
not considered to be developing / Third World
countries. These countries are the members of the
OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development). They contain 20 of the worlds
population, control 80 of the worlds wealth,
and have an average GNP (Gross National Product)
of USD 18,00.
14OECD Countries
- 1. Australia 8. France 15. Luxembourg 21. Spain
- 2. Austria 9. Germany 16. Mexico 22. Sweden
- 3. Belgium 10. Greece 17. Netherlands 23.
Switzerland - 4. Canada 11. Ireland 18. New Zealand 24. United
Kingdom - 5. Czech 12. Iceland 19. Norway 25. United
States - Republic 13. Italy 20. Portugal 26. Turkey
- 6. Denmark
- 7. Finland
15Why isnt Canada indebted like most southern
colonial countries in the Caribbean or in Africa?
- European Settlement
- Self government
- No population replacement (slave)
- Manufacturing
- Climate
- Expansion of empire not just a resource pool.
16 What escalated the debt in the developing
world after the 1950s?
- Opec Oil Crisis
-
- In response to their profits, the OPEC nations
had vast sums of money to invest, and deposited
it in banks in North America, Europe, and Japan.
These banks had to find customers to borrow this
cash. The worlds developing countries became
more than willing customers for loans that had
low, but floating, interest rates. In reality, a
major reason why these countries had to borrow
money was to pay for the oil they needed, which
was dramatically more costly. When a country uses
loans to pay for day-to-day needs like oil,
little capital is left over for economic
development. These oil purchases, of course,
enriched the oil exporters even more.
17What is OPEC?
- OPEC is an organization of eleven developing
nations, whose economies rely on oil export
revenues. - OPEC countries
- Algeria, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya,
Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab
Emirates, Venezuela. - See interactive map
- http//www.opec.org/library/Annual20Statistical2
0Bulletin/interactive/FileZ/worldmapz.htm
182. Loans, not grants
- In 1957, the U.S. decided that, instead of
providing grants, it would provide low-interest
loans as a form of aid to developing countries.
The rationale for this decision was that these
investments would generate sufficient wealth to
than pay for themselves. Many other countries
followed suit with this form of aid.
193. Abolition of U.S. Gold Standard
- In the 1970s, the United States went off the gold
standard. This meant that the value of the dollar
was no longer tied directly to the value of gold,
and created a great deal of uncertainty in world
financial markets. - As a result, the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) felt that the lower
value of the dollar was costing them too much
money. In response, they increased the price of
oil by 70 per cent. Additional significant oil
price increases occurred in 1979. These price
jumps were a big problem for a wealthy country
like Canada, but proved to be even more
economically devastating in the nations of the
developing world.
204. The Trojan HorseSpiraling Inflation
- During the 1970s and early 1980s, the world
experienced spiraling inflation that drove up
interest rates. Loans that might have been
affordable when the cost of borrowing was 5 per
cent became totally unsustainable with rates
between 10 and 15 per cent. - Inflation - a rise in the general level of
prices, as measured against some baseline of
purchasing power.
215. Declining Currency Value
- To make matters worse, throughout this whole
period, as the economies of debtor nations
declined, their currencies lost value compared to
hard currencies like the US dollar and the
Japanese yen. If the currency lost half of its
value compared to US dollars (and many lost much
more than that), the debt load doubled in terms
of local currency.
226. Falling commodity prices
- To add to the growing economic mess, the price of
many of the commodities that the developing
countries relied on for export earnings
(agricultural, forestry, and mining products)
declined in the 1970s and early 1980s. Hence,
these countries had to pay higher prices for
their imports (especially oil) with less income.
237. Cold War
- To add to all of this, the two major world powers
of the day, the U.S and the USSR, were playing
geo-political chess. They made available even
more money to allies of their regimes, even if
such allies were ruled by a Flavor of the Day
ruler. In many cases, these countries would have
a rebellion funded by one of the Superpowers.
They would then get some money through the
Superpowers influence froim banks in Europe and
North America. Then once they had spent the money
on frivolous items while the population starved,
they would be overthrown by a rebellion funded by
the other Superpower. The process woul simply
repeat itself for the most part. It allowed the
Superpowers to jockey for position in areas of
the world that were considered strategic (Middle
East, Asia, South America, Africa, etc)
24Results of the International Debt Crisis
- In response to the inflation of the developing
countries debts, many nations threatened to
default their loans. However, if this were to
occur, it would put into jeopardy many of the
North American, European, and Japanese banks who
lent them the money. This would lead to an
economic crisis in the developed world. - For this reason, organizations such as the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund were
established to allow the developing countries to
reschedule their debts.
25Three types of loans given to nations /
victims of the International Debt Crisis
- In the year 2000.
- 57 - Private loans from various financial
institutions. - 27 - Bilateral loans (country-to-country)
- 16 - Multilateral loans from international
agencies (World Bank, International Monetary Fund)
26What is the World Bank?
- A specialized agency that furthers the economic
development of member nations, chiefly through
guaranteed loans. The Bank obtains most of its
funds through borrowing, and the remainder
through government subscription. Since voting
power is proportional to the amount of money
received from each government, the Bank is
essentially controlled by the richer countries.
27What is the International Monetary Fund?
- The IMF is an organization of 184 countries,
working to foster global monetary cooperation,
secure financial stability, facilitate
international trade, promote high employment and
sustainable economic growth, and reduce poverty.
Since their inception they have developed loan
initiatives which are coupled with S.A.P.
(Structured Adjustment Plan) criteria
28What do S.A.P.s ask developing countries to do??
- Devalue their currency to make imports expensive
and encourage exports. - Increase their exports (cash crops).
- Limit spending on social and education (more
money for loan re-payments). - Increase their military spending and protection
standards. - Eliminate trade barriers with OECD countries.
29Discussion Questions
- 1) Not a single International Monetary Fund or
World Bank program has demanded that indebted
countries make cuts to military or police
expenditures. In fact, some debtor nations have
been told to increase spending in this area to be
eligible for loans (SAP). Why do you think this
is? - 2) These countries received the money. The
citizens of those nations obviously benefited
from this. Why shouldnt the citizens, workers,
business owners and governments today be made to
repay these loans? - 3) We are not considered to be in overwhelming
debt. Why should paying the debt in other
countries be a concern for us? How does
international debt affect us at all?
30Debt cancellation is the key right?
- 550 billion has been paid in both principal and
interest over the last three decades, on 540bn
of loans, and yet there is still a 523 billion
dollar debt burden. - There have been many headline-grabbing promises
by world leaders for third world debt
cancellation or relief for the poorest and most
ravaged countries, and yet those past promises
have hardly been kept. For example - The debt cancellation doesnt actually happen
- The debt cancellation is very slow to happen
- The amount of money or cancellation promised is
actually far less due to fancy spin and adding in
money that has already been earmarked for this
purpose
31How bad can the interest really be?
- Their debt (Developing World) has been
compounding at twice the normal rate - over 20
percent per year. Between 1973 and 1993, their
debt went from from 100 billion to 1.5 trillion
only 400 billion of the 1.5 trillion was
actually borrowed money. The rest was runaway
compound interest. If Third World debt continues
to compound at 20 percent per year, their debt
will be over 150 trillion in twenty years and
13 quadrillion in thirty years. - J.W. Smith, The Worlds Wasted Wealth 2,
(Institute for Economic Democracy, 1994), p. 143.
32But everybody has to pay interest
- The South has already repaid its external debt to
the North. Since the onset of the global debt
crisis, precipitated in 1979 by a sharp increase
in the Federal Reserves interest rates by Paul
Volcker, the devel-oping/emerging market
economies as a whole have paid in current dollars
a cumulative 7.673 trillion in external debt
service.1 However, during the same period their
debt has increased from 618 billion in 1980 to
3.150 trillion in 2006, according to figures
published by the International Monetary Fund
(IMF)
33Current Situations of Countries in Debt
http//www.jubileedebtcampaign.org.uk/?lid2647)
- Top Ten Reasons for Developing Nations Debt
- Colonialism
- Poverty
- Lack of infrastructure
- Incapable/Untrained/Greedy leaders
- Misguided use of funds
- SAP restrictions
- Military regimes
- Uneducated workforce
- Unpayable principles
- Uncontrolled population
34Â Name Position Â
 Name Position Funds embezzled (in U.S. )
1 Mohamed Suharto President of Indonesia (19671998) 15 to 35 billion
2 Ferdinand Marcos President of the Philippines (19721986) 5 to 10 billion
3 Mobutu Sese Seko President of Zaire (19651997) 5 billion
4 Sani Abacha President of Nigeria (19931998) 2 to 5 billion
5 Slobodan Milosevic President of Serbia/Yugoslavia (19892000) 1 billion
6 Jean-Claude Duvalier President of Haiti (19711986) 300 to 800 million
7 Alberto Fujimori President of Peru (19902000) 600 million
8 Pavlo Lazarenko Prime Minister of Ukraine (19961997) 114 to 200 million
9 Arnoldo Alem?n President of Nicaragua (19972002) 100 million
10 Joseph Estrada President of the Philippines (19982001) 78 to 80 million
35Discussion Question
- We are not considered to be in overwhelming debt.
Why should paying the debt in other countries be
a concern for us? How does international debt
affect us at all?
36The Debt Boomerang
- International debt is not only a developing world
problem. It costs developed nations billions of
/year - Lost Jobs through lost markets
- International epidemics through reduced health
standards - Global warming
- Inconsistent governments and insecurity
- Immigration pressures (government expenditures)
37What is being done to relieve the debt?
- Approach I Highly Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPCs) - An initiative by the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund to reduce the debt of the 41
poorest nations in the world. - However
- To be eligible for this initiative, nations must
be willing to implement a Structural Adjustment
Plan (SAP) approved by the World Bank or IMF.
SAPs often require these nations to make
controversial adjustments such as restricted
social spending.
38Approach II Jubilee 2000 / Jubilee Campaign
- An initiative to mark the new millennium by
forgiving the debt owed by the 50 poorest
countries of the world. - Rationale
- The debt of these countries is ruinous.
- The debtor nations have paid more than a fair
amount for loans forced upon them. - Many of the nations are paying for unfair debts
that are at least 2 decades old (i.e. odious
debts) - Odious debts created by corrupt leaders (i.e.
Philippines hundred of shoes owned by the wife
of former president, Imelda Marcos.
39Approach III Canada
- Canada is a significant creditor to many of the
HIPCs. To assist in relieving the debt of these
countries, Canada has - 1. Forgiven bilateral international debt
- 2. Provided relief in lieu of forms of government
development assistance - 3. Cancelled debts
- 4. Encouraged other members of the IMF World
Bank to make HIPC initiatives more generous.
40What has happened since 2001?
- http//www.dailymotion.com/video/x9sqbn_drop-the-d
ebt-2009_news