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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (16171)3/8/2000 5:59:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17770
 
Quite an interesting article.... Although I share the author's analysis of Europe's growing anti-Americanism, I obviously disagree with his value judgement on it.

First, the author is dodging a key factor in this IMF-boss nomination rift, namely the Asian countries. Remember that in 1997, in the depths of the so-called Asian flu, Malaysia PM Mahatir Muhamad threw out the idea of an Asian IMF, that is a financial supervisory body exclusively run by, and dedicated to, Asian technocrats.... Obviously, as I wrote it in my Free Trade is Squeezing you thread (*), at that time, Mahatir was the bˆte noire of the Davos Elite and nobody in the financial community would have bet a penny on Malaysia's prompt recovery....

Thailand, Malysia, Indonesia, even South Korea, all the once awesome Asian tigers and would-be economic juggernauts of the XXIst century, were derided as "pushy gooks".... Just remember how then IMF boss Michel Camdessus was touring Asia, from Kuala Lumpur to Jakarta, to Hong Kong, to Seoul, to Tokyo, grinning broadly at Asian heads of state who were grudgingly listening to their banker of last resort.

Camdessus's orgasmic voluptuousness was glaring as it merely was a feeling shared by most Western chancelleries and openly boasted by the media: those famous Asian values were no match for the Anglo-Saxons' free-for-all capitalism and misjudging the libertarian gospel was to cost Asia a decade of economic growth.... Vice Pres. Gore, currency swindler Soros, and IMF Chief Camdessus were successively casting their reprimands on Asian leaders like a teacher dispensing candies to repentant dunces.

The author notices that Europe accounts for 37% of IMF voting rights. Such a high stake in a key international body might reflect Europe's economic clout from 1945 onwards but the U.S. establishment is forward-looking: taking into account demographic trends (aging Europe vs. booming Asia) and Asia's rapid recovery from the 1997 slump, global finance can no longer be managed as a "whitey turf" --hence the US haggling over the IMF. Simply put, the US is sending a "roger" signal to Asia. The nomination of Stanley Fischer is probably the best middle-of-the-road option since it might be premature for a Japanese to head the IMF. Europeans have demonstrated that they're partial to protectionism whereas Americans unquestionably are freemarket-bashers....

As for an "American Conquest" of Europe, I think such statements are preposterous. I think like Ranjan Gupta ($) that Europe has not yet developed an alternative to the US's benevolent hegemony, viz. the so-called globalization. Globalization is essentially a financial and cultural process through which all countries other than the US somehow got equalized --including Europe's. However, the counterpart of this cultural levelling is America's own openness to other cultures. Europe's own experience of worldwide hegemony is historically known as "Colonialism".

Contrary to the American globalization, (neo)colonialism is not about equalizing alien cultures, races, musics (jazz,...), and religions. For one thing, colonialism denies colonies competition with metropolitan Europe (France, Belgium, Spain,...) on an equal footing. For that matter, the Metropolis/Colony couple is a central tenet of the colonialist paradigm: it means division of labor and racial segregation between the colonial metropolis and the subjugated colonies. To illustrate this rather theoretical analysis, I shall cite MSFT founder Bill Gates visiting Bangalore: "India will be a computer superpower in the XXIst century" --that's a quote for Globalization. Now, as a quote for Neocolonialism, suffice it to refer to Belgium's Foreign Minister Louis Michel in his inaugural memorandum outlining Belgium's foreign policy --quoting from memory: "more African (scholarship) students should be allowed in Belgium..." Understood that they are granted return tickets only. There's no way for Europe to welcome a white-collar workforce from India, China, (North) Africa,... Sure, plenty of asylum seekers will be allowed in --that is, basically, unskilled workers. Meanwhile, computer geeks from India, engineers from China/Taiwan, and even professionals from the Arab world, will skip Europe and head for America....

(*) Message 12989741
($) Message 12774655

(to be continued)

Gus.



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (16171)3/10/2000 4:02:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Respond to of 17770
 
Footnote to my post #16174:

Vol. 5, No. 1232 - The American Reporter - December 28, 1999

The Crisis of Globalism

'MR. YEN' IS BACK ON THE FRONT PAGE
by Edward Neilan
American Reporter Correspondent
Tokyo, Japan


TOKYO -- The Japanese trial balloon to place one of its financial stars -- Eisuke "Mr. Yen" Sakakibara -- in the running for International Monetary Fund (IMF) managing director is still rising.

American and European sharpshooters have been trying to puncture the balloon ever since it was launched officially about two weeks ago by Japanese Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa. Before that, the idea had been heard in whispers in Tokyo, New York and London.

It is an added controversial topic on the sidelines of today's opening of the World Trade Organization (WTO) "circus in Seattle."

Whether the trial balloon is serious or just filled with hot air will not be known for certain until just before the retirement of current IMF chief Michel Camdessus in February.

There has been an unspoken understanding among top money men -- from the gnomes of Zurich to the barons of Wall Street to the samurai elders in the Kasumigaseki financial bureaucracies -- that the world's top financial jobs should be split up among the richest blocs.

The World Bank leadership traditionally has gone to an American, while the IMF chair has been reserved for a European and the Asian Development Bank seat for a Japanese.

Because the IMF was roundly criticized for its handling of Asia's 1997 currency crisis, Southeast Asian nations particularly are happy to join the campaign to support Sakakibara, the former vice-minister of finance for international affairs. During the financal crisis, several Asian officials bristled at "being told what to do by foreigners."

Racist? You bet. But in times of severe stress, such things happen.

The front-runner for the IMF job has been Caio Koch-Weser, Germany's deputy finance minister. Developing or emerging market countries have lobbied against his candidacy, which may open a crucial crack in the door for Sakakibara.

Meanwhile, Japanese paranoia is fed by suspicions that Europeans are miffed that Japan snared the top post in UNESCO, which went to Koichiro Matsuura, former ambassador to France.

Realists at the Japanese foreign and finance ministries realize that the Sakakibara balloon inevitably will show leakage and may eventually collapse.

But Japan and Asia will have served notice through advocacy of the unusual candidacy that they are to be reckoned with. At 58, Sakakibara is young enough to stand for an international financial post at some time in the future.

Sakakibara told me last January that he felt it would take "about 10 years" to develop a yen bloc, which is one of his pet projects. The idea germinated in Sakakibara's mind when he was serving a four-year stint at the IMF after getting his doctorate at the University of Michigan.

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of Treasury Lawrence Summers has opposed making the so-called "Miyazawa fund" of emergency assistance into something permanent that might resemble an Asian Monetary Fund. China, South Korea and The Philippines have recently said such a fund would be welcomed.

These thoughts all have an element in them of the East Asian Economic Caucus concept put forward a few years ago by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahatir bin Mohamad. The guiding theme of the EAEC was the establishment of an Asian fund by and for Asians that would not have American or European management.

In a perfect world, the nationality of fund managers should not matter as much as qualities like transparency, avoidance of cronyism and adherence to accepted rules of the financial game. But sadly, some Asian leaders continue to suffer from a "colonial hangover" mentality that embraces a vague set of "Asian values" to use against the supposedly villainous "globalization."

Edward Neilan is a Tokyo-based analyst of Northeast Asian affairs.

Copyright 1999 Joe Shea The American Reporter. All Rights Reserved.

american-reporter.com

In a "perfect world", one might also add, the FBI would just get off Wen Ho Lee's back.... Yellow peril? You bet.

Sayonara,
Gus.



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (16171)3/10/2000 6:06:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Respond to of 17770
 
Joke of the Day.... Here's how the EU technocracy plans to tackle Neo-fascism's rise throughout Europe:

stars.coe.fr

Executive Summary

C. The far left

22. It is true that extremist ideologies are most often found among the radical right, but they also exist to a lesser extent among the radical left. Although it has been vague and generally invisible in our member states in recent years, it is important to note that the radical left, including autonomous movements, generally aims at the destruction of "the system", because of the belief that this system protects the monopolies of multinational companies. In its most extreme form, the far left also accepts the legitimacy of resorting to terrorism. Recent events in Copenhagen involving the autonomous movement have shown that there are clear links between anti-racism movements and the radical left. This is a very unfortunate alliance, which poses a threat to the general achievements and further development of the combat against racism and xenophobia in our member states.

23. A number of extra-parliamentary extreme left-wing movements continue to favour direct action to disseminate their anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist rhetoric, which is mainly reflected in opposition to the United States and NATO.

24. One very important development is the integration of certain extreme left-wing movements into parliamentary politics. The best example was the success of the joint list of the two French Trotskyite movements, "Lutte OuvriŠre" and the "Ligue Communiste R‚volutionnaire" in the European elections on 13 June 1999. The "LCR", which belongs to the 4th International, is a group which, while formally challenging the institutions of the capitalist and liberal system, pursues democratic objectives, conducts its activities in public and has an internal democratic debate.

25. "Lutte OuvriŠre", on the other hand, is a sectarian-type movement, the real leadership of which is kept secret and which implements strict control over the private lives of its members. To that extent it might be thought that its acceptance of parliamentary politics is merely tactical. Another sectarian-type Maoist organisation is the "Parti du Travail de Belgique" (PTB), which pervades the Belgian voluntary sector, especially the trade unions, anti-fascist associations and organisations supporting foreign residents.

26. Lastly, we should specify that throughout Europe the revisionist denial of the nazi genocide is a component part of the position upheld by minor extreme left-wing groups. In Italy, the Graphos publishing house, which disseminates revisionist theses, belongs to the extreme left-wing "Bordighista" movement.

27. However, at present these extreme left-wing movements are marginal in the Council of Europe?s member states and their support does not appear to be growing sufficiently to cause concern.
[snip]
_________________

WHEW! Relieved we're! EU's fat cats will sleep soundly --fat chance those far-leftists and revolutionmongers can make it to any elective office anywhere in Europe....

Lumping far-rightist hatemongers together with progressive and innocuous anarchists is an old trick the bourgeoisie has always relied upon to deceive public opinion.

BTW, the report does not mention France's contemporary Asterix (after a famous French comic strip's hero), that is Mr Jos‚ Bov‚!....Ooops! Sorry, that's a good PC-leftist: a hillbilly who sets fire to McDonald's drive-thru's, who constantly bashes globalization as a race to the American bottom.... But hey, the guy got endorsed by French President Jacques Chirac, and he wasn't vouchsafed to the last Davos meeting by a whisker. France's farming lobby is so powerful, after all....

Belgium also has her own pet "Jos‚ Bov‚" in the person of Mr Roberto D'Orazio, a lively, sympathetic Italian fellow who inconveniently happens to be.... a PTB-supporting unionist! Toooo baaaad.... When he led the Forges de Clabecq strike in 1997, he got much less support from the media than Jos‚ Bov‚. D'Orazio was vilified as a dangerous subversive, and as a potential terrorist! Up to now, he's staked out by the Gestapo cops.

As for the alleged opposition to the U.S. and NATO by far-leftist groups, that's gross brainwashing: the most genuine and virulent Yank-bashers are obviously to be found among Europe's reactionary, churchy bourgeois. Fanatics from Opus Dei, from the military, from chivalric fellowships, from business jingo clubs, share the most blatant vested interest in keeping the Yanks at bay --there's no way by them that Yankees will succeed in McDonaldize Europe into some second "mongrel continent"!

The obvious irony about these petty bourgeois crying wolf about anarchists and the like is their slanted leniency towards the other political fringe, namely the far-right. If Europe's conservative bourgeois would have had expended as much effort in thwarting the far-right as they've had in framing up the far-left, then maybe Jorg Haider and his European followers would not be as threatening as they're today.... Well, who are they threatening, anyway? The ruling class --or the unionists, the wogs, and other crass people?

Cheerio,
Gus.