The world’s attention is riveted on the United States economy as the financial crisis in the global superpower promises a depression within that country and threatens economic growth everywhere else. But as crisis management in the U.S. comes into play with the government’s proposal for a huge bailout of troubled banks, it is interesting to look at how financial crises in less powerful countries have been managed. The details of the plan in the U.S. are still e merging, but it is clear that it will involve a very large draft on taxpayers, both present and future, and rely on resources from other countries, including developing Asia.
Read moreWorld's Labor Federations React to Financial Crisis
While almost all federations have given expression to workers' fear, frustration, and anger, the political programs and calls to action that they put forward differ fundamentally. In all countries surveyed, the labor movement is divided into rival federations, often along ideological lines. No one federation speaks for all workers in any one country. Few unions have suggested a desire to initiate a major struggle over the crisis, and almost none talk about the need to end the capitalist system. Yet virtually all federations, even the most conservative, have felt it necessary to speak out on the damage to working-class lives and the need that the world's governments do something for working people.
We look here at response from around the world from the moderate American, Canadian and European confederations to the more radical Latin Americans and Japanese.
Read moreInvited Disaster
The likely reduction of capital flows into developing countries is generally perceived as bad news. But that is not necessarily true, since the earlier capital inflows were mostly not used for productive investment by the countries that received them. Instead, the external reserve build-up (which reflected attempts by developing countries to prevent their exchange rates from appreciating and to build a cushion against potential crises) proved quite costly for the developing world, in terms of interest rate differentials and unused resources. While some developing countries may indeed be adversely affected by the reduction in net capital inflows, for many other emerging markets this may be a blessing in disguise as it reduces upward pressure on exchange rates and creates more emphasis on domestic resource mobilisation.
Read moreLooking for Solutions: Labor and the Crisis of Neoliberal Capitalism
This article by Ingo Schmidt lays out some of the debates within labour movements, in the past and today, about economic alternatives. It raises the question of how North American labour movements can begin a process of struggle to form alternative solutions after years of setbacks at the very hands of neoliberalism and financial markets. It follows with two contributions towards such a process. One is an open letter from labour scholars that suggests to union leaders and rank-and-file activists that there is a need to prepare for a struggle against lay-offs, wage concessions and cuts in pensions and public services that will be promoted once the crisis on the financial markets impacts the rest of the economy. The second is a resolution promoting such action and the educational activities necessary for its success that was passed by the Vancouver and District Labour Council at its October 2008 meeting.
Read moreEconomic Illiteracy
The banks were lending tens of dollars for every dollar deposited by the savers. They multiplied the money. They breathed and perspired through every pore…Any contraction led to ruin or to absorption by other banks. They had to be saved; always at the expense of the taxpayers. They were amassing great fortunes. Their privileged majority shareholders could afford to pay any money for anything.
Read moreA (Radical) Approach to the Subprime Mortgage Crisis
What is called the “subprime mortgage crisis” reflects a fundamental crisis in the housing system and a fundamental ideological blinders to the alternatives that the crisis suggests. The crisis is not a crisis of liquidity in the mortgage market, or a failure of regulation, nor is it the same as the crisis of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which is a different crisis, with which it is often confused. It is rather the result of the inability of the market to provide adequate and affordable housing for large numbers of Americans, and of the ideological commitment to homeownership as the incarnation of the American Dream for the masses.
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