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Coming
Clean on Mexico
Stuff
those corks back in the champagne bottles. The Republican leadership
in Congress can't celebrate the New Year until it breaks silence
on the Mexican bailout. This is a debacle that makes subsidies for
midnight basketball seem sensible.
With
the Mexican precedent, who knows what 1996 will bring? Is Japan
next? What about China? Why not the whole of Europe or even Africa?
If Mexico was a good idea, why not back all the world's governments
with the full faith and credit of the U.S.?
The
truth is that foreign aid is always and everywhere a curse. It shifts
resources from market uses to government misuses. It forces good
resources to chase bad projects. And it taxes Americans for the
benefit of foreign governments, helping further lower U.S. median
income. That the foreign governments bailed out are inevitably corrupt,
profligate, and oppressive only compounds the error.
Governments
have an inherent tendency to squander resources. When their currency
crashes as the peso did, it's a sign that its policies are seriously
off. If such governments are bailed out, they will never learn that
there's a price to pay for bad policy.
But
the Mexican oligarchy was dealing in more than bad policies. Every
day brings new revelations about the drug payoffs, murders, and
widespread graft linked to ex-president Salinas, his family, and
his successor. Even Salinas's allies in this country may be entangled.
Did they receive drug money, laundered through the Mexican government
and its affiliates, to lie about Nafta?
At
home, the Salinas regime was bleeding Mexico dry, with the enthusiastic
backing of U.S. elites, including Wall Street. So when things went
sour, the U.S. Treasury volunteered to perform a transfusion with
American tax dollars. Taxpayers paid the bulk of the $50 billion-plus
rescue effort. But like the victim of a vampire, the Mexican economy
couldn't be saved at any price.
The
Nafta-created Inter-American Development Bank slapped together a
$1.25 billion loan package. The World Bank approved a $1.5 billion
loan the biggest of its history. The U.S. finagled $17.5 billion
from the International Monetary Fund and $10 billion from the Bank
for International Settlements under what conditions we do not know.
Add the $20 billion from the Exchange Stabilization Fund, and we're
talking real money.
Congress
could have stopped this crime, and would have if the leadership
had allowed a vote. But Gingrich and Dole refused. We know this
from the press stories about a secret January 26, 1995, meeting
with the White House. During it, reports the Wall Street Journal's
Paul Gigot, "Mr. Gingrich became the most vocal supporter of the
rescue."
Mexico despite
the Beltway baloney about privatization and free markets was and
remains among the most controlled and cartelized economies in the
world, with high taxes, shaky property rights, vicious antitrust
laws, rigged labor markets, and loose money. And the Mexican government
had defaulted on its debt as recently as 12 years ago. Its first
act in this crisis was to impose price and wage controls amidst
a horrendous inflation, and close down businesses caught ignoring
them.
Few
would now extend a loan to Mexican politicians unless they could
put someone else's money at risk. And when the U.S. government extends
credit, American savers and taxpayers are the guarantors. Like all
government debt, the Mexican loans eventually mean a lower dollar,
higher taxes, or higher inflation, or all three. One way or another,
we will pay.
Americans
know it. Everywhere you go, there is fury about this financial mess,
and outrage at those who made it possible. But not in Washington.
Senator Al D'Amato made himself unpopular by conducting even limited
hearings. One reason: they revealed how and when the U.S. government
really learned that the peso was going to be devalued.
It
wasn't through high-level government sources and it wasn't the day
it was announced. In countries with controlled exchange rates like
Mexico, the U.S. embassy employs people to do nothing but roam the
country trading money so they can know what the real exchange rate
is.
In
late May 1994 five months after Nafta passed and eight months before
the bailout these agents were wandering through western Mexico
when they found that traders were paying premiums for greenbacks
and that prices were being quoted in them. It was the form of money
that seemed to be driving the markets.
When
a U.S. agent asked what the heck was going on, a peasant replied,
according to a panicked memo from the Mexico City embassy to D.C.,
that everyone knew a "snap devaluation" was coming as soon as President
Salinas left office.
Then
the lies began and they still haven't ended. E-mail flew wildly
among the U.S. embassy in Mexico, the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, and the Fed headquarters in Washington. They spoke about the
possibility of a complete default.
Months
later, the IMF was still officially ruling out any chance of devaluation.
Clinton never mentioned it. Neither did Greenspan, the Treasury,
nor the Republicans. As late as October, the Wall Street Journal
ran a 14-page sycophantic section entitled "Nafta: So Far, So Good."
The
Mexican printing presses, however, had been running overtime for
two years, creating a classic business cycle: a capital sector pumped
up by credit and preparing to explode. Nafta's negotiators suspected
as much because the treaty contained stop-gap currency measures
designed to prevent a total meltdown.
Reality
hit hard for the president of Mexico's biggest brokerage house.
He was kidnapped. Then the presidential campaign geared up, with
the official party's candidate Luis Donaldo Colosio leading the
pack. Then he was shot dead. Ernesto Zedillo appeared like an apparition
to take his place.
The
vice chairman of Mexico's largest retailer was also kidnapped. The
next day, the police chief investigating the murder of Colosio was
himself murdered. Clinton's response to all this? He told a gathering
honoring Mexico's left-wing revolution that "I have profound confidence"
in the "bright prospects for the Mexican economy."
Meanwhile,
polls showed 80% public disapproval of the bailout. Both parties,
their private sponsors, and their paid intellectuals were terrified
that they would be forced to eat their 10,000-page trade treaty.
Wall Street had "growth" funds to protect. And U.S. banks had $21
billion in loans to Mexican public and private institutions.
Gingrich
and Dole knew that a recorded vote in favor of sending taxpayer
money to Mexico could have set off a fire storm of populist protest,
discrediting their whole phony "revolution." So they took the back
door to bailout.
The
entire enterprise was, of course, unconstitutional and unjust. It
drained American savings on behalf of failed investments and monetary
deals south of the border. Worse, the U.S. government had begun
to act as the lender of last resort for the world.
Despite
the propaganda, there was never any economic downside to letting
the Mexican economy sink. It's no bigger than that of Los Angeles,
and it is only through a broke and debilitated government that Mexicans
have any chance of liberty and prosperity.
If
the Mexican government had to pay the price for its extravagance,
it would have sent a message to every government in the world: if
you can't manage your affairs, you're on your own.
As
to Goldman Sachs and the other investment banks at risk, under capitalism,
you can't divorce the opportunity for profits from the risk of failure.
They go together, and by accepting only profits in the short-term,
we are guaranteeing a future of losses in the long-term.
Central
bankers, like white-collar criminals, long for economic quiet in
which to commit their capers, parceling out big bucks to big banks
and their friends on Wall Street. But currency traders, like honest
cops, insist on telling the truth and making exchange ratios reflect
reality.
No
penalty could approach the seriousness of this crime, but let's
make a few gestures towards justice. The top players should be forced
to resign. Congress should allow no executive agency to transfer
tax money outside the borders without an on-the-record vote. All
subsidies should be withdrawn from the IMF, the World Bank, and
the BIS, and then the U.S. should quit them as well. Then Congress
should outlaw the bailing-out of any government anywhere in the
world for any reason.
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