Kleptocracy
in America
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Reading the
obituaries is such a delight. First, it is a relief when you find
your name not mentioned. Then, it is a joy when you find those that
are. Not that we wish to see any mans name on the roll of
the dead; still, the final audits are always the most revealing.
Here on the back page, we admire honest scalawags
and learn
from them. Thus was our attention drawn to Mr. Omar Bongos
exit from the mortal stage on June 8th.
Popular government
has two major parts. One part is fraud. The other is larceny. As
to the first, it is like a professional wrestling match full
of lurid threats, spilled beer, sacred cows, gaudy uniforms and
self-delusions; the fans feel their private parts shrink when their
man loses. If he wins, they feel they are winners too. But it is
the other part, the more rational part a balance of larceny
and bribery that interests us today.
Serge Dassault
miscalculated. One of the richest men in France, he was stripped
of his position as mayor of a Paris suburb this week. A court found
he had made cash payments to voters in Corbeil-Essones, east of
Paris, which could have influenced the outcome of a mayoral election.
We stand dumbfounded
mouths
wide open
our fondest hopes for the progress of humanity dashed
to pieces. How could an experienced, well-informed man of mature
age and sound finances, have made such an amateurs error?
He bribed the voters unfairly that is, with his own money
but apparently not enough of them!
Mr. Serge Dassault,
meet the late Mr. Bongo. France included in its “mission civilisatrice”
the cultivation of various public officials throughout Africa. Bongo
was one of them.
The moment
when destiny stuck her nose into Mr. Bongos affairs was probably
in 1964, when Mr. Bongo had gotten himself into the post of Minister
of Tourism in the government of President Mba. That year was the
one chosen by Jean-Hilaire Aubame to launch a coup against Mbas
regime, which saw both Mba and Bongo confined together until French
troops came and bailed them out. Being locked up with the president
of a country can be good for your career; at least it was for Bongo.
His ties to Mba were strengthened by the ordeal, says the TIMES,
and he was subsequently made Vice-President, succeeding to the top
post itself when Mbas last cartridge had been spent.
The TIMES
described Bongo as one of the worlds richest heads of
state. The Financial Times provided details: An
indictment
listed 39 properties, mostly in the chic 16th arrondissement
of Paris, nine cars worth nearly $2 million, and 70 bank accounts.
And so the
familiar question: how is this possible?
Mr. Bongos
percentage of Gabons output must have been substantial. He
took over the government of Gabon in 1967 at the age of 31, making
him the worlds youngest head of state. For the next
two decades, continues the obituary, Bongo was able
to rule Gabon almost as a personal fiefdom. With a relatively small
population and benefiting from abundant natural resources
principally oil, but also uranium, manganese and timber
.
The man mastered
both carrot and stick. With revenue from Gabons natural resources
flowing into his coffers, he was able to hand out lavish favors.
He placated students in 2000 by providing hundreds of thousand
of pounds for the purchase of the computers and books they were
demanding, says the TIMES. He could spend his own money
when it suited him too for he had so much of it. And when
the working classes took the streets in 1990, he had plenty of goons
in uniform to beat them with sticks.
Bongo did not
suffer from the typical financing problem of modern democracy. When
you rob Peter to pay Paul, Peter gets cheesed off about it. The
next thing you know hes voting against you or plotting a coup.
That is why it is better to bribe Paul with money Peter never earned.
And do it on a large scale. That is how Bongo won an election as
recently as 2005 with nearly 80% of the vote. Not even Obama can
match that.
But
politicians in modern, developed democracies are now bribing voters
on a breathtaking scale protecting their bank accounts, shoring
up their houses, giving them jobs and health care. In the US alone
total US government debts, obligations and commitments now come
to $112 trillion. Congressmen risk neither jail nor insurrection.
Cometh the old question; how do they get away with it?
Currently,
50% of every dollar spent comes from borrowing. This week brought
news that the developing countries led by China are
still adding to their positions in US Treasury bonds. The funds
are spent immediately. The payer and the payee neither of
whom vote in current US elections can worry about settling
the debt later. What a marvelous invention is inter-generational
government debt, funded by foreigners! Even Mr. Bongo, RIP, must
have been impressed.
June
16,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
Bill
Bonner Archives
|