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Causes of the Debt Crisis — Global Issues 8/25/15, 12:53 PM

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Causes of the Debt Crisis


by Anup Shah This Page Last Updated Sunday, June 03, 2007

This page: http://www.globalissues.org/article/29/causes-of-the-debt-crisis.

To print all information e.g. expanded side notes, shows alternative links, use the print
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http://www.globalissues.org/print/article/29

Third world debt has long been recognized as a major obstacle to human development. Many other problems have
arisen because of the enormous debt that third world countries owe to rich countries. Debt has impeded
sustainable human development, security and political or economic stability. How has this happened?

This web page has the following sub-sections:

1. A Continuing Legacy of Colonialism


2. Odious Debt
3. Mismanaged Lending
4. The World’s Poor Are Subsidizing the Rich
5. Backbone to Globalization
6. More Information

A Continuing Legacy of Colonialism

The historic causes of third world debt is introduced in a working paper from the development organization, the
South Centre. It summarizes how the developing countries’ debt is partly the result of the unjust transfer to them
of the debts of the colonizing States:

The history of third world debt is the history of a massive siphoning-off by international finance of
the resources of the most deprived peoples. This process is designed to perpetuate itself thanks to
a diabolical mechanism whereby debt replicates itself on an ever greater scale, a cycle that can be
broken only by canceling the debt. According to a new Working Paper on “Effects of debt on

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human rights” prepared by Mr. El Hadji Guissé for current UN Sub Commission on Human Rights
(E/CN.4/Sub.2/2004/27), the developing countries’ debt is partly the result of the unjust transfer
to them of the debts of the colonizing States! A sum of US$ 59 billion external in public debt was
imposed on the newly independent States in 1960. With the additional strain of an interest rate
unilaterally set at 14 per cent, this debt increased rapidly. Before they had even had time to
organize their economies and get them up and running, the new debtors were already saddled with
a heavy burden of debt.

— Third World Debt a Continuing Legacy of Colonialism, South Centre, Bulletin 85, August 2004

The working paper continues by questioning the legality of such a system that “pushes many developing countries
into extreme poverty.”

Odious Debt

Odious debt is unfair debt resulting from illegitimate loans. A useful summary from Jubilee USA:

Odious debt is an established legal principle. Legally, odious debt is debt that resulted from loans
to an illegitimate or dictatorial government that used the money to oppress the people or for
personal purposes. Moreover, in cases where borrowed money was used in ways contrary to the
people’s interest, with the knowledge of the creditors, the creditors may be said to have committed
a hostile act against the people. They cannot legitimately expect repayment of such debts.

— G-8 Summit 2004; Iraq’s Odious Debt: Rhetoric to Reality, Jubilee USA, 2003

Jubilee USA continues on to note that this principle has been used by the US to prevent Spain imposing debts on
Cuba in 1898, as the US pointed out to Spain that those loans were imposed on Cuba by force, for Spain’s interest.
Great Britain was also denied similar claims against Costa Rica in 1923).

Many poor countries today have started their independent status with heavy debt burdens imposed by the former
colonial occupiers. South Africa as another example, has found it now has to pay for its own past repression: the
debts incurred during the apartheid era are now to be repaid by the new South Africa.

But it is not just South Africa paying for this; surrounding countries that have been destabilized from this are
paying debts incurred to deal with it. The organization Action for Southern Africa summarizes this clearly, albeit
in a report from 1998:

This report estimates “apartheid-caused debt” at £28 billion [about $46 billion at the time the
report was written]. That is the £11 billion [$18 billion] that South Africa borrowed to maintain
apartheid, and the £17 billion [$28 billion] that the neighbouring states borrowed because of
apartheid destabilisation and aggression. This is 74% of the present regional debt of £38 billion

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[$62.5 billion].

Apartheid wrought vast destruction across the region; now the people of Southern Africa want to
rebuild. In a remarkable spirit of reconciliation, the people of Southern Africa want to forgive the
horrors of the past and look forward. But the banks, international financial institutions, and
individual countries which lent to both sides in the apartheid war are demanding repayment.

... people are dying in Southern Africa so that the debts can be repaid.

... After the Second World War, the United States allowed Britain to repay debt at a very low rate
so that it could rebuild. In 1953, the victorious allies met in London to cancel most of Germany's
debt, so that it could rebuild. Now the nations of Southern Africa want to rebuild a post-apartheid
society, but the creditors of today, are not willing to offer them the space Britain received from the
US and the Allies gave to Germany. Instead they are demanding that the states of Southern Africa
pay three to five times the level that Britain or Germany paid after World War II.

— Paying twice for apartheid, Action for Southern Africa, May 1998

The report also adds that countries further away, such as Tanzania, also felt the effects and had invested
substantial sums (about $800 million for Tanzania) to appose apartheid.

Various other nations have found that they have to pay debts incurred by their previous military dictators (many
of which were installed as clients of the rich countries.

As Steve Mandel, of the New Economics Foundation argues, because so much of these loans were knowingly
given to unaccountable and corrupt leaders, there should be a shift in discussion from odious debt to odious
lending, and thus there should be more of a spotlight on the banks who made large loans to illegal regimes, in
effect, sustaining them.

Mandel also notes the scale to which odious debt has been overpaid, and is quoted at length here:

Long after odious debts are technically off the books, subsequent generations are
still effectively paying for them. This [New Economics Foundation] research paper examines
13 clear cases that present a picture of the extent and impact of odious lending. These include:

Indonesia, where in the region of US$151 billion relating to odious debts has already been
‘overpaid’—twice the level of recorded debt. This means that Indonesia has made a
cumulative net transfer to the North of US$138 billion to date—or 90 per cent of Indonesia’s
GDP.
Argentina, where in the region of US$77 billion relating to odious debts has already been
‘overpaid’—75 per cent of the country’s recorded debt.
Nicaragua, where the odious debt is over five times the country’s total GDP.

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The net loss to these countries economies’ often exceeds the total outstanding debt. This means
that people in these—often desperately poor—countries end up paying three times for loans
ostensibly taken out in their name:

1. first they are oppressed by the regimes propped up and enriched by these loans;
2. secondly they are impoverished by the cost of servicing the loans; and
3. thirdly they are oppressed again by the penalties imposed if the odious regimes default.

Also, if debt cancellation only comes through the procedures of the Paris Club and the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative, they pay a fourth time when IMF conditionality
imposes the often disastrous policies of trade and capital account liberalisation, privatisation, and
restrictions on social expenditure.

— Steve Mandel, Odious lending: debt relief as if morals mattered, New Economics Foundation, September 18,
2006 (Emphasis and numbered formatting added)

Mismanaged Lending

Further debt resulted from mismanaged spending and lending by the West in the 1960s and 70s. As summarized
from Jubilee 2000 (and reposted here) :

1960s saw the US spend more than it had, resulting in the printing of more dollars.
Oil-producing countries, pegged to the dollar were affected as the value of the dollar decreased.
In 1973, the oil-producing countries hiked their prices as a result, earning a lot of money, which they put in
to western banks.
Interest rates started to plummet resulting in more lending by banks to try and prevent a crisis.
A lot of the borrowed money went to western-backed dictators, resulting in little benefit for most people.
In 1982 Mexico defaulted on its debt payment, threatening the international credit system.
The IMF and World Bank stepped in to Mexico and other nations facing similar problems, prescribing their
loans and structural adjustment policies to ensure debt repayment.
The poor have suffered the most as a result of the harsh conditions of structural adjustment.

Most loans to the third world have to be paid back in hard currencies (which do not usually change too much in
value, e.g. the Japanese Yen, the American Dollar, etc.)

Poor countries have soft currencies (values which can fluctuate).


Debt crises can also occur just by the value of the developing country’s money going down, which can be
due to a variety of other inter-related factors.
Paying off loans implies earning foreign exchange in hard currencies.
Combined with falling export prices for many poor countries, debts become even harder to pay off.

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Refinancing loans implies taking on new debts to service the old ones.
Structural adjustment advice in the past from the IMF and others, has led to the cut back on important
spending such as health, education, in order to help repay loans. This has implied a downward spiral and
further poverty.

Economists often refer to a moral hazard of forgiving debts, because it may encourage people to take on new
loans and refuse to pay. Yet, as Action for Southern Africa also noted in the above-mentioned report about
Southern Africa’s odious debt, the problem is not necessarily with borrowers, but with lenders:

....to repay odious debts is to encourage lending to pariah regimes. If banks could lend to apartheid
South Africa in the face of global opposition and global calls for sanctions, and still collect on the
loans, then the signal to international banks is that they can lend to any regime, no matter how
repugnant. There is a “moral hazard” here: that we will encourage immoral lending.

— Paying twice for apartheid, Action for Southern Africa, May 1998

It is not just the debt that is an issue for poor countries; it is the harsh conditions that come with it, that for years,
have been known to make things worse, not better.

The well-respected Martin Khor, director of the Third World Network describes this further in a 3-minute video
clip:

Safari Power Saver


Video:toMartin
Click Khor, Plug-in
Start Flash Debt in the Developing World—Part Two, July 15, 2005, ©
Big Picture TVTranscript

The World’s Poor Are Subsidizing the Rich

Another cause for large scale debt has been the corruption and embezzlement of money by the elite in developing
countries (who were often placed in power by the powerful countries themselves). These moneys are often placed
in foreign banks (and used to loan back to the developing countries). Many loans also come with conditions, that
include preferential exports etc. In effect then, more money comes out of the developing countries than is given
in. This depresses wages even further due to the spiraling circle downwards to ensure that enough exports are
produced. (See the structural adjustment section on this web site for more on that aspect.)

J.W. Smith, from the Institute for Economic Democracy, is worth quoting at length:

Susan George, in her 1992 book, Debt Boomerang: How Third World Debt Harms Us All,
calculated a net of $418 billion borrowed funds flowed right back north between 1982 and 1990.

The world’s poor are subsidizing the rich. The net gain to the over-capitalized countries (loss to
the under-capitalized ones) of $418 billion between 1982 and 1990 is more than double what was

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spent to rebuild Europe after World War II. “Capital flight from Mexico between 1979 and 1983
alone [was] $90 billion — an amount greater than the entire Mexican debt at that time.”

... How this is accomplished is well-known to American bankers,

Their real role has been to take funds that Third World elites have appropriated
from their countries and to loan them back, earning a nice spread each way.

... Loans from the U.S. government are almost invariably tied to the purchase from the creditor
nations. Over 80 percent of America’s foreign aid returns directly through its exports.
Commenting on such generosity, the prime minister of Malaysia pointed out that, “Although
Japan furnishes loans, it takes back with its other hand, as if by magic, almost twice the amount it
provides.” Central American authorities estimated that by 1986 the wealth drained from Latin
America was “more than $70 billion in a single year in the form of money or merchandise for
which [Latin America] didn’t receive anything in exchange.” The effect of this multifaceted assault
on the wealth of the Third World is that real wages in Mexico declined by 60 percent in the decade
of the 1980s, in Argentina by 50 percent, and in Peru by 70 percent.

... With overcapacity [excessive production] in the developed world and with the buying power —
thus the only consumer market — being in the First World, the Third World cannot capitalize. The
world’s powerless cannot obtain their share of capital, high paying jobs, and markets. Thus, they
trade their valuable resources for products manufactured by well-paid labor in the over-capitalized
countries. Just as cheap imported agricultural products destroy an undeveloped country’s
agricultural economy, imported consumer goods forestall the building of industry to produce these
products regionally and build an internal market economy. If a loan is to be of lasting value to the
country to which it is granted, it must be put to productive, not unnecessary consumptive, or
wasteful use. Only by building the tools of production (industry) instead of spending borrowed
funds on consumption can a society become self-sufficient, build an internal market economy,
gain equality in world trade, and eliminate poverty.

[Because the First world wasn’t concerned too much about developing the Third World the loans]
created debt traps, and reduced competition; the indebted world must strip their resources to
repay those debts. (Emphasis is original)

— J.W. Smith, The World’s Wasted Wealth 2, (Institute for Economic Democracy, 1994), pp. 139-141.

Backbone to Globalization

The economic decisions and influence in various international agreements, treaties and institutions by the
wealthy and powerful nations also help form the backbone of today’s globalization. That such immense wealth

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and prosperity for some have come at a time when most nations in the world have steeped into further poverty
and debt is no coincidence. The policies of those who have the power and influence have been successful to help
raise standards for some in their own nations, but at a terrible cost. Rich nations as well as poor incur debts, but
often the wealthier and more powerful ones are able to use various means to avoid getting into the dilemmas and
problems the poor nations get into. In fact, the following summarizes it quite well using the U.S. as an example:

The US began by abandoning the system of fixed exchange rates established by the Bretton Woods
Agreements in 1944 and introducing a system of generalised floating exchange rates. There was a
strong economic motive for the decision, which the US authorities took unilaterally in 1973. They
were seeking to compensate for declining competitiveness and a growing national debt by
exporting the country’s macroeconomic imbalances. The floating exchange rate system provided a
flexible and efficient monetary tool that enabled them to avoid the adjustments that would
otherwise have been required by America’s new situation as a debtor. In a system of fixed
exchange rates and gold convertibility, the US would have been obliged, like every third-world
country today, to pay for its indebtedness with a relative loss of sovereignty and highly unpopular
domestic austerity measures.

The new system also allowed the US to maintain a high standard of living at home by dipping into
the planet’s savings. Thanks to its political power and to the dollar, which was the world’s only
reserve currency, the US was able to keep its monetary sovereignty intact. Its allies could not
question American policy without destabilising the institutional fabric and the cold-war security
system from which they derived undoubted benefits. The burgeoning US deficit was funded for
decades by Japan and Europe.

— Has Globalization Really Made Nations Redundant? The States We Are Still In, Le Monde Diplomatique,
April 2000

More Information

While many western-backed dictators borrowed and went into debt, the impact is longer lasting and the poor
people of today still suffer the impacts. For additional information see:

How It All Began from Jubilee 2000.


Debt: A Silent War from Jubilee 2000.
Structural Adjustment — a Major Cause of Poverty from this web site.
Bringing it all back home from Jubilee 2000 explains why debt in developing countries affect the
industrialized nations too.
The Institute for Economic Democracy does a great job in providing a historical look at the political
economy of the world and how it has led to the conditions of today.
Beginner’s guide to debt from the debtchannel.org provides a good overview.

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Africa’s Debt is a position paper by Africa Policy with a look at the debt situation of sub-Saharan Africa in
particular.
Challenging the legitimacy and legality of Third World Debt, a web site about Odious Debt (debt incurred
by regimes that were not in the interest of their people).
Third World Debt a Continuing Legacy of Colonialism from the South Centre looks at the historical causes
of third world debt and shows how much of it is illegal.

The following are some simple examples of the problems that the current lending schemes have caused. (They are
by no means extensive or exhaustive.)

Where next?

Related articles

1. Causes of the Debt Crisis


2. The Scale of the Debt Crisis
3. The Heavily In-debt Poor Countries Initiative is Not Working
4. Debt Cancellation and Public Pressure
5. Debt and the Global Economic Crisis of 1997/98/99
6. Debt and the Effect on Children
7. Debt and the Environment
8. G8 Summits: Empty promises each year
9. Third World Debt and Disaster Recovery
10. Poverty Links for More Information

See more related articles

by Anup Shah
Created: Monday, July 20, 1998
Last Updated: Sunday, June 03, 2007

“When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint. When I ask why the poor have no food, they call me a
communist.” — Dom Helder Camara

© Copyright 1998–2015

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