Senate Votes To Include $108 Billion For IMF In War Bill

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First Posted: 05-21-09 05:27 PM   |   Updated: 05-21-09 06:55 PM

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The Senate voted Thursday to increase American investment in the International Monetary Fund by $8 billion and extend an additional $100 billion line of credit.

Thirty senators joined together from the right and the left to oppose the measure, but it moved forward with 64 votes in favor.

The line of credit is to be used by the IMF in emergency situations. The funding is part of a war supplemental spending bill and is aimed at stabilizing foreign economies. Eastern Europe has been particularly hard hit by the crisis, sparking fears that its collapse could bring down the European and global economy. Eastern European nations had denominated mortgages in foreign currency. When those currencies fluctuated, it led to a wave of default and bank failure.

But the IMF isn't the institution to fix it, said Bernie Sanders, an independent from Vermont opposing the measure from the left. "I think anyone who studies the history of the IMF, as I have studied, feels this is not a successful organization," said Sanders. "The United States must play an aggressive and active role in foreign policy and in giving support to the poorest people of the world. I believe that very strongly."

But, said Sanders, the IMF often works against the interests of the poor. "What they have done in many instances is gone to the poorest countries and said despite your poverty, you're going to have to cut back on health care, cut back on education, you're going to have to cut back on food before we give you a loan. Kind of like blackmail: you do what I want you to do, you get the money," Sanders told the Huffington Post

From the right come fears that the IMF could eventually be in position to create a global currency to compete against the dollar. But the more immediate concern came down to spending.

"I think we and many, many Americans are concerned of how much we're spending, how much we're borrowing," said Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), "and what that might mean in the not to distant future as it relates to inflation and interest rates an higher taxes. And I'm hearing very much back home enough is enough."

DeMint argued that if the money is to be spent, it should be spent in the United States. Kerry countered that South Carolina, for instance, was suffering because its exports were down 23 percent. Its exports were down because the global economy was suffering, he said.

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Kerry told the Huffington Post after the vote that opposition was coming from a variety of directions. "You've got some ideological opposition, you've got some people who don't like the IMF, some people who disagrees with the way it deals" with developing nations, he said.

But in the end, he thought the plan would be profitable for the U.S. "I think we're gong to make money. I think it'll wind up like every other IMF deal. And besides, the IMF has huge gold reserves. It's backed up. We'll be fine."

Progressive Democrats in the House reacted quickly. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), an IMF critic, launched an effort to make sure the IMF doesn't use the funds to force developing nations to slash their budgets, which could cause the global economy to continue to contract.

"In conference, we urge inclusion of language to ensure that the funds allocated by Congress for global stimulus are used for stimulatory, and not contractionary, purposes," reads a letter she sent to colleagues in the House.

The full letter and language:

Dear Chairman Obey and Chairwoman Lowey:

We are writing to express our concern that the Senate has attached an inadequate International Monetary Fund (IMF) package to the FY 2009 supplemental appropriations bill, which is intended to proceed to conference this week.

We recognize the importance of a swift, internationally coordinated response to the
global financial crisis to ensure that developing countries have the resources they need to cope with the crisis. However, Senate action to provide the IMF with $100 billion in funding and new authorities, including IMF gold sales, as requested by the Obama Administration, has precluded the possibility of House legislation on the IMF package.

In conference, we urge you to ensure that the IMF is not given a "blank check." Specifically, the augmentation of IMF resources and prerogatives should be conditioned on a strong commitment by U.S. leadership to ensure that the institution becomes more transparent and accountable to all member countries, including the poorest.

We urge inclusion in the bill of provisions related to all of the following four concerns:

• Use the Stimulus Money for Stimulus, not Contraction. While the IMF pronounces its commitment to flexible policy approaches for countries in recession or depression, its track record since the onset of the economic crisis in September 2008 demonstrates routine imposition of contractionary monetary and fiscal policies which are exacerbating recessions in recipient countries. In conference, we urge inclusion of language to ensure that the funds allocated by Congress for global stimulus are used for stimulatory, and not contractionary, purposes. Suggested language is attached.

• Resources for Low-Income Countries. Low-income countries are suffering disproportionately as a result of a global financial crisis, which was not of their making. In conference, we urge inclusion of language requiring the U.S. Executive Director to the IMF to ensure that some of the revenue from the planned gold sales and/or other sources of income will be used to provide at least $5 billion in non-debt-creating assistance to the world's poorest countries - either via debt relief or grants.

• Democratic Process. Currently, the IMF negotiates and obtains approval for loans from the executive branch of recipient countries, leaving little opportunity for democratic debate in recipient countries over the content and terms of IMF loans. In conference, we urge inclusion of bill language requiring the U.S. Executive Director to the IMF to ensure parliamentary approval of all IMF loans. This would help to ensure greater democratic participation and transparency, as well as a safeguard against corruption.

• Transparency. Some of the IMF's most important documents are considered classified, strictly confidential, or secret. Among the secret documents are: 1) "side letters" containing policy conditions that the IMF requires a recipient government to implement as a condition of loan disbursements; and 2) transcripts of meetings of the Board of Executive Directors. Draft IMF documents are not disclosed prior to approval by the Board of Executive Directors which precludes input from country constituencies. In conference, we urge inclusion of language to ensure greater transparency and public availability of documents within a reasonable time period. Suggested language is attached.

In this time of global economic crisis, it is critical to ensure a robust and effective global response. But it is also critical for Congress to ensure that the resources and authorities that are provided to the IMF to respond to the crisis are used in an effective manner that is consistent with congressional intent.

Sincerely,

[blank]

Proposed Legislative Language on IMF Policies

IMF Policy Approach to Countries in Economic Recession/Depression:

The Secretary of the Treasury shall instruct the United States Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund to oppose and vote against any loan, project, agreement, memorandum, instrument, plan, or other program of the International Monetary Fund that
(1) does not exempt increased government spending on health care,
education or social safety nets from national budget caps or restraints, hiring or wage bill ceilings, or other limits sought by any international financial institution;
(2) does not authorize countries to spend all foreign assistance in the year it is received, for the purpose for which it was designated;
(3) in case of a country experiencing an economic downturn, does not maintain prior levels of spending on health care, education or social safety nets;
(4) in case of a country experiencing an economic downturn, includes contractionary conditions, including direct or indirect interest rate increases or other monetary tightening, or government spending cuts or other contractionary fiscal policy, unless the IMF can show quantitatively that such adjustments must begin immediately in order to avoid a more severe adjustment in the future, and cannot be postponed or implemented more gradually.

Transparency:

The Secretary of Treasury shall instruct the U.S. Executive Director to the IMF to use the U.S. voice, vote and influence to ensure the following: The minutes and transcripts of the IMF Board of Executive Directors shall be publicly disclosed within six weeks of their issuance. Where applicable, draft documents shall be translated into the relevant language and disclosed prior to Board review to facilitate input from country constituencies. All documents of the Board of Executive Directors shall be disclosed after a period of two years. The criteria for classifying documents as "strictly confidential" and "secret" should be reviewed and made public. The IMF should cease the practice of issuing "side letters" that, in secret, stipulate policy conditions upon which its transactions are conditioned. The institution shall facilitate internet access to all public documentation in the primary language spoken in the country concerned.


The Senate voted Thursday to increase American investment in the International Monetary Fund by $8 billion and extend an additional $100 billion line of credit. Thirty senators joined together from ...
The Senate voted Thursday to increase American investment in the International Monetary Fund by $8 billion and extend an additional $100 billion line of credit. Thirty senators joined together from ...
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using our tax money for other countries when Americans are struggling­... these people need to be cleaned out... 50 cents of every dollar the country spends is borrowed..­. what a disgrace..­. all you young people, get ready for really bad times ahead... you are the ones who will feel this the hardest

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 05/22/2009
- ptarantino I'm a Fan of ptarantino 8 fans permalink

Our Senate is still majority owned by the largest financial criminals

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 05/22/2009
- wiseapple I'm a Fan of wiseapple 5 fans permalink

In these tough times I guess we need to keep the multinationals and their economic hitmen prosperous?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 AM on 05/22/2009

I'm neither a Democrat or a Republican but I am a tax paying American Citizen who thinks it's past time to say ENOUGH is ENOUGH!!! Who out there doesn't know that the IMF is a corrupt organization that does far more harm then good? It's time to speak up and put a stop to sending more & more Americans into poverty by using our tax dollars & credit to enrich the corrupt elites in the US & the World!
Make America take care of Americans for a change!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 06/04/2009
- PATina I'm a Fan of PATina 228 fans permalink
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I think the idea of an IMF is good... I just don't like the way they do business. It seems as if they put poor countries in un winnable situations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 05/22/2009
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It seems that way, because that's exactly what they want to do.

They bribe the leaders into bad practices and then when they default on their loans (by design) they restructure the loans along with agreements to privatize the country. They get them to privatize their mineral rights, utilities, health care, etc. The IMF is the gatekeeper that let's private international corporations into poor countries so they can bleed the country dry.

Read the book, "Confessions Of An Economic Hit Man"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 PM on 05/22/2009
- Okieborn I'm a Fan of Okieborn 63 fans permalink

Bring Our Troopps Home and save the economy, Plus Precious lives !!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 AM on 05/22/2009

When will these people get the proven fact that war does not stabilize economies, it destroys them! We are looking at the proof every day!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:50 AM on 05/22/2009
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Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, John Kennedy are all rolling in their graves saying - Don't you people know why we were shot?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 AM on 05/22/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 375 fans permalink
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Naomi Klein, the IMF, and What I Would’ve Said to Alex Witt

By: Jane Hamsher Monday April 6, 2009 7:00 am

Before I went on I asked Naomi Klein what she would recommend, and here's what she said:

It should first of all demand an independent review of the role the IMF played in creating and deepening the crisis (for instance, by requiring that loan recipients deregulate their financial sectors and eliminate capital controls, as the IMF did during the Asian Economic Crisis). And it should demand that the IMF never require recipients of this loan money to make deep cuts to social spending (on health, education and pensions..­.) or to lay off public sector workers in the midst of the crisis.

The trillion dollar G20 pledge was presented to us as a global economic stimulus package. But the IMF is well known for demanding the exact opposite from loan recipients: deep budgetary austerity, tax increases, and bans on subsidies. Unless there are clear conditions attached to the new IMF money, the extra trillion dollars could actually lead to deep economic contractions, with the new money just going to useless financial sector bailouts in countries around the world, rather than into real economy investments. Some of the money is going to the World Bank so it's an opportunity to make demands that they invest in green energy and infrastructure.

http://firedoglake.com/2009/04/06/naomi-klein-the-imf-and-what-i-wouldve-said-to-alex-witt/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 05/22/2009
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It sounds like IMF is a lot like Treasury in their promise to help People and then funnel the money into the financial eltites.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:50 AM on 05/22/2009

The IMF also has a history of giving loans to poor countries that they know these countries won't be able to pay back. When these countries default, which they almost always do, the condition of the loan allows the IMF to privatize the resources of that said country. This means the lenders within the IMF now control any natural resource (including water) which in turn strips that said country of any revenue they may have gained from these resources. Now they are still poor and left without any way of bringing themselves out of that state. It really is a very deliberate and systematic attempt made by the IMF. Did you ever wonder to yourself why all those hippies are protesting at the conferences of the IMF and the world bank? Well, that's pretty much the reason in a nut shell.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 AM on 05/22/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 375 fans permalink
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April 19, 2009

IMF and World Bank meet in Washington - Greg Palast reports for BBC Television's Newsnight.

Three weeks ago James Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, was supposed to appear on CNN, and he told CNN that if I showed up and they put me on the air he would not appear; he would remove all tapes of his interviews if Greg Palast were allowed on the air. And CNN did the courageous thing and yanked me out of the studio. Now we're going to find out why.

Featuring: Joseph Stiglitz (former chief economist World Bank)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 05/22/2009
- Carolab I'm a Fan of Carolab 375 fans permalink
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Date of Production: May 2009
Author: The Real News
Length: 13min.

Borrowing into submission?

Bankrupt governments are finding the IMF an unfit lender, but alternatives may be developing ...

http://ifiwatch.tv/en/video/2009/05/borrowing-submission

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 05/22/2009
- chiara12 I'm a Fan of chiara12 19 fans permalink
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So they vote to fund the IMF but not the closing of Gitmo? I am not necessarily opposed to funding the IMF but to fund that and then pull the rug out from under Obama really makes me sick. Politics at it most cowardly, feeble best.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 05/21/2009
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this is High-way robbery at it,s finest

as millions lose there job,s homes and there credit goes to the dogs

W T F I M F gets the cash

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 PM on 05/21/2009
- Nancy84 I'm a Fan of Nancy84 12 fans permalink

Everyone should contact their own congressmen/women about this. Is there a link to see who voted for it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 05/21/2009
- tippydog11 I'm a Fan of tippydog11 9 fans permalink

that is why there is no health care better education new energy resources or buildingn up America into the 21 century...­Americans are paying taxes and not getting any of their own money put back into America...­America with their noses in wars and starting them will be Americans downfall..­.why do they not go and borrow money from china...we have a avalanche already with China thanks to Bush. pure craziness.­.not even common sense anymore...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 PM on 05/21/2009

Last I heard, the US was broke. How is it we cannot help our own people, yet we are giving away 100 billion of US workers money to foreign entities? Much of the bailout money already went overseas. How can we continue to give everything away, and buy all our goods from other countries?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:42 PM on 05/21/2009
- JZ735 I'm a Fan of JZ735 22 fans permalink

Isn't it just ridiculous? Stop with this BS.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 PM on 05/21/2009
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