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Oh Canada! Imposing Austerity on the World's Most Resource-Rich Country By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 2, 2012
Even the world’s most
resource-rich country has now been caught in the debt trap.
Its once-proud government programs are being subjected to radical
budget cuts—cuts that could have been avoided if the government had not quit
borrowing from its own central bank in the 1970s.
Last week in Ottawa, the Canadian House of Commons
passed the federal government’s latest round of budget cuts and austerity
measures. Highlights included
chopping 19,200 public sector jobs, cutting federal programs by $5.2 billion
per year, and raising the retirement age for millions of Canadians from 65
to 67. The justification for
the cuts was a massive federal debt that is now over C$ 581 billion, or 84%
of GDP. An
online budget game furnished by the local newspaper the Globe and Mail
gave readers a chance to try to balance the budget themselves.
Possibilities included slashing transfer payments for elderly
benefits, retirement programs, health benefits, and education; cutting
funding for transportation, national defense, economic development and
foreign aid; and raising taxes.
An article on the same page said, “The government, in reality, doesn’t have
that many tools at its disposal to close a large budgetary deficit. It can
either raise taxes or cut departmental program spending.” It seems that no gamer, lawmaker or otherwise, was
offered the opportunity to toy with the number one line item in the budget:
interest to creditors. A chart
on the website of the Department of Finance Canada titled “Where
Your Tax Dollar Goes” showed interest payments to be 15% of the
budget—more than health care, social security, and other transfer payments
combined. The page was dated
2006 and was last updated in 2008, but the percentages are presumably little
different today.
Penny wise, Pound Foolish Among other cuts in the 2012 budget, the government
announced that it would be discontinuing the minting of Canadian pennies,
which now cost more than a penny to make.
The government is focusing on the pennies and ignoring the pounds—the
massive share of the debt that might be saved by borrowing from the
government’s own Bank of Canada.
Between 1939 and 1974, the government actually did
borrow from its own central bank.
That made its debt effectively interest-free, since the government
owned the bank and got the benefit of the interest.
According to figures supplied by Jack Biddell, a former government
accountant, the federal debt remained very low, relatively flat, and quite
sustainable during those years.
(See his
chart below.) The
government successfully
funded
major public projects simply on the credit of the nation, including the
production of aircraft during and after World War II, education benefits for
returning soldiers, family allowances, old age pensions, the Trans-Canada
Highway, the St. Lawrence Seaway project, and universal health care for all
Canadians.
The debt shot up only after 1974.
That was when the Basel
Committee was established by the central-bank Governors of the Group of
Ten countries of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), which
included Canada. A key
objective of the Committee was to maintain “monetary and financial
stability.” To achieve that
goal, the Committee discouraged borrowing from a nation’s own central bank
interest-free, and encouraged borrowing instead from private creditors, all
in the name of “maintaining the stability of the currency.”
The presumption was that borrowing from a central bank
with the power to create money on its books would inflate the money supply
and prices. Borrowing from
private creditors, on the other hand, was considered not to be inflationary,
since it involved the recycling of pre-existing money.
What the bankers did not reveal, although they had long known it
themselves, was that
private banks create the money they lend just as public banks do.
The difference is simply that a
publicly-owned bank returns the interest to the government and the
community, while a privately-owned bank siphons the interest into its
capital account, to be re-invested at further interest, progressively
drawing money out of the productive economy.
The debt curve that began its exponential rise in 1974
tilted toward the vertical in 1981, when interest rates were raised by the
U.S. Federal Reserve to 20%. At
20% compounded annually, debt doubles in under four years.
Canadian rates went as high as 22% during that period.
Canada has now paid over a trillion Canadian dollars in interest on
its federal debt—nearly twice the debt itself.
If it had been borrowing from its own bank all along, it could be not
only debt-free but sporting a hefty budget surplus today.
That is true for other countries as well.
The Bankers’ Silent Coup Why are governments paying private financiers to
generate credit they could be issuing themselves, interest-free?
According to Professor Carroll Quigley, Bill Clinton’s mentor at
Georgetown University, it was all part of a concerted plan by a clique of
international financiers. He
wrote in Tragedy and Hope in 1964: The powers of financial capitalism had another
far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial
control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each
country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be
controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting
in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and
conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International
Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by
the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank . . . sought to dominate its
government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign
exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and
to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the
business world. In December 2011, this charge was echoed in a
lawsuit filed in Canadian federal court by two Canadians and a Canadian
economic think tank.
Constitutional lawyer Rocco Galati filed an action on behalf of William
Krehm, Ann Emmett, and COMER (the Committee for Monetary and Economic
Reform) to restore the use of the Bank of Canada to its original purpose,
including making interest free loans to municipal, provincial and federal
governments for “human capital” expenditures (education, health, and other
social services) and for infrastructure.
The plaintiffs state that since 1974, the Bank of Canada and Canada’s
monetary and financial policy have been dictated by private foreign banks
and financial interests led by the BIS, the Financial Stability Forum (FSF)
and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), bypassing the sovereign rule of
Canada through its Parliament. Today this silent coup has been so well obscured that
governments and gamers alike are convinced that the only alternatives for
addressing the debt crisis are to raise taxes, slash services, or sell off
public assets. We have
forgotten that there is another option: cut the debt by borrowing from the
government’s own bank, which returns its profits to public coffers.
Cutting out interest has been
shown to
reduce the average cost of public projects by about 40%.
Game over: we win. ________________________ Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public
Banking Institute,
http://PublicBankingInstitute.org .
In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a private
cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and
how we the people can get it back. Her websites are http://WebofDebt.com and
http://EllenBrown.com .
The Public Banking Institute’s first conference is April 26th-28th in
Philadelphia. |
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