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CounterPunch Print Edition Exclusive!

Towards a Global Gaza
How Israel is Rewriting Laws of War

From Israel, in a chilling and important report, Jeff Halper reports on how two Israeli professors are rewriting the Geneva Conventions to give legal cover for total war on civilian populations. “If you do something for long enough,” says Colonel (res.) Daniel Reisner, former head of the IDF’s Legal Department, “the world will accept it.”  From Moscow, Boris Kagarlitsky profiles Russia’s economic liberals, the last true believers in pure capitalism. Welcome to the theater of the absurd. Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.

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Today's Stories

March 9, 2010

Marshall Auerback /
Rob Parentau
Let a Dozen Latvias Bloom?

March 8, 2010

Gareth Porter
The Siege of the Fictional City of Marja

Chris Floyd
Unnatural Acts: Breaking the Fever of Militarism

Carl Ginsburg
Save is the New Spend

Jonathan Cook
Is Europe Planning Seal of Approval for Israeli Settlers?

Dean Baker
The Myths of Financial Innovation

Bill Quigley
When Silence is Betrayal

Greg Moses
Murder-Suicide of English Language in Texas

Shamus Cooke
The Fight to Save Public Education

Tolu Olorunda
Ebony's Shame: Taking Time Out to Kick Mumia Abu Jamal

Kieko Matteson
Habeas Porpoise

Mike Bader
Last Chance for the Bull Trout

Website of the Day
"The Special Forces of Spiritual Warfare"

March 5 - 7, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Bogus Hispanic Crime Wave

James Ridgeway /
Jean Casella

The Terrible Case of Jamie Scott

Saul Landau / Nelson P. Valdes The Untouchable Budget: Defense Department, Inc.

Ishmael Reed
The NAACP House of Shame

Dave Lindorff
Who Cares About Child Rape and Sodomy by Afghan Security Forces?

Mike Whitney
The Stealth Bailouts

Russell Mokhiber
The Top Ten Ways to Crack Down on Corporate Financial Crime

John Ross
Death Waltz Across Texas

Mark Schuller
Fault Lines: Haiti's Earthquake and Reconstruction Through the Eyes of Many

Mark Weisbrot
Hillary in Latin America

Rannie Amiri
Mordechai Vanunu's Nobel Stand

Ramzy Baroud
Flexible Objectives in Afghan War

David Rosen
The New Morality Police

David Ker Thomson
What's Your Excuse for Driving in the City?

Wajahat Ali
The Future of Malaysia: an Interview with Opposition Leader Anwar Ibrahim

Missy Beattie
Wake Up

George Wuerthner
Playing Politics With the Fate of the Sage Grouse

Benjamin Dangl
Compromise and Celebration in Uruguay

Martha Rosenberg
Agribusiness Gets Handed Its Lunch

Vladimir Radyuhin
Orange Revolution Tossed in Trashcan

Eric Walberg
Fanning the Flames of Another War in the Caucasus?

Robert Bryce
The Irony of Iowa's Ethanol Exemption

Alison Weir
A Wrench in the Israeli Gears

David Macaray
Lessons From India

Laura Flanders
Challenging "High Road" Contracting

Bouthaina Shaaban
The Navi and the Palestinians: Avatar's Parable of Our Times

Charles R. Larson
Second Thoughts on Those Virgins

David Yearsley
Sensual Secrets of the Vatican

Poets' Basement
Landau, Anderson and Costley

Website of the Weekend
Mindless Missiles

March 4, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts
Is the Recovery Real?

Dave Lindorff
Executing Handcuffed Afghan Kids?

Conn Hallinan
Obama's Landmine Betrayal

Steven Higgs
"A Massive, Toxicological Experiment with Our Children"

Frank Green
Drones Club Meets in San Diego

Ron Jacobs
Of Course Narcs Are Crooked ...

Christopher Brauchli
Trial by Confusion

Don Monkerud
Who Runs America?

Roberto Rodriguez The Politics of the Census: Masking Identities or Counting the Indigenous?

Raymond J. Lawrence
The Brave New World of Sexual Addiction

Website of the Day
Mining Nicaragua

 

March 3, 2010

Norman Finkelstein
Truth and Consequences in Gaza

Bill Quigley
Mercenaries Circling Haiti

Franklin C. Spinney
Eisenhower's Nightmare Arrives

Dean Baker
The Power of Stupidity: Economic Policy and Unemployment

Mike Whitney
We Need Bigger Deficits

Raed Jarrar /
Erik Leaver

Sliding Backwards on Iraq

Adam Federman
To Drill or Not to Drill

Joshua Frank
The EPA's Coal Ash Whitewash

Will Parrish / Darwin Bond-Graham
"WE Make the Crisis"

Matt Siegfried
The Ganja Games

Website of the Day
Sea Lion Defense Brigade

March 2, 2010

Patrick Cockburn
Uproar Before Iraqi Elections

Tricia Shapiro
Mountain Injustice

Gareth Porter
Defying the U. S.

Paul Craig Roberts
A Religion Divided Against Itself

Ellen Brown
IMF-Style Austerity Comes to America

David Macaray
Labor and the Democrats: What Does $400 Million Buy You These Days?

Stewart J. Lawrence
Is Obama Already a Lame Duck?

Shamus Cooke
How Obamacare Kills Real Health Care Reform

Udi Aloni /
Ofer Neiman
What Israel Fears

Binoy Kampmark
Australia's History Wars

Stephen Soldz
The Battle Over Informed Consent

Website of the Day
What to Do About Tactical Nuclear Weapons

March 1, 2010

Ralph Nader
Whatever Happened to "We the People"?

Will Parrish /
Darwin Bond-Graham

Who Runs the University of California?

Mike Whitney
The Case Against Bernanke and Greenspan

Diana Johnstone
The Fall of Greece

Jayne Lyn Stahl
A Refuge for Cowards: the Senate Extends the Patriot Act

Vijay Prashad
It's Love! India and Saudi Arabia Embrace

Paul Buhle Organizing Against Empire: Where Left and Right Meet ... Amicably

Robert Jensen
Getting Rid of Hope and Faith

Marga Tojo Gonzales
Will Capitalism Absorb the World Social Forum?

Website of the Day
The Decline of the Israeli Right?

February 26 - 28, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
Feed Pete Peterson to the Whales

Alison Weir
Media Reporting on Israel: All in the Family

Will Parrish /
Darwin Bond-Graham
DiFi and Blum: a Marriage Marinated in Money

Jason Hribal
How Orky and Kasatka Almost Sank Sea World

Saul Landau /
Nelson P. Valdes
The Pentagon: Gargantua's Mouth

Mark Weisbrot
The Debt is Not the Threat

Alan Farago
The Potemkin Village Economy

Suzan Mazur
Peer Review as Censorship: an Interview with Historian David Noble

Martha Rosenberg
Talking with Gail Collins About the Women's Rights Movement

Ray McGovern
A "Good" Terrorist Captured by Iran

Rannie Amiri
Egypt's Nuclear Option

Dave Lindorff
The Accidental Patient

Ramzy Baroud
Challenging History

David Macaray
Union Politics for Grown-Ups

Jared Ritvo
The Life and Death Struggle of the Yanomami

Missy Beattie
The Indefatigable Cindy Sheehan

Brian McKenna
Zinn and the Art of History

Don Santina
Don't Mourn, Go Green

Binoy Kampmark
Deadly Purchases

M.G. Piety
Frozen in Time: Does Figure Skating Have a Future?

Michael Dickinson Art as Defensive Weapon

Charles R. Larson
Learning to Live

Ben Sonnenberg
"24 City:" a Remarkable Chinese Film

David Yearsley
Sex in the Name of Christ

Poets' Basement
Edward Beatty

Website of the Weekend
A Tribute to Howard Zinn

February 25, 2010

Jason Hribal
Orca Resistance at Sea World

Clancy Sigal
No, in Anger: Liberals Have Lost Their Thunder

Tariq Ali
The Assault on Illhem

Jonathan Cook
Ethan Bronner and Conflicts of Interest

Mike Whitney
The War on Toyota: Is It All Politics?

Peter Lee
China's New Iran Strategy

Russell Mokhiber Prosecuting Bush for War Crimes

Deepak Tripathi Charlie Wilson's Legacy

Norman Solomon
War Politics

Phillip Doe
Colorado's Weed War Swindle

Website of the Day
Once There Was a Senator of Conscience ...

February 24, 2010

Ashley Smith
Haiti and the Aid Racket

Mike Whitney
Geithner's Gotta Go

Garerth Porter
The Real Objective of the Marja Offensive

Joe Bageant
Round Midnight: the American Disease

Shamus Cooke
The Plot to Kill Social Security

Al Benchich
GM's Northern Strategy: Go Non-Union

Harvey Wasserman
The Nuclear Lobby's $645 Million Con Job

Jim Goodman
Promises, Promises: the Fairy Tale of GM Crops

Ron Jacobs
The Hollow Man Reaches His Omega Point

Stewart J. Lawrence
Sarah Palin: All Pump, No Caribou

Tom Clifford
Bribes, Corruption and the Pandur APC

Website of the Day
Blackwater and the "South Park" Alias

February 23, 2010

Uri Avnery
The Dubai Hit

Paul Craig Roberts
The Last Flight of Joe Stack

William P. O'Connor
The Story of Pvt. Hargrove

Steven Higgs
Evan Bayh, the Hoosier Drama Queen

Marshall Auerback / L. Randall Wray
War on Goldman Sachs

Jeff Sher
Health Care as Political Theater

Carl Finamore
Inside Organizing and Outside Representation

Dave Lindorff
Rampage in Philly

Benjamin Dangl
Beer Globalization in Latin America

Anthony Papa
Why Gov. Paterson Should be Applauded for Hiring Former Drug Dealer

Bob Sommer
Bringing the War Home

Robert Bryce
The Melting Case for Cap-and-Trade

Website of the Day
Sibel Edmonds Has Named Names: Why Isn't the Media Reporting It?

February 22, 2010

Vincent Navarro
Fascism is Alive and Well in Spain
The Case of Judge Garzon

Michael Neumann
Israel and Its Neighbors
Leveling the Playing Field

Marc Weisbrot
Hillary Clinton's War Whoop

Richard Neville
Mocked When She Flew to Baghdad

P. Sainath
ABC of Media: Advertising, Bollywood and Corporate Power

Christopher Ketcham
The Joe Stack Manifesto

Marc Catone
The Vatican's Top Ten Album List

February 19 - 21, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
From God to Gaia to Obama's Nuclear Apocalypse

Bill Quigley
Living Under Green Plastic: Voices of Haiti's Homeless

Joshua Frank /
Jeffrey St. Clair
The Case of Briana Waters

Joan Roelofs
Bases of Empire

Paul Craig Roberts
Looting Social Security

Peter Lee
Iran's Natural Gas Game

Gareth Porter
Jailed Taliban Leader Still a Pakistani Asset

Saul Landau /
Nelson P. Valdes

The Defense Elephant in America's Living Room

Mark Schuller
Passing the "Riot Test" in Haiti

Rev. William E. Alberts
The Sacrifice of Haiti

Thomas M. Power
A Hard-Headed Look at Biomass

John Ross
Dead Man Walking in California

Nicola Nasser
Violent Days in Iraq

Rannie Amiri
The Shia Crescent Revisited

Ramzy Baroud
Trial Balloons for War

David Macaray
Iraq's Labor Unions

M. Shahid Alam
Accidental Parallels?

George Wuerthner
A New Round of National Monuments? a Guide to Obama's Short List

Missy Beattie
Cheney's Baby: a Monster Named Torture

Adam Turl
The Wal-Mart Counter-Revolution

Dave Lindorff
Grumpy, White Terrorists in Cars and Planes

Alan Cabal
The Austin Kamikaze

Farzana Versey
The Halal Question

M. G. Piety
The Lonely Sport: What's Killing Figure Skating?

Charles R. Larson
The Fog of War: DeLillo's "Point Omega"

Kim Nicolini
"35 Shots of Rum:" An Intimate Look at Ordinary Life

David Yearsley
The Night of the Living Deadheads

Lorenzo Wolff
Music, Lyrics and the Void Between Us

Poets' Basement
Michelle Askin

Website of the Weekend
Dresden: The Revenger's Tragedy

February 18, 2010

Sasan Fayazmanesh
A Dangerous Liaison: the Iranian Greens and the West

Nadia Hijab
Jerusalem's Battle of the Graves

David Rosen
Sinner Men

Jayne Lyn Stahl
A Tale of Two Cities

Ralph Nader
King Obesity

Dean Baker
Dysfunctional Democracy

Christopher Brauchli
The Politics of Forgetfulness

Charlotte Laws
Hard Times in Vegas

Dave Lindorff
The Battle for Marjah: Why the US has Already Lost

Harvey Wasserman
The Atomic Abyss

Bouthaina Shaaban
The Decade of the Victory for Freedom and Justice in Palestine

Katya Rodriguez
Tug of War in El Salvador

Website of the Day
Inside Obama's Energy Budget

February 17, 2010

Michael Hudson
Wall Street Moves in for the Kill

Karl Grossman
Obama Goes Nuclear

Nirmal Ghosh
The Tiger's Call

Dean Baker
The Savvy Mr. Blankfein

Russell Mokhiber
The Corporate Hijacking of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial

John V. Walsh
Elie Wiesel's Ignoble Recruits

Martin Lukacs
Canada's Aboriginal Show and Tell

Nouri Gana
Arab Despise Thyself ...

Heather Gray /
K. Rashid Nuri
Grow Your Own: Urban Farming's Challenge to Corporate Agriculture

Daniel Wolff
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit: a Familiar Strangeness

Website of the Day
Chernobyl: a Photographic Essay

February 16, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts
A Country of Serfs

Forrest Hylton
Students as Spies: Colombia Mimes the CIA

Carl Ginsburg
Less is Less

Jonathan Cook
Arabs of Jaffa Face Settlers as Neighbors

Robert Alvarez
Nukes Aren't the Answer

Deepak Tripathi
A Great Military Triumph? Questions About the Capture of Mullah Baradar

George Wuerthner
Cows, Condos and All the Rest: the Geography of Agriculture and Sprawl in the West

Shamus Cooke
The Great Bi-Partisan Deception

Robert Bryce
Peak Confusion: Tom Friedman's Twisted Energy Politics

Brian Cloughley
Speaking Badly of Charlie Wilson

Carl Finamore
How to Succeed After Failing

David Rovics
Fighting Shell Oil in Ireland: the Arrest of Pat O'Donnell

Website of the Day
Aid to Israel

February 15, 2010

David Price
Human Terrain Systems Dissenter Resigns, Tells Inside Story of Training's Heart of Darkness

Michael Hudson /
Jeff Sommers

Latvia's Road to Serfdom

Ishmael Reed
My Problem with Hardball

Conn Hallinan
China and India: a Danger in Thin Air

Yvonne Ridley
Operation Moshtarak: a Codeword for Ethnic Cleansing in Afghanistan?

Bill Quigley
A Million Homeless in Haiti

Patrick Cockburn
The Assault on Marjah

Dave Lindorff
Picturing the Dead

David Díaz-Arias
Right Rising in Costa Rica

Stephanie Westbrook
Questioning the "Special Relationship" with Israel

Harvey Wasserman
Our Founders Were Not Fundamentalists

Norman Solomon
Dollars for Death, Pennies for Life

Website of the Day
The World's Oldest Potheads

February 12-14, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Goat in the Clearing

Andrew Cockburn
The Economic Velociraptors

Arno J. Mayer
The Treason of the Nobels

Ishmael Reed /
Sapphire

A Dialogue on "Precious"

Ismael Hossein-Zadeh
The Retrogression: New Phase, Not Just Another Recession

Jonathan Cook
Israel's War on Protest

Gareth Porter
The Taliban Isolated Bin Laden

William Blum
That Which Can Not be Spoken

Jeffrey St. Clair
Fear and Firewood

Saul Landau
Government of Lawyers Spit on Law

John Ross
Mexican Church and State Go Nose to Nose Over Who Can Marry Who

Fran Shor
Dumb Power in the Af-Pak War

Marshall Auerback
Greece Signs Its National Suicide Pact

Dave Lindorff
I Cut My Hair, But I'm Not a Terrorist

Ramzy Baroud
The Useless Logic of Round Numbers

Gary Leupp
Skewing the Himalayan Revolution

Joseph Sher
Health Insurance Death Spiral

David Swanson
Yoo's Weird Lies About Obama

Randall Amster
Empire of the Sunset

David Ker Thomson
Against Canada

Bill Piper
Obama's Drug War Budget: Looking a Lot Like Bush's

Missy Beattie
How Blackwater Built Morale

Farzana Versey
Botulism and Babel: Understanding the Rot in Academia

Dan Bacher
How Water Exports are Killing California Jobs and Salmon

Bill Worf
Fires, Logging and Wilderness in Montana

Christopher Brauchli
Special Offer! Free Cremation!!

Dr. Susan Block
Secret Sexual Fantasies: the Erotic Theater of the Mind

Charles R. Larson
Politics, Corruption and Sex in El Salvador

David Yearsley
A Clavichord Battles Santa Monica

Binoy Kampmark
The Vicious Countryside: Haneke's "The White Ribbon"

Poets' Basement
LaMorticella, Moser and Chaet

Website of the Weekend
Privatizing Public Bison

February 11, 2010

Patrick Cockburn
The Battle for Marjah

Mark Schuller
Uncertain Ground: the Haiti Earthquake and Its Aftermath

Stephen Soldz
The Seven Paragraphs on Torture

Harvey Wasserman
Vermont's Radioactive Nightmare

Stephen Fleischman
How the Corporations Broke America

Ron Jacobs
Ending the War in Afghanistan

Helen Redmond
Haiti and Health Care

Steve Zhou
Ideological Detox and the Muslim Community

Fatemeh Keshavarz Ahmadinejad, the Western Press and the Iranian Green Opposition

Gary Goldstein
The High Cost of Another Failed Star Wars Test

Website of the Day
Love Stinks: Matchmaking for Polluters & Lobbyists


February 10, 2010

Jules Boykoff
Showdown in Vancouver

Paul Craig Roberts
The U.S. is Now a Police State

David Macaray
A Dagger in the Heart of Labor

William Blum
Haiti, Aristide and Ideology

Martine Bulard
Live Long .... If You're Rich

M. Shahid Alam
A Eurocentric Problem

Tolu Olorunda
Making a Killing on Student Loans

Jayne Lyn Stahl
How Much is Too Much Information?

Cecilia Lucas
Don't Ask, Don't Tell, Don't Serve

Eric Walberg
The Great Game Playoff

Website of the Day
Saving Tropical Rainforests

February 9, 2010

Vijay Prashad
Troubles in the Mountains

Bill Quigley
Haiti by the Numbers

Jonathan Cook
Jerusalem Mayor to Raze 200 Palestinian Homes

Shamus Cooke
The Democrats are Coming After Social Security

Robert Jensen
The New York Times, Israel and Ethan Bronner

Laura Flanders
The Discreet Unveiling of a Covert War

Chris Kromm
Who Dat in the New Orleans Mayor's Office?

Dave Lindorff
Mumia Abu-Jamal's Case Stuck in Limbo

George Wuerthner
The Thinning Trap: Fear, Fire and Logging

Belén Fernandez
Check Out That Cuban!

Michael Donnelly
Green After-Birth?

Susie Day
GOP Sells Soul to Pat Robertson

Website of the Day
Goldstone Facts

February 8, 2010

Pam Martens
Wall Street's Killer Instinct Spells Death Knell for Jobs

Heather Gray
The Cruel Insanity of Obama's Agriculture Export Plan

Paul Craig Roberts
Blood Lust and Bragging Rights

Franklin Spinney
Mark-to-Market Pentagon Style

Ralph Nader
Institutionalizing Howard Zinn

Ellen Brown
The World's Greatest Insurance Heist

Sasha Kramer
Hope Rising from the Ashes of Port au Prince

Richard Morse
Who's in Charge of This Country?

Fred Gardner
LaGuardia and the Truth About Marijuana

Binoy Kampmark
Trouble at The Lancet

Michael Winship
Lobbyists Retreat, But Never Surrender

David Michael Green
Just Give Us Some Truth Now

Charles R. Larson
Socialist Blizzard Hits DC

Website of the Day
Markets! Finance!! Scandal!!!

February 5 - 7, 2010

Alexander Cockburn
The Left: Downhill From Greensboro

Paul Craig Roberts
The Free Market Fetish

Forrest Hylton
The Culture of Cocaine

Joanne Mariner
"If You Were in Secret Prisons...:" The Trial of Aafia Siddiqui

Bill Quigley
Haiti, Still Starving 23 Days Later

Jeffrey St. Clair
Vigilante Justice in the Land of Enchantment

Todd Gordon / Jeffrey R. Webber Consolidating the Coup in Honduras

Joseph Nevins
Bottled Water Syndrome: the Drinking Water Profiteers

Mike Miller
What Do Grassroots Organizers Actually Do When They Organize?

Mark Weisbrot
Why Washington "Cares" About Honduras and Haiti

Alison Weir
The NYT's Ethan Bronner's Conflict With Impartiality

David Swanson
Top 10 Problems with America Assassinating Americans

Missy Beattie
Recall Notices

Jonathan Cook
How Israel Stole $2 Billion From Palestinian Workers

Richard Morse
Will Clinton Roll With His Pre-Quake Friends in Haiti?

David Ker Thomson
Sects and the City

Benjamin Dangl
Beer Battles

Cal Winslow
Healthcare Workers Savor a Victory

Jim Goodman
Fear of the Organic

Michael Dickinson
What Not to Wear or Say in Turkey

Bouthaina Shaaban
The Arab Community ... the International Community

Don Monkerud
Justice Thomas in Hiding

Ananya Mukherjee-Reed
The Olympics That Will Not Be Televised

Doug Bevington
The Rebirth of Environmentalism

Stephen Martin
Globalization Burning

Charles R. Larson
The Nigerian 419 Scam

David Yearsley
At Last, the Sackbutt Gets Its Due

Kim Nicolini
"Up in the Air:"
a Landscape of Impossible Options

Poets' Basement
Marlin and Farrelly

Website of the Day
CIA Watched as Missionaries Shot Down in Peru

February 4, 2010

Barbara Rhine
Keep What You Have, But Leave the Rest

Barry Lando
Master of Treachery: Kissinger on Iraq

David Macaray
Black Lung Rising

Shamus Cooke
China's Wage Rates for U.S. Workers

P. Sainath
India's Farm Suicides: a 12-Year Saga

Christopher Brauchli
Sammy the Mouth Alito: Chucking Precedent at the Surpeme Court

Ramzy Baroud
Will Israel Target Gaza or Lebanon First?

Suzan Mazur
The Peer Review Prison

Harry Clark
The Invention of the Jewish People

Andy Worthington
Swiss Take Two Gitmo Uighurs

Website of the Day
Selective Compassion

February 3, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts
The Crisis is Not Over

Kathleen Christison
Zionism Laid Bare

Franklin Spinney
The Pentagon Goes Intellectually AWOL

Dean Baker
No Way Out: Roadblocks on the Way to Recovery

Marc Levy
No Medal Jacket

Kathy Kelly
Banning the Homeless in Colorado Springs

Gareth Porter
Talking with the Taliban: US and Karzai Clash

Joshua Frank
Blackwash: How the Coal Ash Industry Manipulated EPA Reports

Rannie Amiri
Saada War Rages On

Gregory Vickrey
Short-Changing the Health Care Debate ... For Now

Website of the Day
Mt. Reagan?

February 2, 2010

Michael Hudson
The Bernanke Disaster

Boadiba
Boadiba's Earthquake Diary

Chris Floyd
War, Budgets and Blind Ambition

Paul A. Passavant
The Symbolic Politics of the GOP: State of the Union or Civil War?

Mike Whitney
Bair's Damning Testimony

John Ross
Who's Who in Mexico's Narco Wars?

Jonathan Cook
Israel is Criminalizing Dissent

Susan Galleymore
Wasting Good Waste

Dave Lindorff
Talk Now With the Taliban

Tolu Olorunda
Words as Weapons

Ron Jacobs
I See Hawks and Earthworms

Website of the Day
Cop Watch: Guerrilla Video Primer

February 1, 2010

Michael Hudson
Obama's Junk Economics

Stan Goff
The Murderous Mystique of JSOC: How Secret Becomes Special

Patrick Cockburn
The Case Against Tony Blair

Saul Landau
Universal Disorientation: the Modern Media and Haiti

Dr. Carol Paris, MD
Staying When They Tell You to Leave
: What I've Learned Doing Civil Disobedience for Single Payer

Marshall Auerback
A Proposal for Genuine Financial Reform

Harvey Wasserman
Will Obama Guarantee a New Nuclear Reactor War?

Johanna Berrigan
Destruction, Hope and Faith in Port au Prince

Peter Gelderloos
More Wood for the Fire

David Michael Green
An Ugly Week for the Human Race (and Other Living Things)

Martha Rosenberg
If You Liked Bovine Growth Hormone, You'll Love Beta Agonists

Kevin Zeese
Health Care: a Better Idea

Alan Farago
Where Nature Saves the World ... From Us

Website of the Day
Demolishing Flint

 

March 9, 2010

Coming to a Country Near You

Let a Dozen Latvias Bloom?

By MARSHALL AUERBACK
and ROB PARENTEAU

If you want to see the real consequence of smash mouth economics, forget about Greece and take a look at Latvia.  Its 25.5 per cent plunge in GDP over just the past two years (almost 20 per cent in this past year alone) is already the worst two-year drop on record.  The country recently reported a 12% decline in annual wages in Q4 2009 versus Q4 2008.   The IMF projects another 4 percent drop this year, and predicts that the total loss of output from peak to bottom will reach 30 percent. To put this in a broader context, the magnitude of this loss of output in Latvia is more than that of the U.S. Great Depression downturn of 1929-1933.

Mainstream economics insists that one path to full employment is via lower wages. If you want to sell more labor services, lower the price of them, namely wages.  This is a classic fallacy of composition argument. What might work for one firm is unlikely to work for all firms. Wage cuts in the aggregate simply destroy aggregate spending power, unless the lost demand is made up for in other ways.

But even though Latvia’s external balance is improving (largely through a collapse of imports as a result of the collapse of domestic demand), the country is unable to deploy fiscal policy effectively due to the external constraints of its monetary system, which is predicated on the existence of a currency board system. True, the current account is now turning positive, but to suggest that every single country can “internally deflate” its economy via wage destruction of this magnitude to achieve this state of affairs is another fallacy of composition argument. The whole world cannot run trade surpluses, especially not if policy is designed to destroy demand via massive wage destruction.

More importantly, the very structure of a currency board is wrong. It requires a nation to have sufficient foreign reserves to facilitate 100 per cent convertibility of the monetary base (reserves and cash outstanding). Under this system, the central bank stands by to guarantee this convertibility at a fixed exchange rate against the so-called anchor currency. The Government is then fiscally constrained and all spending must be backed by taxation revenue or debt-issuance.  Pegging one’s currency, then, means that the central bank has to manage interest rates to ensure the parity is maintained and fiscal policy is hamstrung by the currency requirements (which is why organizations like the IMF love them so much; it ties governments’ hands). Latvia pegs its currency at 0.71 lat per Euro and joined the ERM in 2005 with the intent of qualifying for the euro zone. It operates a system similar to Argentina in the 1990s which ultimately collapsed and led to its default in 2001 (Argentina pegged against the US dollar).

The country’s debt is projected to be 74 per cent of GDP for this year, supposedly stabilizing at 89 per cent in 2014 in the best-case IMF scenario. A devaluation, however, would substantially raise the debt service ratios, given the high prevalence of foreign debt (about 89% of Latvia’s debt is euro denominated).   The currency peg, then, not only restricted the Latvia government’s freedom of fiscal maneuver, but also created huge financial fragility because Latvians operated under the mistaken assumption that the peg was inviolable, encouraging borrowers to act with no sense of exchange rate risk. As in Argentina nearly a decade ago, a devaluation would, in all likelihood, lead to a default on external debt. Argentina did eventually manage a 25% recovery in output in the two years following Q1 2002, but only after a 190% devaluation (which was 300% at its maximum).

As Michael Hudson and Jeff Sommers have noted, “these debt levels place Latvia far outside the debt Maastricht debt limits for adopting the euro. Yet achieving entry into the euro zone has been the chief pretext of the Latvia’s Central Bank for the painful austerity measures necessary to keep its currency peg.” They also point out that maintaining that peg has burned through mountains of currency reserves that otherwise could have been invested in its domestic economy. It has also precluded the use of fiscal policy, since (by virtue of Latvia’s peg to the euro), the country operates under the same constraints as if it were already working within the Stability and Growth Pact rules.

With no room to adjust the exchange rate, the only other way to make the currency lose value is to engineer a real depreciation – that is reduce labor costs and prices in order to make its tradable products more attractive. This is euphemistically being described as an “internal devaluation”- a one-off coordinated reduction of wages and prices across the board.  It is in reality more like an “infernal devaluation”.  It amounts to a domestic income deflation as wages are crushed in order to get the prices of tradable goods down enough so the current account balance increases sufficiently enough to carry the next wave of growth. The hidden assumption is that a debt deflation spiral does not do the host country in as domestic private incomes are deflated. The argument to justify this toxic remedy is that a reduction in nominal wages and salaries can help Latvia accomplish a boom in net exports, thereby enhancing an economic recovery which would quickly attenuate or short circuit any accompanying debt deflation dynamics that might have been set off at the inception of the internal devaluation.

Here in a nutshell is a country which shows us all of the misery that is enacted through the creation of self-imposed political constraints on policy.  The Latvian government has voluntarily abandoned the policy tools that could make the lives of their citizens better. Policy makers have tied both their hands and their feet behind their backs so that markets could work their self-adjusting magic. They have pegged their currency; they are furiously slashing their net fiscal spending (under the IMF agreement they are due to cut their net position by 6.5 per cent of GDP – a huge fiscal contraction), and the economy continues to deteriorate.

This is something likely in store for Greece, which has recently introduced a new round of austerity measures in order to ensure the success of its latest bond offering. Greece and other countries now face the prospect falling private sector incomes – that is, after all, the direct and immediate result of higher taxes on businesses and households, and lower government expenditures. Euro area nominal GDP is already estimated by the OECD to have fallen over 3% in 2009.

Unless the trade deficits of the nations pursuing fiscal retrenchment can swing sharply into surpluses (as lower domestic incomes lead to less import demand, and lower costs of production lead to higher exports), private debt defaults will now start to multiply and cascade through the system. Last week, as we mentioned, Moody’s placed 4 Greek banks on downgrade watch. This is just the start – the fiscal retrenchment has only just begun to take effect. By taking these steps to avoid a public debt default, we would suggest these economies are now poised for more private debt defaults.

We believe private investors do not yet get this connection, but it will be made very clear in the months ahead. Latvia, with a GDP collapse of nearly 25%, will become the poster child of the region in this regard. This private debt distress will back up into higher loan losses at German banks. Germany’s hard won current account surplus will continue to fade Loan growth is already dead in the water in Europe, and if the above analysis is correct, banker perceptions of private sector creditworthiness are about to go “pear shaped”, as they so delightfully put it in London.

But that’s not all. Each of these countries are about to discover what we will call the paradox of public thrift. Argentina discovered this in 2001-2. Latvia and Estonia have recently rediscovered it. Ireland is rediscovering it, and within the next three months, Greece will no doubt discover it as well. We will let the following comments we came across on Bill Mitchell’s excellent blog depict the nature of this paradox for you, because it really does capture the essence of the dilemma at hand:

“From Ireland: Gov’t took billions of €’s out of the economy in the form of public service pay cuts, pensions cuts, dole cuts + wave of private employees replaced by agency workers at minimum wage rates…

Guess what? January tax receipts crashed yet again below projections.

After two systemic budget cuts, the tax receipts keep tanking.

The mainstream consensus?

We need more cuts (except for bankers and top civil servants who don’t have to take wage cuts)! And the international bond market is happy with Ireland.

One day we shall be able to compete with China on a level wage scale, and generous tax incentives for Multinationals. In the meantime, say hello to all the Irish immigrants for me.”

This is the future discovery awaiting Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy…and the UK…possibly Japan…and perhaps the US, although it could manage to skirt the issue for another year. In each of these nations, if the  private sector is retrenching already, and the public sector tries to retrench on top of that, unless a massive swing in foreign trade can be accomplished, policy makers are unwittingly inviting falling private nominal incomes and private debt distress into the picture as they reverse fiscal stimulus.

As private incomes fall, tax revenues fall. In order to hit fiscal targets promised to global bond holders, further expenditure cuts must be implemented, and further tax hikes must be rolled out. As the Irish blogger reveals above, this is not a theory – it is already happening, but policy makers and investors are not willing to acknowledge it. Yet for those who understand the fiscal balance cannot be changed without influencing the cash flows and financial balances of the remaining sectors of the economy, the paradox of public thrift at this juncture is far too evident.

We are by no means defending the generous pension benefit levels of euro zone government workers, the early retirement ages, the corrupt tax practices, etc. These are decisions the citizens of each nation need to make on their own, preferably in full awareness of their consequences, both short and long run. It is not our place to dictate the trade-offs citizens chose in each nation.

The question we are raising, however, is whether the private leverage ratios in many of these countries will allow them to withstand the pressures of transitioning back to growth in the absence of fiscal autonomy. The now prevalent global quest for “fiscal sustainability” may place these economies on a path of private debt default, which is ultimately unsustainable for the economy as a whole. If fiscal retrenchment is to be enacted, then orderly private debt renegotiation and private asset liquidation must be accomplished at a large scale and in a timely fashion. Yet our experience is that this is no easy trick, as the near locking up of various financial channels following the Lehman debacle illustrated in no uncertain terms. Usually such a recipe delivers a financial implosion.

Even the Honorable David Walker, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Institute, former Comptroller General, and ardent foe of government waste and reckless spending is coming to understand the precarious nature of the current situation. In a February 24th piece on Politico.com with Larry Mishel, Walker insists on the primacy of job creation at this juncture, and recognizes this may actually serve his goal of reducing fiscal deficits in the long run:

“President Barack Obama is in a difficult position when it comes to deficits. Today’s high deficits will have to go even higher to help address unemployment. At the same time, many Americans are increasingly concerned about escalating deficits and debt. What’s a president to do?

The answer, from a policy perspective, is not that hard: A focus on jobs now is consistent with addressing our deficit problems ahead.”

That, dear readers, is the real deal, and it is not being reported or openly discussed. We have seen this movie before in Argentina almost a decade ago. They eventually got out with a massive “external” currency devaluation of 300% and an equally massive swing in the trade balance.  But the costs of delay were enormous:  from 1998-2001, Argentina suffered its worst recession ever and pushed 42% of its households into poverty.

And not every country can do what Argentina has done. Again, the whole world cannot run trade surpluses, the first mover has an advantage until the second mover moves, etc. Plus, Argentina had an explicit debt repudiation and a 300% "external" devaluation that was timed right with global recovery, hardly the sort of conditions that pertain today.

The US has so far managed to resist anything of this magnitude.  But as the voices of fiscal retrenchment intensify, a future not unlike Latvia, Greece and Argentina could await.  It has taken the people of Iceland to make the first stand against this growing neo-liberal madness. In a historic referendum, over 90 per cent of the population has rejected a proposal for the repayment of billions of pounds lent by Britain and Holland to compensate depositors in a failed Icelandic bank.

The deal would have saddled citizens of Iceland with an additional $16k in debt to compensate the UK and Holland with a $5.3 billion note for the failure of their local banks.  This, in a country of a mere 300,000 citizens. The vote failure has already prompted the ratings agencies to downgrade the country to junk, as well as leaving an IMF-led loan in limbo.  The “experts” are declaring this a disaster for Iceland, but they and their banking allies must secretly be dreading the result, demonstrating as it does that an international bailout watchdog is truly powerless when the people of the bailout recipient nation want to have nothing to do with a poisoned chalice of an economic “rescue”, which does nothing but create a country of indentured serfs.

It is now time for the rest of us to follow the Lilliputians of Iceland:  to take the rentier juggernaut down before it completes the task. Time to pry the vampire squid off our faces so we can see the light of day again and allow some semblance of humanity to flourish again.  Hopefully, Iceland represents the future, not Latvia.

Marshall Auerback is a market analyst and commentator. He is a brainstruster for the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Intitute. He can be reached at MAuer1959@aol.com

Rob Parenteau, CFA, is sole proprietor of MacroStrategy Edge, editor of the Richebacher Letter, and a research associate with the Levy Economics Institute. He can be reached at macrostratedge@yahoo.com.

 

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