[This guy is very smart, but more important, he is often right. One reason for 
his track record is that his analysis ignores distractions (like politics and 
religious strife) and gets down to an even more basic level. In the case of the 
“Arab Spring,” that boils down to failing economies and their increasing 
inability to meet the basic needs of their people. df]

 

 

 

www.atimes.com, 6/1/11     

  

 <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MF01Ak01.html> Humpty Obumpty and 
the Arab Spring

 

The borders of the affected nations have begun to dissolve along with their 
economies. It will get worse fast. 

 

By Spengler 

 

I've been warning for months that Egypt, Syria, Tunisia and other Arab 
oil-importing countries face a total economic meltdown (see Food and failed 
Arab states <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB02Ak01.html> , Feb 2, 
and The hunger to come in Egypt 
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/ME10Ak01.html> , May 10). Now the 
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has confirmed my warnings. 

 

The leaders of the industrial nations waited until last weekend's Group of 
Eight (G-8) summit to respond, and at the initiative of United States President 
Barack Obama proposed what sounds like a massive aid program but probably 
consists mainly of refurbishing old programs. 

 

The egg has splattered, and all of Obumpty's horses and men can't mend it. Even 
the G-8's announcement was fumbled; Canada's Prime Minister John Harper refused 
to commit new money, a dissonant note that routine diplomatic preparation would 
have pre-empted. 

 

The numbers thrown out by the IMF are stupefying. "In the current baseline 
scenario," wrote the IMF on May 27, "the external financing needs of the 
region's oil importers is projected to exceed $160 billion during 2011-13." 
That's almost three years' worth of Egypt's total annual imports as of 2010. As 
of 2010, the combined current account deficit (that is, external financing 
needs) of Egypt, Syria, Yemen, Morocco and Tunisia was about $15 billion a 
year. 

 

What the IMF says, in effect, is that the oil-poor Arab economies - especially 
Egypt - are not only broke, but dysfunctional, incapable of earning more than a 
small fraction of their import bill. The disappearance of tourism is an 
important part of the problem, but shortages of fuel and other essentials have 
had cascading effects throughout these economies. 

 

"In the next 18 months," the IMF added, "a greater part of these financing 
needs will need to be met from the international community because of more 
cautious market sentiments during the uncertain transition." 

 

Translation: private investors aren't stupid enough to throw money down a 
Middle Eastern rat-hole, and now that the revolutionary government has decided 
to make a horrible example of deposed president Hosni Mubarak, anyone who made 
any money under his regime is cutting and running. At its May 29 auction of 
treasury bills, Egypt paid about 12% for short-term money, to its own captive 
banking system. Its budget deficit in the next fiscal year, the government 
says, will exceed $30 billion. 

 

And the IMF's $160 billion number is only "external financing"; that is, 
maintaining imports into a busted economy. It doesn't do a thing to repair 
busted economies that import half their caloric intake, as do the oil-poor Arab 
nations. 

 

Egypt's economy is in free fall. Its biggest foreign exchange earner was a 
tourist industry that won't come back for a decade, if ever. The IMF's $160 
billion doesn't take into account the costs of teaching two-fifths of the 
Egyptian population to read, or raising crop yields to more than a fifth of 
American levels, or training university graduates to do more than stamp 
identity cards and shuffle papers. As the international organization made 
clear, this is what Egypt and its neighbors require merely to pay for essential 
imports. 

 

Of course, the IMF's admission that Egypt, Tunisia, Syria and Yemen can't meet 
the majority of their import bill without foreign aid does not increase the 
probability that these countries will obtain financing on that scale. On May 
30, the IMF announced that it would lend $3 billion to Egypt - a tenth of its 
budget deficit - sometime in June. The G-8 offered the grandiose pledge of $20 
billion in their own money along with $20 billion from the IMF, World Bank, and 
so forth, to support the "Arab Spring", with the dissension of the Canadian 
prime minister. But it is unclear whether that represents new money, or a 
shuffling of existing aid commitments, or nothing whatever. 

 

Whatever the Group of Eight actually had in mind, the proposed aid package for 
the misnomered Arab Spring has already become a punching bag for opposition 
budget-cutters. "Should we be borrowing money from China to turn around and 
give it to the Muslim Brotherhood?" Sarah Palin asked on May 27. 

 

"Now, given that Egypt has a history of corruption when it comes to utilizing 
American aid, it is doubtful that the money will really help needy Egyptian 
people. Couple that with the fact that the Muslim Brotherhood is organized to 
have a real shot at taking control of Egypt’s government, and one has to ask 
why we would send money (that we don't have) into unknown Egyptian hands," the 
former Republican vice-presidential candidate added. 

 

Whether any amount of foreign aid will stabilize Egypt's economic position is 
questionable, even if the industrial nations and the Arab Gulf states opened 
their purses, which is doubtful. 

 

>From Arab-language online media, it appears that Egypt's economic troubles 
>have metastasized. Last month, rice disappeared from public storehouses amid 
>press reports that official food distribution organizations were selling the 
>grain by the container on the overseas market. Last week, diesel fuel was the 
>scarce commodity, with 24-hour queues forming around gasoline stations. 
>Foreign tankers were waiting at Port Said on the Suez Canal to pump diesel oil 
>from storage facilities, as government officials sold the scarce commodity for 
>cash. 

 

This is the sort of general breakdown I observed in 1992 in Russia, following 
the collapse of the communist government. As an adviser to finance minister 
Yegor Gaidar, I heard stories of Russian officials selling unregistered 
trainloads of raw materials on foreign markets and depositing the proceeds in 
Swiss banking accounts. Anything of value that could find a buyer overseas was 
sold. I didn't last long as an adviser; looting and pillaging wasn't my area of 
competence. Russia, it should be recalled, is largely self-sufficient in food 
and is among the world's largest oil producers, while Egypt imports half its 
food. Russia had enormous resources on which to draw. Egypt, Syria and Tunisia 
have nothing. 

 

For 60 years, the Egyptian army and associated crony capitalists ran the 
economy as a private preserve. Although the army remains in nominal charge, the 
public humiliation of Mubarak serves notice on the previous masters of Egypt's 
little universe that they are as vulnerable as their former patron. Everyone 
who can get out will and will take with them whatever they can. 

 

Syria is also vulnerable to hunger, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization 
(FAO) warned May 23. "Continuing unrest in Syria will not only affect economic 
growth but could disrupt food distribution channels leading to severe localized 
shortages in main markets," according to the FAO. ''Syria hosts one of the 
largest urban refugee populations in the world, including nearly one million 
Iraqis who have become more vulnerable because of rising food and fuel prices." 

 

Nearly 700,000 Libyan refugees have reached Libya and Egypt, fleeing their 
country's civil war. At least 30,000 Tunisian refugees (and likely many more) 
have overwhelmed camps in Italy, and perhaps a tenth of that number have 
drowned in the attempt to reach Europe. A large but unknown number of Syrian 
refugees have fled to Lebanon and Turkey. 

 

Robert Fisk wrote in the London Independent on May 30 that Turkey fears a mass 
influx of Syrian Kurdish refugees, so that "Turkish generals have thus prepared 
an operation that would send several battalions of Turkish troops into Syria 
itself to carve out a 'safe area' for Syrian refugees inside Assad's 
caliphate." The borders of the affected nations have begun to dissolve along 
with their economies. It will get worse fast. 

 

Spengler is channeled by David P Goldman. 

 

 ###

 

 

Dan Friedman
NYC



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