-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Nov. 29, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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Fidel Castro lays it out

ANATOMY OF WORLD ECONOMIC CRISIS

[Following are excerpts from a Nov. 2 television address on 
the present international situation, the economic and world 
crisis, by President Fidel Castro of Cuba.]

To characterize the current situation, one could say, by way 
of a very brief summary, that in the mid-1990s, when 
globalization was extending around the planet, the United 
States, as the absolute master of the international 
financial institutions and through its immense political, 
military and technological strength, achieved the most 
spectacular accumulation of wealth and power ever seen in 
history.

But the world and capitalist society were entering into an 
entirely new phase. Only an insignificant part of economic 
operations were related to world production and trade. Every 
day $3 trillion were involved in speculative operations 
including currencies and stocks. Stock prices on U.S. 
exchanges were rising like foam, often with no relation 
whatsoever to the actual profits and revenues of companies.

A number of myths were created: there would never be another 
crisis; the system could regulate itself, because it had 
created the mechanisms needed to advance and grow unimpeded. 
The creation of purely imaginary wealth reached such an 
extent that there were cases of stocks whose value increased 
800 times in a period of only eight years, with an initial 
investment of $1,000. It was like an enormous balloon that 
could inflate to infinity.

As this virtual wealth was created it was invested, spent 
and wasted. Historical experience was completely ignored. 
The world's population had quadrupled in only 100 years. 
There were billions of human beings who neither participated 
in nor enjoyed this wealth in any way whatsoever. They 
supplied raw materials and cheap labor, but did not consume 
and could not be consumers. They did not constitute a 
market, nor the almost infinite sea fed by the immense river 
of products that flowed, in the midst of fierce competition, 
from factories that were ever more productive and created 
ever fewer jobs, based in a privileged and highly limited 
group of industrialized countries.

An elementary analysis was sufficient to comprehend that 
this situation was unsustainable.

Nobody seemed to realize that any apparently insignificant 
occurrence in the economy of one region of the world could 
shake the entire structure of the world economy.

THE FANTASY FALLS TO PIECES

The architects, specialists and administrators of the new 
international economic order, economists and politicians, 
look on as their fantasy falls to pieces, yet they barely 
understand that they have lost control of events. Other 
forces are in control now. On the one hand, those of the 
large and increasingly powerful and independent 
transnationals and, on the other, the stubborn realities are 
waiting for the world to truly change.

In July of 1997, the first major crisis of the globalized 
neoliberal world erupts. The tigers fall to pieces. Japan 
has still not managed to recover, and the world continues to 
suffer the consequences.

In August of 1998 comes the so-called Russian crisis. 
Despite this country's insignificant contribution to the 
worldwide gross domestic product, barely 2 percent, the 
stock markets of the United States were badly shaken, 
dropping by hundreds of points in a matter of hours.

In January of 1999, only five months later, the Brazilian 
crisis breaks out.

An all-out joint effort by the G-7, IMF and World Bank was 
needed to prevent the crisis from spreading throughout South 
America and dealing a devastating blow to the U.S. stock 
markets.

This time, the inevitable has happened: the crisis began in 
the United States, almost imperceptibly at first. Beginning 
in mid-2000, the first symptoms began to be observed, with a 
sustained decrease in the rate of industrial production.

U.S. CRISIS BEGAN IN MID-2000

In March of that year, the so-called high-tech NASDAQ index 
had already begun to drop.

At the same time, the trade deficit showed an enormous 
growth, from $264.9 billion in 1999 to $368.4 billion in 
2000.

In the second quarter of the year 2000, the gross domestic 
product registered growth of 5.7 percent; in the third 
quarter, it grew by only 1.3 percent.

Industrial sector production began to fall in October of 
2000.

Nevertheless, at the end of the year 2000, opinions on the 
prospects and forecasts for the world economy were still 
rather optimistic. But reality soon reared its ugly head.

Since the beginning of 2001, the IMF, the World Bank, the 
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) 
and the European Commission, along with private 
institutions, have been obliged to downwardly adjust their 
growth predictions in the various regions of the world for 
2001.

In May, the IMF forecast 3.2 percent worldwide growth in 
2001. For the United States in particular, projected growth 
was 1.5 percent, and 2.4 percent for the Eurozone. Japan was 
facing its fourth recession in 10 years, leading to a 
prediction of 0.5 percent negative growth for the same year.

IMF Managing Director Horst Kohler, during a speech to the 
United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in 
Geneva, on July 16, 2001, stated, "Growth is slowing 
throughout the world. This may be uncomfortable for the 
advanced economies [the developed and wealthy countries], 
but it will be a further source of hardship for many 
emerging markets and developing countries [the poor and 
underdeveloped countries], and a real setback in the fight 
against world poverty."

Production has dropped in the majority of the Southeast 
Asian countries, with the exception of China, and in Latin 
America, too. According to the World Bank, growth in 
Southeast Asia, which had begun to recover after its 
dramatic fall in 1997, would decline from 7.6 percent in 
2000 to 4.5 percent this year, while Latin America's growth 
would be around 2 percent, one half of the growth registered 
in 2000.

Other institutions also made predictions. The Economist 
magazine estimated in April that world growth in 2001 would 
be only 2.7 percent, in contrast to the 4.6 percent growth 
registered in the year 2000, while world trade would grow by 
3.5 percent, compared to the 13.4 percent growth in 2000.

With regard to the Eurozone, the OECD, in its quarterly 
report issued in early May of 2001, estimated that the 
European Union would experience growth of 2.6 percent, a 
figure 0.5 percent lower than its initial projection.

On Sept. 10, just one day before the events in New York and 
Washington, the IMF analyzed the evolution of growth 
predictions for the world economy and for the economies of 
the United States, Europe and Japan.

[Here Castro cites figures showing falling growth rates from 
autumn 2000 to September 2001: the growth rate of the world 
economy declined from 4.2 to 2.7 percent; the U.S. economy 
from 3.2 to 1.5; Japan, from 1.8 to 0.2 percent; the 
Eurozone, from 3.4 to 1.9.]

Without exception, the three major centers of the world 
economy saw their growth rates fall simultaneously, dropping 
to less than half of initial figures over the course of less 
than a year. In the case of Japan in particular, growth 
dropped to almost zero.

THE EMPLOYMENT SITUATION

At the end of the year 2000, the unemployment rate in the 
United States was only 3.9 percent. By August 2001, it had 
risen to 4.9 percent.

Today, Nov. 2, the official figure was released: it is 5.4 
percent. In just one month, 415,000 jobs were lost.

The increase of the unemployment rate is irrefutable 
evidence of the deterioration that the U.S. economy had been 
suffering prior to the terrorist attacks.

It should be kept in mind, as an important precedent, that 
over the last 50 years, when the unemployment rate has 
reached 5.1 percent, this has coincided with the beginning 
of a recession.

In August, industrial production fell by 0.6 percent as 
compared to July. Over the previous 12 months, industrial 
production had shrunk by around 5 percent. August was the 
11th consecutive month of economic contraction.

The figure registered in August is very close to the lowest 
level reached since 1983.

Also registered in the month of August of 2001 was a budget 
deficit of $80 billion.

That same month, Democratic members of Congress were already 
pointing out that predictions indicated that the government 
would have to use Social Security money to finance current 
expenditures.

During the second quarter of 2001, U.S. imports shrank by 
$13.9 billion, while the low level of trade activity in the 
rest of the world led to a $9.1-billion reduction in 
exports.

Stock values on the main indexes have suffered the following 
decreases in 2001: Dow Jones, 18.06 percent; NASDAQ, 66.42 
percent; Standard and Poor's, 28.48 percent.

This means the loss of trillions of dollars in less than a 
year.

The Federal Reserve has lowered interest rates nine times in 
2001. The goal in doing so is to lower the cost of money, 
boost consumer confidence and thus promote economic 
activity. This frantic frequency clearly reflects 
desperation.

DECLINE IN EUROPE AND JAPAN

Industrial production in the European region experienced a 
sustained decline in the first quarter of the year 2001 that 
obliged companies to reduce staff, and this, in turn, 
reduced consumption, thus creating a vicious downward 
circle.

Investment and consumption are depressed, aggravating the 
trend towards recession.

The European Commissioner for Monetary Affairs has stated 
that the European economy will grow by only 1.5 percent this 
year. Meanwhile, the six most prestigious economic research 
institutes in Germany have predicted that their country's 
economy will grow by 0.7 percent this year and 1.3 percent 
next year, and announced that the German economy is on the 
verge of a recession. This will have a strong negative 
impact on the rest of Europe, given that Germany is 
considered the region's "economic motor."

The decrease in industrial production that began in March 
reached 11.7 percent by August. This phenomenon of six 
consecutive months of decline in industrial production has 
not been witnessed in the Japanese economy since the period 
from December of 1991 to May of 1992, and it places 
industrial production at the lowest level of the last seven 
years. This means an even worse crisis than the financial 
crisis of 1997-1998, according to Japanese analysts.

Japan's trade surplus decreased 48 percent in July of this 
year.

As a defensive measure, companies are cutting staff, leading 
to a rise in the unemployment rate, which reached an all-
time high of 5 percent in August of this year, something 
never before seen in Japan.

CRISIS IN LATIN AMERICA

In August, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the 
Caribbean (ECLAC) reported that the region's economy would 
grow by only 2 percent in 2001, a mere half of the growth 
registered the previous year.

According to ECLAC, this is the result of the worldwide 
economic weakening and instability in a number of the 
region's key countries: Peru and Uruguay will experience no 
growth; Brazil has been affected by a scarcity of fuel 
supplies, which has hit its productive activity, and by an 
almost 40-percent devaluation of its currency this year; and 
Chile's economic reactivation has come to a halt. In the 
case of Mexico, a feeble economic growth of 0.13 percent is 
predicted for this year, and 1.74 percent for 2002. The 
government had originally forecast 4.5 percent growth in the 
gross domestic product for 2001, but it has downscaled that 
figure a number of times due to the slowdown in the world 
economy, and particularly that of the United States.

ECLAC estimates that unemployment in the region will reach 
at least 8.5 percent.

As can be seen, the economic crisis is not a consequence of 
the Sept. 11 attacks and the war against Afghanistan. Such 
claims could only be made out of total ignorance or an 
attempt to hide the real cause. The crisis is a consequence 
of the resounding and irreversible failure of an economic 
and political conception imposed on the world: neoliberalism 
and neoliberal globalization.

The terrorist attacks and the war did not give rise to the 
crisis, but they have considerably aggravated it.

- END -

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