stokes234
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2010
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I'm most of the way through "The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein, and it seems to be a particularly powerful book.
It basically claims that free market supporters, originating from the chicago school of economics and spreading out to take high positions in IMF, world bank and USA treasury, spread their free market ideology by holding desperate countries to ransom. They wait until some disaster strikes, such as a natural disaster, a war, price drops on the countries' main exports or something similar, and then they move in and say that they will provide aid to stabilise the economy, but only if the country adopts radical, undemocratic free market principles, such as rapid privatisation, removal of minimum wage and price controls, and barriers to free trade. The country is forced to do so, and various rich businessmen make a killing from the sales of public assets, and they then leave the country in ruins with mass unemployment and much heightened inequality, and move on. In some cases the book claims the financial crises were deliberately worsened by the IMF and various other financial bodies and multinational conglomerates to force these countries into a position where they would have to accept the free market policies.
The book also claims that the chicago economists, which it dubs "the chicago boys", exploit military coups to force their economic policies through as well, such as in indonesia and chile.
As case studies, the book cites indonesia under suharto; chile under pinochet; argentina, brazil and uruguay soon after; south africa coming out of apartheid; poland breaking free from the soviet union; the soviet union collapsing; thailand, south korea, indonesia and the philippines in the 97 asian financial crisis; and canadas allegedly artificially created low credit rating in the late 90s.
It makes a particularly compelling case, filling about 50 pages of references at the end, and quoting many top figures among the financial bodies at these times including jeffrey sachs and a bunch of other top economists and political advisors, investigative journalists and so on.
What I want to know is whether or not this qualifies as a conspiracy theory (if a resounding "no", feel free to move or delete the thread), and what other materials there are on the subject, supporting or rejecting the claim that the western economic powers deliberately held countries to ransom in order to lay claim to their financial assets. Official replies, high profile responses, any resulting court cases etc would all be particularly welcome, as well as opinions of anyone who knows much about the subject.
One further thing, that made me do a double take, and which may end up driving the thread off on a tangent - at one point, the book claims that donald rumsfeld made a particularly controversial speech in the pentagon, basically declaring war on the pentagons bureaucracy, stating he would sell off all parts of the military that he thought could be better performed by private companies. Obviously he should have faced some serious opposition by the established bereaucracy, but he never did because he made the speech on september 10, 2001. I've always rejected the 9/11 conspiracy theories and consider myself a rational person; on balance, I have to say it must have been a coincidence. But I was suprised that i'd never heard it as an argument supporting the claim that 9/11 was planned by the american government.
Anyway, discuss, and preferably try to convince me one way or the other and/or point me to where I can learn more. I'm one of the few people on the internet whose opinion can actually be changed.
It basically claims that free market supporters, originating from the chicago school of economics and spreading out to take high positions in IMF, world bank and USA treasury, spread their free market ideology by holding desperate countries to ransom. They wait until some disaster strikes, such as a natural disaster, a war, price drops on the countries' main exports or something similar, and then they move in and say that they will provide aid to stabilise the economy, but only if the country adopts radical, undemocratic free market principles, such as rapid privatisation, removal of minimum wage and price controls, and barriers to free trade. The country is forced to do so, and various rich businessmen make a killing from the sales of public assets, and they then leave the country in ruins with mass unemployment and much heightened inequality, and move on. In some cases the book claims the financial crises were deliberately worsened by the IMF and various other financial bodies and multinational conglomerates to force these countries into a position where they would have to accept the free market policies.
The book also claims that the chicago economists, which it dubs "the chicago boys", exploit military coups to force their economic policies through as well, such as in indonesia and chile.
As case studies, the book cites indonesia under suharto; chile under pinochet; argentina, brazil and uruguay soon after; south africa coming out of apartheid; poland breaking free from the soviet union; the soviet union collapsing; thailand, south korea, indonesia and the philippines in the 97 asian financial crisis; and canadas allegedly artificially created low credit rating in the late 90s.
It makes a particularly compelling case, filling about 50 pages of references at the end, and quoting many top figures among the financial bodies at these times including jeffrey sachs and a bunch of other top economists and political advisors, investigative journalists and so on.
What I want to know is whether or not this qualifies as a conspiracy theory (if a resounding "no", feel free to move or delete the thread), and what other materials there are on the subject, supporting or rejecting the claim that the western economic powers deliberately held countries to ransom in order to lay claim to their financial assets. Official replies, high profile responses, any resulting court cases etc would all be particularly welcome, as well as opinions of anyone who knows much about the subject.
One further thing, that made me do a double take, and which may end up driving the thread off on a tangent - at one point, the book claims that donald rumsfeld made a particularly controversial speech in the pentagon, basically declaring war on the pentagons bureaucracy, stating he would sell off all parts of the military that he thought could be better performed by private companies. Obviously he should have faced some serious opposition by the established bereaucracy, but he never did because he made the speech on september 10, 2001. I've always rejected the 9/11 conspiracy theories and consider myself a rational person; on balance, I have to say it must have been a coincidence. But I was suprised that i'd never heard it as an argument supporting the claim that 9/11 was planned by the american government.
Anyway, discuss, and preferably try to convince me one way or the other and/or point me to where I can learn more. I'm one of the few people on the internet whose opinion can actually be changed.