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Bailouts Dwarf Spending on Climate and Poverty Crises

Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh | November 24, 2008

Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco

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Foreign Policy In Focus

The financial crisis is only one of multiple crises that will affect every country, rich and poor alike.

There's also the global poverty crisis. Tens of millions of people across the developing world are expected to fall into extreme poverty and joblessness as a result of an economic mess originating in the United States. This is bad news for workers everywhere, as it means even more brutal competition in the globalized labor pool.

And then there's the climate crisis. If we don't do something about that one, we could find out what a real meltdown feels like.

Yet the richest nations in the world appear fixated almost entirely on the financial crisis, and specifically, on propping up their own financial firms.

A new report by our organization, the Institute for Policy Studies, finds that the approximately $4.1 trillion that the United States and European governments have committed to rescue financial firms is 40 times the money they're spending to fight climate and poverty crises in the developing world.

And as officials head to two upcoming global summits, there's strong reason for concern that rich country governments may backtrack even further on their aid and climate finance commitments.

On November 29, the Middle East nation of Qatar will host a Financing for Development conference, where governments will review aid obligations made six years ago. On December 1, international negotiators will convene in Poland to hammer out commitments to fighting climate change, including climate-related financial assistance for developing countries.

The financial crisis has overshadowed both of these major summits. When bank failures escalated in September, the United States and European governments moved with lightning speed to mobilize those $4.1 trillion in resources to aid struggling financial institutions.

For the United States, the total so far comes to about $1.3 trillion, including the $700 billion bailout bill as well as rescues for individual firms, deposit insurance for failed banks, and purchases of banks' short-term debts. In Europe, countries have pledged about $2.8 trillion for bank loan guarantees and cash injections.

More Than Development Aid

The combined $4.1 trillion is more than 45 times the sums the U.S. and Western European governments spent on development aid last year.

Some individual companies have enjoyed bailouts that dwarf the size of country aid packages. For example, the U.S. government's $152.5 billion rescue plan for AIG greatly exceeds the $90.7 billion U.S. and European governments spent on aid to all developing countries in 2007. And remember when AIG executives headed off to a luxury resort a few days after getting their taxpayer bailout? The tab for that junket — $440,000 — came to roughly the equivalent of U.S. food aid last year to Lebanon, a country struggling to recover from conflict.

The biggest company-specific bailout — the $200 billion for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — comes to nearly 1,000 times U.S. economic aid to Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's poorest country. The $29 billion for investment bank Bear Stearns was far more than the U.S. government's total aid bill of $23.2 billion.

Short-changing countries in such extreme need will only boomerang back to the United States in the form of greater global insecurity and reduced export markets.

Likewise when it comes to climate finance, the U.S. and European governments appear to be a penny wise but a pound foolish. Europe's new and additional funding commitments for a variety of climate-related efforts in developing countries over the next several years add up to only $13.1 billion, and very little of this has been disbursed.

The Swiss government has committed $60 billion to rescue the ailing bank UBS, which invested heavily in U.S. subprime mortgage debt. That's more than five times Europe's total commitments to climate finance for developing countries.

The U.S. Congress has not approved a single dollar of contributions to the developing world's climate change efforts. This is in part because the Bush Administration insisted that such financing be channeled through the World Bank, an institution with a poor environmental track record.

All three crises — financial, poverty, and climate — underscore the inter-connectedness of every nation on the globe. Thus, such extremely lopsided spending priorities, if continued, will only come back to haunt the United States and the rest of the global North in the long run. The richer countries not only have an obligation to clean up the messes they've made abroad. It's also in our own interest.

Sarah Anderson is Global Economy Project Director of the Institute for Policy Studies and John Cavanagh is IPS Director. They are co-authors of the report “Skewed Priorities: How the Bailouts Dwarf Other Global Crisis Spending” and Foreign Policy In Focus contributors.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh, "Bailouts Dwarf Spending on Climate and Poverty Crises," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, November 24, 2008).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/5694

Production Information:
Author(s): Sarah Anderson and John Cavanagh
Editor(s): Emily Schwartz Greco
Production: Jen Doak

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name BornFreeMen Date: Nov 25, 2008
Dear Sarah,

More reporting on this issue should be done from a different perspective.

1. The USA Patriot Act and other laws directly benefit law enforcement. They have taken over our country using warrantless surviellance and their stazi police spy network.

2. Follow the money. "The indictment against Cheney alleges that his personal investment in the Vanguard Group, which invests in private prison companies, gives him culpability in alleged prisoner abuse."

Boy, every corner you turn Cheney is involved with torture and abuse, one has to wonder if he is sent the video tapes for home viewing pleasure.

How many corporations and elected officials like Dick Cheney have the inside track to help create laws that have circumvented the Constitution that protects us from government and law enforcement abuses.

In other words, the jails will fill faster because the constitution has been replaced by the Patriot Act, which allows law enforcement to conduct warrantless surviellance and warrantless property searches.

Cha-Ching for Cheney and his Buddies.

Remind me please, who master-minded the Patriot Act, approved billions of dollars for building huge nationwide security-law enforcement /spy network.

The community watch spies do all the dirty work, and law enforcement swoops in makes the arrests. When I say dirty work, I mean they conduct gang stalking surviellance tactics to cause suspects to react in a retaliatory nature. Noise campaigns, mobbing, tail-gating. Law enforcement will tap your phones and internet use, then pass information out to their spy groups which use the information to disrupt the victim's life.

I wonder how many arrests have been made over the last 5 years that involve warrantless surviellance and warrantless property searches in the name of the Patriot Act.

Every time I post, I am made more of a target. Because their plan to ruin and discredit me has failed. And all involved in my warrantless surveillance are now caught in this moral trap. They know what they have done to me was based on lies from a handful of powerful corrupt people that they are afraid to turn into authorities.

That's the America that people like Cheney have molded. He sits on his throne, invested in private prison and War companies, using all of us as he makes money.

BornFreeMen
Surveillance and torture victim/survivor in Bradenton Fl ,,, 24/7 , two years and still running.

Name Henk Date: Nov 25, 2008
One has to have priorities. We know that poverty, hunger and strife will always be with us, but how often in history does one get a chance to bestow mind bogglingly huge piles of cash on a few obscenely wealthy people. Those of us who follow the teachings of Jesus Christ our savior know that this is truly God's will: That the few control the wealth and the many accept what trickles down their pant leg. It is written.
Name economist Date: Nov 26, 2008
Grow up. The poor have never been important except as underpaid peons for the rich to whom the bulk of their wage is paid as profit. The poorer the poor are, the less money they will work for and the more profits will acrue to the rich. Read history and learn
 
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