Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Bank of the South: vamos a ver

Celebrating May Day, Hugo Chávez announced that Venezuela is severing ties with the World Bank and IMF. President Correa of Ecuador has also said he will cut ties to the IMF, and Daniel Ortega is aiming for the same.

The question is whether the proposed “Bank of the South” can get off the ground and become an alternative to those institutions. In March, the foreigner ministers of Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Venezuela put together the structure, with plans for a first loan (to Bolivia) later in the year. Brazil has expressed interest but has not yet committed.

Obviously, we’ll just have to see how it works in practice. Can it generate enough capital to replace U.S.-dominated institutions? Will more countries sign on? Will it be multilateral, or primarily a Venezuelan affair? Would it loan to countries with governments opposed to Chávez? Can it do any worse than the IMF?

3 comments:

Miguel Centellas 8:25 AM  

Can it generate enough capital to replace U.S.-dominated institutions? Will more countries sign on? Will it be multilateral, or primarily a Venezuelan affair? Would it loan to countries with governments opposed to Chávez? Can it do any worse than the IMF?

I think the answers to your questions are: no, maybe, Venezuelan (until the price of oil drops), no, and yes (especially after the price of oil drops).

Greg Weeks 8:38 AM  

Yes, it goes without saying that cash from Venezuelan oil is critical to the entire endeavor. For the last question, though, I was thinking more in terms of the effects of its loans/projects on the average person.

Justin Delacour 2:11 PM  

"For the last question, though, I was thinking more in terms of the effects of its loans/projects on the average person."

Let's be honest. The neoliberals aren't interested in what's good for the average person. They're interested in what's good for U.S. and Latin American elites. If someone's first priority --however disguised-- is to preserve existing class relations in Latin America, he or she will naturally see the Bank of South as potentially "worse than the IMF."

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