Doug Henwood wrote:
> Thomas Seay wrote:
>
> >In Empire, Negri and Hardt posit that there is no
> >outside to Empire...we are all embedded in the nexus
> >of global capital and there is no longer an escape
> >route through a struggle known as "national
> >liberation".
> >
> >Now we have seen a heroic revolt in Argentina this
> >week, but one has to wonder how even the best
> >intentioned group that came to power could free the
> >country from the clamps of the IMF and World Bank. Is
> >it possible or impossible...and what are the political
> >implications of this? I would like to hear from
> >everyone but am especially interested in the
> >economists perspectives.
>
> Argentina's room for maneuver is very limited. It's a small country
> with big debts. It has less wiggle room than a larger country, like
> Brazil. If it were to default as a conscious, explictly rebellious
> strategy, it would be screwed - frozen out of global markets, unable
> to finance the import of basic goods. Without a change in the
> creditor countries, or without the formation of a serious and large
> debtors' cartel, there's not much the Argentinas of the world can do.
>
> One alternative is gone - the USSR. All you anti-Soviet lefties - as
> much as I sympathize with your critique of the USSR - don't talk much
> about the international role of actually existing socialism. Without
> it, it's gone from difficult to impossible for poor countries to do
> something revolutionary. For all the problems of Cuba, it's still a
> helluva lot better than Haiti, and it wouldn't be had it not been for
> 30 years of Soviet subsdies.
>
> Doug