Global Capital, Empire and Argentina

Juan Jose Barrios jota at netgate.com.uy
Sat Dec 22 15:57:00 PST 2001


what you say is half true, which sometimes it ends up as a big lie ....no intentions, of course. But Argentina is a relatively closed country which has traditioanlly relied upon domestic demand. We cannot expect nothing from the world (except if the conspiracy theory holds true), so the only way out is domestic demand. You noee to work on poverty (urgent!!! food for the hungry!!), the exchange rate (to recover competitivness) and on income distribution (to boost aggregate demand). Easy to say, I admit. On the long run, a more participatory society is needed; changes in election procedures and people's participation. Again, the main problem is strong leadership whish is lacking.-jj

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



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list