What do
Indonesia's General Suharto and Italy's Silvio Berlusconi have in common? Both
were corrupt national leaders who stayed in office too long and finally lost
power as a result of financial crises. These kinds of crises are ugly and
painful, but often bring about overdue reforms and lead to positive long-term
outcomes. As you might have heard your doctor say, "this might hurt a
little." But do you run out of the doctor's office, or take the pain to
get the gain?
In the
middle of a financial crisis, things look pretty alarming. Earlier this week,
Dan Drezner referred to "the collapse of the euro and maybe the entire
global economic system." But the pain and fear are what catalyzes change.
The "creative destruction" of capitalist crashes, described by economist
Joseph Schumpeter, has its political equivalent. Barack Obama owes his
presidency in no small part to an economic collapse caused by the previous
administration's unwise policies (like going to war while cutting taxes).
Others have also found openings for change and reform when things fall apart.
Consider
the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which tore through Thailand, Indonesia, and
South Korea like an unstoppable tsunami. In Indonesia the collapse of the
currency led directly to inflation, and thus popular unrest, that unseated the
dictator Suharto after more than 30 years in power. Since then East Timor
became independent, a peace agreement ended the secessionist war in Aceh
province, and Indonesia has developed a pretty robust democracy and solid economy
that survived the global recession in good shape and has resumed 6 percent
growth.
In 1997,
South Korea, still in transition after decades of military dictatorship, had a
terrible economic setback. The currency fell dramatically, economic growth reversed
and went negative, and people across the country suffered. But in short order
the country elected a new reformist president, opposition leader Kim Dae Jung,
and got onto a better path. Look back at the graph of South Korea's economic
growth now, 15 years later, and you see just a short drop and a return, four
years later, to the same impressively steep growth rate that made South Korea
an economic miracle. (GDP per person has grown from about $6,000 to $25,000 in
the last 30 years.)
Remember
Argentina in 2001-02? It had a massive debt crisis, so big that experts feared
it might default and send the world's financial system into a meltdown. Well,
it did default on $132 billion in sovereign debt, but the global capitalist
system took it in stride. In 2003, Nestor Kirchner took over as president and
has presided over an impressive period of recovery and growth. The banks got
screwed -- in 2005 they were offered a take-it-or-leave-it deal for less than
30 cents on the dollar for Argentina's debt, and most took it. But am I crying
big tears for the poor banks? Nope.
Greece
needed a new government and it got one. As prime minister, the technocrat Lucas
Papademos this week replaces the old politico George Papandreou whose
grandfather and father were prime minister before him. I mean, enough is
enough. It was all high-drama politics, and a big mess, but look what came out
of it -- change.
Italy has
needed a new government for quite a while, and it too will get one. And the
European Union has needed a new way to deal with the contradiction at the heart
of the euro currency -- the crazy idea that sovereign states can control their
individual fiscal policies (taxation and budgets) while merging their monetary
policies (currency and inflation). I don't know what solution is going to
emerge, but I do know that it won't happen without the kind of big crisis we're
in the middle of now.
Folks, this
is the way the world works. Change is not incremental and it doesn't happen
when everything's going smoothly. Small comfort, perhaps, if you're unemployed
or can't afford spiraling prices, or just lost your savings in a stock market
crash. But in the long run, it's for the best -- just ask the people in
Indonesia or Argentina. In the short term, though, this might hurt a little.
Related Article:
"What's Going to Happen?" - Oct 19 2011 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Caroll)
(Subjects: The Humanization of God, Re-calibration, Shift of Human Consciousness, Financial Institutes (Recession, System to Change ...), (Old) Souls, 21-12-2012, Gaia, Hawaii (Lemuria), All Dictators to fall, Old Politics, Old and New energy, Higher self, 1 - No fear, 2 - Compassion, 3 - Change Attitude (Expect positive outcome), 4 - Believe the Truth of DNA/Akashic records, 11:11, Master Christ, Reincarnation, Global Unity,..... etc.) - New !
(Subjects: The Humanization of God, Re-calibration, Shift of Human Consciousness, Financial Institutes (Recession, System to Change ...), (Old) Souls, 21-12-2012, Gaia, Hawaii (Lemuria), All Dictators to fall, Old Politics, Old and New energy, Higher self, 1 - No fear, 2 - Compassion, 3 - Change Attitude (Expect positive outcome), 4 - Believe the Truth of DNA/Akashic records, 11:11, Master Christ, Reincarnation, Global Unity,..... etc.) - New !
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