Oil-linked inflation
destabilizes Africa, Middle East
(http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/mar2008/infl-m05.shtml)
(http://www.wsws.org/)
By Alex
Lantier
5 March 2008
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Writing in 1845 in The German
Ideology, the young Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels noted,
“It is certainly an empirical
fact that separate individuals
have, with the broadening of
their activity into
world-historical activity,
become more and more enslaved
under a power alien to them
[...] which has become more and
more enormous and, in the last
instance, turns out to be the
world market.”
The
economic instability and social
struggles breaking out in large
parts of Africa and the Middle
East over price inflation bear
out this famous analysis. The
financial shockwaves spread by
the crisis of US imperialism—the
fall of the dollar amid the US
mortgage crisis, and the
explosion of the world market
price of a barrel of oil from
$23 in 2002 to the present $103,
after the 2003 US-led invasion
of Iraq—are shaking the entire
region.
Not
only are fuel prices affected,
but the rise in petroleum prices
is pushing up food prices, which
are closely dependent on the
prices of energy, transport, and
fertilizers, the component parts
of which are produced from
natural gas, the prices of which
are in turn heavily affected by
oil prices.
The
origins and effects of this
inflation should be noted:
investors and firms in key areas
of the economy (notably the oil
sector) are responding to
increased economic uncertainty
by rapidly bidding up the prices
for their goods. They are
attempting to deal with the
world financial crisis by
placing the burden on the backs
of the working class. As workers
struggle to get by with fewer
goods while working more jobs,
these investors and firms are
carrying out a huge transfer of
real wealth away from the
working masses.
For
oil-importing countries, state
budget deficits have increased
dramatically, as the cost of
providing national fuel
subsidies has risen with oil
prices. On February 8 the
Jordanian parliament voted to
eliminate fuel subsidies and
subsidies on certain grains,
such as barley. According to the
Jordan Times, the
elimination of subsidies would
help decrease a budget deficit
of $1.3 billion (7.1 percent of
GDP) by $983 million. The
government promised to
distribute $427 million to
“poorer Jordanians” to help them
deal with the price increases.
Domestic fuel and kerosene
prices jumped 76 percent upon
passage of the law. In the month
since the law was passed, the
prices of several basic
foodstuffs have doubled. Ratings
agency Standard and Poor’s
predicted that Jordan’s 2008
inflation rate would be around
10 percent, as fuel prices
increase the cost of living.
A
February 25 New York Times
article, “Rising Inflation
Creates Unease in Middle East,”
noted, “Officials or business
owners artificially inflate
prices or take a cut of such
increases.” The Times
interviewed former Economy
Minister Samer Tawil, who said:
“Oil, cement, rice, meat, sugar:
these are all imported almost
exclusively by one importer each
here. Corruption is one thing
when it’s about building a road,
but when it affects my food,
it’s different.”
A
clothing store employee in Amman
told the Times, “No one
can be in government now and be
clean.” Describing the doubling
of potato and egg prices, he
said, “These were always the
basics. Now they’re luxuries.”
Neighboring Syria is also
considering abolishing fuel
subsidies. Its official
inflation rate last year was 5.5
percent. However, according to a
February 2008 report from the UN
Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, prices for
key fruits and vegetables have
doubled over the last year, with
rents also rising quickly. It
quoted a Syrian civil servant
who explained that his monthly
costs had roughly doubled to
20,000 Syrian pounds (US$400)
over the last two years.
Oil-producing countries also
face spiraling inflation, due to
both global and local factors.
Most of those countries’ oil is
sold in dollars, but most of
their trade is conducted with
European and Asian countries
whose currencies are rising
against the US dollar. Also, the
unequal division of oil revenues
between the ruling classes and
the rest of the population in
these countries aggravate
financial difficulties. Large
portions of the new oil revenues
languish in the inflated bank
accounts of various kings and
dictators, squeezing the masses’
purchasing power.
Inflation in Iran has oscillated
between 12 and 17 percent since
2003 and has become an important
issue in the March 2008
legislative elections. President
Mahmoud Ahmedinejad told the
press, “Over the last 18 months,
the rise in oil prices has
increased national revenues but
in the same period world prices
have increased. And our economy
is greatly dependent on
imports.” He added the price of
Iranian imports had increased by
16 percent over the last year.
The
United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based
Khaleej Times cited
Iranian Central Bank director
Tahmasb Mazaheri: “When the
country’s objectives are based
on an inflation rate of 8
percent, reaching 20 percent,
for which the country is
unprepared, it is worrisome.
[...] Liquidity injected into
the economy has led to increased
inflation rather than rising
employment.”
Inflation has also grown rapidly
in the Persian Gulf monarchies,
notably Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
The Arab Times recently
reported that rising Saudi
inflation hit an annualized rate
of 7 percent in January 2008,
its highest point since 1981.
There has been a 17 percent
increase in rents over the last
year along with large-scale
price hikes in food, of which
Saudi Arabia must import 65
percent of its consumption.
According to the UAE-based
Arabian Business, 2007
inflation in the UAE was 11
percent—with food prices jumping
8 percent and rents accounting
for about two-thirds of price
increases.
In a
bid to contain discontent, the
UAE announced a 70 percent raise
in its public sector workers’
salaries in February 2007; Oman
raised them by 43 percent.
However, this does not address
the difficulties of private
sector workers.
Price inflation is eating into
the earnings of the massive
numbers of foreign workers who
power the highly strategic oil
and construction sectors of the
Gulf economies, and who send
cash home to their families. Not
only do workers face decreased
earnings in local currencies due
to inflation, but these
currencies—pegged to the US
dollar—are falling in value
against their home currencies in
India, Pakistan, etc. This has
led to a sharp increase in
militancy in these highly
oppressed sections of the
working class.
In
Dubai, a UAE emirate,
construction of the Burj Dubai,
the tallest building in the
world, has been interrupted in
2006 and 2007 by strikes and
protests by workers demanding
improved pay, housing, and
conditions. Forty-five Indian
workers were recently tried for
organizing the protests. Unions
and strike action are illegal in
Dubai, and the workers face 6
months in prison, then
deportation back to India.
Strikes have also hit Bahrain,
where 1200 mostly Indian workers
won a wage increase after a
weeklong strike. Jane Kinnimount
of the Economist Intelligence
Unit told the BBC: “The recent
strike in Bahrain was
essentially about low wages.
[...] Some Indian workers are
paid as little as $160 a month
for a six or seven-day week,
whereas the average national is
paid seven times as much.”
Workers complain of being worked
so hard that several workers per
work site suffer from heat
exhaustion on a typical day.
In
December 2007, a group of 19
prominent Saudi clerics,
including the prominent
conservative Nasser al-Omar,
addressed an open letter to the
Saudi monarchy, criticizing it
for its handling of inflation
and in particular for pegging
its currency to the US dollar.
In repeated comments, however,
Saudi Central Bank Governor
Hamad al-Sayari reiterated his
support for the peg of the Saudi
riyal to the US dollar,
criticizing “easy solutions” to
the inflation problem.
Underlying the Saudi Central
Bank’s decision are complex
geopolitical factors tied to the
crisis of American capitalism.
The riyal is pegged to the
dollar because Saudi Arabia’s
foreign currency earnings
overwhelmingly come from oil
sales, in markets currently
denominated in US dollars.
Removing the riyal’s peg to the
dollar could only take place in
the context of a decision by
Saudi Arabia to denominate its
oil sales in other currencies.
Such
a shift would have massive
implications for the US. The
American balance-of-payments
deficit is financed largely by
foreign investors, who use the
dollars they buy on US debt
markets to purchase goods and
raw materials on
dollar-denominated world markets
for oil and other essential
commodities. Absent the need to
hold dollars for purchases on
world markets, demand for US
dollars would fall
substantially, threatening a
further collapse of the US
dollar’s value and a crisis in
the US’ ability to finance its
foreign trade.
The
growing integration of Africa
into world trade, particularly
as a source of oil and metals,
is increasingly producing social
and financial effects in Africa
similar to those in the Middle
East.
The
International Monetary Fund’s (IMF)
2006 Regional Economic
Outlook for Sub-Saharan
Africa gives statistics
detailing the remarkable
dependency of oil-exporting
African countries on their oil
revenues. Among eight
petroleum-exporting African
countries (Ivory Coast,
Cameroon, Chad, Gabon, Nigeria,
Angola, the Democratic Republic
of Congo, and Equatorial Guinea)
the percentage of real GDP
generated by the oil revenues
was under 5 percent for the
Ivory Coast, but 10, 40, 50, 52,
55, 60, and 90 percent
respectively for the remaining
countries. Overall inflation in
those countries was 13.5 percent
in 2005.
Violent demonstrations against
price hikes rocked Cameroon and
Burkina Faso last week. In
Cameroon, strikes by taxi
drivers and transport workers
against fuel hikes turned into
street battles against police
and then army units, as
President Paul Biya announced
that he intended to modify the
Constitution to allow him to
remain longer in power. Strikes
shut down Douala, the main port
city on the Atlantic coast, and
Yaoundé, the capital, as well as
several smaller towns in western
Cameroon.
Twenty people were killed in the
demonstrations, according to the
government. The government
denied widespread reports by
eyewitnesses, published in the
European media, that the victims
had been shot by government
troops.
In
Burkina Faso, February 28
demonstrations planned by the
Popular Call for Democracy led
to street violence and attacks
on government buildings in the
capital, Ouagadougou, as well as
Bobodioulasso, Banfora, and
Ouahigouya. The government
carried out hundreds of arrests,
but also announced that it would
seek negotiations with local
producers to bring down the
price of sugar and cooking oil,
which had increased by 10 to 65
percent in different parts of
the country.
The
week before, violent
demonstrations had led the
government to announce a
moratorium on import taxes of
imported staples like rice,
milk, flour, and salt.
See Also:
A superficial analysis of
global capitalism
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of
Disaster Capitalism by Naomi
Klein, Allen Lane: 2007
[28 February 2008]
Mining firms impose huge price
hike on Chinese steelmakers: a
sign of global inflation
[27 February 2008]
Food prices continue to rise
worldwide
[25 February 2008]
The world crisis of capitalism
and the prospects for socialism
[31 January 2008]
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