Rasta TimesCHAT ROOMArticles/ArchiveRaceAndHistory RootsWomen Trinicenter
Africa Speaks.com Africa Speaks HomepageAfrica Speaks.comAfrica Speaks.comAfrica Speaks.com
InteractiveLeslie VibesAyanna RootsRas TyehimbaTriniView.comGeneral Forums
*
Home
Help
Login
Register
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
May 18, 2024, 11:24:51 AM

Login with username, password and session length
Search:     Advanced search
25912 Posts in 9968 Topics by 982 Members Latest Member: - Ferguson Most online today: 27 (July 03, 2005, 06:25:30 PM)
+  Africa Speaks Reasoning Forum
|-+  WORLD HOT SPOTS
| |-+  Around the World (Moderators: Tyehimba, leslie)
| | |-+  Britain Proposes Debt Relief to Nations
« previous next »
Pages: [1] Print
Author Topic: Britain Proposes Debt Relief to Nations  (Read 7758 times)
Oshun_Auset
Senior Member
****
Posts: 605


« on: September 27, 2004, 11:19:38 AM »

Hmmm.....

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040926/ap_on_bi_ge/britain_debt_4

Britain Proposes Debt Relief to Nations

Sun Sep 26, 1:51 PM ET  Add Business - AP to My Yahoo!


By ED JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

BRIGHTON, England - Britain will provide more debt relief for the world's poorest countries and challenge other rich countries to do the same, Prime Minister Tony Blair (news - web sites)'s government said Sunday.


Treasury chief Gordon Brown said many developing countries were crippled by servicing their debt and could not invest in their infrastructure.


"We will pay our share of the multilateral debt repayments of reforming low-income countries," Brown said in a statement, released by the Department of International Development.


"We will make payments in their stead to the World Bank (news - web sites) and African Development Bank for the portion that relates to Britain's share of this debt. We do this alone today but I urge other countries to follow so that over indebted countries are relieved of the burden of servicing all unpayable multilateral debt."


Brown was scheduled to reveal further details in a speech later Sunday to a "Vote for Trade Justice" event at a church in Brighton, the coastal town where the governing Labour Party is holding its annual conference.


Britain holds about 10 percent of the total debt owed to the World Bank and other development banks, or about 7 percent of all the debt of the world's poorest nations.


Britain's Development Secretary Hilary Benn said poor countries needed "significant additional resources" to "lift people out of poverty, get children into primary schools and improve basic health."


"Debt relief is an efficient way of transferring these resources to countries that can use them most effectively," he said in the statement. "We call on other governments, especially our G-8 partners, to join us so that no country is held back by the burden of unsustainable debt."


To be eligible for the debt relief, countries must be able to show the savings will be used to meet the goals of the 2000 Millennium Summit. Those goals include halving the number of people living in dire poverty from 2000 levels; ensuring that all children have an elementary school education; ensuring that all families have clean water; and halting the AIDS (news - web sites) epidemic — all by 2015.


The list of countries will include those that have been through the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative: Benin, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guyana, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Niger, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda, as well as a number of other countries such as Vietnam and Armenia, where the World Bank has assessed the countries are capable of absorbing direct budget support, the statement said.


Britain also called for debt payments owed to the International Monetary Fund (news - web sites) to be funded through the more efficient use of IMF (news - web sites) gold reserves.
Logged

Forward to a united Africa!
iyah360
Junior Member
**
Posts: 592

Higher Reasoning


« Reply #1 on: September 27, 2004, 03:11:15 PM »

Interesting. It says "We will make payments in their stead to the World Bank and African Development Bank for the portion that relates to Britain's share of this debt."

Question is - who owns the credit? The U.S. pays interest on the money it creates to a private organization called the Federal Reserve bank.

So who really is at the top of the "food chain"?

Logged
Oshun_Auset
Senior Member
****
Posts: 605


« Reply #2 on: September 28, 2004, 02:11:08 PM »

Exactly,

"Debt relief", if the same draconian privatization and social cuts are demanded for qualification, which of course is the plan, because that is the only way the West can still remain the financial benefactor of such a move, is just another name for "IMF Aid loans". This was the case with the failure of Argentina to pay its debts. Argentina is now entirely privatized as a country and has been taken over by businesses sanctioned by the IMF.

The form, or in this case the name has changed but the essense remains the same. The IMF and World Bank tactics remind me in essense of an economic version of post slavery Sharecropping.

IMHO the so-called 3rd world countries should refuse to pay the debt and also should ignore the IMF mandates made when the so-called "Aid" was given in the first place...It's not like the former colonizers, a.k.a. the G-8 countries, returned land or natural resources(AKA stolen wealth) after the end of colonization...So why should the so-called 3rd world keep their end of an unfair bargain. They should follow the example the U.S. gave on how they honor legal contracts with the Native Americans...all 371 treaties they made...none honored. Sounds fair to me.

Only in a capitalist paradaigm could the G-8 countries lending the wealth back to the people they stole it from in the first place, with interest, make any sense...

Like the anti-cigarette smoking TV commercials funded by the tobacco companiy Phillip-Morris say..."Welcome to crazy world."
Logged

Forward to a united Africa!
Pages: [1] Print 
« previous next »
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines
Copyright © 2001-2005 AfricaSpeaks.com and RastafariSpeaks.com
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!