Thursday, August 3, 2023

AS THE BILLIONAIRE CLASS RAKE IT IN - Another 165 million people join more than one billion in poverty as cost of government debt servicing soars

 THERE'S NOTHING IN AMERICA GROWING FASTER THAN POVERTY!

Another 165 million people join more than one billion in poverty as cost of government debt servicing soars

Figures released by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) reveal the devastating impact on the world’s poorest people of the “polycrisis”.

The term refers to the COVID-19 pandemic, the cost-of-living crisis, inflation, rising interest rates in all the centres of imperialism, the surge in the value of the US dollar, the US-NATO led war in Ukraine against Russia and the fallout from disasters made more catastrophic by climate change.

An internally displaced Afghan child looks for plastic and other items which can be used as a replacement for firewood, at a garbage dump in Kabul, Afghanistan, December 15, 2019. [AP Photo/Altaf Qadri]

Poverty rates, as measured by the number of people living on less than $3.65 a day, have surged over the three-year period 2020-23, with an additional 165 million thrown into poverty.

Worse is to come, according to the UNDP’s new policy brief, “The Human Cost of Inaction: Poverty, Social Protection and Debt Servicing, 2020–2023.” It predicts that the poorest 10 percent of the world’s population will be the only group not to have recovered its pre-pandemic, real terms per capita income by 2023. Within low-income countries the bottom half of the population will remain below pre-pandemic levels.

As well as the reduction in monetary income revealed by the UNDP’s data, there has been a shocking decline in the global Human Development Index (HDI), measuring average achievement in three basic dimensions: a long and healthy life, knowledge, and a decent standard of living. It has declined for two years in a row, for the first time ever.

According to the UNDP’s 2023 survey of 110 of the world’s 195 countries for which data is available on its multidimensional poverty index (MPI), 1.1 billion out of 6.1 billion people (just over 18 percent) live in acute multidimensional poverty, with Sub-Saharan Africa (534 million) and South Asia (389 million) home to approximately five out of every six poor people.

Nearly two-thirds of all poor people (730 million) live in middle-income countries, while 35 percent reside in low-income countries that constitute just 10 percent of the population surveyed. By far the worst affected are the young generation, with children under 18 years old accounting for a staggering half of MPI-poor people (566 million). Some 27.7 percent of children and 13.4 percent of adults are poor. Poverty predominantly affects rural areas across all regions of the world, with 84 percent of the world’s poor living in rural areas.

The long-term implications are staggering. It means that an entire generation of undernourished children suffers chronic illness, performs poorly in school performance and faces low income and a dearth of opportunities. In East Africa alone, over 8 million children under five suffer acute malnutrition. It is these devastating conditions that are fuelling local and regional conflicts and driving those able to flee their homes and migrate in search of an income for their families.

Further exacerbating the crisis, as the UNDP explains, is the level of public debt, on the rise all over the world in the last decades. Global public debt, including both domestic and external debt, has increased more than fivefold since 2000 to reach $92 trillion, compared to global GDP which has tripled over the same period to $101 trillion. Developing countries owe almost 30 percent of the total, of which about 70 percent is attributable to China, India and Brazil.

While interest rates were very low in 2020–2021—as central banks pumped in trillions of dollars to prop up the financial system following the onset of the pandemic—in 2022 the central banks began hiking interest rates at the fastest pace in four decades, in a bid to induce a recession and curb the demands of the working class for pay increases to meet the soaring cost of living. This led to an increase in the value of the US dollar to which many internationally traded commodities are linked, a corresponding surge in inflation and the soaring cost of government debt. This particularly affected poorer countries whose currencies were pegged to the dollar, like Sri Lanka, Lebanon and Egypt.

The vice-like grip in which so many poorer countries are held makes it impossible for their governments to provide the social assistance and public services necessary to withstand poverty, humanitarian crises, emergencies and climate change. According to UNDP, in 2022, 46 countries pay more than 10 percent of government revenue on interest payments, while 25 developing countries—the highest number since 2000—spent more than 20 percent on external debt servicing. The average low-income country spends 11 percent on debt servicing, compared with 3.8 to 4.8 percent in 2011.

Debt servicing is replacing the already meagre amounts spent on health, education and social protection, severely efforts to mitigate loss of income, unemployment and poverty and driving many into destitution. The figures lay bare the ruthless expropriation of the value created by world’s poorest people by the global financial elite.

Low-income countries are on average spending twice as much servicing debt as they spend on social assistance and 1.4 times more than on healthcare, while the cost of debt servicing is typically equal to 60 percent of education expenditure. According to the UN Global Crisis Response Group, 3.3 billion people or 41 percent of the world’s population live in countries that spend more on interest payments than on education or health.

This has also made it impossible for these countries to build infrastructure and implement measures to reduce the impact of climate change.

Following last year’s catastrophic floods in Pakistan, the worst in the country’s history that killed more than 1,700 people and affected 33 million, the government took on more new debt than it received in international humanitarian aid, eating up a massive 40 percent of government revenue.

Achim Steiner, UNDP Administrator, explained, “In highly indebted countries, there is a correlation between high levels of debt, insufficient social spending, and an alarming increase in poverty rates.” Without the measures that some governments took to alleviate the impact of the pandemic, net poverty increases between 2022 and 2023 would have been even higher. “Debt servicing is making it increasingly harder for countries to support their populations through investments in health, education and social protection.”

This has translated, as the UN’s Food and Agriculture “State of Food Insecurity and Nutrition in the World 2023” reports, into up to 783 million people facing hunger in 2022 and 600 million people chronically undernourished by 2030. More than 3.1 billion people (42 percent of the world’s population) were unable to afford a healthy diet in 2021, and 2.4 billion people were moderately or severely food insecure in 2022 (29.6 percent of global population), while food and energy giants more than doubled their profits in 2022.

Not only are the international banks, financial institutions and multilateral lending institutions like the World Bank and International Monetary Fund imposing ever greater hardships on workers and their families as they suck in taxpayers’ money throughout the world, they also charge poorer countries far more than wealthy countries. According to the UN Global Crisis Response Group, African countries borrow at rates four times those of the US and eight times those of Germany.

The turn to private creditors, such as bondholders, banks and other lenders, is more expensive than multilateral and bilateral lenders and the large number of creditors makes it more difficult to restructure to restructure the debt.

The Global Crisis Response Group points out that a “solution” is not out of reach. It calculates that it would cost around $14 billion, or 0.009 percent of global GDP in 2022, to alleviate this latest surge of poverty and lift the 165 million people above $3.65 a day. This is less, on average, than 4 percent of low and middle-income countries’ public external debt service payments of $370 billion in 2022. It is an infinitesimal amount of the wealth of the world’s 2,640 billionaires that has exploded to $12.2 trillion, according to Forbes’ “World’s Billionaires List”, on the back of the COVID-19 crisis and the war in Ukraine.

But the economic system that produces phenomenal wealth for the world’s corporate and financial elite and hunger, poverty and acute suffering for billions will not tolerate such a “solution,” as numerous UN appeals for humanitarian aid that have fallen far short of their targets testify. The elimination of poverty and hunger requires a unified struggle against the entire capitalist system, and for socialism, by workers and rural masses in the richer and poorer countries alike.




New Jersey Farm Ordered to Pay Over Half a Million for Skimming Wages of H-2A Foreign Visa Workers

CALEXICO, CA - JANUARY 22: Farmworkers pick Bok Choy in a field on January 22, 2021 in Calexico, California. , President Joe Biden unveiled an immigration reform proposal offering an eight-year path to citizenship for some 11 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally as well as green cards to upwards …
Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images

A New Jersey farm has been ordered to pay more than half a million in back wages and fines for skimming wages and not providing sanitary housing for foreign H-2A visa workers it imported to take asparagus-cutting jobs.

In October 2019, New Jersey-based Sun Valley Orchards was found to have violated the terms of the H-2A visa program which allows United States farms to import an unlimited number of foreign workers to take agricultural jobs.

Owners of the farm, though, claimed that the Labor Department administrative judge who made the initial decision in the case did not have the authority to do so. Late last week, Judge Joseph Rodriguez ruled that the administrative judge did have the authority.

Subsequently, Sun Valley Orchards must pay nearly $370,000 in back wages to the foreign H-2A visa workers it was found to have mistreated and more than $212,000 in penalties.

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According to the initial ruling, Sun Valley Orchards skimmed the wages of its foreign H-2A visa workers by charging them $75 to $80 per week for food, failing to provide them with sanitary housing, and not giving them proper transportation to their jobs on the asparagus fields.

Also, the contractor who helped place the foreign H-2A visa workers at Sun Valley Orchards had the workers sign departure forms claiming they were leaving their jobs for personal reasons — even though the statement was knowingly false because the workers were leaving their jobs due to a dispute with one of the farm’s owners.

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The decision comes as a handful of Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee have slipped a massive expansion of the H-2A visa program into a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spending bill, Breitbart News reported.

The $91.5 billion spending bill, which must still go before the full House and Senate, loosens H-2A visa rules so that more industries related to the agricultural sector could import foreign workers, and it rewrites the program so that jobs do not have to be seasonal or temporary.

The latest data shows that in the first half of Fiscal Year 2023, which runs from October 2022 through March 2023, U.S. farms imported nearly 200,000 foreign H-2A visa workers — a 10 percent increase in the program compared to the same time last year.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Email him at jbinder@breitbart.com. Follow him on Twitter here

Washington Post: Illegal Migration Jumped 30 Percent in July

Migrants look through donated clothing on a street in downtown El Paso, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 18, 2022. Texas border cities were preparing Sunday for a surge of as many as 5,000 new migrants a day across the U.S.-Mexico border as pandemic-era immigration restrictions expire this week, setting in motion plans …
AP Photo/Andres Leighton

Border migration numbers spiked 30 percent in July amid claims by President Joe Biden’s pro-migration border chief that new policies are reducing illegal migration, according to the Washington Post.

The numbers are revealed by preliminary data collected by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection data, said the Washington Post:

U.S. agents made more than 130,000 arrests along the Mexico border last month, preliminary figures show, up from 99,545 in June.

The inflow has jumped in Arizona, partly because the Texas government is trying to block movement across the Mexico-Texas border, the Post noted:

Large groups of migrants from Mexico, Central America and Africa have been crossing in recent weeks through the deserts west of Nogales, Arizona, to surrender to U.S. agents, straining CBP holding facilities and transportation capacity.

The inflow comes as border officials are being ordered by top officials to not stop or block migrants, but to focus on registering and releasing the migrants into the United States:

The Post‘s report on the July 130,00o number does not reveal how many were excluded, or how many were flown back to their home countries.

The Post also noted that officials invited an additional 50,000 economic migrants to cross the border via the quasi-legal “CPB One” scheduling software:

Authorities allowed an additional 50,000 migrants to cross into the United States in July, primarily through Biden administration programs allowing asylum-seekers to schedule appointments at U.S. ports of entry using the CBP One mobile application.

The Post‘s July 130,000 number also excludes roughly 30,000-plus illegal migrant “gotaways” who sneak across the border, and the roughly 30,000 migrants who are invited to fly from their home countries through the airport parole program.

The additional inflows above the announced 130,000 number deliver at least 100,000 migrants per month into U.S. communities, housing, and workplaces.

But if 100,000 of July’s 130,000 arrivals were allowed to stay by border chief Alejandro Mayorkas, then the July inflow would be roughly 200,000 migrants.

The 200,000 per month would add up to roughly 2.4 million per year. That inflow delivers about two border migrants for every three American births.

Mayorkas repeatedly argues that his welcome policies are justified by “equity” between Americans and migrants and by claims that Americans cannot fill the needed jobs in the U.S. economy. So far, Mayorkas has not indicated when he will stop welcoming migrants, even as Americans’ wages are forced down and their housing prices are forced upwards.

That open-ended welcome policy is quietly supported by many GOP legislators who put the needs of local business leaders ahead of American families and voters.

GOP presidential candidates Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis promise to curb the inflow.

DeSantis described his immigration plan in a July 31 economic speech in New Hampshire:

We need a strong and fair labor market. We have to secure our border, we have to stop illegal immigration, we need to end things like chain migration and the diversity visa lottery. We should not have massive amounts of unskilled migration coming into this country. What we want is immigration that benefits the average American. We don’t want to be bringing people in on programs to undercut wages of American citizens.

“The most important reform needed right now is a total ban on Biden using taxpayer dollars to free illegal aliens — and criminal penalties for administrative noncompliance, which happens every single minute of every single day,” Trump said in December 2022.

Many economic migrants now feel entitled to be released into the United States.

In fact, illegal migrants staged an August 1 protest to demand a faster catch-and-release process so they get to U.S. jobs and homes sooner:

“Every one of these people is inadmissible,” said immigration Mark Krikorian in a tweeted response to the protest. “The Biden crowd has dangled the possibility of entering the US [so] they’re protesting that they’re not being let in fast enough,” said Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies.

“The root cause of the border crisis is napping in the Oval Office,” he added.


US credit downgrade: Another sign of a deepening crisis

The downgrading of the long-term credit rating of the United States by Fitch Ratings Agency on Tuesday is a significant milestone in the historic economic and financial decline of US imperialism, together with the deepening crisis within the American state.

The downgrade reflects the massive surge in the US federal debt, which has been driven by a series of bank and corporate bailouts accompanied by runaway military spending to finance endless wars.

The Fitch downgrade was from AAA rating to AA+, bringing it into line with a similar downgrade by Standard & Poor’s in 2011 following a conflict in Congress during the Obama administration over the lifting of the debt ceiling.

Speaking on behalf of Wall Street, Fitch demanded that the US government respond to the the growing debt crisis with an intensified assault on the social position of the working class through the slashing of social spending.

Fitch complained that “there has been only limited progress in tackling medium-term challenges related to rising Social Security and Medicare costs due to an aging population.”

In other words, while bank bailouts and military spending may have caused the debt crisis, Wall Street’s solution is to impoverish and immiserate the vast majority of the population.

The explosion of US government debt is graphically revealed by forecasts of its size by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).

In 2007, just before the global financial crisis, when illusions in the ongoing strength of the US economy were at their height, the CBO predicted that the federal debt held by the public would fall to 22 percent of GDP in a decade.

It is now around 100 percent, with the CBO predicting that it will rise to 107 percent in 2031.

The growth of debt has been fueled by the deepening crisis of the American economy and financial system.

The financial crisis of 2008 was met with the outlay of hundreds of billions of dollars in corporate bailouts, combined with the injection of money into the financial system by the Federal Reserve under its quantitative easing program. Hundreds of billions of dollars more were handed to the corporations in response to the COVID crisis, as the Fed pumped still more money into the financial markets.

Responding to a series of banking panics this year, the Biden administration effectively implied that all bank deposits would be backstopped by the federal government.

And on top of this, the US has lifted its military spending to record heights, with more increases to come, coupled with subsidies to corporations to reshore their operations to the US, particularly in high-tech areas, as part of its economic warfare against China.

Announcing the decision, Fitch said it had been made because of a “steady deterioration in the standards of governance of the past 20 years.” As if to underscore the point, the announcement was made on the same day that four indictments were issued against former president Trump over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election result.

New York Times report said Biden administration officials had been briefed ahead of the downgrade, where they made their opposition known, and “Fitch representatives repeatedly brought up the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection as an area of concern about US governance.”

In a Financial Times column largely devoted to extracts from the Fitch report, the author noted at the conclusion that “the FT’s metadata tool suggested we tag this under ‘emerging markets.’”

The Fitch downgrade brought strident denunciations from officials in the Biden administration, describing it as “off base,” “absurd” and “widely and correctly ridiculed.”

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the decision was “arbitrary and based on outdated data.”

“Fitch’s decision does not change what Americans, investors, and people all around the world already know: that Treasury securities remain the world’s pre-eminent safe and liquid asset, and that the American economy is fundamentally strong,” she said.

If that really were the case, then the top financial official in the government would not have to say so.

The reality is that the US financial system has been wracked by a series of crises over the past decade and a half.

In 2008, the banking system was on the brink of a meltdown. In March 2020, the US Treasury market froze, such that for several days there were virtually no buyers for US government debt, supposedly the safest and most liquid asset in the world. And in March of this year, the US recorded three of the four largest banking failures in its history.

There are also decisive longer-term processes at work.

In August 1971, the Bretton Woods Agreement—one of the key planks of the post-war monetary system—collapsed when the US removed the gold backing from the US dollar, which had been redeemable at the rate of $35 per ounce.

Since then, the global financial system has operated on the basis of the dollar, functioning as a fiat currency. Not backed by real value in the form of gold, its pre-eminence has depended on two factors: the political stability of the US as the major capitalist power and the strength of its economy and financial system.

Both of these foundations are now in an advanced state of decay.

This situation has major economic and political ramifications. The US has only been able to organise corporate bailouts, pump seemingly endless amounts of money into the financial system and lift military spending to ever-greater records—doing what no other government can do—because of the dollar’s global role.

The Fitch decision is another sign this position is under threat. There are moves by other powers, including China, Brazil, India and Saudi Arabia, to settle trade deals outside the dollar.

Central banks are increasing their purchases of gold as a more secure store of value, and there is the ever-present threat of a crisis in the $25 trillion US Treasury market resulting from a shift out of US government debt.

The US ruling class is responding to this deepening crisis through the escalation of a “war on two fronts:” against the working class at home and Washington’s rivals abroad.

The downgrade will be used, as Fitch indicates with its reference to rising Social Security and Medicare costs, to accelerate the attack on the social position of the working class.

And not only in the US. As the Australian Financial Review noted, the US downgrade is a “wake-up call to other nations in a fiscal mess,” a description that can be applied to governments around the world whose debts have risen to record levels.

The global eruption of US imperialism, expressed most nakedly in the escalation of the war in Ukraine, marks an effort by the United States to shore up its global hegemony, and the preeminence of the US dollar, through military means.

As is always the case, economic crises will be fought out in the class struggle. The working class must respond to the ever-deepening attacks of the ruling class by developing its political struggle for an international socialist program and the building of the revolutionary party to fight for it.

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