FEBRUARY 18, 2015 JC COLLINS 1 COMMENT
DEVELOPMENT GOALS OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER
(Or the Rise of the
Supra-Multilateral Development Bank)
By JC Collins
For lack of a better term,
the European banking structure is about to be gutted and the direct management
of the system will be given to the European Stability Mechanism. This statement
is not made flippantly or without regard to the facts and macroprudential policies
which are being implemented globally.
As an extension of the post
titled BRICS SDR to Bailout Eurozone, this installment will provide more detail on
why the European Monetary Union is in the cross hairs for 2015 and how all
paths towards the multilateral framework have now arrived at the systemic
bottleneck called the Pillars of Hercules.
In addition, we will
explore how the International Monetary Fund will move past the 2010 Quota and
Governance Reforms and evolve into a Supra-Fund with the help of the BRICS
Development Bank and other Multilateral Development Banks, or MDB’s. But not
before discussing how American interests will be sidestepped, not just on IMF
Reform, but also to ensure the Chinese yuan is included in the SDR basket by
January, 2016.
While Europe will be the
first mover in the transition to the multilateral financial system it will be
soon followed by America in 2016. The American resistance to the 2010
Reforms which had been previously agreed upon has lead the other members of the
fund and the G20 to prepare alternative measures in order to bring a more
balanced structure to the international monetary architecture.
In January of 2015 the
Peterson Institute for International Economics published a policy brief titled What Next for the IMF? The paper was authored by Edwin M. Truman
and contains some enlightening concepts on how the quota and governance reforms
could continue without the consent of the United States.
In brief, the paper
discusses how the other members of the IMF could put in place an alternative
reform package which not only would bypass American participation, but also
eliminate the veto held since the funds inception. I find the best way to view
this alternative is to imagine that the existing framework and governance
structure of the IMF is copied and pasted. The original version stays the same
and the copied and pasted version is adjusted to not just reflect the initial
2010 reforms, but will include additional measures to reduce the American
influence.
This “new” version of the
fund would establish a sort of Supra-Fund which operates separately from the
source fund but is still fundamentally linked to the mechanics of the
original. The Supra-Fund would be regulated under the same systemic
procedures and governance obligations as the source fund, but would see majority
voting reduced from the current 85% to 70%, which would reflect the
economic realities of the emerging economies.
Eventually the new fund
would expand larger than the source fund, making the original fund
redundant. The full transformation would be complete by March, 2016, when
the NAB, or New Arrangements to Borrow, is replaced by the updated quota
amounts of the Supra-Fund.
It’s important to remember
that the original 2010 Quota and Governance Reforms were meant to reduce the
leverage of Western Europe on the IMF Executive Board while increasing the
leverage of the emerging economies, such as China and Russia, and to a larger
extent the BRICS countries as a whole.
Since Europe is the region
of the world which has the most over-represented allowance in the current
governance structure, we can expect that any alternative reforms which will be
represented in the form of a Supra-Fund will also reduce the representation of
Western Europe.
We will discuss this
decreased European representation further along in the post, but as we continue
consider the possible connections between the geopolitical proxy drama
unfolding over Ukraine between the United States and Russia, and the
multilateral transition which we are reviewing.
In the post War & Petroleum Reserves we contemplated the possibility of a
larger war breaking out over Ukraine, or possibly the proxy fighting taking
place in Syria, and the larger region of the Middle East. The fact that
both proxy wars in Ukraine and Syria are between America and Russia is not a
coincidence, as the representation and leverage of Europe is about to be
dramatically reduced. I’m beginning to think of Europe as the swing vote, or
minority, in the multilateral structure, and both the West and East would very
much like to secure their alliance with the swing vote holder.
In May of this year there
will be an “informal” review of the SDR composition followed by the official
review in the fall, likely near the end of October. Any changes to the
SDR composition will be implemented in January, 2016. The required votes to
make these changes will be reduced from the current 85% majority vote to the
new 70% majority vote on the IMF Executive Board.
Please reference back to
the 70% majority vote which will be implemented in the Supra-Fund governance
structure. This percentage is not thrown around randomly and it keeps turning
up in further research on IMF alternative reforms and SDR composition changes.
Based on the reluctance of
the US Congress to pass legislation supporting the 2010 Quota and Governance
Reforms, we can expect that any inclusion of the Chinese yuan in the SDR
composition, which is fully expected, will follow the same Supra-Fund process
as detailed above, with the SDR existing in two forms, one associated and tied
to the original source fund, without the yuan, and the other structurally
integrated within the governance and framework of the Supra-Fund, with the
yuan.
As with both funds, the
original SDR will eventually be replaced by the Supra-SDR.
During the last SDR
evaluation five years ago the argument was made that the yuan was not freely
convertible and could not be included in the basket composition. That
argument has now been made irrelevant as China’s currency is now ranked in the
top 5 most Traded Currencies.
The fragmentation of the
euro currency will make room in the SDR composition for the Chinese
yuan. The European Monetary Union itself will remain fundamentally
intact, but the move back into domestic currencies will happen as the banking
failure in Europe spreads from Greece, through Germany, and moves westward towards
the beaches of Normandy.
This brings us to the last
segment of this post, in where we discuss the rise of Multilateral Development
Banks and how the IMF Supra-Fund will likely take on the characteristics of a
Supra-Multilateral Development Bank.
The world has numerous
regional development banks, which are as follows:
- African Development Bank
- Asian Development Bank
- European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development
- Inter-American Development Bank
- Islamic Development Bank
- World Bank Group
- European Investment Bank
- International Fund for Agricultural Development
- Development Bank of Latin America
The above list of MDB’s are
made up of member countries which have both lender and borrower status. There
are some “sub-regional” Multilateral Development Banks which are designated as
borrower only, such as the Eurasian Development Bank. This means that
these banks, supported by member countries, cannot make loans but only accept
loans from the larger regional MDB’s listed above.
This is telling us
something extremely important when it comes to the current Greece and Eurozone
crisis. The MDB’s offer funding which is outside of the international capital
markets, and as such can provide lower interest rates than what is available in
the capital markets, or even US Treasury bonds.
The emerging and developing
economies have large Foreign Exchange reserves which can be
“invested” and loaned through the Multilateral Development Bank
structure. These loans can be used to help European countries as the
systemic banking failure in the Eurozone spreads and alternative sources of
liquidity are required.
There are two MDB’s which
are not on the above list, and they are:
- The BRICS New
Development Bank, established July, 2014, and expected to be operational
by 2016, just in time for the emergence of the Supra-Fund and Supra-SDR.
- The Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank, established in October, 2014.
The emerging multilateral
architecture is integrating itself within the existing governance structure and
will make adjustments as it begins to rise upward, allowing for the old
governance structure to fall away underneath it. This is the same process
we discussed above as the new pasted and copied IMF fund will eventually
supersede the original source. Like Hercules collapsing the world which came
before, the pillars of the unipolar USD world well crumble under the strength
of the multilateral self-imposed demigods.
From the Global Economic Governance policy brief titled:
Securing the Future of
Multilateral Development Finance: Time for Europe to Take the Initiative
European countries could
take the lead by collectively allowing special capital increases in the
traditional development banks – including the World Bank and African
Development Bank – that would give rising powers (BRICS – JC) shares
that reflect their growing economic weight. This would secure much greater
buy-in from these countries. Paradoxically it might also benefit Europe.
Radical consolidation of the presently fragmented and excessive number of
European Chairs would make for a more coordinated European position, and
increase Europe’s legitimacy in the eyes of rising powers, ultimately
strengthening the voice of European representation.
RECOMMENDATIONS:
European countries should:
- Signal support for
initiatives that would allow emerging economies to increase their shares
and votes in the ‘old’ development banks in line with their growing
economic weight, accepting reductions in relative European shares again
reflecting changing economic realities
- Radically consolidate
the currently fragmented and excessive number of European Chairs.
Emerging economies, as the
major shareholders of new development banks, should:
- Ensure that these
banks use appropriate, evidence-based, technical, economic, institutional,
environmental and social appraisal to ensure loans support sustainable
development.
This information from the
official policy papers of the global institutions should suffice as supporting
evidence to our ongoing thesis. The original proposition in the post BRICS SDR to Bailout Eurozone has been validated and supported by the
information provided here. The dots are now more easily connected as we
move forward in to the spring and the deeper deflation which awaits the global
economy.
In closing, I’d like to
briefly touch on the Millennium Development Goals for 2015 as designated by the
United Nations. These goals were established back in the year 2000 and
were meant to be completed by the end of 2015. They are:
- Eradicate Extreme Poverty and Hunger
- Achieve Universal Primary Education
- Promote Gender
Equality and Empower Women
- Reduce Child Mortality
- Improve Maternal Health
- Combat HIV/AIDS,
Malaria, and other Diseases
- Ensure Environmental Sustainability
- Develop a Global
Partnership for Development
The last item is what we
have been specifically focused on with our analysis and thesis on the
multilateral financial and governance structure.
It’s hard not to look at
the above list and see the mandates of our mass media over the last 15 years.
Almost every item on that list has been culturally and socioeconomically
engineered and packaged to the disorganized masses through our television programing, Hollywood productions,
educational curriculum, music, and all other CSI points across the conscious
and subconscious spectrum.
We also cannot discount or
ignore the role of the alternative media in distracting the aware masses away
from the systemic process of this transition. There are a multitude of
so-called alternative and freedom reporters, as well as economic and
geopolitical analysts, who are attempting to promote and spread a script of good
guys versus bad guys storyline. The obvious nature of these “operations”
and “characters” can be found in their reluctance to provide much in the way of
factual evidence, and to a larger extent, they ignore the vast amount of
official and supporting evidence which we cover here.
While everyone is waiting
for the BRICS countries to save the world from the evil international bankers,
the framework of the new global governance structure is being constructed right
in front of us. As Edwin Truman states in his latest policy brief:
“The international
community must therefore prepare for the likelihood of a new world order, in
which the IMF augments its funding and reforms its governing structure without
the full US participation… The US leadership role would not be so much reduced
as abandoned in a self-inflicted wound.”
The United Nations is set
to announce a new set of Development Goals for the years after 2015. We
should see them announced in the next few months. In the meantime, watch
the official video below on the Millennium Development Goals, complete with the
eye of providence. – JC
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