15 Jun 2015

Canadian Medicare and the Retirement Conundrum

MURRAY DOBBIN

Powell River, British Columbia.
There’s been lots of attention paid recently to the Canada Pension Plan and how to extend it, and news stories and commentary about how adequate or otherwise Canadians’ retirement situation will be. The sunshine boys over at the C.D. Howe Institute (a.k.a. the Isn’t Capitalism Wonderful Institute, or ICWI) reassure us that everything is fine and we should just ignore all the warnings. The author of one ICWI study observes: “Canadians frequently read that they borrow too much, spend too much, save too little, retire too early and live too long.”
Well, yes, they are told that because it is regrettably true. Personal debt levels are at a record high of 163 per cent of after-tax yearly income, savings rates are a small fraction of what they were in the 1970s and ’80s, and low interest rates (trying to goose a system that has now adjusted to goosing) has given them license to borrow madly off in all directions. According to a 2014 BMO Rainy Day report, “Three in 10 Canadians are living paycheque to paycheque or spending more than they earn… Forty-seven per cent of Canadians said they have enough to cover three months or less… One in five — 19 per cent — have less than $1,000.” The 2014 survey of employees by the Canadian Payroll Association (CPA) “shows more people are overwhelmed by their debt, are saving less and would face real hardship if their paycheque was delayed by a single week… Just over half, or 51 per cent, of the 3,211 employees surveyed by the CPA said it would be tough to make ends meet if their paycheque was delayed by one week.”
Between 1980 and 2005, the actual dollar (after inflation) increase in annual income in Canada was $52 — that’s right, just $2 a year. But I guess you could save that.
Enough about the brutal facts that everyone except the folks at the ICWI know about. Whatever is done with the CPP — however much wages may or may not increase and however we deal with the 17 per cent of mortgage holders who will be under water if interest rates go up two per cent — there is another elephant in the room. It’s called Medicare — or, if you’ve been paying attention, the threat to Medicare.
When actuaries and economists work out their retirement numbers, they do so with a bunch of working assumptions. But if the plan for Medicare designed by our prime minister is actually carried out (and the numerous other threats materialize), there is one very large assumption that will be patently false. Medicare allows everyone, including the one per cent, to lop off a big chunk from their retirement needs. In the U.S., private health insurance costs the average American family $15,000 a year — and even that covers only a portion of costs.
A U.S. study, “Get Sick, Get Out: The Medical Causes of Home Mortgage Foreclosures,” shows just how devastating sickness can be without public healthcare. “Half of all respondents (49 per cent) indicated that their foreclosure was caused in part by a medical problem.” The study also examined the impact of medical disruptions — large, out-of-pocket health payments, loss of work due to medical issues, and those tapping into home equity to pay medical bills. Sixty-nine percent of respondents reported at least one of these factors.
Medicare isn’t dead yet, you say. But for Canadians looking to retire in 25 to 40 years, given the trends it well could be. Medicare is under attack on so many fronts, and it will take incredible determination on the part of those who will need it to ensure it’s there when they retire. Yet younger generations — who face the greatest threat of losing public health care — don’t seem to think about it that much. They should — and before the fall election.
The number of vultures circling the most lucrative public service plum in the firmaments is truly scary. They are driven by the fact that there is almost nowhere else to invest the hundreds of billions of idle cash sloshing around in corporate coffers. The obscenely profitable private system in the U.S. is a powerful motivator.
The big five vultures anticipating the joys of feeding off Medicare’s carcass include a B.C. medical privateer’s legal challenge, a major trade deal, the public-private partnerships fleecing health budgets of hundreds of millions of dollars in excess costs in virtually every province, a new domestic services treaty, and lastly, Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s new, imposed health “accord” that will decrease federal contributions to the provinces by $36 billion over 10 years.
Dr. Brian Day’s challenge, based on the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, is perhaps the most frightening, because if he wins it will effectively constitutionalize the right of health care corporations to compete with Medicare. Researcher Colleen Fuller’s CCPA study, “The Legal Assault on Universal Health Care,” details how “Day wants the B.C. Supreme Court to legalize extra-billing, user fees and private insurance, creating an American-style health care system here in Canada.” In the U.S., in 2004, “health care regulation cost up to $340 billion out of a total health expenditure of $1.7 trillion. In spite of such high expenditures, fraud costs the U.S. health system $75 billion annually.”
The flurry of corporate rights agreements being pursued by the Harper government are also a threat to the viability of Medicare. The Canada-EU deal, the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, will immediately add at least $2 billion to drug costs in this country. The international Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA) now being negotiated in secret threatens to apply the deregulatory imperative of investment agreements explicitly to services, including health care. As Public Services International has pointed out, TiSA “would restrict governments’ ability to regulate, purchase and provide services. This would essentially change the regulation of many public services from serving the public interest to serving the profit interests of private, foreign corporations.”
But by far the most dangerous threat to Medicare is our prime minister, who loathes Medicare more than any other aspect of Canadian governance and democracy. Harper actually quit politics in the late 1990s to become the head of the viciously right-wing National Citizens Coalition — an organization founded in the early 1970s explicitly to fight Medicare.
Until 2014, Medicare in Canada received federal funding through a 10-year, legally binding accord negotiated by the provinces and the federal government, providing them with a six per cent increase every year. But what is in place now is a 10-year funding formula imposed on the provinces with virtually no consultation. Its increase per year is just three per cent, which means a loss of $36 billion over the 10 years. It is classic Harper — make a structural change whose bite is worse and worse as years go by. The underfunding systematically pushes provinces to cut and privatize.
Harper has abandoned all federal oversight or guardianship. There are no strings attached to the money. And the equalization aspect of the former accord is also gone, meaning increasingly unequal health care across the country and an erosion of the principle of universality. Lastly, the current funding formula not only brings the funding contribution of Ottawa to a record low 19 per cent, but it is not legally binding. If Harper wins the election, he could unilaterally chop billions from Medicare any time he chooses.
Some 40 per cent of Canadians can’t be bothered to vote in federal elections, mistaking ill-informed cynicism for sophistication along the lines of “they’re all the same.” I wonder if they’ll remember that refrain 30 years from now when they have to remortgage their house to pay their medical bills.

14 Jun 2015

TWAS-DBT Postgraduate Research Fellowship for Developing Countries, India 2015/2016

Scholarship Name: TWAS-DBT Postgraduate Research Fellowship
Brief description: PhD Research Fellowship for Foreign scholars from Developing Countries in Biotechnology, India 2015
Accepted Subject Areas?
PhD in Biotechnology
About Scholarship
The Department of Biotechnology (DBT) of the Ministry of Science and Technology, India, and TWAS, Italy have instituted a postgraduate fellowship programme for foreign scholars from developing countries who wish to pursue research towards a PhD in Biotechnology, tenable at key biotechnology research institutions in India for a period of up to five years. The language of instruction is English.
Scholarship Offered Since: Not Specified
Who is qualified to apply?
Applicants for these research fellowships must meet the following criteria:
  • Be a maximum age of 35 years on 31 December of the application year.
  • Be nationals of a developing country (other than India).
  • Hold a Master’s or equivalent degree in science or engineering.
  • Be regularly employed in a developing country and hold a research assignment there.
For SANDWICH Fellowships:
  • Be registered PhD students in their home country and provide the “Registration and No Objection Certificate” from the HOME university (sample is included in the application form).
  • For FULL-TIME Fellowships: Be willing to register at a university in India. Be accepted at a biotechnology institution in India (see sample Acceptance Letter included in the application form).

Number of scholarship: Several
Benefits: DBT will provide a monthly stipend to cover for living costs, food and health insurance. The monthly stipend will not be convertible into foreign currency. In addition, the fellowship holder will receive a house rent allowance.
Duration: TWAS-DBT Postgraduate Fellowships are tenable at key biotechnology research institutions in India for a period of up to five years.
Eligible African Countries: Developing Countries
To be taken at (country): Applicants may be registered for a PhD degree in their home country, or may enrol in a PhD course at a host laboratory/institute in India.
Application deadline: 31 August of each year
Offered annually? Yes
How to Apply
Before applying it is recommended that you read very carefully the application guidelines for detailed information on eligibility criteria, and other key requirements of the application procedure.
Sponsors
The Department of Biotechnology (DBT) of the Ministry of Science and Technology, India, and TWAS, Italy
Important Notes:
Applicants may be registered for a PhD degree in their home country, or may enrol in a PhD course at a host laboratory/institute in India. However, candidates are free to choose an Indian biotechnology institution that does not appear on the list.

Apply for NNPC/Chevron Nigerian University Scholarship 2015/2016

2015/2016 NNPC/Chevron JV National University Scholarship Awards for Undergraduate students
Chevron Nigeria Limited, in collaboration with its Joint Venture partner, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), is offering a number of Chevron Scholarship Awards to suitably qualified undergraduate students in Nigerian Universities. Full-time second year (200level) students studying specific courses listed below, in Nigerian Universities, are invited to apply online.
Eligible Course of Study
E-applications are invited from full-time SECOND YEAR (200 LEVEL) degree students of the under-listed courses, in Nigerian Universities:
·         Accountancychevron scholarship
·         Agricultural Engineering/Agricultural Science
·         Architecture
·         Business Administration/Economics
·         Chemical Engineering
·         Civil Engineering
·         Computer Science
·         Electrical/Electronic Engineering
·         Environmental Studies/Surveying
·         Geology/Geophysics
·         Law
·         Mass Communication/Journalism
·         Mechanical/Metallurgical & Materials Engineering
·         Human Medicine/Dentistry/Pharmacy
·         Petroleum Engineering

Application Guidelines1. Before you start this application, ensure you have clear scanned copies of the following documents
      • Passport photograph with white background not more than 3 months old (450px by 450px not more than 200kb)
      • School ID card
      • Admission letter
      • Birth certificate
      • O’ Level result
      • JAMB Result
      2. Ensure the documents are named according to what they represent to avoid mixing up documents during upload
      3. Ensure you attach the appropriate documents when asked to upload
      Application Deadline:
      Closing date for receipt of e-applications is strictly June 16, 2015.
      How to Apply for Chevron Scholarship
      To apply for this scholarship Click on apply.

      Full Beit Trust Masters & PhD Scholarship for Students from Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe 2015

      Scholarship Name: Beit Trust Scholarship
      Brief description: Every year Beit Trust postgraduate Masters & PhD scholarship for students from Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe to study in UK, Ireland or South Africa
      Accepted Subject Areas? All
      About Scholarship
      The Beit Trust offers annually a number of Postgraduate Masters or PhD Scholarships abroad for  studies or research to graduates who are domiciled in Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe (the beneficial area). Scholarships are taken up at a university in the United Kingdom, Ireland or South Africa, for study in a subject of the individual’s choice appropriate to the needs of the beneficial area.
      In addition, shared awards for a taught Masters Degree are offered at the University of Cambridge (BC); University of Cape Town (BCT); Imperial College London (BI), the University of Leeds (BL); Rhodes University (BRU); Stellenbosch University (BS) and the University of Witwatersrand (BW).
      Scholarship Offered Since: Not Specified
      Scholarship Type: Full Scholarship
      Who is qualified to apply?
      • All applicants except medical and veterinary doctors must be under 30 years of age on 31 December of the year of application.
      • Some experience of work after completion of a first degree is desirable.
      • Doctors and vets must be under 35 years of age on 31 December and should have completed 18 months of internship and preferably a one-year rural posting in the relevant country.
      • hold at least a degree of class 2.1, i.e. Merit or Distinction
      Number of Scholarship: Not Specified
      Benefits

      • Fees and costs of tuition and related academic expenses are paid by the Trust direct to the universities.
      • Scholars receive a personal allowance, index linked in accordance with guidance from an independent authority covering maintenance support.
      • Other allowances are paid for arrival, a laptop and printing of a thesis, and return to Africa.
      • Economy Class air passages are met by the Trust for the initial journey to the place of study, and for the return at the end of the course.
      • No allowances are paid for spouses or other family members.
      How long will sponsorship last? Duration is normally for a maximum of three years at the discretion of Trustees.
      Eligible African Countries: Malawi, Zambia or Zimbabwe
      To be taken at (country): United Kingdom (Rhodes University, University of Leeds and University of Reading), Ireland or South Africa
      Application Deadline
      Applications may be made from 1 April, but all original and certified documents must be received by The Beit Trust by 31 August each year.
      Offered annually? Yes
      How to Apply
      For more details visit the Scholarship Webpage
      Sponsors: Beit Trust
      Important Notes: Only those applicants who state that they intend to return to work in the relevant country upon completion of the scholarship, and who can, if short-listed, present themselves for interview before a Beit Postgraduate Scholarship Selection Board in Harare, Blantyre or Lusaka at the beginning of December, will be considered.

      The United Nations – The Nippon Foundation of Japan Fellowship Programme 2016/2017

      On 22 April 2004, the United Nations and The Nippon Foundation of Japan concluded a trust fund project agreement to provide capacity-building and human resource development to developing States Parties and non-Parties to UNCLOS through a Fellowship Programme.
      The Programme is jointly executed by the Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea (DOALOS) of the Office of Legal Affairs and the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA). DOALOS serves as the focal point in charge of all substantive elements of the Project. DESA, in its capacity as implementing agency for the Project, is responsible for providing certain administrative services to the Project on behalf of DOALOS.
      Scholarship Offered Since: 2004
      Who is qualified to apply?
      Candidates wishing to be considered for a Fellowship award must ensure that they meet all the following criteria:
      –          You must be between the ages of 25 and 40;
      –          You must have successfully completed a first university degree, and demonstrate a capacity to undertake independent advanced academic research and study;
      –          You must be a mid-level administrator from a national government organ of a developing coastal State, or another government related agency in such a State, which deals directly with ocean affairs issues, and your professional position must allow you to directly assist your nation in the formulation and/or implementation of policy in this area. This includes marine sciences and the science-policy linkage. Your “Nomination and Recommendation Form” should be completed by a Government official who can attest to the nature of your work with respect to the Government’s ocean affairs and law of the sea related activities, and indicate how an Award would directly contribute to these activities; and

      –          Your proposed research and study programme must contribute directly to your nation’s formulation and/or implementation of ocean affairs and law of the sea policies and programmes.
      By what Criteria is Selection Made?
      Satisfaction of the above criteria must be clearly demonstrated by the candidate through the application forms and confirmed by a nominating authority.
      Programme Structure
      The 9-month Fellowship Programme is composed of two consecutive phases which provide Fellows with advanced and customized research and training opportunities in their chose fields:
      –          Phase One: 6-month Advanced Academic Research and Study – undertaken at one of the prestigious participating Host Institutions and under the guidance of subject matter expert(s) who have recognized in-depth expertise in the Fellows’ chosen field of study.
      –          Phase Two: 3-month Research and Training – normally undertaken at DOALOS at the United Nations Headquarters in New York.
      Eligible Countries: Open for International Students
      Application Deadline for the 2016-2017 Session is 11 September 2015
      Offered annually? Yes
      How to apply
      If you need more Information about this scholarship, kindly visit the Scholarship Webpage
      Sponsors: The United Nations and The Nippon Foundation
      Fellowship Objective
      The objective of the fellowship is to provide opportunities for advanced education and research in the field of ocean affairs and the law of the sea, and related disciplines including marine science in support of management frameworks, to Government officials and other mid-level professionals from developing States, so that they may obtain the necessary knowledge to assist their countries to formulate comprehensive ocean policy and to implement the legal regime set out in UNCLOS and related instruments.

      Scholarship in USA for Physicians from Developing Countries 2016

      The Developing Countries Scholarship Fund was established to provide access to quality education for physicians who reside in developing countries by helping them attend the AAHPM and HPNA Annual Assembly.
      This scholarship program provides financial support (up to $5,000) to physicians to help them access the latest clinical information and research updates in hospice and palliative care from leading experts in the field.
      This scholarship program is intended to facilitate Annual Assembly participation and cover ordinary costs associated with meeting registration, travel-related expenses (airfare, cab fare, meals), and lodging.
      Field of Study: To help physicians access the latest clinical information and research updates in hospice and palliative care from leading experts in the field
      Eligibility:

      Scholarships are available to physicians who care for seriously ill patients and permanently reside and practice in a developing country. It is our hope that the scholarship recipients will share the knowledge gleaned from the Annual Assembly to improve the palliative care offerings in their home country. Preference will be given to applicants who are
      • members of the AAHPM. Free online membership is available to physicians who reside in a developing nation as defined by the World Bank as “lower or middle income” & HINARI list of eligible countries
      • have not previously attended the Annual Assembly
      • are junior in their career, and
      • whose organizations are considered least able to afford this opportunity.
      Scholarship Worth
      This scholarship program will provide financial support (up to $5,000) to physicians to cover ordinary costs associated with meeting registration, travel-related expenses (air fare, cab fare, meals), and lodging.
      Application Deadline: The application window will close September 3, 2015
      Visit Scholarship Webpage for more details

      PEO International Peace Scholarships for Women to Study in USA and Canada 2016/2017

      The PEO International Peace Scholarship Fund is a program of Women helping women reach for the stars. The fund will provide scholarships for selected women from other countries for graduate study in the United States and Canada. Members of P.E.O. believe that education is fundamental to world peace and understanding and aims to help qualified women who desire higher education and are in need of financial assistance.
      Eligibility and Criteria
      • An applicant must be qualified for admission to full-time graduate study and working toward a graduate degree in an accredited college or university in the united States or canada.
      • A student who is a citizen or permanent resident of the united States or canada is not eligible.
      • Scholarships are not given for research, internships, or practical training, unless it is combined with coursework. Awards are not to be used to pay past debts.
      • In order to qualify for her first scholarship, an applicant must have a full year of coursework remaining, be enrolled and in residence for the entire school year.
      • Doctoral students who have completed coursework and are working only on dissertations are not eligible as first-time applicants.
      • international students attending cottey college are eligible to apply for a scholarship.
      Scholarship Worth
      The maximum amount awarded to a student is $10,000. Lesser amounts may be awarded according to individual needs.
      The scholarship is based upon demonstrated financial need; however, the award is not intended to cover all academic or personal expenses. At the time of application, the applicant is required to confirm additional financial resources adequate to meet her estimated expenses. Additional resources may include personal and family funds, tuition waivers, work scholarships, teaching assistantships, study grants and other scholarships.

      Awards are announced in may. The amount of the scholarship will be divided into two payments to be distributed in August and December
      Application Guideline and Procedures
      • Information concerning the international peace Scholarship program is available from the P.E.O. Executive Office or from the website at peointernational.org.
      • Eligibility must be established before application material is made available. Eligibility information and application deadlines can be found at any time on the P.E.O. website.
      • Information concerning admission to cottey college may be obtained by writing to the coordinator of Admissions, Cottey College, Nevada, Missouri 64772, or visit them at cottey.edu.
      Awards are announced in May. The amount of the scholarship will be divided into two payments to be distributed in August and December.
      Important dates:
      September 15, 2015
      IPS begins to accept Eligibility Forms
      December 15, 2015
      Last day to submit Eligibility Forms
      March 1, 2016
      Last day to submit completed application materials from applicants already enrolled in the graduate program and school for which their scholarship is intended
      April 1, 2016
      Last day to submit completed application materials from applicants not yet enrolled in the graduate program or school for which the scholarship is intended
      Last day to submit completed application materials for applicants who will be attending Cottey College
      May 2016
      Notification of scholarship awards
      June 1, 2016
      Last day for students to accept IPS scholarships

      13 Jun 2015

      The dictatorship of finance capital: Greece and Ukraine

      Alex Lantier

      As Greece teeters on the verge of bankruptcy, European Union officials are tightening the screws on the indebted country.
      They are demanding that Greece repay its debts and further slash pensions as a precondition for new loans. They have replied to Syriza’s brief delay in repaying 300 million euros by threatening to cut off credit to Greece and push its state and financial system into bankruptcy. This could force Greece to reintroduce its own national currency to avert a collapse of its banks and even set into motion the dissolution of the euro currency and the EU itself.
      Berlin is adopting a “hardline, ‘take-it-or-leave-it’ approach,” the Financial Times wrote yesterday, citing one euro zone official who said, “The only answer they’re looking for from the Greeks is to say ‘yes.’”
      As the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank walked out of talks with Greek officials, Donald Tusk, the former Polish prime minister and current European Council president, said, “We need decisions, not negotiations, now.”
      It is instructive to compare the treatment of Greece with that of another bankrupt country, Ukraine. In the same edition as the article citing European officials on Greece, the Financial Times has an editorial demanding a diametrically opposed policy in Ukraine, calling on creditors to forgive much of its debt.
      Ukraine’s creditors, the Financial Times writes, have a “moral obligation to agree to a restructuring that reduces Ukraine’s debt to sustainable levels.” If Ukraine’s creditors refuse to reach an agreement, the newspaper declares, “Ukraine is right to raise the possibility of declaring a moratorium on debt servicing.” That is, the government in Kiev would be right to delay payments to its creditors, as Greece briefly did to the IMF, or even to cancel them outright.
      Why does the journalistic voice of European finance capital wax lyrical on a “moral obligation” to aid the Kiev regime even as it demands no let-up in the financial strangulation of Greece?
      “Staving off Greek collapse is vital to the euro zone’s stability, but its strategic importance is dwarfed by that of Ukraine,” the Financial Times explains. Pointing to the Kiev regime’s role in fighting a “proxy war” against neighboring Russia in eastern Ukraine, the newspaper adds, “On an issue of such geopolitical magnitude, private financial interests cannot be allowed to dictate public policy.”
      Behind the apparent contradiction in the treatment of Greece and Ukraine stand the reactionary class interests of finance capital in the leading imperialist powers, which are pursued with ruthless determination.
      Ukraine’s far-right regime is a key cog in the campaign of Washington and NATO for a vast military build-up across Europe, threatening all-out war against Russia. It was installed in a US- and EU-sponsored putsch, led by fascist militias, to serve as the cat’s paw of an imperialist drive to compel Moscow to accept a semi-colonial status.
      As it wages a bloody civil war against pro-Russian forces in eastern Ukraine, the Kiev government is slashing jobs and utility subsidies, rehabilitating the legacy of Ukraine’s World War II Nazi-collaborationist forces, and banning public mention of the October Revolution and communism. The imperialist governments are well aware that if billions of euros are handed to Kiev, the entire sum will be spent on war. Not a penny will go to Ukrainian workers.
      There are no such geo-strategic considerations when it comes to the regime in Greece. EU officials know the leaders of Greece’s ruling party, Syriza (Coalition of the Radical Left), too well to think of them as a revolutionary threat. However, Syriza was elected on the basis of broad popular opposition to six years of EU austerity and to the country’s traditional parties of government, which had implemented savage cuts.
      The European banks are seeking to make clear in relation to Greece that they will not tolerate any concessions to popular opposition to austerity. The looting of billions of euros from workers will continue, no matter what.
      The experience of the five months since the election of Syriza in January contains critical lessons for the Greek and international working class. It has vindicated the warning of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) that only the struggle to unify the working class internationally and mobilize it in revolutionary struggle against capitalism offers a way forward.
      Syriza assumed power claiming that a deal could be reached with the EU, and that Greek workers’ grievances could be addressed within the framework of capitalism, imperialism and the European Union. To the extent that Syriza had a scheme to somewhat modify the EU’s austerity agenda, it was to exploit tensions between Berlin, the leading power promoting the EU’s austerity policy, and Washington and other European capitals that favor a more stimulative monetary policy.
      It made no appeal to the explosive anger against austerity building up in the working class in Germany, Britain, France, across Europe and in the US. Instead, it aligned itself with the foreign policy of imperialism, declining to veto EU sanctions against Russia and cynically abandoning its election promises to reverse austerity, signing a pledge within weeks of taking office to abide by Greece’s previous EU austerity agreements.
      It took Syriza no time at all to demonstrate the bankruptcy of its anti-Marxist perspective, rooted in the interests of more privileged sections of the upper-middle class. The United States, Britain and France did not lift a finger to help Greece. Syriza was quickly exposed as a political instrument for the subordination of the working class to a bankrupt social order.
      Cuts continue to rain down on the Greek working class, whose living standards are being set back decades. Visiting Berlin Thursday, Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis made clear his government’s commitment to even further concessions to the European banks. He called for “surgery” to slash Greek pensions, saying, “We need to find ways of eliminating early retirements, of merging pension funds, of reducing their operating costs, of moving from an unsustainable to a sustainable system, rationally and gradually.”
      In the meantime, the imperialist war drive against Russia continues to escalate, with US and NATO officials organizing military exercises across Eastern Europe and threatening pre-emptive missile strikes against Russia. World war is ever more starkly on the political agenda.
      What is at stake is the future not only of Greece, but of all of Europe and the entire world. The survival of capitalism and the imperialist world order to which it gives rise poses imminent dangers to the working class and to human civilization itself.
      This perspective underlies the struggle of the ICFI to build sections in countries across Europe that will fight to mobilize the working class for the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of the United Socialist States of Europe.

      Trade Deals and the Quest for Global Dominance

      Rob Urie

      The Setup
      “In the factory books, you see lots of turnover. But slaves couldn’t quit. While factories were worrying about filling positions and just keeping things going, plantation owners were focused on optimization. They could reallocate labor as they saw fit. I found real quantitative analysis in their records. They were literally looking at humans as capital.”
      — Caitlin Rosenthal, Harvard Business Review
      As this is being written U.S. President Barack Obama is pushing the House of Representatives to give him ‘fast-track’ authority for his trade agreement, the TPP (Trans-Pacific Partnership), granting him the authority to cede political control to global capital at will. As has now been well commented on, the agreement isn’t about trade per se, but is a template for the consolidation of corporate power within an international framework. The current push for explicit ‘political’ control is only an anomaly to the historically illiterate— the growth of Western capitalism has come through use of state power in the service of predominant economic interests. Hopes that the defeat of ‘fast-track’ will represent a strategic victory against global capital have several centuries of history to overcome.
      uriefast1
      A machine that turns the toil of one group into the possession of another is invented. Presciently, the source of the labor and toil to be converted; be it through slavery, imperialism, armed robbery or capitalism, is irrelevant. Nature, as expressed through the ‘will’ of the machine, is served by the conversion. Or at least that is the explanation provided by those whose pockets its product ends up in. Original image source: flourmillmachines.com.
      Given record corporate profits relative to U.S. economic production, the question of why granting corporations more control over the lives of hundreds of millions of people is a good idea is worth asking? The occasional frame of the American ‘political’ leadership provides context. Mr. Obama argues that ‘if we don’t write the rules, the Chinese will,’ a telling conflation of geopolitics and economics. Through the ISDS (Investor State Dispute Settlement) mechanism multinational corporations will ‘write the rules.’ And ISDS-like mechanisms of past trade deals assure that this will continue regardless of pending outcomes. The geopolitical frame is true by degree— U.S. based multinational corporations will represent their own interests through state power just as they always have.
      From the ‘inside’ the political challenge of the last half century has been in explaining Western economic policies as a series of unfortunate, but nevertheless necessary, accidents. NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) may not have turned out exactly as planned, but that is water over the dam. Bank deregulation may not have turned out exactly as planned, but that is water over the dam. The bailouts of Wall Street, including major European banks, may not have turned out exactly as planned, but that is water over the dam. The war for oil in Iraq may not have turned out exactly as planned, but…, . Left unsaid is that politically connected plutocrats have benefitted from each and every one of these policies while the toiling classes have seen their lots diminished. As with exit polling results, a persistent bias is evidence that the fix is in.
      uriefast2
      In the spirit of current ‘intelligent’ technology, this early Italian device combines the functionality of an automobile with that of an ‘intelligent’ telephone. Users start the motor and ride the device to the location of the person with whom they wish to have a conversation, and then they have a conversation. Western telecommunication companies developed the innovation that places them as intermediaries in this process for a few hundred dollars a month in charges and fees. Original image source: boredpanda.com.
      Slavery Goes to College
      Western economists’ explanation of profits as the measure of economic ‘efficiency,’ the clever combination of labor, production methods and machinery in economic production, faces the moral and conceptual conundrum that slavery was more profitable than ‘free’ economic production when the two were openly comparable in the pre-Civil War U.S. More than one-half of the richest one-percent in the colonial U.S. were Southern slave owners and merchants who profited from trade in goods produced by slaves. In the present the ‘scientific’ business practices of Human Resource departments and corporate managers were taken directly from slave ‘management’ (HBR link above, h/t to Lambert Strether). Following the war the reparations due freed slaves, or even the forty acres and a mule that would have made them economically independent, were replaced by the promise of ‘free’ wage labor.
      Control of the institutional context that governed ‘free’ labor led to the rapid reconstruction (irony intended) of the conditions of slavery through de facto criminalization of ‘blackness.’ The law, the judiciary, policing and the penal system were used to reconstitute the economic extraction of slavery through convict leasing and like programs. In capitalist economics stolen / expropriated labor diminishes ‘free’ labor by ‘signaling’ that capital should flow to low / no wage production (e.g. outsourcing). The ‘political’ question regarding past trade agreements like NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) is why monopoly power for the rich and socially connected (doctors, tech, pharma) was protected while the poor and middle classes were thrown into international competition? In the liberal frame the difference is inexplicable while in economic history it ties to four centuries of specific intent.
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      This ‘devil’ is in fact an eighteenth century machine that when motivated (cranked) makes the devil move. As metaphor, there is more than a touch of animism at work— the machine is a devil and the devil is a machine. As deeper metaphor, the devil is of ‘our’ own making. Collectively suicidal ‘trade’ agreements add prescience to the metaphor. Original image source: neatorama.com.
      The ready contention that slavery occurred in the past while modern business practices occur now, historical ‘progress,’ begs the question of why practices applied to slave ‘management’ would still have bearing on contemporary labor management? What is it that unites ‘free’ and slave labor in business practice? The view of slaves as human ‘capital’ (opening quote), as labor that is interchangeable with machines depending on their relative costs, is part of the basic economics taught at MIT and Princeton. The question of the ownership of capital has no bearing on the neo-classical production function, on determination of the (theoretically) most profitable mix of labor and machines used to produce things. However, the price of labor does figure into the calculation making the use of low / no wage labor the ‘rational’ choice.
      One of the distributional aspects of the slavery economy, which is most likely obvious to readers who aren’t economists, is that ‘a society,’ in this case the Southern U.S., can be rich with the overwhelming preponderance of ‘its’ citizens living in destitution as chattel. The same can be said of the Ancien Regime in France and Russia under the Tsars. By the metrics of Western economists slavery was very successful— productivity was higher than ‘free’ factory production and rising and the slave economy supported the larger economy by producing goods for trade and the accumulation of capital. By the standards of capitalist economics, if slavery hadn’t been one of the cruelest, most murderous and morally bankrupt institutions in human history, it would have been great. And lest this result be applied only to pre-revolutionary despots, liberal economists are busy proving that high ‘inequality’ isn’t a hindrance to economic growth. The question of ‘growth for whom’ never enters consideration?
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      The economic ‘efficiency’ of slavery very much depends on who is doing the calculation. It most certainly wasn’t efficient for the over twelve million kidnapped Africans, many who died of disease, malnutrition and mistreatment on their journey to America, and their descendants who were made slaves. The very idea of economic efficiency as applied to slavery should provide indication that there is a fundamental flaw with the concept. ‘Efficiency’ came through the control that slavery provided over the captive work force—it is a metric of social power. Original image sources: faculty.polytechnic.org, beginningandend.com, rachaelmurrin.blogspot.com.
      Steve Jobs Waves Goodbye to His Money
      This is necessarily speculative, but from the mainstream perspective any effort to link slavery to modern capitalist practice and trade deals like the TPP lacks basis in ‘serious’ analysis. Granted is that it is impossible to convey the horror and diminished lives that resulted from slavery. Otherwise, the cover that difference provides difference diminishes neither intentions nor historical continuities— the conditions for those working for U.S. based multi-national corporations in Haiti, El Salvador, Vietnam, China or in U.S. prisons isn’t chattel slavery, but they tie to it through both the scientific methods of industrial organization that are employed and the ‘negative’ freedom to choose employment due to the residuals of colonial history.
      “A foreman immediately roused 8,000 workers inside the company’s dormitories, according to the executive. Each employee was given a biscuit and a cup of tea, guided to a workstation and within half an hour started a 12-hour shift fitting glass screens into beveled frames. ….. “The speed and flexibility is breathtaking,” the executive said. “There’s no American plant that can match that.”” Apple Computer Executive on Chinese Working Conditions
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      The late Steve Jobs waves goodbye to his money as his final act of living. Mr. Jobs embodied the ethos of an age, one expressed through power as unhindered greed. The pseudo-hipster positioning of Mr. Jobs and ‘his’ products ties to the capitalist propaganda of Edward Bernays’ who made lung cancer hip for some seven generations of Western women now. Likely irony will find the youth who still view Mr. Jobs as an icon on the receiving end of his version of ‘free-trade’ economics in the decades to come. Original image source: blog.timesunion.com.
      The Western executives who marvel at the long lines of applicants outside of U.S. contracted manufacturing facilities in China would presumably have been likewise awed by the sudden availability of ‘free’ wage labor following the end of slavery in the U.S. The late Steve Jobs of Apple Computer embodied the ethos of the current age when he ‘privatized’ government funded research while shipping its production to former European colonies where labor is plentiful, cheap and pliable. Mr. Jobs didn’t create the technology that he popularized, nor did he manufacture it. What he did was use state resources— technology developed in government sponsored labs and the legal and military institutions needed to assure repatriation of ‘profits,’ to pose as a capitalist.
      The iconography that lauds self-serving sociopaths like Mr. Jobs is wedded to ideology that bears almost no relation to its facts. Theorists can debate the particulars of the scientific business management practices of slavers as they relate to modern business management, but what becomes apparent is that they didn’t exist in opposition to slavery. In related fashion, following the Second World War significant numbers of Nazi scientists, formerly committed Nazis who were also scientists,were brought to the U.S. to impart their scientific expertise to the military-corporate technocracy. This isn’t to call anyone a Nazi. It is to grant, for the moment, that science is precisely what notable scientists claim it is, a method, not an ideology. That it is a method to make slavers and Nazis more ‘efficient’ slavers and Nazis may seem a cheap shot, but that was the goal as per the actual practitioners.
      The comeback that ‘we’ must compete against political and economic opposition using all of the tools available to ‘us’ brings ‘us’ back to the TPP. As of the moment of this writing the certainty surrounding passage of ‘fast-track’ authority is waning. What has been unleashed by the push to pass the TPP is impetus toward completion of the capitalist / corporate coup begun in the 1970s. ISDS-like mechanisms exist from past trade agreements and are already being used. Growing catastrophes for global labor and the environment will be at best incrementally inconvenienced by a political setback for ‘fast-track.’ And while ending ‘fast-track’ is a possibly necessary diversion, the capitalist coup and its institutional facts will remain the problem. The next President from either political Party will push the same high-capitalist program and the most likely lesson learned from a defeat of ‘fast-track’ will be to better hide the grab for increased corporate power, not to reverse it.
      In Memory: Ornette Coleman 1930 – 2015
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      Ornette Coleman, one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century. Readers can find a reasonable representation of Ornette’s discography online. He was also a painter, a philosopher and a truly beautiful human being. Original image source: barryrafael.wordpress.com

      G7: Currencies to Protect, Countries to Bomb

      Vijay Prashad

      The members of the G7 just ended their 41st summit. The leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and US gathered in a great Bavarian palace, the Schloss Elmau. It was a fitting location for the masters of the universe.
      They claim that the maintenance of world order is their passtime. In fact, what they are most interested in is the preservation of their power at any cost.
      The first G7 summit was held in 1974 in the Chateau de Rambouillet – a grand feudal palace in France. The purpose of that summit was for the G7 states to find a common strategy to tackle the Opec oil cartel and the NIEO – the New International Economic Order.
      Opec had limited supply to raise the price of crude oil, which threatened economic growth in advanced industrial countries. The NIEO had passed in the UN General Assembly with support from the Third World states.
      It called for a new international economic and political architecture to benefit the poorer nations. The G7 was created to break both Opec and the NIEO. It has largely succeeded.
      Swallowing the world whole
      After the collapse of the USSR, the G7 drew Russia into its orbit to become the G8 by 1994. The point was to create sufficient consolidation so as to prevent the emergence of a new economic and political pole on the planet – represented by the rise of China.
      With the world financial crisis in 2007, the threadbare West turned to the Brics bloc (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) for financial liquidity.
      The promise was that if these states, particularly China, delivered funds to the world financial system, the G8 would be suspended in favour of the G20. China paid up. That assurance of closing down the G7 was hastily set aside when the banks felt secure. The G20 was adjourned.
      Western confidence rose in the aftermath of the 2011 Nato intervention in Libya. It was now thought that not only was the financial system saved, but that humanitarian interventionism provided the West sufficient legitimacy to use its superior military force to order the planet.
      Western pressure against Iran from the mid-2000s intensified as tensions with Russia flashed into the open around Syria and Ukraine. The G8 suspended Russia as member in 2014. In the most recent G7 summit, Russia was the target of overheated rhetoric. The US president, Barack Obama, asked of his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin: “Does he continue to wreck his country’s economy and continue Russia’s isolation in pursuit of a wrong-headed desire to recreate the glories of the Soviet empire?”
      If the Soviet empire is long gone, the West’s ambition to drive world policy remain intact. Contradictions in G7 policy affect Europe far more than the US – Two big energy suppliers to western Europe, Iran and Russia, are hurt by sanctions promoted by the US through the G7, and Libya, another big supplier, saw its institutions destroyed by the NATO war and its aftermath.
      Europe bears the cost of the G7 excesses. The German chancellor, Angela Merkel, could very well have asked Obama if he wanted to wreck Europe’s economy in pursuit of his wrong-headed ambition to perpetuate American hegemony.
      The G7, as I discovered while researching my book on the forum, The Poorer Nations, often does not make public its most important debates.
      Its public pronouncements in the 1970s were gestures about stability and order. Privately, the leaders discussed in practical terms how to trounce Opec and the Third World bloc by any means necessary, including creating instability.
      All mouth, no action
      At the most recent meeting, the masters of the universe pledged to phase out fossil fuels by the end of the 21st century – 85 years from now – and end poverty by 2050. There was no programme of action, only empty pledges.
      What was discussed in private would have been of far more interest, but we will have to wait a few decades to read the transcripts of the private meetings.
      Standing in the anteroom, awaiting an audience, was the prime minister of Iraq, Haider al-Abadi. He was told that the G7 had “agreed to work together to further combat terrorism”. How would they do so? The G7 had no clue. “We don’t yet have a complete strategy,” said Obama in his concluding remarks, “because it requires commitments on the part of the Iraqis”.
      For a year now, the US and its allies – backed by the G7 – have been bombing Iraq and Syria, but it seems this has been without any strategy. “We don’t yet have a finalised plan because the Iraqis haven’t given it to us yet,” said Obama.
      The masters of the universe claim the right to determine planetary affairs, use military force as it suits them, and yet show utter disdain for their subordinate allies.
      Obama turned away from Abadi, who seemed to be eager to say more. Obama fell into an animated discussion with the Italian prime minister, Matteo Renzi, and IMF chief Christine Lagarde. Abadi stood around. No one took note of him. He eventually walked away. He did not realise that he had been dismissed when Obama turned away from him.
      The masters of the universe were busy with each other. They have currencies to protect and countries to bomb.