The Benchmarks Iraq Is Meeting -- And One It Thankfully Is Not
The Benchmarks Iraq Is Meeting -- And One It Thankfully Is Not
The Government Accountability Office has confirmed the obvious: the "benchmarks" the U.S. Congress set out to assess progress in the
Unfortunately, it turns out that
At the end of 2005, the IMF entered into a stand-by agreement with
The IMF has just released
With one crucial exception -- privatization of the oil sector --
The Iraqi government reports that:
* "We will continue resisting undue wage and pension increases and bonuses."
* It is strictly limiting hiring in the public sector "in order to keep the wage bill within the budgeted amount."
* It is cutting back on public pension expenditures, including by eliminating inflation indexation -- a huge effective reduction in pension payments in a country where the inflation rate is 19 percent.
* Those public enterprises that have not been sold off or given away to private corporations -- a top priority of former Coalition Provisional Authority head Paul Bremer -- will be forced to operate like for-profit businesses, an almost certain prelude to subsequent privatization.
* It has undertaken measures to ensure foreign investors receive the same treatment as Iraqi firms.
* Tariff rates will be maintained at extremely low levels (5 percent), imposing enormous challenges for Iraqi firms that obviously must seek to operate in the most trying of economic circumstances.
But the news is not entirely bleak.
Apart from some non-trivial accounting issues, the one key area where the Iraqi government is not meeting IMF targets is privatization of the oil sector. (Presumably because this is also a key Congressional benchmark, the government does not acknowledge its growing troubles in this area. Instead, it states, "The GoI [Government of Iraq] will continue its efforts towards developing a competitive and transparent hydrocarbon sector. Draft hydrocarbon legislation will be submitted to the CoR [Council of Representatives] when final agreement between all concerned parties has been reached, possibly in the next few months. The envisaged legislative package includes a draft oil and gas law to regulate the sector, a draft law to reestablish the Iraq National Oil Company, a draft law reorganizing the MoO [Ministry of Oil], and a draft financial management law on the sharing of oil revenues.")
This remarkable -- and welcome -- failure reflects massive Iraqi opposition to Big Oil's designs to gain control of
Says Antonia Juhasz of Oil Change International, "everyone thought this law was going to pass because no one knew what it was. Now that people know what it is, it seems far less likely that it will actually pass."
It is far too simple to say that popular mobilization can defeat the IMF's extraordinary power, because there are countless examples of governments imposing draconian IMF policies despite popular uprisings, riots and insurrections. And
But especially because the IMF is now in a weakened state, a mobilized public in borrower countries now has a chance at resisting the IMF's Big Business-friendly, anti-labor, anti-public health, anti-development policies.
 Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor, <http://www.multinationalmonitor.org> and director of Essential Action <http://www.essentialaction.org>. Â



