[stop-imf] Vicente Navarro's profile of incoming IMF head Rato

robert.weissman@essentialinformation.org robert.weissman@essentialinformation.org
Mon, 21 Jun 2004 17:35:33 -0400


www.counterpunch.org
19 June 2004

Meet the New Head of the IMF - Who Is Rodrigo Rato?

by Vicente Navarro

Vicente Navarro is Professor of Public Policy at Johns Hopkins University,
USA and Pompeu Fabra University, Spain. He can be reached at:
navarro@counterpunch.org

Rodrigo Rato has been appointed as the new managing d\irector of the
International Monetary Fund. I have read the biographical notes and
references to his career that have appeared in the New York Times, the
Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and other major papers in the U.S.,
and nowhere have there appeared those key elements of his biography that
could shed light on his economic policies. As I have written about in a
previous article (The US Media's Double Standard. The Case of Mr. Aznar,
Friend of Bush, CounterPunch, August 21, 2003), one of the most unsettling
developments in the main stream US media is their right wing shift. For
example, the US press saluted Mr. Aznar, past president of the Spanish
government, as a "great friend of the U.S." (confusing, as usual, the U.S.
government with the U.S. population), without once making reference to his
fascist past and current ultra-right wing positions. The same is happening
now with Mr. Rodrigo Rato, Mr. Aznar's Minister of Economy, who is
responsible for the dismantling of the Spanish welfare state.

Mr. Rato is of the ultra-right . While in Aznar's cabinet, he supported such
policies as making religion a compulsory subject in secondary schools,
requiring more hours of schooling in religion than in mathematics, undoing
the progressivity in the internal revenue code, funding the Foundation
dedicated to the promotion of francoism (i.e., Spanish fascism), never
condemning the fascist dictatorship, and so on. In the economic arena, he
dramatically reduced public social expenditures as a way of eliminating the
public deficit of the Spanish government, and was the person responsible for
developing the most austere social budget of all the governments of the
European Community.

The elimination of the deficit in the Spanish government's budget has had an
enormous social cost. The Spanish welfare state (public transfers like
pensions, and social services such as education and health services) had
been very limited, due to forty years of fascist dictatorship. Franco was
known not only for his enormous repression--for every political
assassination carried out by Mussolini, Franco killed 10,000--but also for
his non-existent social sensibility. As a consequence, when Franco died IN
1975 , the percentage of the population with poor education (less than six
years of schooling) was the highest in Europe (84per cent), and the public
social expenditures (the funds to support the welfare state) were extremely
low (14 per cent of GDP), much lower than the average in Continental Europe
(22 per cent of GNP). This deficit of eight points was reduced after the
establishment of democracy, (and very much under the social democratic
governments, 1982-1993), to reach only four points in 1993. In that year,
Spain spent 24 per cent of the GNP in public social expenditures, while the
EU-15 average was 28 per cent. In 1991-93 there was a fight within the
socialist party that ended with the victory of the so-called social-liberals
(the equivalent of the Democratic Leadership Council of the U.S.). One of
its leaders, Solbes, (later the person in charge of fiscal austerity in the
EU-15 as European Commissions for Economics and Financial Affairs) took over
the Ministry of Economy of the social democratic government and inaugurated
a whole series of cuts in social expenditures that led to the socialist
party'S defeat in 1996, at the hands of Aznar's Popular Party.

Rato then became the new Minister of Economy. During his tenure as Minister
(1996-2004), the pensions and health expenditures were cut even more
savagely than during the Solbes period of 1993-1996. In pensions, for
example, Rato increased the Spanish deficit of pension expenditures per
capita relative to the EU-15 average by 21per cent and the deficit of public
medical care expenditures to the EU-15 average by30 per cent. The
consequence of these policies is that Spain, rather than catching up with
the EU-15, has been losing ground quite dramatically. Today, the deficit of
social expenditures of Spain compared with the average of the EU-15
(measured as percentages of the GNP) is the same as when Franco died. At the
practical level, these policies have come to mean that the average time of a
visit to the doctor in the National Health Services is only six minutes;
that a 14 year old student in a public school has the academic knowledge of
an average 13 year old student in the rest of the EU-15, that Spanish
pensions are the lowest in the EU-15; that the percentage of children 0-3
years old in attendance at public child care centers is only 8 per cent, the
lowest in the EU-15; that the level of temporary work (called "shit work" by
the trade unions) in Spain is the highest in the EU-15, 35 per cent of the
labor force, and a long etcetera of other social problems. The quality of
life of the popular classes (working and middle class) has indeed declined
during these social austerity years, as dictated by Mr. Rato.

Mr. Rato (and Mr. Aznar) has paraded triumphantly around the EU-15, claiming
that Spain is in the top of the league because it is the first member of the
EU-15 to reach the stability pact, i.e., public deficit zero. And none other
than Blair's Minister of Economy, Gordon Brown, became Rato's main advocate
for the IMF position. Nowhere mentioned is the enormous costs this "success"
has had on the quality of life of average folks in Spain. And these are the
same policies that Mr. Rato is going to follow in the IMF, policies that
have caused enormous pain and harm to the Spanish people, and will now be
implemented world-wide. Nowhere, however, have the mainstream media reported
on such important dimensions of Mr. Rato's tenure as Minister of Economy of
Spain. Quite remarkable!