Datum: 07-12-2010
Een publicatie van onze collega's van de Debt and Development Coalition Ireland (DDCI) over de EU-IMF leningen aan Ierland.
'AGlobal Justice Perspective on the Irish EU-IMF Loans: Lessons From the Wider World'.
This document outlines lessons fromthe global debt justice movement in responding to debt crises, provides a background to the Irish EU-IMF loans (up to the 28thNovember 2010 - before the loan documents were made public), and offers some recommendations from DDCI based on these lessons from our work. It also flags up recommendations from other groups.
Key Lessons highlighted include:
Recommendations from DDCI:
Lesson 1:The IMF and Ireland’s Membership
Recommendation: Fundamental reform of the IMF’s role is long overdue. DDCI has been calling for a set of key reforms in Irish government policy toward the IMFcentral to which are:
Lesson 2: Policy Conditionality and the EU-IMF Lending Dynamic
Recommendation: If the EU-IMF loans are accepted by Ireland (DDCI is not proposing that the loans should be accepted by Ireland) there must be total transparency so that the roles the EU and IMF are playing as combined lenders are clear:
Lesson 3: Potential new EU/International approaches to lending and borrowing?
Recommendation:Any proposed new lending or debt management principles that may emerge among EU member states in response to the eurozone crisis must supportSouthern nations’ right to debt justice.
Recommendations from other groups:
Lesson 4: Fighting for Alternatives
Trade unions and economists are proposing a number of possible options regarding lender responsibilities. Some of the documented ones so far include (in no particular order): ICTU (supporting a write down on all bank bondholders holdings to 10% of their nominal value); Michael Taft / Unite (supporting write downs on bank bondholder debt); Dr Andy Storey (supporting debt default / repudiation); economist David McWilliams (calling for Debt to Equity Swaps).A range of budgetary options which prioritise protecting the majority of people from unjust and damaging budgetary measures and outlining alternative budgets can be found from lots of active social justice civil society groups including:www.socialjusticeireland.org;www.communityplatform.org;www.unitetheunion.org,www.ictu.ie,www.olderandbolder.ie, among plenty of other groups.
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