Contrary to European and US publicists, on the Right and Left, very few
of the top former Communist leaders are found among the current Russian
billionaire oligarchy. Secondly, contrary to the spin-masters' claims
of 'communist inefficiencies', the former Soviet Union developed mines,
factories, energy enterprises were profitable and competitive, before
they were taken over by the new oligarchs. This is evident in the
massive private wealth that was accumulated in less than a decade by
these gangster-businessmen.
Virtually all the billionaires' initial sources of wealth had nothing
to do with building, innovating or developing new efficient
enterprises. Wealth was not transferred to high Communist Party
Commissars (lateral transfers) but was seized by armed private mafias
run by recent university graduates who quickly capitalized on
corrupting, intimidating or assassinating senior officials in the state
and benefiting from Boris Yeltsin's mindless contracting of 'free
market' Western consultants.
Forbes magazine puts out a yearly list of the richest individuals and
families in the world. What is most amusing about the famous Forbes
magazine's background biographical notes on the Russian oligarchs is
the constant reference to their source of wealth as 'self-made' as if
stealing state property created by and defended for over 70 years by
the sweat and blood of the Russian people was the result of the
entrepreneurial skills of thugs in their twenties. Of the top eight
Russian billionaire oligarchs, all got their start from strong-arming
their rivals, setting up 'paper banks' and taking over aluminum, oil,
gas, nickel and steel production and the export of bauxite, iron and
other minerals. Every sector of the former Communist economy was
pillaged by the new billionaires: Construction, telecommunications,
chemicals, real estate, agriculture, vodka, foods, land, media,
automobiles, airlines etc..
With rare exceptions, following the Yeltsin privatizations all of the
oligarchs quickly rose to the top or near the top, literally murdering
or intimidating any opponents within the former Soviet apparatus and
competitors from rival predator gangs.
The key 'policy' measures, which facilitated the initial pillage and
takeovers by the future billionaires, were the massive and immediate
privatizations of almost all public enterprises by the Gaidar/Chubais
team. This 'Shock Treatment' was encouraged by a Harvard team of
economic advisers and especially by US President Clinton in order to
make the capitalist transformation irreversible. Massive privatization
led to the capitalist gang wars and the disarticulation of the Russian
economy. As a result there was an 80% decline in living standards, a
massive devaluation of the Ruble and the sell-off of invaluable oil,
gas and other strategic resources at bargain prices to the rising class
of predator billionaires and US-European oil and gas multinational
corporations. Over a hundred billion dollars a year was laundered by
the mafia oligarchs in the principle banks of New York, London,
Switzerland, Israel and elsewhere – funds which would later be recycled
in the purchase of expensive real estate in the US, England, Spain,
France as well as investments in British football teams, Israeli banks
and joint ventures in minerals.
The winners of the gang wars during the Yeltsin reign followed up by
expanding operations to a variety of new economic sectors, investments
in the expansion of existing facilities (especially in real estate,
extractive and consumer industries) and overseas. Under President
Putin, the gangster-oligarchs consolidated and expanded – from
multi-millionaires to billionaires, to multi-billionaires and growing.
From young swaggering thugs and local swindlers, they became the
'respectable' partners of American and European multinational
corporations, according to their Western PR agents. The new Russian
oligarchs had 'arrived' on the world financial scene, according to the
financial press.
Yet as President Putin recently pointed out, the new billionaires have
failed to invest, innovate and create competitive enterprises, despite
optimal conditions. Outside of raw material exports, benefiting from
high international prices, few of the oligarch-owned manufacturers are
earning foreign exchange, because few can compete in international
markets. The reason is that the oligarchs have 'diversified' into stock
speculation (Suleiman Kerimov $14.4 billion USD), prostitution (Mikhail
Prokhorov $13.5 billion USD), banking (Fridman $12.6 billion USD) and
buyouts of mines and mineral processing plants.
The Western media has focused on the falling out between a handful of
Yeltsin-era oligarchs and President Vladimir Putin and the increase in
wealth of a number of Putin-era billionaires. However, the biographical
evidence demonstrates that there is no rupture between the rise of the
billionaires under Yeltsin and their consolidation and expansion under
Putin. The decline in mutual murder and the shift to state-regulated
competition is as much a product of the consolidation of the great
fortunes as it is the 'new rules of the game' imposed by President
Putin. In the mid 19th century, Honoré Balzac, surveying the rise of
the respectable bourgeois in France, pointed out their dubious origins:
"Behind every great fortune is a great crime." The swindles begetting
the decades-long ascent of the 19th century French bourgeoisie pale in
comparison to the massive pillage and bloodletting that created
Russia's 21st century billionaires.
Latin America
If blood and guns were the instruments for the rise of the
Russian billionaire oligarchs, in other regions the Market, or better
still, the US-IMF-World Bank orchestrated Washington Consensus was the
driving force behind the rise of the Latin American billionaires. The
two countries with the greatest concentration of wealth and the
greatest number of billionaires in Latin America are Mexico and Brazil
(77%), which are the two countries, which privatized the most
lucrative, efficient and largest public monopolies. Of the total $157.2
billion USD owned by the 38 Latin American billionaires, 30 are
Brazilians or Mexicans with $120.3 billion USD. The wealth of 38
families and individuals exceeds that of 250 million Latin Americans;
0.000001% of the population exceeds that of the lowest 50%. In Mexico,
the income of 0.000001% of the population exceeds the combined income
of 40 million Mexicans. The rise of Latin American billionaires
coincides with the real fall in minimum wages, public expenditures in
social services, labor legislation and a rise in state repression,
weakening labor and peasant organization and collective bargaining. The
implementation of regressive taxes burdening the workers and peasants
and tax exemptions and subsidies for the agro-mineral exporters
contributed to the making of the billionaires. The result has been
downward mobility for public employees and workers, the displacement of
urban labor into the informal sector, the massive bankruptcy of small
farmers, peasants and rural labor and the out-migration from the
countryside to the urban slums and emigration abroad.
The principal cause of poverty in Latin American is the very conditions
that facilitate the growth of billionaires. In the case of Mexico, the
privatization of the telecommunication sector at rock bottom prices,
resulted in the quadrupling of wealth for Carlos Slim Helu, the third
richest man in the world (just behind Bill Gates and Warren Buffet)
with a net worth of $49 billion USD. Two fellow Mexican billionaires,
Alfredo Harp Helu and Roberto Hernandez Ramirez benefited from the
privatization of banks and their subsequent de-nationalization, selling
Banamex to Citicorp.
Privatization, financial de-regulation and de-nationalization were the
key operating principles of US foreign economic policies implemented in
Latin America by the IMF and the World Bank. These principles dictated
the fundamental conditions shaping any loans or debt re-negotiations in
Latin America.
The billionaires-in-the-making, came from old and new money. Some began
to raise their fortunes by securing government contracts during the
earlier state-led development model (1930's to 1970's) and others
through inherited wealth. Half of Mexican billionaires inherited their
original multi-million dollar fortunes on their way up to the top. The
other half benefited from political ties and the subsequent big payola
from buying public enterprises cheap and then selling them off to US
multi-nationals at great profit. The great bulk of the 12 million
Mexican immigrants who crossed the border into the US have fled from
the onerous conditions, which allowed Mexico's traditional and nouveaux
riche millionaires to join the global billionaires' club.
Brazil has the largest number of billionaires (20) of any country in
Latin America with a net worth of $46.2 billion USD, which is greater
than the new worth of 80 million urban and rural impoverished
Brazilians. Approximately 40% of Brazilian billionaires started with
great fortunes – and simply added on – through acquisitions and
mergers. The so-called 'self-made' billionaires benefited from the
privatization of the lucrative financial sector (the Safra family with
$8.9 billion USD) and the iron and steel complexes.
How to Become a Billionaire
While some knowledge, technical and 'entrepreneurial skills' and
market savvy played a small role in the making of the billionaires in
Russia and Latin America, far more important was the interface of
politics and economics at every stage of wealth accumulation.
In most cases there were three stages:
1. During the early 'statist' model of development, the current
billionaires successfully 'lobbied' and bribed officials for government
contracts, tax exemptions, subsidies and protection from foreign
competitors. State handouts were the beachhead or take-off point to
billionaire status during the subsequent neo-liberal phase.
2. The neo-liberal period provided the greatest opportunity for seizing
lucrative public assets far below their market value and earning
capacity. The privatization, although described as 'market
transactions', were in reality political sales in four senses: in
price, in selection of buyers, in kickbacks to the sellers and in
furthering an ideological agenda. Wealth accumulation resulted from the
sell-off of banks, minerals, energy resources, telecommunications,
power plants and transport and the assumption by the state of private
debt. This was the take-off phase from millionaire toward billionaire
status. This was consummated in Latin America via corruption and in
Russia via assassination and gang warfare.
3. During the third phase (the present) the billionaires have
consolidated and expanded their empires through mergers, acquisitions,
further privatizations and overseas expansion. Private monopolies of
mobile phones, telecoms and other 'public' utilities, plus high
commodity prices have added billions to the initial concentrations.
Some millionaires became billionaires by selling their recently
acquired, lucrative privatized enterprises to foreign capital.
In both Latin America and Russia, the billionaires grabbed lucrative
state assets under the aegis of orthodox neo-liberal regimes
(Salinas-Zedillo regimes in Mexico, Collor-Cardoso in Brazil, Yeltsin
in Russia) and consolidated and expanded under the rule of supposedly
'reformist' regimes (Putin in Russia, Lula in Brazil and Fox in
Mexico). In the rest of Latin America (Chile, Colombia and Argentina)
the making of the billionaires resulted from the bloody military coups
and regimes, which destroyed the socio-political movements and started
the privatization process. This process was then even more
energetically promoted by the subsequent electoral regimes of the right
and 'center-left'.
What is repeatedly demonstrated in both Russia and Latin America is
that the key factor leading to the quantum leap in wealth – from
millionaires to billionaires – was the vast privatization and
subsequent de-nationalization of lucrative public enterprises.
If we add to the concentration of $157 billion in the hands of an
infinitesimal fraction of the elite, the $990 billion USD taken out by
the foreign banks in debt payments and the $1 trillion USD (one
thousand billion) taken out by way of profits, royalties, rents and
laundered money over the past decade and a half, we have an adequate
framework for understanding why Latin America continues to have over
two-thirds of its population with inadequate living standards and
stagnant economies.
The responsibility of the US for the growth of Latin American
billionaires and mass poverty is several-fold and involves a wide gamut
of political institutions, business elites, and academic and media
moguls. First and foremost the US backed the military dictators and
neo-liberal politicians who set up the billionaire-oriented economic
models. It was ex-President Clinton, the CIA and his economic advisers,
in alliance with the Russian oligarchs, who provided the political
intelligence and material support to put Yeltsin in power and back his
destruction of the Russian Parliament (Duma) in 1993 and the rigged
elections of 1996. And it was Washington, which allowed hundreds of
billions of dollars to be laundered in US banks throughout the 1990's
as the US Congressional Sub-Committee on Banking (1998) revealed.
It was Nixon, Kissinger and later Carter and Brzezinski, Reagan and
Bush, Clinton and Albright who backed the privatizations pushed by
Latin American military dictators and civilian reactionaries in the
1970's, 1980's and 1990's . Their instructions to the US
representatives in the IMF and the World Bank were writ large:
Privatize, de-regulate and de-nationalize (PDD) before any loans should
be negotiated.
It was US academics and ideologues working hand in glove with the
so-called multi-lateral agencies, as contracted economic consultants,
who trained, designed and pushed the PDD agenda among their former Ivy
League students-turned-economic and finance ministers and Central
Bankers in Latin America and Russia.
It was US and EU multi-national corporations and banks which bought out
or went into joint ventures with the emerging Latin American
billionaires and who reaped the trillion dollar payouts on the debts
incurred by the corrupt military and civilian regimes. The billionaires
are as much a product and/or by-product of US anti-nationalist,
anti-communist policies as they are a product of their own grandiose
theft of public enterprises.
Conclusion
Given the enormous class and income disparities in Russia, Latin America and
China (20 Chinese billionaires have a net worth of $29.4 billion USD in
less than ten years), it is more accurate to describe these countries
as 'surging billionaires' rather than 'emerging markets' because it is
not the 'free market' but the political power of the billionaires that
dictates policy.
Countries of 'surging billionaires' produce burgeoning poverty,
submerging living standards. The making of billionaires means the
unmaking of civil society – the weakening of social solidarity,
protective social legislation, pensions, vacations, public health
programs and education. While politics is central, past political
labels mean nothing. Ex-Marxist Brazilian ex-President Cardoso and
ex-trade union leader President Lula Da Silva privatized public
enterprises and promoted policies that spawn billionaires. Ex-Communist
Putin cultivates certain billionaire oligarchs and offers incentives to
others to shape up and invest.
The period of greatest decline in living standards in Latin America and
Russia coincide with the dismantling of the nationalist populist and
communist economies. Between 1980-2004, Latin America – more precisely
Brazil, Argentina and Mexico – stagnated at 0% to 1% per capita growth.
Russia saw a 50% decline in GNP between 1990-1996 and living standards
dropped 80% for everyone except the predators and their gangster
entourage.
Recent growth (2003-2007), where it occurs, has more to do with the
extraordinary rise in international prices (of energy resources, metals
and agro-exports) than any positive developments from the
billionaire-dominated economies. The growth of billionaires is hardly a
sign of 'general prosperity' resulting from the 'free market' as the
editors of Forbes Magazine claim. In fact it is the product of the
illicit seizure of lucrative public resources, built up by the work and
struggle of millions of workers, in Russia and China under Communism
and in Latin America during populist-nationalist and
democratic-socialist governments. Many billionaires have inherited
wealth and used their political ties to expand and extend their empires
– it has little to do with entrepreneurial skills.
The billionaires' and the White House's anger and hostility toward
President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela is precisely because he is reversing
the policies which create billionaires and mass poverty: He is
re-nationalizing energy resources, public utilities and expropriating
some large landed estates. Chavez is not only challenging US hegemony
in Latin America but also the entire PDD edifice that built the
economic empires of the billionaires in Latin America, Russia, China
and elsewhere.
Note: The primary data for this essay is drawn from Forbes Magazine 's "List of the World's Billionaires"published March 8, 2007
James Petras most recent book is The Power of Israel in the
United States.(clarity 2006 third printing)his essays in English can be
found at petras.lahaine.org
And in Spanish at rebellion.org