2002 Ron Paul 10:1
Mr. Speaker, I rise to
introduce
legislation to withdraw the United States from the Bretton Woods
Agreement and
thus end taxpayer support for the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Rooted in a
discredited economic philosophy and a complete disregard for
fundamental
constitutional principles, the IMF forces American taxpayers to
subsidize large,
multinational corporations and underwrite economic destruction around
the globe.
This is because the IMF often uses the $37 billion line of credit
provided to it
by the American taxpayers to bribe countries to follow destructive,
statist
policies.
2002 Ron Paul 10:2
For example, Mr. Speaker, the
IMF
played a major role in creating the Argentine economic crisis. Despite
clear
signs over the past several years that the Argentine economy was in
serious
trouble, the IMF continued pouring taxpayer-subsidized loans with an
incredibly
low interest rate of 2.6% into the country. In 2001, as Argentinas
fiscal
position steadily deteriorated, the IMF funneled over 8 billion dollars
to the
Argentine government!
2002 Ron Paul 10:3
According to Congressman Jim
Saxton,
Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee, this "Continued lending over
many
years sustained and subsidized a bankrupt Argentine economic policy,
whose
collapse is now all the more serious. The IMFs generous subsidized
bailouts
lead to moral hazard problems, and enable shaky governments to pressure
the IMF
for even more funding or risk disaster."
2002 Ron Paul 10:4
Argentina is just the latest
example of
the folly of IMF policies. Only four years ago the world economy was
rocked by
an IMF-created disaster in Asia. The IMF regularly puts the taxpayer on
the hook
for the mistakes of the big banks. Oftentimes, Mr. Speaker, IMF funds
end up in
the hands of corrupt dictators who use our taxpayer-provided largesse
to prop up
their regimes by rewarding their supporters and depriving their
opponents of
access to capital.
2002 Ron Paul 10:5
If not corrupt, most IMF
borrowers are
governments of countries with little economic productivity. Either way,
most
recipient nations end up with huge debts that they cannot service,
which only
adds to their poverty and instability. IMF money ultimately corrupts
those
countries it purports to help, by keeping afloat reckless political
institutions
that destroy their own economies.
2002 Ron Paul 10:6
IMF policies ultimately are
based on a
flawed philosophy that says the best means of creating economic
prosperity is
through government-to-government transfers. Such programs cannot
produce growth,
because they take capital out of private hands, where it can be
allocated to its
most productive use as determined by the choices of consumers in the
market, and
place it in the hands of politicians. Placing economic resources in the
hands of
politicians and bureaucrats inevitably results in inefficiencies,
shortages, and
economic crises, as even the best intentioned politicians cannot know
the most
efficient use of resources.
2002 Ron Paul 10:7
In addition, the IMF violates
basic
constitutional and moral principles. The federal government has no
constitutional authority to fund international institutions such as the
IMF.
Furthermore, Mr. Speaker, it is simply immoral to take money from
hard-working
Americans to support the economic schemes of politically-powerful
special
interests and third-world dictators.
2002 Ron Paul 10:8
In all my years in Congress, I
have
never been approached by a taxpayer asking that he or she be forced to
provide
more subsidies to Wall Street executives and foreign dictators. The
only
constituency for the IMF is the huge multinational banks and
corporations. Big
banks used IMF funds- taxpayer funds- to bail themselves out from
billions in
losses after the Asian financial crisis. Big corporations obtain
lucrative
contracts for a wide variety of construction projects funded with IMF
loans.
Its a familiar game in Washington, with corporate welfare disguised as
compassion for the poor.
2002 Ron Paul 10:9
The Argentine debacle is yet
further
proof that the IMF was a bad idea from the very beginning-
economically,
constitutionally, and morally. The IMF is a relic of an era when
power-hungry
bureaucrats and deluded economists believed they could micromanage the
worlds
economy. Withdrawal from the IMF would benefit American taxpayers, as
well as
workers and consumers around the globe. I hope my colleagues will join
me in
working to protect the American taxpayer from underwriting the
destruction of
countries like Argentina, by cosponsoring my legislation to end
Americas
support for the IMF.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr022702.htm