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Ichingcarpenter

(36,988 posts)
Thu Dec 12, 2013, 04:42 AM Dec 2013

Global Power Project: The Group of Thirty, Architects of Austerity

The Group of Thirty, a preeminent think tank that brings together dozens of the world’s most influential policy makers, central bankers, financiers and academics, has been the focus of two recent reports for Occupy.com’s Global Power Project. In studying this group, I compiled CVs of the G30's current and senior members: a total of 34 individuals. The first report looked at the origins of the G30, while the second examined some of the current projects and reports emanating from the group. In this installment, I take a look at some specific members of the G30 and their roles in justifying and implementing austerity measures.

Central Bankers, Markets and Austerity

For the current members of the Group of Thirty who are sitting or recently-sitting central bankers, their roles in the financial and economic turmoil of recent years is well-known and, most especially, their role in bailing out banks, providing long-term subsidies and support mechanisms for financial markets, and forcing governments to implement austerity and "structural reform" policies, notably in the European Union. With both the former European Central Bank (ECB) President Jean-Claude Trichet and current ECB President Mario Draghi serving as members of the G30, austerity measures have become a clearly favored policy of the G30.

In a January 2010 interview with the Wall Street Journal, Jean-Claude Trichet explained that he had been “involved personally in numerous financial crises since the beginning of the 1980s,” in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and Soviet Union, having been previously the president of the Paris Club – an "informal" grouping that handles debt crisis and restructuring issues on behalf the world’s major creditor nations. In this capacity, Trichet “had to deal with around 55 countries that were in bankruptcy.”

In July of 2010, Trichet wrote in the Financial Times that “now is the time to restore fiscal sustainability,” noting that “consolidation is a must,” which is a different way of saying austerity. In each of E.U. government bailouts – of which the ECB acted as one of the three central institutions responsible for negotiating and providing the deal, alongside the European Commission and the IMF, forming the so-called Troika – austerity measures were always a required ingredient, which subsequently plunged those countries into even deeper economic, social and political crises (Spain and Greece come to mind).

- See more at: http://www.occupy.com/article/global-power-project-group-thirty-architects-austerity#sthash.bW5C1CWI.dpuf

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Global Power Project: The Group of Thirty, Architects of Austerity (Original Post) Ichingcarpenter Dec 2013 OP
Look forward to reading the rest of the series, Joe Shlabotnik Dec 2013 #1

Joe Shlabotnik

(5,604 posts)
1. Look forward to reading the rest of the series,
Thu Dec 12, 2013, 04:33 PM
Dec 2013

Andrew Gavin Marshall writes some good stuff. For context, from the first 2 parts of the series:

This institution, though not widely discussed, is enormously influential. And here's why.

The history of the Group of Thirty goes back to the Rockefeller Foundation, which provided the organization's initial funding. In its 1978 annual report, the Rockefeller Foundation – which represents the interests of highly centralized corporate and financial power – recalled that it was created in 1913 as a response to “the Populist assault on the massive concentration of wealth in the hands of few.”
http://www.occupy.com/article/global-power-project-group-thirty-and-good-discussion-theyre-still-having

...In other words, for the Group of Thirty, they don’t produce mere "recommendations," but rather "instructions" which they expect to be followed. It is of significance that many of those who produced the report and who are members of the G30 conveniently hold an official position so as to be able to dutifully implement those instructions.

The report noted some “ideal candidates” to manage long-term financing, such as pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, insurance companies, endowments and foundations. By the end of 2010, these institutions had roughly $57 trillion in assets, a number which the G30 predicted would increase by $3 trillion per year until 2020.

Noting that the world’s major economies would be continuing to undergo austerity measures – or "fiscal consolidation" programs – over the “medium-term,” the ability of governments to make investments would be heavily restrained. Thus, “the private sector will need to be mobilized to fill the gap.” In other words, so-called "public-private partnerships" become the route to go, to ensure that corporations and banks reap massive profits, subsidized by governments.
http://www.occupy.com/article/global-power-project-group-thirty-and-its-methods-financial-governance

Usurp democratically elected power by dismantling a government's ability to raise taxes, or regulate markets in any way. Starve the citizens through austerity. Create dependency while integrating the 1% 'benefactor class' as the only possible solution. Sell it to the public as cheap goods, and economic wisdom (Thatcher's T.I.N.A.)

Perhaps ancient-alien-lizard-people-banking-Illuminati are not that far fetched after all.
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