Boycott World Bank Bonds; Take Its Money Away!
The following petition from Southern activist organizations represents
the opening salvo in a new campaign to de-commission the institutions
that impose structural adjustment programs. This campaign, initiated
by peoples‚ movements in all parts of the world, calls for a boycott
of World Bank bonds, the major vehicle through which that institution
acquires its capital resources, until it ends its support of austerity
policies and cancels debts owed it by impoverished countries. The
letter has over 100 endorsers from 29 Southern countries.
Eighty percent of World Bank funding comes from bonds.
Many of these bonds are held by public institutions. This means
that we can have leverage over the World Bank by asking institutions
such as universities and union pension funds to declare that they
will not purchase those bonds.
The inspiration for this campaign comes from the successful
campaigns targeting the financial supporters of South Africa‚s apartheid
regime. While we may not actually "de-fund" the Bank in
the immediate future, the campaign can publicize the negative impacts
the Bank has among college students and workers, and, through demonstrations
and victories, also attract media coverage. Once the momentum starts
to build, the Bank‚s reputation among investors will become increasingly
vulnerable. Our intention is to turn the weapon of denial of funds
˜ the same weapon the Bank uses so frequently and with such destructive
effect ˜ against the Bank.
Already several "socially-responsible investment
firms" have developed policies against buying World Bank bonds.
As Citizens Advisers stated: "As socially responsible investors
we do not invest or recommend investment in World Bank bonds because
of the Bank‚s record for financing projects and supporting policies
that are documented financial, social and environmental failures."
The Calvert World Values Fund determined that "the World Bank
appears to fail to meet the spirit of the fund‚s human dignity and
environmental criteria." This campaign will put the weight
of public pressure behind the moral findings of these firms in order
to force larger investors to make the moral choice, even if only
to appease public sentiment.
Signatures for a companion letter from Northern activists
(saying simply that they support the letter below) are also being
compiled. To sign-on, send an e-mail to signon@rtk.net
or call one of the numbers below. For more information on the campaign,
contact the following:
General Coordination: Beverly Bell Student Organizing:
Daisy Pitkin
Center for Economic Justice Macalester College
Albuquerque, New Mexico St. Paul, Minnesota
e-mail: econjustice@rtk.net
e-mail: daisypitkin@hotmail.com
telephone: 505/341-1864 telephone: 651/644-0968
AN OPEN LETTER FROM THE SOUTH TO THE WORLD BANK
Mr. James Wolfensohn - President, World Bank Group
Dear Mr. Wolfensohn:
As citizens of countries suffering from World Bank policies, we
are writing to you because:
- 65% of World Bank lending today is for sectoral and structural
adjustment loans;
- The conditions attached to these and other World Bank loans
have crippled economic growth, hindered economic development,
promoted dependency, and increased misery and poverty in developing
countries;
- Adjustment is vastly increasing the socio-ecoanomic burden
on women;
- Adjustment leads to the promotion of sweatshops, and the denial
of workers‚ rights to organize and to earn a decent living;
- Adjustment is destroying peasant-led agricultural production
and the abilities of our countries to feed themselves;
- Adjustment has accelerated destruction of the natural environment;
- Adjustment has a very destructive impact on the most vulnerable
sectors of the population;
- Adjustment is degrading our cultural integrity, by changing
our models of consumption and our relationship with nature;
- Adjustment has significantly added to the external debt burden
of countries implementing such programs;
- Privatization under World Bank policies has led to increased
corruption, private gain at the expense of the public, further
concentration of wealth and power, greater unemployment and
decreased access to public services;
- The World Bank in practice supports the macroeconomic policies
imposed by the International Monetary Fund by making agreement
with the IMF a condition of Bank lending, and by contributing
money to IMF austerity packages, and is therefore responsible
for the consequences of those policies;
- For sound and healthy economies, societies, and citizenry,
economic policy in our countries must be formed in the interest
of the pooand working people who compose the majority of the
population; and
- National economic sovereignty is a prerequisite for the adoption
of such policies.
Since the majority of the Bank‚s funds are raised in
the private capital market, we call on all supporters of human rights
and sustainable economic development to boycott the purchase of
World Bank bonds, and encourage all public institutions to do so.
Moreover, we call on governments of all member nations
of the World Bank, to cease further funding to the World Bank until
all destructive World Bank lending has ended and the World Bank
has cancelled all debts owed to it by Third World countries
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