Wednesday

Economy Hurting More Than Violence

** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches **

*Violence is taking a heavy toll in Iraq, but everyday economic
difficulties could be hurting people more.*


*BAGHDAD, Nov 9 (IPS) - * Violence is taking a heavy toll in Iraq, but
everyday economic difficulties could be hurting people more.

Nearly 20 months into the occupation, Iraqis find themselves in a
desperate situation, with countless struggling to survive.

U.S. President George W. Bush said at a speech at the U.S. Army War
College May 24 this year that the United States wants ”freedom and
independence, security and prosperity for the Iraqi people.”

Prosperity now looks like 70 percent unemployment. A recent study found
that if the food ration programme set up by Saddam Hussein's regime
during the U.S.-led sanctions was disbanded, more than 25 percent of
Iraqis would starve to death.

Bush had also praised ”a growing private economy” in Iraq after the
former governing council approved a new law ”that opens the country to
foreign investment for the first time in decades.”

But Antonia Juhasz, project director at the International Forum on
Globalisation based in San Francisco in the United States says that
orders to this effect by the disbanded Coalition Provisional Authority
have allowed the economy of Iraq to be sold from under Iraqis.

In a paper 'The Hand-Over That Wasn't: Illegal Orders give the U.S. a
Lock on Iraq's Economy', she wrote that order no. 39 allows for ”(1)
privatisation of Iraq's 200 state-owned enterprises; (2) 100 percent
foreign ownership of Iraqi businesses; (3) 'national treatment' -- which
means no preferences for local over foreign businesses; (4)
unrestricted, tax-free remittance of all profits and other funds; and
(5) 40-year ownership licences.”

Iraqis are therefore not given preference in reconstruction efforts in
their own country. Foreign corporations such as Halliburton and Bechtel
have been allowed ”to buy up Iraqi businesses, do all of the work and
send all of their money home,” Juhasz said.. ”They cannot be required to
hire Iraqis or to reinvest their money in the Iraqi economy. They can
take out their investments at any time and in any amount.”

The consequences of those decisions are being felt in Iraqi homes. Abu
Ahmed al-Hadithi, 40, sells vegetables in the al-Adhamiya district of
Baghdad. ”The economic situation is very bad now,” he said as he stood
waiting to sell some cucumbers. ”The costs of gas and food are going up
so high. So even if we make more now, everything is costing more.”

The vegetables he sells now are imported. ”I make less profit now, I
have nine people to take care of, and it has made my life very
difficult,” he said.

This is the consequence of order no. 12 of the Bremer orders as they
came to be called after former U.S. administrator in Iraq L. Paul
Bremer. The order suspends ”all tariffs, customs duties, import taxes,
licensing fees and similar surcharges for goods entering or leaving Iraq.”

Juhasz says this led to ”an immediate and dramatic inflow of cheap
foreign consumer products -- devastating local producers and sellers who
were thoroughly unprepared to meet the challenge of their mammoth global
competitors.”

Another critical factor leading to the dismal economic situation in
occupied Iraq is that little has come by way of the promised
reconstruction funds.

Anthony Cordesman from the Centre for Strategic and International
Studies in Washington says that as of June 25 this year, ”the Programme
Management Office (PMO) data show...out of 18.4 billion dollars in aid,
11 billion dollars has been apportioned, 7.6 billion dollars has been
committed, 4.8 billion dollars has been obligated, and all of 333
million dollars has actually been spent.”

This has meant idle factories, and Abu Gouda, 50, knows what that means.
The ex-factory worker too is now selling vegetables in al-Adhamiya market.

”I make between 8,000-10,000 dinars (five to seven dollars) a day, and
this is just enough to feed my family of seven,” he said at his
vegetable stall. ”Things have become so difficult for us, this is what I
have to do to take care of my family.”

The charity Christian Aid says the U.S.-controlled coalition in Baghdad
is handing over power to an Iraqi government without properly
investigating what it has done with some 20 billion dollars of Iraq's
own money. Many Iraqis say the economy is suffering because of the
security situation.

”We have no security and this means our economy cannot function,” said
Sabah Ahmed, a former local official, now unemployed. ”People are in a
critical situation because of the increase in prices. The gasoline,
transportation, everything is going up so much.”

Another former official is trying to sell sweets, but does not sell
many.. ”Before people used to eat so many sweets, but now they are
buying less because nobody can afford them.” (END)

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