As part of the ongoing global debate over how to understand this crisis and how to move forward, the International Peoples Assembly and Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research have developed a 16-point plan:
1) Immediate suspension of all work, except essential medical and logistical personnel and those required to produce and distribute food and necessities, without any loss of wages. The State must assume the cost of the wages for the period of the quarantine.
2) Health, food supply, and public safety must be maintained in an organised manner. Emergency grain stocks must be immediately released for distribution amongst the poor.
3) Schools must all be suspended.
4) Immediate socialization of hospitals and medical centres so that they do not worry about the profit motive as the crisis unfolds. These medical centres must be under the control of the government’s health campaign.
5) Immediate nationalization of pharmaceutical companies, and immediate international cooperation amongst them to find a vaccine and easier testing devices. Abolishment of intellectual property in the medical field.
6) Immediate testing of all people. Immediate mobilization of tests and support for medical personnel who are at the frontlines of this pandemic.
7) Immediate speed-up of production for materials necessary to deal with the crisis (testing kits, masks, respirators).
8) Immediate closure of global financial markets.
9) Immediate gathering of the finances to prevent the bankruptcy of governments.
10) Immediate cancellation of all non-corporate debt.
11) Immediate end to all rent and mortgage payments, as well as an end to evictions; this includes the immediate provision of adequate housing as a basic human right.
12) Decent housing must be a right for all citizens guaranteed by the state.
13) Immediate absorption of all utility payments by the State – water, electricity, and internet provided as part of a human right; where these utilities are not universally accessible, we call for them to be provided with immediate effect.
14) Immediate end to the unilateral, criminal sanctions regimes and economic blockades that impact countries such as Cuba, Iran, and Venezuela and prevent them from importing necessary medical supplies.
Urgent support for the peasantry to increase the production of healthy food and supply it to the government for direct distribution.
15) Suspension of the dollar as an international currency and request that the United Nations urgently call a new international conference to propose a common international currency.
16) Ensure a universal minimum income in every country. This makes possible to guarantee support from the state for millions of families who are out of work, working in extremely precarious conditions or self-employed. The current capitalist system excludes millions of people from formal jobs. The State should provide employment and a dignified life for the population. The cost of the Universal Basic Income can be covered by defence budgets, in particular the expense of arms and ammunition.
www.socialisteconomist.com/2020/03/the-cost-of-this-pandemic-must-not.html
1) Immediate suspension of all work, except essential medical and logistical personnel and those required to produce and distribute food and necessities, without any loss of wages. The State must assume the cost of the wages for the period of the quarantine.
2) Health, food supply, and public safety must be maintained in an organised manner. Emergency grain stocks must be immediately released for distribution amongst the poor.
3) Schools must all be suspended.
4) Immediate socialization of hospitals and medical centres so that they do not worry about the profit motive as the crisis unfolds. These medical centres must be under the control of the government’s health campaign.
5) Immediate nationalization of pharmaceutical companies, and immediate international cooperation amongst them to find a vaccine and easier testing devices. Abolishment of intellectual property in the medical field.
6) Immediate testing of all people. Immediate mobilization of tests and support for medical personnel who are at the frontlines of this pandemic.
7) Immediate speed-up of production for materials necessary to deal with the crisis (testing kits, masks, respirators).
8) Immediate closure of global financial markets.
9) Immediate gathering of the finances to prevent the bankruptcy of governments.
10) Immediate cancellation of all non-corporate debt.
11) Immediate end to all rent and mortgage payments, as well as an end to evictions; this includes the immediate provision of adequate housing as a basic human right.
12) Decent housing must be a right for all citizens guaranteed by the state.
13) Immediate absorption of all utility payments by the State – water, electricity, and internet provided as part of a human right; where these utilities are not universally accessible, we call for them to be provided with immediate effect.
14) Immediate end to the unilateral, criminal sanctions regimes and economic blockades that impact countries such as Cuba, Iran, and Venezuela and prevent them from importing necessary medical supplies.
Urgent support for the peasantry to increase the production of healthy food and supply it to the government for direct distribution.
15) Suspension of the dollar as an international currency and request that the United Nations urgently call a new international conference to propose a common international currency.
16) Ensure a universal minimum income in every country. This makes possible to guarantee support from the state for millions of families who are out of work, working in extremely precarious conditions or self-employed. The current capitalist system excludes millions of people from formal jobs. The State should provide employment and a dignified life for the population. The cost of the Universal Basic Income can be covered by defence budgets, in particular the expense of arms and ammunition.
www.socialisteconomist.com/2020/03/the-cost-of-this-pandemic-must-not.html
Socialisteconomist
The Cost of This Pandemic Must Not Bankrupt the People
✑ Vijay Prashad & Manuel Bertoldi. If we look at the example of previous crises—such as the Financial Crisis of 2008-09—then we know that the costs of these crises are rarely borne by the very rich. A 16-point plan, intended to encourage discussion.
South Korea’s Geoeconomic Project
Announced in 2017, President Moon Jae-in’s vision has a northern and a southern component. The New Northern Policy expands South Korea’s cooperation on infrastructure projects and is focused on Russia, but also includes North Korea, Belarus, Ukraine, Mongolia, China, and the five Central Asian countries.
The New Southern Policy aims to bolster South Korea’s economic cooperation with ASEAN countries.
source
Announced in 2017, President Moon Jae-in’s vision has a northern and a southern component. The New Northern Policy expands South Korea’s cooperation on infrastructure projects and is focused on Russia, but also includes North Korea, Belarus, Ukraine, Mongolia, China, and the five Central Asian countries.
The New Southern Policy aims to bolster South Korea’s economic cooperation with ASEAN countries.
source
Over the last two decades, corporate America’s credit rating has collapsed. In the early ’90s, more than sixty companies held AAA credit ratings. Today, only two US firms are AAA rated: Johnson & Johnson and Microsoft. In 2001, fewer than one in five “investment-grade” firms were rated BBB. Today half of all investment-grade corporate debt belongs to firms rated “triple-B” (BBB) or lower. A third of those firms are rated triple-B minus (BBB-), one notch away from speculative or “junk” status.
jacobinmag.com/2020/03/corporate-debt-crisis-coronavirus-financial-covid-19/
jacobinmag.com/2020/03/corporate-debt-crisis-coronavirus-financial-covid-19/
Jacobin
Corporations Are Broke. It’s Time to Cut Up Their Credit Cards.
After a decade-long, worldwide corporate debt binge, the bill has come due: huge swaths of the corporate world are now at risk of default, with only governments able to save them. This time, any bailouts must place corporate investment under public control.
During one of the many Indian famines (Southern India, 1876-78), the British viceroy Lord Lytton declared, “there is to be no interference of any kind on the part of government with the object of reducing the price of food.” Johann Hari tells the story of one British official, Sir Richard Temple, who, when he imported some food to give to the starving during another famine, was denounced by the Economist magazine for giving Indians the notion that “it is the duty of the Government to keep them alive.”
www.socialisteconomist.com/2020/03/when-economists-try-to-solve-health.html
www.socialisteconomist.com/2020/03/when-economists-try-to-solve-health.html
Socialisteconomist
When Economists Try to Solve Health Crises, the Results Can Often Be Disastrous
✑ Justin Podur. Classical economics helped kill millions in the British Empire’s famines—following economic orthodoxy today could be just as deadly.
Forwarded from Strike Force
Forward this post if your channel stands in solidarity with everyone who is not paying rent on April 1st or is refusing show up to work ✊🏳️
#podcast
theintercept.com/2020/03/19/organizer-mariame-kaba-we-need-a-peoples-bailout-to-confront-coronavirus/
theintercept.com/2020/03/19/organizer-mariame-kaba-we-need-a-peoples-bailout-to-confront-coronavirus/
The Intercept
Intercepted Podcast: Mariame Kaba and a People’s Bailout for Coronavirus
Organizer Mariame Kaba discusses the realities facing some of the most vulnerable people in our society.
Forwarded from Political memes
AP NEWS
UN General Assembly to decide on rival COVID-19 resolutions
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — How should the U.N. General Assembly and its 193 member states respond to the coronavirus pandemic? Members have been sent two rival resolutions for consideration — and under new voting rules instituted because the global body isn’t…
From "Globalisation: A systematic Marxian account" by Tony Smith, which you can also find on @pantopialibrary