
	
	
	by Michel Chossudovsky
	January 20, 2011
	from 
	GlobalResearch Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	General Zine el Abidine Ben Ali , the defunct 
	and deposed president of Tunisia is heralded by the Western media, in 
	chorus, as a dictator.
	
	The Tunisian protest movement is casually described as the consequence of an 
	undemocratic and authoritarian regime, which defies the norms of the 
	"international community".
	
	But Ben Ali was not a "dictator". Dictators decide and dictate. Ben Ali was
	a servant of Western economic interests, a faithful political puppet who 
	obeyed orders, with the active support of the international community.
	
	Foreign interference in Tunisia's domestic affairs is not mentioned in the 
	media reports. The food price hikes were not "dictated" by the Ben Ali 
	government. They were imposed by Wall Street and 
	
	the IMF. 
	
	The role of Ben Ali's government was to enforce the IMF's deadly economic 
	medicine, which over a period of more than twenty years has served to 
	destabilize the national economy and impoverish the Tunisian population.
	
	Ben Ali as head of state did not decide on anything of substance. National 
	sovereignty was foregone. In 1987, at the height of the debt crisis, the 
	left nationalist government of Habib Bourguiba was replaced by a new regime, 
	firmly committed to "free market" reforms.
	
	Macroeconomic management under the helm of the IMF was in the hands of 
	Tunisia's external creditors. Over the last 23 years, economic and social 
	policy in Tunisia has been dictated by the Washington Consensus.
	
	Ben Ali stayed in power because his government obeyed and effectively 
	enforced the diktats of the IMF, while serving the interests of both the US 
	and the European Union.
	
	This pattern has occurred in numerous countries.
	
	Continuity of the IMF's deadly reforms requires "regime replacement". 
	
	 
	
	The 
	installation of a political puppet ensures the enforcement of the neoliberal 
	agenda while also creating conditions for the eventual demise of a corrupt 
	and unpopular government which has been draw upon to impoverish an entire 
	population.
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	The Protest Movement
	
	
	It is not Wall Street and the Washington based international financial 
	institutions which are the direct target of the protest movement. The social 
	implosion was directed against a government rather than against the 
	interference of foreign powers in the conduct of government policy.
	
	At the outset, the protests were not the result of an organized political 
	movement directed against the imposition of the neoliberal reforms.
	
	Moreover, there are indications that the protest movement was manipulated 
	with a view to creating social chaos as well as ensuring political 
	continuity. There are unconfirmed reports of armed militias conducting acts 
	of repression and intimidation in major urban areas.
	
	The important question is how will the crisis evolve? How will the broader 
	issue of foreign interference be addressed by the Tunisian people?
	
	From the standpoint of both Washington and Brussels, an unpopular 
	authoritarian regime is slated to be replaced by a new puppet government. 
	Elections are envisaged under the supervision of the so-called international 
	community, in which case candidates would be pre-selected and approved.
	
	Were this process of regime change to be carried out on behalf of foreign 
	interests, the new proxy government would no doubt ensure the continuity of 
	the neoliberal policy agenda which has served to impoverish the Tunisian 
	population.
	
	The interim government led by acting president Fouad Mebazza is currently in 
	an impasse, with fierce opposition emanating from the trade union movement (UGTT). 
	
	
	 
	
	Mebazza has promised to "break with past", without however specifying 
	whether this signifies a repeal of the neoliberal economic reforms.
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Historical Background
	
	
	The media in chorus have presented the crisis in Tunisia as an issue of 
	domestic politics, without a historical insight. The presumption is that 
	with the removal of "the dictator" and the instatement of a duly elected 
	government, the social crisis will eventually be resolved. 
	
	The first "bread riots" in Tunisia date back to 1984. 
	
	 
	
	The January 1984 
	protest movement was motivated by a 100 percent hike in the price of bread. 
	This hike had been demanded by the IMF under Tunisia's structural adjustment 
	program (SAP). The elimination of food subsidies was a de facto condition of 
	the loan agreement with the IMF.
	
	President Habib Bourguiba, who played a historical role in liberating his 
	country from French colonialism, declared a state of emergency in response 
	to the riots:
	
		
		While gunfire sounded, police and army troops in Jeeps and armored personnel 
	carriers fanned out through the city to quell the "bread riot." The show of 
	force finally brought an uneasy calm, but only after more than 50 
	demonstrators and bystanders were killed. 
		 
		
		Then, in a dramatic five-minute 
	radio and television broadcast, Bourguiba announced that he was reversing 
	the price hike. 
		
		(Tunisia: Bourguiba Lets Them Eat Bread - TIME, January 
	1984)
	
	
	Following president Bourguiba's retraction, the hike in the price of bread 
	was reversed. 
	
	 
	
	Bourguiba fired his Minister of the Interior and refused to 
	abide by the demands of the Washington Consensus.
	
	The neoliberal agenda had nonetheless been instated, leading to rampant 
	inflation and mass unemployment. Three years later, Bourguiba and his 
	government were removed in a bloodless coup d'Etat, "on the grounds of 
	incompetence", leading to the instatement of General Zine el Abidine Ben Ali 
	as president in November 1987. 
	
	 
	
	This coup was not directed against Bourguiba, 
	it was largely intended to permanently dismantle the nationalist political 
	structure initially established in the mid-1950s, while also privatizing 
	State assets.
	
	The military coup not only marked the demise of post-colonial nationalism 
	which had been led by Bourguiba, it also contributed to weakening the role 
	of France. The Ben Ali government became firmly aligned with Washington 
	rather than Paris.
	
	Barely a few months following Ben Ali's November 1987 instatement as the 
	country's president, a major agreement was signed with the IMF. An agreement 
	had also been reached with Brussels pertaining to the establishment of a 
	free trade regime with the EU. A massive privatization program under the 
	supervision of 
	the IMF-World Bank was also launched. 
	
	 
	
	With 
	
	hourly wages of 
	the order of Euro 0.75 an hour, Tunisia had also become a cheap labor haven 
	for the European Union.
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Who is the dictator?
	
	
	A review of IMF documents suggests that from Ben Ali's inauguration in 1987 
	to the present, his government had faithfully abided by IMF-World Bank 
	conditionalities, including the firing of public sector workers, the 
	elimination of price controls over essential consumer goods and the 
	implementation of a sweeping privatization program. 
	
	 
	
	The lifting of trade 
	barriers ordered by the World Bank was conducive to triggering a wave of 
	bankruptcies.
	
	Following these dislocations of the national economy, cash remittances from 
	Tunisian workers in the European Union became an increasingly important 
	source of the foreign exchange earnings.
	
	There are some 650,000 Tunisians living overseas. Total workers' remittances 
	in 2010 were of the order of 
	
	US$1.960 billion, an increase of 57 percent in 
	relation to 2003. 
	
	 
	
	A large share of these remittances in foreign exchange 
	will be used to service the country's external debt.
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	The Speculative Hike in World Food Prices
	
	
	In September 2010, an understanding was reached between Tunis and the IMF, 
	which recommended the removal of remaining subsidies as a means to achieving 
	fiscal balance:
	
		
		Fiscal prudence remains an overarching priority for the [Tunisian] 
	authorities, who also see the need for maintaining a supportive fiscal 
	policy in 2010 in the current international environment. 
		 
		
		Efforts in the last 
	decade to bring down the public debt ratio significantly should not be 
	jeopardized by a too lax fiscal policy. The authorities are committed to 
	firmly control current expenditure, including subsidies... 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		IMF Tunisia: 
	2010 Article IV Consultation - Staff Report
		
		
		
		Public Information Notice on 
	the Executive Board Discussion; and Statement by the Executive Director for 
	Tunisia
	
	
	It is worth noting that the IMF's insistence on fiscal austerity and the 
	removal of subsidies coincided chronologically with a renewed upsurge in 
	staple food prices on the London, New York and Chicago commodity exchanges. 
	
	
	 
	
	These price hikes are in large part the result of speculative trade by major 
	financial and corporate agribusiness interests.
	These hikes in food prices, which are the result of outright manipulation 
	(rather than scarcity) have served to impoverish people Worldwide. 
	
	 
	
	The surge 
	in food prices constitutes a new phase of the process of global 
	impoverishment.
	
		
		"The media has casually misled public opinion on the causes of these price 
	hikes, focusing almost exclusively on issues of costs of production, climate 
	and other factors which result in reduced supply and which might contribute 
	to boosting the price of food staples. While these factors may come into 
	play, they are of limited relevance in explaining the impressive and 
	dramatic surge in commodity prices.
Spiralling food prices are in large part the result of market manipulation. 
	They are largely attributable to speculative trade on the commodity markets. 
	Grain prices are boosted artificially by large scale speculative operations 
	on the New York and Chicago mercantile exchanges. ...
Speculative trade in wheat, rice or corn, can occur without the occurrence 
	of real commodity transactions. The institutions speculating in the grain 
	market are not necessarily involved in the actual selling or delivery of 
	grain.
The transactions may use commodity index funds which are bets on the general 
	upward or downward movement of commodity prices. A "put option" is a bet 
	that the price will go down, a "call option" is a bet that the price will go 
	up. Through concerted manipulation, institutional traders and financial 
	institutions make the price go up and then place their bets on an upward 
	movement in the price of a particular commodity. 
Speculation generates market volatility. In turn, the resulting instability 
	encourages further speculative activity.
Profits are made when the price goes up. Conversely, if the speculator is 
	short-selling the market, money will be made when the price collapses.
		
This recent speculative surge in food prices has been conducive to a 
	Worldwide process of famine formation on an unprecedented scale." 
		
		
		(Michel Chossudovsky,
		
		Global Famine, Global Research, May 2, 
		2008) 
	
	
	From 2006 to 2008, there was a dramatic surge in the prices of all major 
	food staples including rice, wheat and corn. The price of rice tripled over 
	a five year period, from approximately 600$ a ton in 2003 to more than 1800$ 
	a ton in May 2008.
	
	(Michel Chossudovsky,
	
	The Global Crisis: Food, Water and Fuel. Three 
	Fundamental Necessities of Life in Jeopardy. 
	For further details, see Michel Chossudovsky, Chapter 7 Global Poverty and 
	the Economic Crisis in Michel Chossudovsky and Andrew Gavin Marshall, 
	editors,
	
	The Global Economic Crisis, The Great Depression of 
	the XXI Century)
	 
	
	
	
	The recent surge in the price of grain staples is characterized by a 32 
	percent jump in the FAO's composite food price index recorded in the second 
	half of 2010.
	
		
		"Soaring prices of sugar, grain and oilseed drove world food prices to a 
	record in December, surpassing the levels of 2008 when the cost of food 
	sparked riots around the World, and prompting warnings of prices being in 
	"danger territory".
An index compiled monthly by the United Nations surpassed its previous 
	monthly high – June 2008 – in December to reach the highest level since 
	records began in 1990. 
		 
		
		
		
		Published by the Rome-based Food and Agriculture 
		Organization (FAO), the index tracks the prices of a basket of cereals, 
	oilseeds, dairy, meat and sugar, and has risen for six consecutive months." 
		
		
		(Jill Treanor, 
		
		World food prices enter 'danger territory' to reach record 
	high, The Guardian, January 5, 2011)
	
	
	Bitter irony: 
	
		
		Against a background of rising food prices, the 
		IMF recommends 
	the removal of the subsidies with a view to reaching the goal of 
		fiscal 
	austerity. 
	
	
	 
	 
	
	Manipulating the Data on Poverty and Unemployment
	
	
	An atmosphere of social despair prevails, people's lives are destroyed.
	
	While, the protest movement in Tunisia is visibly the direct result of a 
	process mass impoverishment, the World Bank contends that the levels of 
	poverty have been reduced as a result of the free market reforms adopted by 
	the Ben Ali government.
	
	According to the World Bank's country report, the Tunisian government (with 
	the support of the Bretton Woods institutions) was instrumental in reducing 
	the levels of poverty to 7 percent (substantially lower than that recorded 
	in the US and the EU). 
	
		
		Tunisia has made remarkable progress on equitable growth, fighting poverty 
	and achieving good social indicators. It has sustained an average 5 percent 
	growth rate over the past 20 years with a steady increase in per capita 
	income and a corresponding increase in the welfare of its population that is 
	underscored by a poverty level of 7% that is amongst the lowest in the 
	region.
The steady increase in per capita income has been the main engine for 
	poverty reduction... Rural roads have been particularly important in 
	helping the rural poor connect to urban markets and services. 
		 
		
		Housing 
	programs improved the living conditions of the poor and also freed up income 
	and savings to spend on food and non-food items with resulting positive 
	impacts on poverty alleviation. Food subsidies, which have been targeted to 
	the poor, albeit not optimally, have also helped the urban poor.
		
		(World Bank 
	Tunisia - Country Brief)
	
	
	These poverty figures, not to mention the underlying economic and social 
	"analysis", are outright fabrications. 
	
	 
	
	They present the free market as the 
	engine of poverty alleviation. The World Bank's analytical framework is used 
	to justify a process of "economic repression", which has been applied 
	Worldwide in more than 150 developing countries.
	
	With a mere 7 percent of the population living in poverty (as suggested by 
	the World Bank "estimate") and 93 percent of the population meeting basic 
	needs in terms of food, housing, health and education, there would be no 
	social crisis in Tunisia. 
	
	The World Bank is actively involved in cooking the data and distorting the 
	social plight of the Tunisian population. The official rate of unemployment 
	is 14 percent, the actual level of unemployment is much higher. Recorded 
	youth unemployment is of the order of 30 percent. 
	
	 
	
	Social services, including 
	health and education have collapsed under the brunt of the IMF-World Bank 
	economic austerity measures.
	 
	
	 
	
	
	
	Tunisia and the World
	
	
	What is happening in Tunisia is part of a global economic process which 
	destroys people's lives through the deliberate manipulation of market 
	forces. 
	
	More generally, 
	
		
		"the harsh economic and social realities underlying IMF 
	intervention are soaring food prices, local-level famines, massive lay-offs 
	of urban workers and civil servants and the destruction of social programs.
		 
		
		Internal purchasing power has collapsed, health clinics and schools have 
	been closed down, hundreds of millions of children have been denied the 
	right to primary education." 
		
		(Michel Chossudovsky, 
		
		Global Famine, op cit.)