by MrBill » Mon 07 Aug 2006, 03:07:26
Petrodollar wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')or example, a poor sub-Saharan country in Africa that does not buy or trade much of anything with the US but does buy oil from OPEC may not want to finance the US trade account deficit - but it does anyway by virture of the petrodollar recycling system.
I hope you're not so disengenius to suggest that the economic problems in Robert Mugabe's failed state of Zimbabwe have something to do with trade in US dollars or the US' current account deficit?
This is a strawman argument. Corruption, not the price of oil, and in which currency it is priced, is behind poverty in Africa. Some African countries have benefited from higher oil prices and higher prices for base metals and commodities in general. Like Sudan, Chad, Angola, Nigeria and others, but have the people of those countries benefited or just a ruling elite? Alas, the World Bank cannot get these countries to account for where these revenues are going even as they use oil as bargaining chips when dealing with the World Bank over debt repayment.
Total Outpumps Exxon Mobil in Africa, New Frontier in Oil Race
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')$2 Billion From China
When the war ended, Angola agreed to an International
Monetary Fund reform program with the aim of obtaining IMF and
World Bank funds. In 2005, it broke off negotiations for an IMF
loan, which required greater accountability in how oil revenue is
used to alleviate poverty. Instead, it borrowed $2 billion from
China, which had no such requirements.
In March, the IMF issued a formal report describing its
preliminary findings. It recommended that the Angolan government
be more transparent in how it spends its $10 billion in oil
revenue, which accounted for more than 90 percent of the
country's export earnings last year.
Global Witness, a London-based organization that monitors
corruption, especially in areas with diamonds, timber and oil,
says as much as $1 billion a year of Angola's oil revenue is
unaccounted for since 1996. It may have been diverted from the
Angolan National Bank into Angola's national oil company and to
the presidency, the group says.
Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, 64, has been Angola's president
since 1979. The country held its only elections in 1992, and he
won, continuing his rule.
`No Proper Debate'
``There is no proper debate on openness or transparency or
reconstruction,'' says Sarah Wykes, an African specialist at
Global Witness. ``How much of the oil wealth is going to the good
of the country? Without good governance, you'll never know.''
Angola ranked 151st out of 158 nations in Transparency
International's 2005 Corruption Perceptions Index. The agency
rated Angola 2.0 out of 10 for perception of bribery and misuse
of public funds. Iceland scored 9.7, making it the most
transparent.
Ismael Gaspar Martins, Angola's UN ambassador, says the
government has been tackling the issue of transparency.
``If conditions are so bad, or opaque, of course you would
not invest,'' Martins says. Angola is spending 40 percent of its
budget on social issues such as education and health, he says.
``One of the things needed is rehabilitation of the
infrastructure,'' he says. ``This is a major effort that is being
done.''
I can post the entire artitle if you are interested.
But at the end of the day petroleum engineers and geologists as well as the oil companies that employ them go to where the oil is. There is no use looking for oil where there is none. Growth in the USA, Germany, Japan and China all depend on imports of oil, base metals and commodities from some of the poorest countries in the world, but they are poor because their governments steal from them, not because oil and other commodities are priced in dollars. Although, naturally some of those dollars do get recycled in euros and francs via Swiss bank accounts from corrupt dictators who are also happy to take World Bank loans as well! ; - )