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National Catholic Reporter,: July 29, 2005
CONFESSIONS OF
AN ECONOMIC HIT MAN
Coming clean about U.S. corporatocracy
By
John Perkins
Berrett
Koehler Publishers, 264 pages, $24.95
Reviewed by TOM KEENE
The Odyssey of a Conscience could
have been the subtitle of John Perkins
Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.
Like most of us, Mr. Perkins grew up believing
that America was a liberating force, encouraging
democracy and self-determination for other
nations. He also took for granted the American
notion that success is rewarded with money
and power.
In the 10 years between 1971 and 1981, Mr. Perkins
worked for an international consulting firm
where he earned impressive job titles and salaries.
Mr. Perkins real function was to serve
as an Economic Hit Man, or EHM, for corporate
enterprise in the Third World to build global
empire. EHMs, he writes, use international
financing organizations to foment conditions
that make other nations subservient to the
corporatocracy running our biggest corporations,
our government and our banks.
The Economic Hit Mans primary tools are
loans to develop the infrastructures that serve
corporations: electric generating plants,
highways, ports, airports or industrial parks.
A key condition of each loan is that the project
be built by U.S. engineering and construction
companies. While the money goes right to the
U.S. firms, the recipient country is
required to pay it all back, principal plus
interest. The debts are so large that
eventually the debtor country has to default.
The debt becomes a lever forcing that country
to serve U.S. and corporate interests, whether
with United Nations votes, the installation
of military bases or access to precious resources
such as oil. If debt is not enough, other
tools are brought in -- fraudulent financial
reports, rigged elections, payoffs, extortion,
sex and murder. So, as Mr. Perkins notes,
another country is added to our global
empire.
In his travels, Mr. Perkins made it a point to
learn to converse in the languages of the countries
to which he was assigned. This gave him access
to people that other Economic Hit Men did not
have access to. Though consulting with wealthy
and English-speaking elites, Mr. Perkins hung
out with students and workers who gave him
an earful of how his work steals from the poor
and gives to the rich.
To demonstrate the impact of EHMs, Mr. Perkins
offers the example of Ecuador, the country
he served in as a Peace Corps volunteer in
1968. We loaned it billions of dollars
so it could hire our engineering and construction
firms to build projects that would help its
richest families. As a result, in ... three
decades, the official poverty level grew from
50 to 70 percent, public debt increased from
$240 million to $16 billion, and the share
of national resources allocated to the poorest
citizens declined from 20 percent to 6 percent.
Today, Ecuador must devote nearly 50 percent
of its national budget simply to paying off
its debts -- instead of to helping the millions
of its citizens who are officially classified
as dangerously impoverished.
Mr. Perkins recalls driving past a concrete dam
for which he had arranged financing. The dam
had dried up the living of families in dozens
of fishing villages, and he contemplated how
his job imposed costs on people and on nature:
an oil pipeline that leaked twice what the
Exxon Valdez spilled; the near vanishing of
fragile rain forests, macaws and jaguars; three
Ecuadorian indigenous cultures driven
to near collapse; and pristine
rivers transformed into cesspools. Considering
all this, Mr. Perkins broke into a sweat, his
stomach churning. Conscience was hitting the
hit man.
Conscience had struck before in 1977 when Mr.
Perkins met a beautiful Colombian woman
who would become a powerful agent for change
in my life. Prior to meeting Paula, Mr.
Perkins would always find a way to rationalize
staying in the system.
She convinced me to go deep inside myself
and see that I would never be happy as long
as I continued in that role.
Mr. Perkins quit the role of EHM in 1981 but
kept a cautious silence about the EHM system.
With the help of contacts in high places, he
built his own alternative energy company, Independent
Power Systems Inc. Later he sold it for big
money to Ashland Oil Company. He entered the
nonprofit turf and worked with indigenous people
in Latin America while teaching folks in Europe
and North America about these cultures. He
wrote five books about that endeavor, always
avoiding references to my EHM activities.
As Mr. Perkins looked at his daughter, he came
to understand that without coming clean about
EHMs, all his books and works could not assuage
his conscience or do his duty to his daughter.
Jessica was inheriting a world where
millions of children are saddled with debts
they will never be able to repay. And I had
to accept responsibility for it. With
that bit of clarity, Mr. Perkins resolved to
write his Confessions. He made it a fast and
engaging read.
For Mr. Perkins, confessing was an essential
part of my personal wake up call. Like all
confessions, it is the first step toward redemption.
Mr. Perkins invites his readers in Americas
democratic republic turned empire to examine
their own conscience and to make confession
about our denial and complicity.
Tom Keene is a retired professor of religious
studies at Our Lady of the Lake University
in San Antonio.
National Catholic Reporter, July 29, 2005
See also Religion
and the Market by David Loy
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