This is a weekly thread in which we read through books on and related to imperialism and geopolitics. Last week’s thread is here.
Welcome to the thirteenth week of Michael Hudson’s Super Imperialism: The Origin and Fundamentals of US World Dominance! I’m reading the Third Edition.
For every week, I will write a summary of the chapter(s) read, for those who have already read the book and don’t wish to reread, can’t follow along for various reasons, or for those joining later who want to dive right in to the next book without needing to pick this one up too. I will post all my chapter summaries in this final thread, for access in one convenient location. Please comment or message me directly if you wish to be pinged for this group.
This week, we will be reading Chapter 13: Power Through Bankruptcy, 1968-1970, which is approximately 20 pages.
Since this is the one of, if not the most pivotal events in U.S dollar hegemony, I guess I’ll try to do it justice by trying to make some key highlights what this chapter is about:
at the cost of its military hegemony’s prestige, especially in Vietnam
$10 billion of gold and decreasing versus 195 billion of money supply and increasing
For this, I think Canada was the first experiment to be
(Note: France, a major dissident to the U.S’s plans, complied due to economic stability, particularly from 1968 May Protest and Riots, and the gold flight out of the country)
As a result:
Now about the SDRs (Special Drawing Rights):
Initially the U.S was opposed to such idea, until 1968, when it saw benefit for its own hegemony
All of this is a nice appetizer to the main modus operandi to come
Much to the chagrin of Europe’s stance against this, which has been falsely exclusively attributed to France, the dissident
And here’s the more interesting part: the American spin on the balance of payments
2 hypotheses came about:
and
Specifically how, well:
It seemed, the U.S officials argued, that unless the world follows the plan of financing U.S deficits in such manner, well
Plus, what about that sweet interest? Surely that’ll bring some trust
And soon the U.S officials tried to justify the deficits as an imbedded part of the system
Just one thing, however
Oof, also the savings bank analogy doesn’t rlly work
And returning back to the “voluntary nature” of the deal
Going back to the Vietnam War issue, in this context, it means
About the IFI
Now, going back on the Gold
What the seperation of political economy into politics and economics does to a brain
Finally, let’s talk about some economic manipulation shenanigans
Consult the graph again…