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Putting MONETARY
REFORM on the G20 APRIL AGENDA 1. Update.
It's been all go since my last communication
on 4 February. This message is an update. There
is a request to Prime Minister Gordon Brown to be supported,
please (Item 2). An Emergency Congress is taking place today and tomorrow. Please send it a message
asking it to bring to his attention the need for monetary reform to be on the
G20's April agenda (Item 3). There are several
active new links on monetary reform now on my website's Links
page (Item 4). Supportive
messages from Mexico, the US, Australia, and Ireland and other parts of
Europe have come in, and many new individual supporters have
been in touch (Items 5 to 9). Finally, two important background documents
(Items 10 and 11). Understanding is spreading fast that the dodgy foundations of the
world's present "financial architecture" - how the
supply of money is created nationally and internationally, and what is taxed
and what is not taxed - are the
prime (not sub-prime!) causes of the world's present financial disaster.
The "elephant in the room" is too big and too obvious and too
simple to be noticed by professional expert financial "architects".
A
historic drama could be building up, in which we all have bit parts.
As it becomes clearer and clearer that virtually all our leading politicians
and financiers and economic pundits have lost the plot - that virtually none
of the little emperors has any clothes - how will the drama unfold? That will be up to us. 2. Please vote for the request to Gordon Brown made by
"summit" at http://yoosklondonsummit.com/profile/730/summit.aspx:
"Will you place on the G20 agenda the proposals by James Robertson
(www.jamesrobertson.com) for monetary reform ... ". Thanks to Martin
Hyams (http://economics4change.wordpress.com)
for this. 3. Please e-mail an urgent personal message in favour of
including monetary reform on the G20 April agenda to Rights And Humanity's
Emergency Congress On Global Economic Reform. The Congress is on NOW and
Tomorrow. Their email address is congress@.... The message might be on the following lines:
The Emergency Congress is being held in South Africa House
in London from 23rd to 25th February, in co-operation with the South African
Human Rights Commission and Tomorrow's Company, with Archbishop Desmond Tutu
as patron. Its recommendations will go to Gordon Brown for the G20
April meeting, and also to the Commission of Experts of the President of the
UN General Assembly on Reforms of the International Monetary and Financial
System. Our G20 Monetary
Reform Campaign Document has been submitted to the Rights and Humanity
Congress, as has Hazel Henderson's powerful new paper containing "More Advice For Summiteers On
Reforming The Global Casino". For more on Rights and Humanity see www.rightsandhumanity.org. 4. New
Links on My Website - please see these excellent new links
listed under "Monetary Reform". End the Recession
- proposes just that. Simon Dixon
- future prospects for monetary reform and banking & finance. For the Common Good
– includes a good 2009 pamphlet on Monetary Reform. The Money
Reform Party - just that, very clear. Scottish
Monetary Reform - recovering money from the
private banking system and returning it to constitutional & democratic
accountability. Ecova
Project - a new green alternative. 5. Encouragement
from Mexico - Ecosol and World Social Forum discussions in
Mexico at the beginning of this month included nationalising the issue of new
money and had their sights on the G20 April meeting in London. For
correspondence on 13-15 February click here. 6. FEASTA
(Foundation for the Economics for Sustainability) - this
Irish NGO is outward looking and breaking new ground, as always. Click
here for its 2009 project on radical monetary reform, and click here for its new Smart Taxes Network. 7. Danger
of financial disaster predicted in 1999 - click
here for a September 1999 New York Times article predicting that the
government-subsidized corporation Fannie Mae "may run into trouble in an
economic downturn, prompting a government rescue similar to that of the
savings and loan industry in the 1980's". That's just what has now
happened in a very big way. Thanks to Charles Mollison, Chairman of the Foundation for National Renewal
in Australia for this reference. As he says, "The disaster has been at
least nine years in the making. One would have thought more than enough time
to realise it was not a good idea". 8. A new Coalition
for Economic Justice of twelve
member organisations advocating Land Value Taxation has recently come
together in the UK. Click
here for details. As the Coalition says in its important 13 February letter to
the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Also see www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/feb/24/house-prices-taxes. 9. Support
from Richard Murphy - the impact of Richard Murphy's sustained work
against tax havens with John Christensen and other colleagues in the Tax
Justice Network is growing rapidly as the global financial crisis worsens. So it's good to see him emphasise the need to get behind a
simple, united campaign for monetary reform in a recent
blog post.
10. Richard
C Cook - his long article Credit
as a Public Utility: the Key to Monetary Reform (over 9000 words) gives
fascinating American background to the need for monetary reform. As a taster,
I have extracted the first and last few paragraphs of its final section on
Analysis and Conclusions. Click
here to read them. 11.Bernard
Lietaer - the Crisis2008
section on his website includes an authoritative 30-page White Paper on All the Options for
Managing a Systemic Bank Crisis. Its primary focus is on alternative currencies. But, in his
Section IV(d) on Nationalizing
the Money Creation Process, he gives a fair summary of the
proposal to treat the public money supply as a source of public revenue, not
private profit, but expresses some objections These can be questioned. But I'm sure that, unlike some
well-meaning but naive currency decentralisers, he doesn't think monetary
reform would make matters worse than continuing to allow the big banking
corporations to create 95% of the public money supply as profit-making debt. Personally,
I have always supported a much wider development of decentralised currencies,
along with a more decentralised economy generally. But I see it as complementary to
mainstream reform, and largely dependent on mainstream reform
having happened. Six weeks to go until the G20 meeting - say, four weeks to
get the agenda changed. Well worth trying! James
Robertson 24th February, 2009 www.jamesrobertson.com/g20monetaryreform.htm
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