TRANSFORMATION WATCH #4: BUSH’S MIXED SIGNALS ON SOVIET AID PUT U.S. TAXPAYERS IN HARM’S WAY
(Washington, D.C.): In his 24
September meeting in New York with Soviet
Foreign Minister Boris Pankin, President
Bush reportedly discouraged his
interlocutor from expecting large-scale
American aid to the former Soviet Union
in the absence of structural reform
there. At the same moment, however, his
Administration was sending the most
recent in a series of contradictory
signals to the Kremlin and to its Western
commercial lenders. Unfortunately, the
U.S. taxpayer is likely to be the
ultimate victim of the difference between
what — to use Mr. Bush’s terminology —
his “lips” are saying and what
his “hips” are doing.
The Washington Post reported
Wednesday that Mr. Bush used his meeting
with Pankin to convey the message that
“further help depends on the pace of
economic reform in the central government
and republics.” On the same day,
however, the New York Times
disclosed that Secretary of Agriculture
Edward Madigan was increasing the
taxpayer-underwritten guarantees on $211
million worth of agricultural export
credits to 100 percent of
principal and the full value of the
prevailing rate of interest for
52-week Treasury bills (about 5.2%). This
step — which the Center for Security
Policy has warned for several months was
in the offing — replaces the previous,
already inordinately generous terms for
such guarantees (98 percent of principal
and the first 4.5 percentage points of
interest on the covered principal).
Under this new arrangement, the
U.S. taxpayer will be assuming virtually
the full risk associated with such
dubious credit transactions.
Incredibly, this is being done at the
very moment that the prospects for
repayment — which have been declining
sharply in recent months — have
virtually vaporized. Indeed, the only
reason for this change in Administration
policy is that commercial lenders were
simply refusing to absorb any additional
credit exposure in the former Soviet
Union.
The extent of Moscow’s insolvency was
vividly portrayed in the comments of top
Soviet and European officials in Jim
Hoagland’s column in the Washington
Post today. For example, a European
cabinet minister confided, “They
[the Soviets] are broke, dead broke, and
in private they say so.” Hoagland
went on to say:
“The central authorities in
Moscow have run out of foreign
currency. A senior Moscow
official made the embarrassing
admission to a Western leader
recently that his government will
be unable to make foreign loan
payments, purchase imports or
meet its payrolls abroad without
an immediate cash infusion of $1
billion from the West in the next
few weeks.”
According to a senior official at an
American commercial bank quoted on
background by the New York Times,
now that banks’ depositors and
shareholders will not be liable for any
losses when Moscow center defaults on or
reschedules its debts (as it is expected
to do imminently), “the expanded
guarantees should be more than sufficient
to insure that they are used.”
Today’s Times confirms that
Soviet authorities have been
“flooded” with offers to lend
money. After all, as Senator Bill Bradley
(D-NJ) put it, “It’s a no-lose deal
for the banks and a bad deal for the
taxpayers.”
Unfortunately, this
is but the most recent in a series of
initiatives embraced by the Bush
Administration which offers the
reconfigured — but as yet essentially
unreformed — Soviet center greatly
expanded access to U.S. taxpayer
resources. Leading Soviet advocates of
systemic economic reform just today
underscored the frightening
extent to which so little has changed in
the post-coup period. Konstantin
Borovoi, the head of the new Russian
stock exchange, was quoted in the Washington
Post today as saying:
“I’ll tell you what happened
during the coup. Communists
defeated Communists. They may
call themselves democrats, but
they are still Communists. Their
methods are the same. We are
again building communism. It’s
the same old centralized methods
and the same old people. It’s
terrible.”
Vladimir Tikhonov, one of the
leading Soviet economists, whose
commitment to real reform led him to
break with Mikhail Gorbachev last year,
added:
“The inertia of the old
state apparatus is
enormous….for all the changes
that have taken place over the
last few weeks, the system is
basically the same. In this
country, the provisional has a
tendency of becoming the
permanent. There is no guarantee
that things are going to be any
better tomorrow. The more we
resort to temporary measures, the
more obstacles we create to real
economic reform.”
Despite this deplorable reality, the Bush
Administration has — in addition to its
offer of liberalized agricultural credit
guarantees — taken the following steps:
- On 10 September, Secretary of
State James Baker disclosed that
— as far as the Bush
Administration is concerned —
all that a reconfigured Soviet
center need do now to gain access
to Western economic assistance
would be to express “a
commitment to true free market
economic policies” and to
have “some sort of
plan.” As he put it,
“If they can take those
steps, we will be there. They
don’t have to take the steps
first, but commit to taking the
steps.” - The Administration decided last
month to accelerate
Moscow center’s access to the
taxpayer credit guarantees
affected by Secretary Madigan’s
action. In a decision taken in
June 1991 — which effectively
waived the statuary requirement
that recipients of such credits
be creditworthy — Mr.
Bush announced a distribution of
$1.5 billion in credit guarantees
to occur in three tranches. The
first $600 million was released
immediately; the second $500
million was not supposed to be
released until October; the last
remaining $400 million was to
wait until February 1992. - In the wake of the August coup,
however, the President acted to
speed up ditribution of $315
million from the second tranche
— releasing $116 million
immediately. The newly sweetened
guarantee terms will apply to
$211 million dollars worth of
credits out of that $315 million
package. It will almost
certainly apply to the remaining
$585 million now due to be made
available to Moscow starting in
October as well as all such
credit guarantees in the
foreseeable future. - According to press reports, the
Administration is now willing to
support immediate Soviet entry
into the International Monetary
Fund and World Bank as a full
member. Such a step
would confer borrowing privileges
on Moscow center, allowing it
near-term access to billions in
Western and other taxpayers’
funds. Scarcely three months ago,
senior Administration officials
like Treasury Secretary Nicholas
Brady and Under Secretary David
Mulford were defending the U.S.
insistence that Moscow obtain
nothing more than “associate
membership” status until
such time as the Soviet Union had
undergone wholesale structural
economic transformation. - The Administration has also
insisted on pressing for
prompt congressional approval of
the U.S.-Soviet Trade Agreement
signed last year. This
accord — made with an entity
that no longer exists — would
serve as the basis for other
agreements and credit
arrangements that will have the
effect of aiding and
strengthening the reconfigured
Soviet center. For example, one
of the side letters accompanying
the Trade Agreement states that
upon the extension of MFN to the
Soviet Union, the USSR will begin
to repay the $674 million owed to
the United States through the
Lend Lease program — payments
which were suspended in 1974. - Under the terms of this side
letter, however, the
United States agrees not to
collect on the Lend-Lease debt
until the U.S. government makes
available to the Soviet Union
export credits, guarantees and
insurance through the U.S.
Export-Import Bank and other
government credit facilities.
This amounts to American taxpayer
bribes used to induce the new
Moscow center to honor its past
debt obligations to the United
States government. - President Bush has also
asked Congress immediately to
repeal the Stevenson and Byrd
amendments, legislation
that currently limits Soviet
access to U.S. Treasury resources
supplied through the
Export-Import Bank. Such a step
would open up to the reconfigured
Moscow center — and American
companies in the strategic energy
and other sectors wishing to do
business with it — vast new
opportunities to lay off onto the
U.S. taxpayer the associated
business risk.
The Center for Security Policy
believes that it is unacceptable to
expose the U.S. taxpayer to the sorts of
losses sure to accrue from expanded
guarantees and other borrowing capacity
now being granted by the Bush
Administration to Moscow center. It
agrees wholeheartedly with an observation
made by the Financial Times of
London 24 September:
“The Administration could
create problems for itself,
however, by changing the terms of
the credit guarantees for the
Soviets. These could be
the first in a long series of
such guarantees and a precedent
that lets the banks off the hook
for virtually all risk my not be
considered the best course of
action. Other countries could
demand similar terms, further
undermining the shared risk
concept on which the guarantee
program was built.”
The Center calls on the Bush
Administration and the Congress to
reconsider immediately this irresponsible
course of action before real damage
is done to U.S. taxpayer equities. The
fact that such assistance will almost
certainly retard rather than
catalyze necessary reforms in the former
USSR is a further, compelling reason for adopting
a more — rather than
less — disciplined policy toward lending
to the reconfigured Soviet central
authorities.
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