Friday, October 25, 2019
The Debt Crisis of the Eighties and Nineties Essay -- Economy Economic
The Debt Crisis of the Eighties and Nineties    The debt crisis of the 1980s and 1990s has been one of the largest  economic disasters of the 20th Century. It has caused widespread  poverty, famine and starvation across many of the third world  countries it has touched. The Crisis did not go by unnoticed  however. Since the mid 1990s world governments have awoken to the  horrible reality that such debt causes with attempts to lighten the  devastating affects with such programs as the Brady plan, HIPC and  eventually HIPC 2. While these plans have had only limited success  the question of weather the debt crisis can be solved in the long run  is still to be answered.    The debt crisis as it is now called did not occur in one single event;  instead it developed as a slow moving ââ¬Å"chronic syndromeâ⬠[1]. The  primary crisis, which occurred in Mexico in 1982, was centred on  middle-income nations[2], while the second strain occurred in poorer  African nations, with the effects from it still being well and truly  felt today[3]. For these countries the need for industrialisation  meant the need for large-scale borrowing. Since many of the African  nations were excluded from being aloud to borrow until the early  1960s, the need to borrow a lot, quickly, was a common trend  throughout the developing nations[4]. The reasons for the colossal  amounts of debt cannot be simply explained for they vary from country  to country. Some nations had corrupt militaristic governments who  cared more for themselves than for their people[5]. While others  struggled with failed projects and damaging economic decisions[6].    By the early 70ââ¬â¢s the debt had begun to accumulate. The impoverished  and debt stricken countries began to shift commodities meant for the  sustenance of the people to the export sector to try and make enough  money to pay off their debts. Suddenly all the indebted countries  were simultaneously selling their primary commodities on the world  market. The flow of coffee, coca, copper, steel, ect, had the  devastating effect of lowering the commodity prices causing the  developing nations to make much less than they had previously.  Countries now had to sell two or three times what the used too to make  the same money[7]. Combined with the rising and falling of the  dollar, and the rises of interest rates in the 80s, the third world  debt was now even larger than ...              ...continue in the  long run many of HIPC goals will be achieved.    Success of HIPC and the debt cancellation plans of the 90ââ¬â¢s are indeed  difficult to judge. If success were to be measured by how much has  been paid out from the forecasted amount then HIPC could be viewed as  a failure. However if success were judged on the increase of social  service spending then yes HIPC would be seen as a successful  initiative. The one clear success of the debt cancellation plans has  been public awareness. Though the cancellation process is moving  slowly and only achieving a fraction of its goals[18] the general  public of the world has now awoken to the horrors that debt can lead  to. With public support behind the debt cancellation process the debt  crisis will eventually be overcome.    ---------------------------------------------------------------------    [1] La Trobe, Assignment Manual, p.130    [2] Ibid    [3] Ibid, pp.130, 131    [4] Ibid, p.133    [5] Ibid, p.131    [6] Ibid    [7] Ibid, p.137    [8] Ibid    [9] lecture    [10] Ibid, p.144, 145    [11] Ibid    [12] Ibid    [13] Ibid, p.149    [14] Ibid, p.152    [15] Ibid, p.156    [16] Ibid    [17] Ibid    [18] Ibid, pp. 150-153                        
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