by Caroline Glick
It was seven months ago that Mohammed Bouazizi, a vegetable peddler in Tunisia set himself and the Arab world on fire. The 26-year-old staged his suicidal protest on the steps of the local city hall after a municipal inspector took away his unlicensed vegetable cart thus denying him the ability to feed his family of eight.
Most  depictions of the Arab revolutions that followed his act have cast them  as struggles for freedom and good government. These depictions miss the  main cause of these political upheavals. No doubt millions of Arabs are  upset about the freedom deficit in Arab lands. But the fact is that  economics has played a decisive role in all of them. 
In  Bouzizi's case, his self-immolation was provoked by economic  desperation. And if current trends continue, the revolutionary ferment  we have seen so far is only the tip of the iceberg. Moreover, the  political whirlwind will not be contained in the Middle East.
Most  of the news coming out about Egypt today emanates from Cairo's Tahrir  Square. There the protesters continue to demand ousted president Hosni  Mubarak's head on a platter alongside the skulls of his sons, business  associates, advisors and everyone else who prospered under his rule.  While the supposedly liberal democratic protesters' swift descent into  bloodlust is no doubt worth noting, the main reason these protesters  continue to gain so much international attention is because they are  easy to find. A reporter looking for a story's failsafe option is to  mosey on over to the square and put a microphone into the crowd. 
But  while easily accessible, the action at Tahrir Square is not Egypt's most  important story. The most important, strategically consequential story  is that Egypt is rapidly going broke. By the end of the year, the  military dictatorship will likely not only default on Egypt's loans.  Field Marshal Tantawi and his deputies will almost certainly be unable  to feed the Egyptian people.
Some raw statistics are in order here.
Among  Egypt's population of 80 million, some 32 million are illiterate. They  engage in subsistence farming that is too inefficient to support them.  Egypt needs to import half of its food from abroad.
As David Goldman, (aka Spengler), reported in Asia Times Online,  in May the International Monetary Fund warned of the impending economic  collapse of non-oil exporting Arab countries saying that, "In the  current baseline scenario the external financing needs of the region's  oil importers is projected to exceed $160 billion during 2011-13."
Goldman noted, "That's almost three years' worth of Egypt's total annual imports as of 2010."
Since  Mubarak was overthrown in February, Egypt's foreign currency reserves  have plummeted from $36bn to $25-28bn. Last month Tantawi rejected an  IMF loan offer of $3bn. claiming he would not accept any conditions on  the loans. Instead he accepted $4bn in loans from Saudi Arabia and  another $2.34bn from the Gulf States. 
And  still, Egypt's foreign currency reserves are being washed away. As  Goldman explained, the problem is capital flight. Due in no small part  to the protesters in Tahrir Square calling for the arrest of all those  who did business with the former regime, Egypt's wealthy and foreign  investors are taking their money out of the country.
At  the Arab Banking Summit in Rome last month, Jordan's Finance Minister  Mohammed Abu Hammour warned, "There is capital flight and $500 million a  week are leaving the Arab world." 
According  to Goldman, "Although Hammour did not mention countries in his talk...  most of the capital flight is coming from Egypt, and at an annual rate  roughly equal to Egypt's remaining reserves." 
What  this means is that in a few short months, Egypt will be unable to pay  for its imports. And consequently, it will be unable to feed its  people. 
EGYPT IS far from alone. Take Syria.  There too, capital is fleeing the country as the government rushes to  quell the mass anti-regime protests.
Just as  Egyptian and Tunisian protesters hoped that a new regime would bring  them more freedom, so the mass protests sweeping Syria owe in part to  politics. But like the situation in Egypt and Tunisia, Syria's economic  woes are dictating much of what is happening on the ground and will  continue to do so for the foreseeable future.
Last  month Syrian President Bashar Assad gave a speech warning of "weakness  or collapse of the Syrian economy." As a report last month by Reuters  explained, the immediate impact of Assad's speech was capital flight and  the devaluation of the Syrian pound by eight percent.
For  the past decade, Assad has been trying to liberalize the Syrian  economy. He enacted some free market reforms, opened a stock exchange  and attempted to draw foreign investment to the country. While largely  unsuccessful in alleviating Syria's massive poverty, these reforms did  enable the country a modest growth rate of around 2.5% per year. 
In  response to the mass protests threatening his regime, Assad has  effectively ended his experiment with the free market. He fired his  government minister in charge of the economic reforms and put all the  projects on hold. Instead, according to a report this week in Syria Today,  the government has steeply increased public sector wages and offered  100,000 temporary workers full-time contracts. The Syrian government  also announced a 25% cut in the price of diesel fuel at a cost for the  government of $527 million per year. 
Boasting  foreign currency reserves of $18bn, the Syrian regime announced it would  be using these reserves to pay for the increased governmental outlays.  But as Reuters reported, the government has been forced to spend $70-80  million a week to buck up the local currency. So between protecting the  Syrian pound and paying for political loyalty, the Assad regime is  quickly drying up Syria's treasury. 
In the  event the regime is overthrown, a successor regime will face the sure  prospect of economic collapse much as the Egyptian regime does. And in  the event that Assad remains in power, he will continue to reap the  economic whirlwind of what he has sown in the form of political  instability and violence.
What this means is  that we can expect continued political turmoil in both countries as they  are consumed by debt and tens of millions of people face the prospect  of starvation. This political turmoil can be expected to give rise to  dangerous if unknowable military developments.
POOR  ARAB nations like Egypt and Syria are far from the only ones facing  economic disaster. The $3bn loan the IMF offered Egypt may be among the  last loans of that magnitude the IMF is able to offer because quite  simply, European loaners are themselves staring into the economic  abyss. 
Greece's debt crisis is not a local  problem. It now appears increasingly likely that the EU is going to have  to accept Greece defaulting on at least part of its debt. And the  ramifications of Greek default on the European and US banking systems  are largely unknowable. This is the case because as Megan McArdle at The Atlantic wrote this week, the amount of Greek debt held by European and US banks is difficult to assess. 
Worse  still, the banking crisis will only intensify in the wake of a Greek  default. Debt pressure on Italy, Ireland, Spain and Portugal which are  all also on the brink of defaulting on their debts will grow. Italy is  Europe's fourth largest economy. Its debt is about the size of Germany's  debt. If Italy goes into default, the implications for the European and  US banking systems - and their economies generally -- will be  devastating.
The current debt-ceiling  negotiations between US President Barack Obama and the Republican  Congressional leadership have made it apparent that Obama is  ideologically committed to increasing government spending and taxes in  the face of a weak economy. If Obama is reelected next year, the dire  implications of four more years of his economic policies for the US and  global economies cannot be overstated. 
DUE TO  the economic policies implemented by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu  since his first tenure as prime minister in 1996, in the face of this  economic disaster, Israel is likely to find itself in the unlikely  position of standing along China and India as among the only stable,  growing economies in the world. Israel's banking sector is largely  unexposed to European debt. Israel's gross external debt is 44 percent  of GDP. This compares well not only to European debt levels of well over  100 percent of GDP but to the US debt level which stands at 98 percent  of GDP. 
Assuming the government does not bend  to populist pressure and take economically hazardous steps like reducing  the work week to four days, Israel's economy is likely to remain one of  the country's most valuable strategic assets. Just as economic  prosperity allowed Israel to absorb the cost of the Second Lebanon War  with barely a hiccup, so Israel's continued economic growth will play a  key role in protecting it from the economically induced political  upheavals likely to ensue throughout much of the Arab world and Europe. 
Aside  from remaining economically responsible, as Israel approaches the  coming storms it is important for it to act with utmost caution  politically. It must adopt policies that provide it with the most  maneuver room and the greatest deterrent force. 
First  and foremost, this means that it is imperative that Israel not commit  itself to any agreements with any Arab regime. In 1977 the Camp David  Agreement with then Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in which Israel  surrendered the strategically invaluable Sinai for a peace treaty seemed  like a reasonable gamble. In 2011, a similar agreement with Assad or  with the Palestinian Authority, (whose budget is largely financed from  international aid), would be the height of strategic insanity. 
Beyond  that, with the rising double specter of Egyptian economic collapse and  the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to power, Israel must prepare for the  prospect of war with Egypt. Recently it was reported that IDF Chief of  General Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz has opted to spread over several  years Israel's military preparations for a return to hostilities with  Egypt. Gantz's decision reportedly owes to his desire to avoid provoking  Egypt with a rapid expansion of the IDF's order of battle. 
Gantz's  caution is understandable. But it is unacceptable. Given the escalating  threats emanating from Egypt - not the least of which is the expanding  security vacuum in the Sinai -- Israel must prepare for war now.
So  too, with the US's weak economy, Obama's Muslim Brotherhood friendly  foreign policy, and Europe's history of responding to economic hardship  with xenophobia, Israel's need to develop the means of militarily  defending itself from a cascade of emerging threats becomes all the more  apparent.
The economic storms may pass by  Israel. But the political tempests they unleash will reach us. To emerge  safely from what is coming, Israel needs to hunker down and prepare for  the worst. 
Originally published in The Jerusalem Post. 
Caroline Glick
Source: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/07/caution-storm-approaching.php
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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