Why do you say the debt crisis is an ideological construction?

There is a debt, but who owes it and who's responsible for it is an ideological
question, not an economic question. For example, there's a capitalist principle that
nobody wants to pay any attention to, of course, which says that if I borrow money
from you, it's my responsibility to pay it back, and if you're the lender, it's your risk
if I don't pay it back. But nobody even conceives of that possibility. Suppose we
were to follow that. Take, say, Indonesia, for example. Right now its economy is
crushed by the fact that the debt is something like 140 percent of GDP. You trace
that debt back, it turns out that the borrowers were something like 100 to 200 people
around the military dictatorship that we supported, and their cronies. The lenders
were international banks. A lot of that debt has been by now socialized through the
IMF, which means Northern taxpayers are responsible. What happened to the
money? They enriched themselves. There was some capital export and some
development. But the people who borrowed the money aren't held responsible for it.
It's the people of Indonesia who have to pay it off. And that means living under
crushing austerity programs, severe poverty and suffering. In fact, it's a hopeless
task to pay off the debt that they didn't borrow. What about the lenders? The lenders
are protected from risk. That's one of the main functions of the IMF, to provide free
risk insurance to people who lend and invest in risky loans. That's why they get
high yields, because there's a lot of risk. They don't have to take the risk, because
it's socialized. It's transferred in various ways to Northern taxpayers through the IMF
and other devices, like Brady bonds. The whole system is one in which the
borrowers are released from the responsibility. That's transferred to the
impoverished mass of the population in their own countries. And the lenders are
protected from risk. These are ideological choices, not economic ones.

In fact, it even goes beyond that. There's a principle of international law that was
devised by the United States over a hundred years ago when it "liberated" Cuba,
which means it conquered Cuba to prevent it from liberating itself from Spain in
1898.
At that time, when the United States took over, it canceled Cuba's debt to
Spain on the quite reasonable grounds that the debt was invalid since it had been
imposed on the people of Cuba without their consent, by force, under a power
relationship. That principle was later recognized in international law, again under
US initiative, as the principle of what's called "odious debt." Debt is not valid if it's
essentially imposed by force. The Third World debt is odious debt. That's even been
recognized by the US representative at the IMF, Karen Lissaker, an international
economist, who pointed out a couple of years ago that if we were to apply the
principles of odious debt, most of the Third World debt would simply disappear.