Hammond:
Iraqis need oil dividends
AS
IN ALASKA: The wealth should be saved for citizens.
The
Associated Press(Published: February 23, 2004)
WASHINGTON
-- President Bush should create an Iraqi permanent fund dividend
program
modeled after Alaska's, according to former Gov. Jay Hammond.
In
fact, Hammond said, Bush should make the fund and dividends to citizens
a central element of his re-election campaign.
Hammond
made the remark after delivering a history and defense of the Alaska
Permanent
Fund dividend to the annual conference of the U.S. Basic Income
Guarantee
Network. The organization wants governments to offer all citizens,
regardless
of their own means, enough money to live.
The
group says the Alaska dividend, which Hammond helped create while
governor,
is "the only example of an existing basic income guarantee in the world
today."
Hammond,
81, has been on a sort of moral crusade recently as he has perceived a
growing threat to the dividend program. Earlier this month he crashed
the
Conference of Alaskans, a 55-member group that Gov. Frank Murkowski
convened
to talk about the Permanent Fund's future, and diverted participants
into
a discussion of income taxes as well.
Saturday,
Hammond recited a detailed history of his dividend advocacy, starting
with
his attempts in the 1960s as mayor of the Bristol Bay Borough to
capture
some of the salmon dollars that "hemorrhaged" out of that region. He
used
the current Alaska dividend debate as a segue into the international
arena.
"Without
a Permanent Fund dividend program," Hammond said, "Alaska will face the
same fate as Nigeria." The World Bank estimates that $296 billion
flowed
in and out of that government's treasury during its oil boom, "leaving
them worse off than they were before," Hammond said.
The
Economist magazine appropriately called such mismanaged oil wealth "the
devil's excrement," Hammond said. The pattern has been repeated around
the globe where countries have come into an oil windfall, he said.
"Absent
something like our dividend program and ensuing public interest, those
windfalls simply inflated a grab bag for special interests," he said.
Once
deflated, the average citizen was left holding that empty bag, Hammond
said. "Iraq is but the latest example."
He
said he intends to seek an audience with the president to push the idea.
Hammond
noted that he met the president's father, former President George Bush,
years ago in Alaska before the elder Bush was well known nationally.
The
elder Bush helped with his fund-raising and even wrote a blurb for his
autobiography, Hammond said.
"I
owe George Junior at least this -- to convey to him how he could make
this
the centerpiece of his national campaign, thereby hopefully propelling
the other candidates into the same arena to compete to see who can do
more
to propel or promote the concept in Third World countries, Iraq or
wherever,"
Hammond said.
"What
better way to induce a capitalistic, democratic mind-set among Iraqis?"
Hammond said. "Far better than a few privileged kleptocrats living in
opulent
splendor while others grovel in squalor."
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