by MICHAEL
HUDSON
[…]
Rome’s
creditor oligarchy wins the Social War, enslaves the population and brings on a
Dark Age
Matters were
more bloody abroad. Aristotle did not mention empire building as part of his
political schema, but foreign conquest always has been a major factor in
imposing debts, and war debts have been the major cause of public debt in
modern times. Antiquity’s harshest debt levy was by Rome, whose creditors
spread out to plague Asia Minor, its most prosperous province. The rule of law
all but disappeared when publican creditor “knights” arrived.
Mithridates
of Pontus led three popular revolts, and local populations in Ephesus and other
cities rose up and killed a reported 80,000 Romans in 88 BC. The Roman army
retaliated, and Sulla imposed war tribute of 20,000 talents in 84 BC. Charges
for back interest multiplied this sum six-fold by 70 BC.
Among Rome’s
leading historians, Livy, Plutarch and Diodorus blamed the fall of the Republic
on creditor intransigence in waging the century-long Social War marked by
political murder from 133 to 29 BC. Populist leaders sought to gain a following
by advocating debt cancellations (e.g., the Catiline conspiracy in 63-62 BC).
They were killed. By the second century AD about a quarter of the population
was reduced to bondage. By the fifth century Rome’s economy collapsed, stripped
of money. Subsistence life reverted to the countryside.
[…]
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