Author: Adam Lerrick
As 2000 drew near, luminaries including president Bill Clinton, bishop Desmond Tutu and pope John Paul II pressed the overfed First world to liberate a group of starving nations from what one of their number, Jesse Jackson, called the new economy’s chains of slavery. Their gift was the forgiveness of all that these countries had borrowed and, for years, had been clearly unable to repay.
Now that the rosy glow has dissipated and the reckoning is due, debt relief in its entirety continues to make sound economic sense.
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