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Free Market Myth
Regulation is everywhere. Let’s choose who benefits.
The extraordinary financial collapse of recent months has been commonly described as a testament to the failure of deregulation. The events are indeed testament to a failure—a failure of public policy. Blaming deregulation is misleading.
In general, political debates over regulation have been wrongly cast as disputes over the extent of regulation, with conservatives assumed to prefer less regulation, while liberals prefer more. In fact conservatives do not necessarily desire less regulation, nor do liberals necessarily desire more. Conservatives support regulatory structures that cause income to flow upward, while liberals support regulatory structures that promote equality. “Less” regulation does not imply greater inequality, nor is the reverse true.
Framing regulation debates in terms of more and less is not only inaccurate; it hugely biases the argument toward conservative positions by characterizing an extremely intrusive structure of, for example, patent and copyright rules, as the free market. In the realm of insurance and finance over the last two decades, calls for deregulation have been cover for rules tilted starkly toward corporate interests. And the recent change in bankruptcy law, hailed by conservatives, requires much greater government involvement in the economy.
False ideological claims have circumscribed the public debate over regulation and blinded us to the wide range of choices we can make. Without these claims, what would guide regulatory policy? What kinds of choices would we have?
* * *
Patent and copyright protection are good examples of government policies obscured in the debate. They are forms of regulation, not elements of a “free market.”
It does not matter that we call patents and copyrights “property” or even that we have a clause in the Constitution that authorizes Congress to grant patents and copyrights. Suppose autoworkers were given a property right to a job in the automobile industry, a right they could even sell. Would anyone say that this right to a job is part of the free market?
Patents and copyrights are government-granted protections designed for a specific public purpose, as stated in the Constitution: “to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts.” But granting intellectual property rights is one of many possible mechanisms for accomplishing this important public goal. Whether patents and copyrights are the most effective mechanisms for the promotion of the arts and sciences is an empirical question. And the answer could be different depending on the specific social and economic circumstances. However, we cannot have a serious discussion of the relative merits of patents and copyrights until we recognize that these are public policies and not intrinsic features of the free market. Debates about both patent and copyright have been hugely distorted by the failure to recognize this obvious fact.
In the case of patent protection, policy disputes arise most frequently with regard to prescription drugs. If drugs were sold in a competitive market (i.e., without patent protection), the overwhelming majority of drugs would sell for just a few dollars per prescription. Wal-Mart and other major drug store chains now sell most generic drugs for less than $10 per prescription—we know these drugs can be manufactured safely and sold profitably at low prices.
The drugs available as generics are not chemically distinct from their brand-name counterparts that often sell for hundreds of dollars per prescription. The only difference is that the latter, as a group, enjoys a government-guaranteed monopoly. Patents constitute a government policy that effectively raises drug prices by several thousand percent above the free market price.
Recognizing this should be the starting point in any policy debate. The next question is whether this policy for supporting innovation is the best mechanism for financing the research and development of new drugs. It clearly is not the only one.
The government could, for example, support drug research through a prize system in which it buys drug patents and then places them in the public domain so that newly developed drugs could be manufactured and sold as generics.
When we sweep away ideology, we see that it is a debate between two regulatory strategies for keeping drug prices down.
Alternatively, the government could pay for the research upfront and make all research findings and patents fully public. It already spends $30 billion a year financing biomedical research through the National Institutes of Health, an amount almost as high as the pharmaceutical industry claims to spend on its research. NIH research is highly respected, with almost all observers agreeing that the money is, on the whole, extremely well spent. While the NIH focuses on basic research (it also does some later-stage drug research, including clinical testing), there is no obvious reason why the government could not simply double its commitment to biomedical research in order to replace the research and development currently supported by grants of patent monopolies.
But the government may wish to use a different mechanism to encourage drug development. It may choose to establish a small number of master contractors, who would then contract out the awarding of research funds so as to minimize the potential for political interference. Regardless of the structure a particular program would take, expansion of direct funding is clearly feasible.
There would also be large public benefits in addition to lowering the price of drugs to their marginal cost. Eliminating huge monopoly rents associated with drug patents would take away the incentive for drug companies to push drugs in cases where they may not be especially beneficial, or even potentially harmful. Nor would there be incentive to conceal research findings that indicate a drug’s weak performance. Furthermore, by placing all research findings in the public domain, so that scientists can quickly benefit from the research done by others, the process of drug innovation would likely accelerate.
Whether a patent-buyout system or direct public funding would be preferable to the current patent system is obviously debatable; the point is that patent is just one mechanism among many that could facilitate prescription-drug research. And it is one that involves granting monopoly rents to large drug companies.
It is important to establish that patents are a form of regulation because there are many venues in which the regulation of prescription drugs has been a major issue, with those who would see prices fall cast as opponents of the free market. For example, the ongoing push to have Medicare bargain for lower prices for drugs bought as part of its prescription drug benefit is widely viewed as interference in the free market. Even The New York Times and other highly respected media outlets often present the argument about Medicare-negotiated drug prices as a debate between proponents of free markets and of government intervention. When we sweep away ideology, we see that it is a debate between two regulatory strategies for keeping drug prices down.
* * *
There is a similar story with copyrights, although the economic waste is even larger and the enforcement measures even more perverse. In the Internet age, almost any printed or recorded material—music, movies, books, video games—can be instantly transferred anywhere in the world at almost no cost. However, rather than allowing the public to enjoy the full benefit of this technology, the government has created a dizzying array of new laws and restrictions designed to make it more difficult, and legally more risky, to pass along material that is subject to copyright protection.
As with drug patents, copyrights serve an important public purpose. They provide an incentive to produce creative and artistic work. But to protect copyright, the government has imposed an aggressive sanction regime even for seemingly minor offenses. In one case, a woman in Minnesota faced a fine of more than $200,000 for allowing people to download music from her computer. Universities have been told to police dorm rooms to ensure that students are not downloading material in violation of copyright, and they have been encouraged to conduct classes teaching that it is wrong to make unauthorized copies of copyrighted material.
The government has repeatedly prohibited the production of various types of hardware until protections could be installed to prevent the duplication of copyrighted material. It has banned the development of software that can break through copyright protections. In one case a Russian computer scientist was arrested by the FBI after a conference presentation in which he described a way to get around a form of copyright protection.
The list of extraordinary government measures that have been developed to enhance copyright protection is lengthy. Remarkably, these measures are never described as forms of government regulation. They are treated as enforcement measures necessary to protect copyright. However, just as patents are not the only way to encourage innovation, a government-granted monopoly with extensive rules and heavy-handed enforcement is not the only way to promote creativity.
A vast amount of creative and artistic work is already supported through mechanisms that do not depend on copyright protection. Private foundations are a major alternative source of support, as are the limited funds available through public programs such as the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities. Colleges and universities are probably the largest source of funding not dependent on copyright. Professors are expected to do research and writing in addition to their teaching responsibilities.
It is easy to envision mechanisms to expand support for creative and artistic work outside the copyright regime. For example, it would be possible to design a modest tax credit for individuals who either support creative work directly or contribute to organizations that support such work. The credit could be modeled after the tax deduction for nonprofits or charities. Even a modest tax credit (e.g., $100 per person)—which taxpayers could allocate to an artist, writer, musician, or film producer of their choice—would likely be sufficient to fund almost all of the work currently supported by the copyright system.
To be fair, rarely does either side argue against regulation as such. The real issue is the structure of regulation and its impact on economic outcomes, especially income distribution.
Alternatives to copyright are feasible and probably far more efficient than the copyright system. And they would replace a gigantic array of enforcement measures that can themselves be seen as unnecessary forms of government intervention into the economy.
* * *
A final example of excessive government regulation, never discussed as such, is the bankruptcy-reform bill that passed Congress in 2005. This bill substantially strengthened the conditions imposed on people seeking bankruptcy protection, making such protection a much less attractive option.
The public debate over the bill dealt in liberal/conservative caricatures that completely misrepresented what was at stake. The liberal argument relied on sympathy for the people seeking bankruptcy; it drew on studies showing that the great majority of people seeking bankruptcy had not been spendthrifts who deliberately ran up huge credit card debts, but rather had fallen on hard times as result of job loss, medical emergencies, or family breakup. The opponents of stricter conditions argued that these people needed and deserved the break that bankruptcy allows.
The conservative argument centered on individual responsibility. No one forced anyone to take on debt; these people voluntarily chose to do so. Everyone knows that bad things can happen. Those seeking bankruptcy protection should have taken precautions.
This version of bankruptcy reform undoubtedly resonated with those inclined to accept that people succeed or fail largely as a result of their own actions, but, most importantly, it obscured the real issue that the bill addressed: to what lengths should the government go to collect unpaid bills? The party seeking the aid of the government in this story is the creditor, not the debtor.
Under the preexisting bankruptcy law, creditors could lay claim to most of the debtors’ assets and in some cases place liens on future earnings. The new law hugely expanded the creditors’ claims on future earnings. This means that the government will be far more involved in bill collection in the future than it has been in the past, possibly monitoring the wages of millions of individuals in bankruptcy who still have debts to creditors. (For those who worry about the negative incentives caused by taxation, it is worth noting that having money deducted from paychecks to pay creditors provides the same disincentive to work.)
The individual-responsibility line could have been applied just as validly to the creditors in this story as it was the debtors. Part of being a successful business involves knowing under what circumstances to extend credit. No one forced businesses to extend credit to the people who subsequently declared bankruptcy. They exercised bad judgment in extending credit to people who were not good credit risks. Why should the government step in to help businesses that fail to assess credit risk? The ideological battle around the bill was a distraction. It was an effort to get the government more actively involved in helping the banks. It’s that simple.
Other cases in which the conservative position arguably requires more government involvement in the economy than the liberal position abound. For years Ben and Jerry’s Homemade has fought attempts by state governments to ban labeling dairy products as free of recombinant bovine growth hormone. Some pressure groups associated with the dairy indutry argue that the rBGH-free label implies that bovine growth hormones are harmful, which has not been established by the Food and Drug Administration. Of course, Ben and Jerry’s Homemade is not trying to prevent its competitors from assuring the public that their ice cream is safe. It is trying to make a truthful claim about its own ice cream.
In the same vein, the Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently prohibited a meatpacker from testing its cattle for mad cow disease. The meatpacker had intended to privately test all of its cattle, whereas the USDA tests only 1 percent of cattle. But the USDA, arguing that full testing would cause the public to question the safety of other meat, moved to prevent it.
To be fair, rarely does either side argue against regulation as such. The real issue is the structure of regulation and its impact on economic outcomes, especially income distribution.
Let’s return to the financial crisis with this in mind. In the decades preceding the financial collapse, regulations designed to protect the public and to ensure the stability of the financial system were considerably weakened, but the system was (and is) quite far from being deregulated.
The key regulation that remained in place was the “too-big-to-fail” doctrine. Essentially, the banks and other financial institutions took enormous risks with an implicit guarantee that their creditors could count on the protection of the U.S. government if things went badly. For everyone except the creditors of Lehman Brothers and the preferred shareholders of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, this gamble proved correct.
This one-sided giveaway was not deregulation. Had those setting financial policy over the last three decades been committed to deregulation, they would have assured financial markets that financial institutions making bad investments would go out of business and that their creditors would be out of luck. The Federal Reserve Board and the Treasury would have warned that investors were acting at their own risk when they put money in Bear Stearns, AIG, and the rest.
In the context of a too-big-to-fail principle, the removal of restrictions on leverage (investment banks were allowed to leverage their capital at a ratio of forty-to-one compared to just ten-to-one for commercial banks) and the relaxation of other prudential regulation (the nominal value of credit default swaps, a new class of derivative instruments, grew to more than $70 trillion in a nearly unregulated market) essentially gave the banks a license to wager with taxpayers’ money.
Banks did exactly what economic theory predicts. They took huge risks, leveraging themselves to the hilt with questionable assets, knowing that they would gain as long as the housing bubble held up. And the banks did so with willing accomplices among pension funds, hedge funds, and other investors because these investors knew that the government would rescue them if things went badly.
Deregulation can be a principled position held by true believers in a free market. But Wall Streeters all wanted one-sided regulation that provided them with an enormous government security blanket without any costs or conditions. None of the Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan crew ever went to lobby Congress for an explicit repeal of the too-big-to-fail doctrine. And while many on Wall Street lost their jobs when the bubble burst, the tens or hundreds of millions of dollars that banking executives earned during the good times are theirs to keep. Even with the market collapse, the vast majority of them are almost certainly better off than they would have been had they done honest work over the last decade.
* * *
If the real debate is over the type rather than extent of regulation, then why is it always framed as the latter? For conservatives, the answer is obvious. Many Americans embrace the idea of free markets and hold a deep aversion to government. Faith in government ebbs and flows, even in the most liberal times. It will almost always be advantageous, then, to associate a political position with support of the free market.
It is less apparent why liberals would be so eager to accept such a disadvantageous caricature of their position. The answer requires digging a bit deeper into what their position implies about the nature of the economy and economic outcomes.
Like conservatives, liberals generally acknowledge that people get ahead as a result of their skills and hard work, with some luck thrown in. The main difference in the liberal and conservative views of the economy is that liberals are more likely to believe that many people face serious impediments to their success and do not get the same chance as people from wealthier backgrounds. Liberals are also likely to feel guilty about the difference in opportunities and therefore support political measures that will reduce the gap and help those at the bottom. However, most liberals still accept the proposition that the distribution of income is fundamentally determined by the market rather than political decisions embodied in regulations such as patents, copyrights, and bankruptcy law.
But what if we accept a view that virtually every facet of the economy is shaped by policies that could easily be altered? Investment bankers get incredibly rich because the government gives them the shelter of too-big-to-fail but doesn’t impose any serious prudential regulation in return. Bill Gates gets incredibly rich because, through copyright and patents, the government gives him a monopoly on the operating system that is (or was) used by 90 percent of the computers in the world.
Doctors are well-paid because, unlike less politically connected workers, they enjoy protection from international competition. The same is true for lawyers and other highly paid professionals. The six-figure salaries depend less on skill and hard work than on being able to structure labor markets in ways that autoworkers, textile workers, and cab drivers cannot.
Deregulation can be a principled position held by true believers in a free market. But Wall Streeters all wanted one-sided regulation that provided them with an enormous government security blanket.
There is a long list of professional licensing requirements (many of which have nothing to do with maintaining quality standards) that make it difficult for foreign professionals to work in the United States. While trade agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement have been designed explicitly to eliminate institutional barriers that obstruct investment in developing countries and the free flow of manufactured goods back into the United States, there has been no comparable effort to reduce or eliminate the barriers that obstruct highly educated professionals in the developing world from practicing their professions in the United States. Many ambitious professionals from the developing world do manage to overcome these barriers, but professionals in the United States still enjoy a far greater level of protection from international competition than less highly-educated workers.
* * *
The less-versus-more framing of regulation supports the premise that there is in principle an unregulated market out there and that some of us wish to rein in this unregulated market while others would leave it alone. This is consistent with the idea that large inequalities in income distribution just happen as a result of market forces. But as the above examples illustrate, no one is really talking about an unregulated market—rather we are all just talking about whom the regulation is designed to benefit. Distribution of income has never preceded the intervention of government.
The government is always present, steering the benefits in different directions depending on who is in charge. Accepting this view provides a political vantage point much better suited to the case for progressive regulation. After all, conservatives want the big hand of government in the market as well. They just want the handouts all to go to those at the top.
This expansive view of regulation puts everything up for grabs, including the six-figure salaries of many of those arguing the liberal position. Do liberals really want everyone asking if we can have the same economic benefits by removing trade barriers in physicians’ and lawyers’ services that we gain by removing barriers to clothes and cars? Liberals, too, are invested in the obfuscation that less-versus-more provides.
Even so, the catastrophe produced by the one-sided deregulation of the financial industry, coupled with a long list of regulatory failures in other areas, will almost certainly lead to a serious rethinking of regulatory policy in the years ahead. It remains to be seen whether this rethinking will go beyond the familiar debate. We know that when we emerge from the current crisis the economy will be extensively regulated. The questions is, to whose benefit?
- Posted in




63 Comments so far
Show AllIt's almost impossible to comprehend the level of naivete' in this article.
While the author makes a few interesting comments about patents and copyrights, his discussion of the use of regulation to promote the well being of some at the expense of many is childish. What on earth does he think that republicans have been doing for more than half a century?
The entire basis of Reaganism is that corporations are good and individuals are bad and, therefore, regulatory structures should promote the wealth of corporations regardless of the effects on the population in general.
Yes, one-sided regulation has definitely created our current economic misery. It was intended to do so.
q
Good grief, 'quickstepper,' you're certainly lethargic in your lack of enthusiasm over this debate. Dean Baker is absolutely right, now is the perfect time for a massive debate on all aspects of government regulation.
We've already had the debate. Reagan lost.
It's time for government action; the finacial barriers set up by Roosevelt to prevent the kind of financial catastrophe we are experiencing need to be restored. Period.
q
Without a massive debate, very little will change. Public opinion must be brought around. Just because the debate is settled in your mind means nothing to the world.
Debate what?
What is the proposition around which you want to have this "massive debate"?
It's pretty obvious that US public opinion is in full support of financial-sector regulation. Congress, of course, has been bought and paid for by Wall Street so their point of view is more standpatist.
So tell me, what is the question which you want debated "massively"?
q
You're right, we've had this debate, but where you're wrong is the Reaganites won in the sense that they captured the imagination of the public with their lies, distorted logic and clever framing of the debate. They won in the sense that their policies were enacted, to the detriment of the people. They won in the sense that they benefited from their gambles and the government still saved them. They only lost in the sense that any independent thinker could see through their sham, but independent thinkers are in perilously short supply. There are a great number of people that believe in policies that are detrimental to themselves (poor rural republicans are a great example), and this piece is worthwhile if it changes even on person's mind on that count.
It's almost impossible to comprehend the level of shortsightedness in your posts. Baker is not making an argument in the debate at all here. He's making a meta-argument trying to reframe the debate in such a way that the people can see the truth behind the rhetoric. The point you're missing is that even the wall-street execs are in full favor of financial sector regulations, it's what those regulations consist of and the results they are designed to produce that opinions begin to differ. Proceeding willy-nilly with reactionary ideas of acceptable policy, as you're suggesting here, will produce predictably stagnant results. If we can rethink the situation, as Baker is attempting to do, it's possible to produce NEW results and greater benefits.
This is, of course, laying aside the numerous problems with representative government and the aristocracy it creates. I would agree that debate is pointless to some extent as long as the overwhelming will of the people continues to be ignored by our oligarchs. But that is a separate systemic problem that requires a complete rethink of our system of government to solve. I'm all for that debate, it's time to oust these kings we have erected over ourselves, but that hardly means the argument happening here around the nature of regulation is worthless. Even if we manage to institute democracy in the US (an unlikely scenario) we still need to debate the policies themselves.
Gee. Did I hurt some feelings?
All Baker is saying that the question of regulation is more complex than simply whether or not to do so.
Duh.
We've understood for years that government regulation can be a blessing or a weapon and we've watched Bush and Cheney use it as the latter. The author is asking for a debate that took place during the 1930's and again during this decade. We already know what regulation is needed because we've used it successfully.
Reinstituting Roosevelt's structures cannot intelligently be called "reactionary" (do you even know what that word means?) because those structures have been proven to work and weakening them has proven to be a disaster. Calling the restoration of these laws "willy nilly" simply demonstrates that you haven't been paying attention.
q
"Reactionary (also reactionist) refers to any movement or ideology that opposes change or progress in society and SEEKS TO RETURN TO A PREVIOUS STATE [emphasis mine], the status quo ante." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reactionary)
Sounds like an accurate depiction to me. You like the way this worked between Roosevelt and Reagan, and seek to restore that order. We certainly need to change from BS neoconservative policies, which in blending collectivist and individualist ideas reaps the benefits of neither and carries the drawbacks of both. I'm not saying that New Deal policies aren't better than current neoconservative policies, they most certainly are better. Potentially, they could function as a stop-gap measure until we can rethink the whole situation. I just think that we can do BETTER than Roosevelt's underlyingly Capitalist system, and forge new ways to support scientific, artistic, and economic progress that don't rely on simply mitigating the drawbacks of a broken system. Holding up the New Deal as the end-all-be-all is selling us all short.
Also, when you say "We've understood for years..." who exactly is the "we" you're referring to? It can't be the general population, because we've muddled along with a large percentage of people accepting the idea that "deregulation" is inherently good. At best, public opinion on this has shifted well within the last year, and I still haven't seen polls on public attitudes about the nature of regulation. All my evidence saying that anybody at all sees things this way is anecdotal and mostly pertaining to being pissed off about the financial crisis and bailouts. Even then, most of the rhetoric tends to indicate a shift to disapproval of deregulation or the notion that the bailouts are unnecessary and harmful government intervention. That's far from a recognition that it has been lopsided government intervention and regulation and that regulation is a double-edged sword. It could be progressives and the left, or you and me. But this article has a wider audience than simply core progressives in mind, and reaching liberals, moderates and conservatives is key to shifting public opinion and restructuring the debate around the actual issues and false ideology. Getting dismissive because you agree and it seems obvious to you is silly when so many people fail to see it the same way.
I hope that, when you read the definition for "reactionary," you realized that Roosevelt's structures were and still are progressive. You leaned too heavily on one aspect of the term's definition.
Where did you come up with the phrase "Roosevelt's underlyingly (sic) Capitalist system"? Roosevelt's reforms improved capitalism by curbing its destructive tendencies, such tendencies having painfully manifested themelves when those refoms were gutted. Capitalism is a fact of life; it is not going to go away.
Is this sentence supposed to make sense: "That's far from a recognition that it has been lopsided government intervention and regulation and that regulation is a double-edged sword."?
So you want to center a debate "around the actual issues." Sounds great. Please identify those issues for us.
q
It wasn't merely because of the central (bot not only) aspect of the definition (it's not so much about resisting change as such, but resisting change that's already happened, looking back to a "better" time instead of thinking about new solutions to the same problems) it's because of cultural usage as well. Somebody who appears to support the lower classes, possibly appeasing them, but still pushes capitalist agendas, such as FDR and New Deal policies, could rightly be called reactionary in this sense as well. (Although I'll freely admit you can be progressive in the sense of being a non-radical leftist, and a reactionary in the Marxist sense despite the definitions of the basic words themselves being seemingly mutually exclusive) You happen to embody both. Silencing the debate and providing answers whose main support is "Hey it worked tolerably before!" is core reactionary behavior. Assuming that there is no alternative to captialism is reactionary behavior in the Marxist sense.
BTW, "underlyingly" is a real word, and it was spelled correctly and used in its proper context. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/underlyingly By getting all snarky, you've made yourself look a fool. Also, you failed to prove anything about my assertion that the New Deal was essentially nothing more than a mitigation of Capitalism that ignored the idea of pursuing a new, better way of solving these problems in the way Baker talked about in this article. In fact, you go on to confirm exactly what I was saying while underscoring your reactionary viewpoint. By reinstating the New Deal without modification, the best we can hope for is a revolution in its root meaning: another period of the same old cycle. We save capitalism now, in fifty years or so when we all get complacent they start pulling out the stops and then in another thirty we have another crisis because neoconservative policies are untenable.
I'll admit my sentence about public perception of regulation was worded clumsily, but I still think it was comprehensible in context. What I was trying to say was that my impression, based on anecdotal evidence taken from editorials and acquaintances, was that for most people the debate is still framed in terms of regulation vs. deregulation instead examining regulation and determining who stands to benefit from it. Again by "actual issues" I mean who stands to gain from government intervention instead of assuming it's all bad or all good on fallacious grounds. Like Baker, I'm not interested in debating the issues themselves here, but I do agree that it's essential to reframe the debate so that those of us on the left can even the playing field that has been slanted to the right for so long.
" ... for most people the debate is still framed in terms of regulation vs. deregulation instead examining regulation and determining who stands to benefit from it."
That was more or less the gist of the article.
"Again by "actual issues" I mean who stands to gain from government intervention instead of assuming it's all bad or all good on fallacious grounds. Like Baker, I'm not interested in debating the issues themselves here, but I do agree that it's essential to reframe the debate so that those of us on the left can even the playing field that has been slanted to the right for so long."
Yes, exactly. For too long the conservatives have claimed "regulation bad" and the liberals "regulation good". But the conservatives simply want regulation, as Baker points out, in their favor, while trying to frame the debate as conservative versus liberal equal to deregulation good versus regulation bad.
-- ekaton aka d.k.shaw
American capitalism in the age of Reagan/Bush, unlike capitalism in, say, some European countries, has an element of the deliberate humiliation of the vast majority of 'lesser' individuals who do not dominate or own outright the financial high ground. The kind of theft that has gone on for over a generation, as monumental as it has been easy, has about it the stink of feces shoved and ground into our faces by the chortling Masters of the Universe who find our humiliation both comical and immensely satisfying emotionally. The moral rotteness and nastiness of it all, the sheer evil, is what makes American capitalism different.
Agreed I am a self employed landscaper in the summer season and my upper middle class clients are some of the most nasty people on the face of the planet. I swear sometimes that what they are paying for isn't so much someone to arrange flowers, but to watch someone on their knees in the dirt who they can give arbitrary orders to. And no not all of them are that bad, but at least 25% are. IMO we can't go fast enough to Swedish style mixed economy.
There's no such thing as a "free" market, PERIOD. The market was RIGGED the day HEMP was banned and Big Oil was oversubsidized ! Besides, in a truly free market, Wall $treet and Big Military wouldn't be given "free" bailouts and handouts !
The fact is that practically all basic research that discovers principles of science is done at public expense, peer review places it in the public domain, and business makes use of it without remuneration. Virtually all business research involves only adapting these principles to its forms of material, facilities, and practices. Despite its chest-thumping, business is not a force for innovation and often, as illustrated in movies like Tucker and The Aviator, quite the reverse.
Copyright protection is a strangulation of the arts in this age of post-modernism. Prior to the Internet age, a work could be copyrighted that made use of another work, but the work could not be legally produced except by payment of royalties. Now works that rely upon other works, regardless of the fact that the originals are a century old, cannot even be copyrighted except by payment of royalty. Artists of the last century could only copyright for 26 years, then apply for a renewal. Today’s business interests own copyrights over standard works that will last in perpetuity.
Well yes, the current copyright system is broken. It has been taken too much to one extreme. It doesn't so much protect the rights of the original artists, as it does protect the rights of the corporations / agents etc that represented them / distributed their works etc. When the original artist, and even his / her direct descendants are (long) dead, the copyright shouldn't still be extant.
That doesn't mean that the solution is to go the other extreme and remove copyright protection completely.
Sioux Rose
RFLOH: Good points. I remember when Disney, I believe it was, went to the widow of Dr. Seuss to ask for permission to use the late author's works in animated films. While she preferred to say no, the copyrights had expired and she had no choice.
The most insane misuse of copyright law was granting to for-profit genetic research company the COPYRIGHT to actual DNA samples! I related this in the forum previously as based on a compelling story published by Mother Jones Magazine under the heading, "Blonde Ambition." One for-profit genetic engineering company paid the government of Iceland something like $100 million to corner access to their genetic heritage that mostly produces blonde-blue eyed persons. It would do Adolph proud.
This is a good article. A bit long but worth the time.
The conclusion is that the American economic system is socialism for the rich.
Thanks to Namomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine" I now understand what "conservatives" mean when they say they want a free market. Baker's right that there never really was any such thing as a "free market." It was always just a code among the wealthy and powerful for: "How do we get more money for ourselves and more power for ourselves."
Take the problem of enlarged protestate, a common affliction for men over 50. The patented "flow max: is $109 a month and it must often be supplimented with finasteride, another $46 a month. Still, in order to avoid re-occuring urinary tract infections in might be wise to take concentrated cranberry juice in tablet form , around $24 a month.
That's alot of money to companies whose discovery and development of these drugs is best described as "a happy accident", all the fundamental research having been mostly done at tuition supported University research centers.
Last weekend “The Starving Artists” conducted a sale in South Bend Indiana. Ads for the sale were all over TV and the sale was located in a convention center type of facility.
The ads boasted that no painting, even sofa sized painting, sold for more than $59.00.
The paintings in the ads appeared to be acrylics on canvas and were framed. In the United States the materials for a similar painting could not be purchased for the retail price the works of “The Starving Artists” paintings sold for.
Ironically many of the works of “The Starving Artists” had more than a coincidental resemblance to those of Thomas Kinkade. (Thomas Kinkade is to art as “The Franklin Mint” is to collecting.)
http://www.thomaskinkadegallery.com/index.php
Given the large amount of advertising and the cost of renting the facility it’s my guess that the mark-up on the works of “The Starving Artists” was well more than triple. It’s my guess that “The Starving Artists” are actually near starving third world craftsmen and women that get paid pennies a day to paint for an employer that buys the materials in vast bulk quantities and exports the works to the U.S.
I have several friends that once upon a time were artists that made a meager living producing their works. Today whenever an artist develops a “look” that sells it’s only a matter of a few months until retailers start stocking their shelves with imported knockoffs.
Kinkade’s ability to mass market his works guaranteed “The Starving Artists” would be coming soon to a convention hall near you.
(I wonder if the paintings get tested for lead based paint?)
There was also a "starving artists" sale here in the Harrisburg PA area within the last couple weeks. I have a feeling your speculations regarding this situation are true. Its probably a large business with "franchises" in several states.
-- ekaton aka d.k.shaw
I read an article somewhere a couple weeks ago that described a city in China that was famous for the number of artists who mass produce paintings. They too were forced to cut production because of the world recession.
"Ironically many of the works of “The Starving Artists” had more than a coincidental resemblance to those of Thomas Kinkade."
Oooooo! He's good! :-)
I was at the Philadelphia Art Museum last weekend, the last day for the retrospective of James Castle. He can kick Kinkade's butt any day, and his characteristic "medium" is soot from the wood stove mixed with his own spit.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Charles_Castle
Definitely a good article.
Its basic point - don't look at the quantity of regulation but cui bono - applies equally well to taxation policies, at all levels.
Its other main point, that "regulation/deregulation" should be a subject of an open debate and not of left to ideological posturings of the self-elected pundits may be more of wishful thinking. The tone of American debate has become so infantilized (Duck Season! - Wabbit Season!) that such a debate is probably never likely to happen anytime soon.
In solidarity, Walter
Power shift 2009 - can it happen?
http://www.powershift09.org/about
Sioux Rose
OLD GOAT: This group of young activists is certainly "using the force" as Luke Skywalker might say. The astrological alignments of that phase are truly empowering to those of like-mind who gather with the intention of utilizing the power of human synergy to affect meaningful change. Not only shit happens! (That could be a bumper sticker!)
That and two fify (as the rappers say) will get you a cup of coffee at the rich man's cafe.
Sioux Rose
HOOT: Try this on for size. I remember a "Law and Order" episode based on a guy who bombed abortion clinics. The story line evolved to show that this guy, apart from any moral feelings about abortion was mostly reacting to a woman who left him heartbroken by refusing to have his child. You are the male equivalent of the lady that doth protest too much. I wonder if you dated a woman who believed in things like astrology, reincarnation, and mystical aspects that go beyond what logic can measure and thus consistently vent your rage at me, as HER projection? Your anger is disproportionate to the insights I relate in this forum. And as Richard Bach so wisely stated, "If you argue FOR your limitations, you get to keep them." How arrogant of you to believe that reality consists of only what your limited senses can feed back at you? How many times has science had to correct its own conjecture as new data emerged or was recognized? Today's physicists are discovering what mystics for all time have KNOWN.
You can attempt to psychoanalysize me until the crows come home SR but the bottom line is I am sick of impractical, fuzzy minded people dissipating the energy of the left, period, end of story. The last time the left was truly strong was between 1910 and 1935 or so when it was all about being secular atheists tightly organized to do things like shutting down entire cities with general strikes. Do you think striking miners facing Pinkerton cops had any time for woo, woo, woo? "Praying for peace" and thinking about archetypes and other b.s. doesn't do jack shit to help poor people or the planet, but it does make the overfed bourgeoisie THINK they did something when they didn't, and thus the corporate war machine continues to roll over us quite satisfied that someone bought a crystal and a Deepak Chopra book at the mall rather than participating in a general strike or doing anything to actually make power uncomfortable. Does that make me ANGRY? You bet!
And don't even get into what physicists are "discovering" as I showed over in the other thread the way physicists use words like "observer" and "reality" at the subatomic level is VERY different from the way those words are twisted by New Age frauds using those words in inexact metaphorical ways.
I challenge you to read physicist Richard Feynaman's Cargo Cult Science essay and do a mini report as to what you learned.
Can you handle that challenge SR?
http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/cargocul.htm
Why I am not holding my breath that you can handle it?
p.s please don't tell me about "law and order" episodes" television is for stupid people.
Mystics dabble in the mythical. Useless. Nuager interpretation of quantum mechanics is the ignorant preaching about that which they don't understand. The only spirits that exist are those found in a bottle. Meditation and prayer, may "feel" good, but so does any other delusion of one's choice.
Sioux Rose
BIN BAN & Hoot owl: For one thing the "left" would benefit from a little spirituality, given that the RIGHT relies on a fundamentalist religious base that coheres it together! Second, while I will not respond to either of you personally for you're so locked into a self-limited worldview, I can say with all due regard that I feel SORRY for your bankrupt inner lives.
Except the right doesn't actually enact any policies whatsoever based on the religion they lay claim to. Their own figurehead (Christ) is so distorted from how he appeared in the mythology they owe no resemblance to one another. The right are exactly the kind of self-righteous bigots Christ tiraded against, and he was one of the first figures in history to preach nonviolent civil disobedience.
I'm not interested in the kind of false cohesion through perverted religion the right relies on. They're more united by deceptive rhetoric, false journalism, and cultlike unwavering nationalism than religion.
... Look. As long as you're interested in taking action as opposed to waiting for the cosmic cycle to right itself, you can philosophize and preach all you want. Cosmic cycles, god, divine will, assuming these things exist, they manifest themselves through our actions and natural consequences. I'll gladly stand next to you in the picket line so long as you're willing to show up.
Sioux Rose
COSMO: Deal. My point is one stance is not mutually exclusive in terms of the other, they (mundane activism & spiritual awareness) can be co-factors.
Different people function different ways with different motivators, but hey, whatever fuels your conscience and moves you to action is a positive in my book.
Agreed a non fact based left is vulnerable to whatever irrational fad holds sway IMO:
http://skepdic.com/sokal.html
Sioux Rose
HOOT: Handle "the challenge" yeah, like after you study astrology for 30 years. I am in the midst of a comprehensive book edit, have not even read the books that I recently purchased, your "ITEM" is low on the list of any priorities I'd presently care to manage. Your ego is unbelievable, seems to me your yard work is some kind of penance designed to educate your soul with a modicum of humility. I would not be at all surprised if you were one of those same rich bastards that abused the lawn help in a previous incarnation. You may not LIKE the FACT that all things come full circle, but escape from the law of karma is about as possible (in a body) as defying gravity. Have fun. You and I are like oil and water. And I am not wasting any more time on your case. I'd appreciate it if you returned the favor.
"seems to me your yard work is some kind of penance designed to educate your soul"
This is EXACTLY the sort of blame the victim mentality that I often see among New Agers who talk of things like people "attracting negativity" to themselves that fills me with disgust at New Agers. I suppose those Palestinian children weakened from hunger laying next to their dead mother in a bombed out house "attracted" the bombs to themselves too, right?
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21683.htm
You are a "witch" all right in the most pejorative sense of that term. If you secretly harbor a blame the victim mentality please stay far away from demonstrations whose aim is to help victimized people OVERCOME hierarchical power.
Anything to avoid the facts laid out in the article I inked to right SR?
And people wonder why I want a Green version of the old secular IWW back, SIGH!
good work, all of you. finally americans are beginning to analyze their economic system. never thought i'd see the day. "nunc dimittis..."
Privatization by the Bush Cartel was promoting Deregulation, and what did we
get? A bankrupt country that is draging down the world.
WE must be on guard that the name Bush never gains power in this country again.
Along with the Clintons we must be on guard from this self made Royalty.
Why should foreign countries donate tens of millions of dollars to Bill Clinton?
They must appreciate all the goodies he gave them through our treasury.
Erase the Red; Turn Blue
The system is so broken
but has quite a head of steam
total chaos controls the team
the total chaos of networked non entities
all picking up speed, bottom line indeed
The broken dogma is in the lead
though breakdown is on the throw
with Trump towers debt in stow
destination no on knows
Planet bling is on its final fling
like a tragic Madoff, Zion sting
Our money is for nothing
and our spaceship is for trash
trade some toxins and hide your cash
Destroy our home; hide in a dome
a dummy dome
to delay the ‘we all turn blue’
as the well to do
the haves
the have mores
ponder poison tar sands trailing ponds
and claim the easy ride
with chaos in control
was worth it
and try for one last stand of better best and who of who’s
in the red white ‘turn blue’ land
The system is quite broken
chaos controls the leader’s team
the inertia of stupidity
is mushrooming with fecund fluidity
as our spaceship home
is put up for sale
We need a cap on personal wealth. In the interests of protecting free enterprise of the INDIVIDUAL, the right of every man to have a CHANCE AT SUCCESS.... it is clearly impossible for any man, no matter how brilliant he may be to compete with MEGA MONOPOLIES AND HIGHLY CONCENTRATED WEALTH.
Go ahead and set the cap high, to still allow for rewarding hard work and innovation. But don't allow Mr. Monopoly (Insert industry of your choosing here) to choose what is innovation and what is not, and buy out the competition that threatens his inbred inherited megalomania entrenched business.
As of today, we are just indentured servants of a beastly robot called the FREEMARKETRON. Humanity is suffocating.
Sometimes I wonder... I know it's illegal to print money ofcourse, but what if some how we invent a new alternative to money? Harness the power of technology, community networks, modern communication, and the internet to build a new and modernized barter system? Direct value, exchanged directly within the community and somehow tracked, measured, and banked on the internet? Banked by us, for us? It could very well dethrone the oligarchs... when no one no longer accepts their funny money.
Maybe we need to push the concept that "freedom" means freedom from domination by any individual or group of individuals with interests inconsistent with one's own, regardless of whether such individuals are government actors or private actors. Given that it is obvious to most that such domination is difficult to impossible to avoid in a world with multitudes struggling to survive while the few amass great fortunes, it could be easy to convince the majority that "freedom" for the many means no accumulation of billions for the few.
I believe we should also push the concept that one of the most important freedoms is the freedom of non-elites to form governments that can implement policies to protect them from the predations of the elites.
"I believe we should also push the concept that one of the most important freedoms is the freedom of non-elites to form governments that can implement policies to protect them from the predations of the elites."
OR
... to form institutions of government that can ...
Why is it so hard for so many to recognize how this concept (along with others) is already enabled and guaranteed under Amendment X? The opening is there, all WE have to do is step through it. WE are the ultimate check and balance, and Amendment X allows us the opportunity and means, perhaps even the responsibility to formalize our rights and powers accordingly.
A formal institute for implementing policies of public interest and for safeguarding freedoms, apart from international affairs and military actions, can and should be founded under the auspices of Amendment X. Our very first order of business in this matter should be to convene a national public convention and to assemble a significant group of advisors with non corporate, non-military and non-political interests. Our very first objective should be to declare the authority and intent to act as a unified people, with the constitutional authority to address grievances and promote causes.
Agreed, though a new amendment to the constitution might be necessary to get the Supreme Court to start protecting the rights of non-elites from the predations of the elites.
indeed:
there is the saying, which applies PERFECTLY to the capitalist AMERICAN DOGMA equating capitalism and "free market" with "freedom" -- clever use of language there, just using the ROOT part of the word "free" - with 'freeDOM' -- and then equate Capitalism=free market -- VOILA --
FREE MARKET CAPITALISM --- -equals "freedom" ...democracy. etc...
clever -- but WRONG.
and that saying goes:
"those that believe they are free - are the ones that are most enslaved".
Not to mention that a truly free market isn't on the neoconservative agenda. They want a market tightly controlled for their benefit. Actual free markets are part of what's destroying the third world. No tariffs to protect local industry, no subsidies to help vital industries survive, no grants to fund public research, no copyright and certainly no patent protection. This isn't even what so-called free market proponents are actually arguing for. They're arguing for a lie.
Agree ..
But from the looks of what has happened re progression if capitalistic-
corporatism over last decades, they no longer hsve simply a lock on
candidates, elections, debates, press, legislation ... they now have a
stranglehold on government and its agencies.
Rather than bailouts for these corporate criminals, they should face
charges. STOP bailing out capitalism--!!!
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
"they now have a stranglehold on government and its agencies."
Specifically, the FED and the Treasury. The FED, though an independant agency, creates money and works hand in glove with commercial banks and so-called "investment banks" and insurance companies, the latter two only this year falling under the auspices of the FED simply by decree of the FED.
The taxpayer is being raped. Lay back and enjoy it or physically fight it? We can write and telephone and complain to our representatives and vote all we want. These efforts have become useless. Drastic action is required, like a taxpayer revolt.
-- ekaton aka d.k.shaw
Huey Long called for this in the 30s and got called a "demoagougue" and shot for his troubles.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/hueyplongshare.htm
And why was that? Because this a damn good practical idea that leaves some good features of the market in place like allowing for individual innovation is damn threatening to the parasitic speculator class who doing nothing itself lives off the sweat and blood of others.