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The State of Our Disunion: A Globalizing Private Sector, A Government Overwhelmed by Corporate Money
Who should have the primary strategic responsibility for making American workers globally competitive – the private sector or government? This will be a defining issue in the 2012 campaign.
American business won’t and can’t lead the way to more and better jobs in the United States. First, the private sector is increasingly global, with less and less stake in America. Second, it’s driven by the necessity of creating profits, not better jobs.
In his State of the Union address, President Obama will make the case that government has a vital role. His Republican rivals disagree. Mitt Romney charges the President is putting “free enterprise on trial,” while Newt Gingrich merely fulminates about “liberal elites.”
American business won’t and can’t lead the way to more and better jobs in the United States. First, the private sector is increasingly global, with less and less stake in America. Second, it’s driven by the necessity of creating profits, not better jobs.
The National Science Foundation has just released its biennial report on global investment in science, engineering and technology. The NSF warns that the United States is quickly losing ground to Asia, especially to China. America’s share of global R&D spending is tumbling. In the decade to 2009, it dropped from 38 percent to 31 percent, while Asia’s share rose from 24 to 35 percent.
One big reason: According to the NSF, American firms nearly doubled their R&D investment in Asia over these years, to over $7.5 billion.
GE recently announced a $500 million expansion of its R&D facilities in China. The firm has already invested $2 billion.
GE’s CEO Jeffrey Immelt chairs Obama’s council on work and competitiveness. I’d wager that as an American citizen, Immelt is concerned about working Americans. But as CEO of GE, Immelt’s job is to be concerned about GE’s shareholders. They aren’t the same.
GE has also been creating more jobs outside the United States than in it. A decade ago, fewer than half of GE’s employees were non-American; today, 54 percent are.
This is all good for GE and its shareholders, but it’s not necessarily good for America or American workers. The Commerce Department says U.S. based global corporations added 2.4 million workers abroad in first decade of 21st century, while cutting their US workforce by 2.9 million.
According to the New York Times, Apple Computer employs 43,000 people in the United States but contracts with over 700,000 workers abroad. It makes iPhones in China not only because of low wages there but also the ease and speed with which its Chinese contractor can mobilize their workers – from company dormitories at almost any hour of the day or night.
An Apple executive says “We don’t have an obligation to solve America’s problems. Our only obligation is making the best product possible.” He might have added “and showing a big enough profits to continually increase our share price.”
Most executives of American companies agree. If they can make it best and cheapest in China, or anywhere else, that’s where it will be made. Don’t blame them. That’s what they’re getting paid to do.
What they want in America is lower corporate taxes, less regulation, and fewer unionized workers. But none of these will bring good jobs to America. These steps may lower the costs of production here, but global companies can always find even lower costs abroad.
Global corporations — wherever they’re based — will create good jobs for Americans only if Americans are productive enough to summon them. Problem is, a large and growing portion of our workforce isn’t equipped to be productive.
Put simply, American workers are hobbled by deteriorating schools, unaffordable college tuitions, decaying infrastructure, and declining basic R&D. All of this is putting us on a glide path toward even lousier jobs and lower wages.
Get it? The strategic responsibility for making Americans more globally competitive can’t be centered in the private sector because the private sector is rapidly going global, and it’s designed to make profits rather than good jobs. The core responsibility has to be in government because government is supposed to be looking out for the public, and investing in public schools, colleges, infrastructure, and basic R&D.
But here’s the political problem. American firms have huge clout in Washington. They maintain legions of lobbyists and are pouring boatloads of money into political campaigns. After the Supreme Court’s Citizen’s United decision, there’s no limit.
Who represents the American workforce? Organized labor represents fewer than 7 percent of private-sector workers and has all it can do to protect a dwindling number of unionized jobs.
Republicans like it this way, and for three decades have been trying to convince average working Americans government is their enemy. Yet corporate America isn’t their friend. Without bold government action on behalf of our workforce, good American jobs will continue to disappear.
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52 Comments so far
Show AllA good summary as far as it goes - but there's much much more.
Not a mention of the environment - no comment on "The Limits to Growth".
In short - no vision.
Manysummits
========
Here's the short version:
http://www.ratical.org/corporations/limit2growth.html
Well, no; Robert Reich is not an anarcho-primitivist.
no, he prefers to pretend any return to American industry will be wonderful, and not return the attendant death, disease and disfigurement of industrial chemicals and processes to this continent's lands and peoples...
as if the planet is nothing but endless, viable source material for any human folly...
oops! spilled a bunch of oil...that's okay, I own the regulating governments and agencies...
hey! just get a bunch of Corexit...I own stock!!
what about the resulting dead animals in the Gulf?
get some cheap know-nothings to haul them away when they wash up at night!
what if someone sees that going on?
get the Coast Guard to shoot them!
would the Coast Guard do that?
sure!!!
yeah! let's keep getting richer!!!
how's that Afghanistan heroin operation going?
Off the charts!!!
yeah, business is good, and business is booming...
perhaps we'll all build our own personal drone for a living, as we die of cancer?
no wonder he was Clinton's NAFTA guy...he spews all the right babble...
meaningless babble, but many really enjoy a nice, long babble-bath...
So, I assume that you live in a log cabin completely surrouned by hand-made goods, inlcuding cookware and every other personal item. You sent you post on a compeltely hand made computer made from copper, silver, silicon, tantalu, and other rare earths you mined yourself, chips made yourself SMT PC boards assembled yourself...
Heh dubet !
My new equation of state:
Power checked by nature = the sacred balance
Mike (hangin' in there)
=====
(double entry)
This was a very spirited and informed discussion. Thanks to all of you for the effort.
Thank you. The most tiresome aspect of CD is people complaining that the article they read was not the one they wanted the writer to have written.
I have to agree. Without grounding politics in the environment, we are going to be going nowhere fast.
See more at Transition Times: http://bethechange2012.wordpress.com/2012/01/24/state-of-the-union-or-state-of-the-planet/
Ghettoized North Americans find comic relief in shows that capitalize on their plight like “Shameless” or “Hard Rock Pawn”
Why is it important for Americans to be competitive in a leveling of the economic playing field world wide? Because they can afford to tax wage earners to the hilt enabling them to bully their way to cheap energy?
Perhaps interlocking non dynastic Corporations will realize that their bottom line is better served by a peaceful global market, rather than by capitalizing on conflict.
Glendon Wayne Toews
Bravo, for this line, Empire Pie:
"Perhaps interlocking non dynastic Corporations will realize that their bottom line is better served by a peaceful global market, rather than by capitalizing on conflict."
And Dubet & Michael D are correct to point out the Natural Capital that's being used up to speed the demise of all living beings. Such a code of values only differs from that attached to Jim Jones by degrees.
first off, the merger of the corporate and government sectors in a country is called fascism
so with that in mind if we re-ask the indelicate question - which mr reich would never do because it would be tantamount to sticking a needle in his career's eye - but if we were to ask the question: gee how did things get so bad now that we have surrendered the society to the corporations? i think the answer is clear
they only care about money - earning cheating lying paying off pols to get it - it is their only concern
society should have more humane considerations on its mind - and in most countries it does but not here
like the voice over at the beginning of the movie blood simple says - down here in texas (and now across amerika) you are on your own
how can there be a recovery in amerika when all our jobs have been shipped over to third world slave markets like china and vietnam etc
what can be done (and is being done) is to degrade amerika to the level of third world country
and that is not to get the jobs back
it is to allow the corporations to keep more and more of the american pie to themselves
they get the pie and we get the cow patty
hmmmmm....can i have some sauce with that
no...just thought i'd ask
i can dream can't i
This post is right-on; and your use of images to drive your points home makes you a better than average writer. I don't see the value, however, in choosing never to use capital letters. The lower case "i' hardly seems the choice of shy or humble C.D. regulars.
i use i all the time, on purpose. Why do we capitalize the ego word? It's not capitalized in Spanish or French, i don't know about other languages. It just seems such quintessentially human-centric egoistic and hubristic chest-thumping. "I"!
i know, my pointless acts of cultural resistance are pointless. Absurdly i carry on.
i use it, too, sometimes. it's an e.e. cummings thing.
==Who should have the primary strategic responsibility for making American workers globally competitive – the private sector or government? This will be a defining issue in the 2012 campaign.==
Ever seen a =droodle=? Anyone here remember those from the late 1950s? They were a visual cartoon art form, created by a man called Roger Price, who drew them in real time before live black and white TV audiences. Eventually, Price published them in a paperback book, which I purchased in high school. There is a Wikipedia page devoted to Droodles.
You have a square, and the droodle is drawn inside the box. Try to envision this word picture. In the center is a large circle. On the circumference of the circle are two small triangles, opposite each other 180 degrees. Price asks the audience if they can figure out what this is, and pauses a few beats while the audience obligingly shakes their collective heads NO. Price explains.
"This is the outside world, as seen by a tiny man who lives inside a beer can."
Trylon
Hey Trylon,
I have that Droodle book, too - I bought it in the late sixties by sending in a couple of quarters and a box top from a package of Milk Duds. I still love those droodles.
Thanks for the pleasant memory.
Germs avoiding a friend who has caught penicillin.
A tomato sandwich made by an amateur tomato sandwich maker.
A ship arriving too late to save a drowning witch.
Cow on a cold morning.
Worm crawling over a razor blade.
Your turn.
Trylon
you might enjoy this website. some favorites: http://xkcd.com/668/, http://xkcd.com/795/, http://xkcd.com/565/, http://xkcd.com/612/, http://xkcd.com/830/, http://xkcd.com/385/, http://xkcd.com/869/
Back before pull-tabs, when you opened a beer can with a can opener. Wait, were you old enough to open a beer can? Give me that can opener!
Robert Reich, as is typical of democrats,
refuses to see and tries to manipulate others into not seeing,
that the government of the United States is privatized and
when any "leader" of the democrats talks about the government having a "vital role" in job creation
they are working on the SAME agenda as the republicans.
Neither corporate owned party is working for the people.
Typical and delusional at best.
The democrats make the republicans look honest.
Disgusting.
When did Reich mention the Democratic Party?
"pjd412"
1. Is not Obama the result of and the leader of the democrats?
2. Not mentioning the democrats is exactly how Reich tries NOT to reveal the truth.
I totally agree that the the so-called "Washington Consensus," with a policy agenda of fiscal austerity, central-bank autonomy, deregulated markets, liberalized capital flows, free trade, and privatization, is a two-party affair every since carter betrayed the democratic alliance with the liberal wing of the party.
Just an aside: has anyone heard that "the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA, has been quietly signed or ratified by most of the developed world...[including the us, where] ... Internet Service Providers will police all data passing through them, making them legally responsible for what their users do online. And should you do something considered "breach of copyright" like, for instance, getting a tattoo of a brand logo, taking a photo and posting it somewhere, you may be disconnected from the Internet, fined or even jailed." http://rt.com/news/acta-internet-censor-treaty-591/
Robert Reich is an absolute tool. Here's an excerpt from FAIR published back in 2008:
"As America heads toward a critical presidential election, “free trade” advocate Robert Reich, who as Bill Clinton’s labor secretary in 1993 fought hard for passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), glumly admitted that the constituency for “free trade” has severely eroded.
“I’m still a free trader, although I will tell you . . . there are fewer and fewer of us,” he told MSNBC host Chris Matthews wanly (Hardball, 10/8/07). “It’s a very unpopular position.”
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3690
Now the SOB has the gall to write at the top of his column:
"Who should have the primary strategic responsibility for making American workers globally competitive...?"
My question is, which "economist" should be held primarily responsible for making American workers lose their competitive advantage? "Globally competitive," my ass, Robert Reich. You ought to be strung up along with the rest of Clinton, Bush, and Obama administrations.
Amen!
What is mostly missed by critics is the fact, that there is no longer the ability for a person to work hard put in plenty of overtime save some money and to use the fruits of their hard work to start their own business. Jobs are about survival for the majority of people now.
Jobs at 31 cents an hour like at Foxconn, enable the Mitt Romney types to use the revolving door between corporations and government to continue the corruption and parasitic system.
There is no money for the little guy, to start a small business, or the average guy to bring new inventions to the market without being eaten alive by the parasitic 1%.
Actually, what people miss more is simply being paid well enough, with enough benefits so they don't have to work overtime and so can spend time with family, hobby and and involvement in their communities. If they are entrepenurial or inventive, that is fine, but they are a tiny minority not not at all representative of the "little guy".
Now, that's just crazy talk.. What american's want is a newer bigger Wall-Mart! and sports bars with lots of big screens to watch the game and git away from the famaly "all they do is bitch about getting the new iphone and vidieo games! Who worries about retirement, we'll all get strokes and work injuries trying to keep up with the line anyhow! >^^<
Dear Mr. Reich,
Have you ever included neo-liberalism in your analysis of global economic conditions? Do you understand that the old conservative/liberal divide does not apply in the economic discussion we must now have? Have you ever considered analyzing the capital/labor dichotomy to explain the 1% - 99% conflict? Do you understand the unsustainable impact of surplus value placed on products and services? And finally explain to the American worker the value of derivatives trading and the value impact on the "real" economy. Markets vs. Labor, where does "true" value derive? It is time to have a real discussion on economics.
This entire article is about neoliberalism and its 30 years of impacts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoliberalism
And furthermore, while US liberals have shed any leftist economic analysis they once had and have become conservatives who are gay and abortion friendly, the left-right divide certainly exists. In your comment, you are proposing a leftist, generally Marxian analysis. Therefore, you are a leftist, and should not hesitate to call yourself that.
My bright RED wristband says: LABOR CREATES ALL WEALTH.
I often tend to agree with much of what Reich says, even in this piece. However, with this line he loses me: "Problem is, a large and growing portion of our workforce isn’t equipped to be productive..."
It exposes a fundamental flaw in all capitalist economic analysis. That is: workers must be competitive, productive and efficient for an economy to succeed. The reality is that only the owners and toadies of a global capitalist economy can ever succeed in such a scheme.
The U.S. remains a wealthy country, even after centuries of despoiling our environment. U.S. workers, like workers everywhere, know how to work and figure things out. That's what people do.
Economic competitveness, productivity and efficiency are antithetical to a decent human life. Unless, he abandons his allegience to capitalism -- even regulated capitalism -- Reich will remain spinning his wheels.
However, in the spinning, he throws out alot of useful stuff and shows a willingness to stand up to the worst excesses of capitalism. He deserves, in my opinion, respect for that in these pages.
"Economic competitveness, productivity and efficiency are antithetical to a decent human life. Unless, he abandons his allegience to capitalism -- even regulated capitalism -- Reich will remain spinning his wheels."
Word up to that my friend.
"I’d wager that as an American citizen, Immelt is concerned about working Americans. But as CEO of GE, Immelt’s job is to be concerned about GE’s shareholders. They aren’t the same."
Mr Reich is correct. However, like many other economists, he doesn't clearly state the necessary fix: replacing the pervasive and destructive shareholder system with the progressive conversion of all companies into co-operative enterprises with employee stakeholders. In other words, the destruction of the capitalist system as we know it.
That, of course, is a Marxist approach to political economy and hence largely unpalatable to United States culture despite having over 11,000 co-operatives across the country. Such a change would also include all private companies that employ workers.
Given the entrenched nature of global capitalism, I don't yet see a growing push for such radical change.
Hence, despite all the brave words about a brave new world, look forward to business as usual.
Point taken but I would wager Immelt like most CEO's is not concerned about American jobs. They are mostly concerned about shareholders.
This has been proven time and again with the off-shoring of jobs! Millions of American jobs gone forever. Shareholders pleased with stock increases and the CEO's who kicked fellow citizens to the curb have been obscenely rewarded. These people are traitors. They are not good American citizens they are good and loyal corporate citizens.
http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/u-s-to-grant-three-year-extension-of-loan-guarantees-to-israel-1.409037
The average German Auto-worker makes 66.37 cents per hour in wages and benefits.
The average auto-worker in the USA makes 33.00 per hour an wages and benefits.
Germany has some 80 million people and manufactured over 5 million cars last year.
The USA has 300 million people and manufcatured 4 million cars last year. Germany has a trade surplus of about 150 billion annualy while the USA runs a deficit of some 560 billion annualy.
The mantra that wages and benefits must be lowered in order to compete is not supported by the data.
the unintended cost of winning WWII, I guess.
Many Americans don't realize that when America won WWII, our public sector got to impose things on the conquered countries, like universal healthcare, that weren't popular back home. When these countries regained their independence, the population already knew how valuable these things were, and kept them. America, by winning that war, never got to experience the value of those socialist concepts.
Oh please. Americans aren't "productive" enough? What a load of BS. Productivity has increased 80% in recent years, while wages have stagnated. We are plenty productive, but unlike Chinese workers, they cannot yet treat us like slaves for a pittance. We have some of the top universities in the world, we graduate far more engineers than are actually hired here. Bottom line is they want productive without having to pay for it. We can pour more money into our schools (even though we spend much more per student than many higher performing countries) and college aid and it won't stop this trend. Global employers don't want to have to follow labor laws. They love hiring workers in oppressive regimes who have zero rights. Can we really compete with Chinese plantation factories where workers can be roused in the middle of the night and forced to work a 12 hour shift with no advanced warning, based on "productivity"? NO. The answer is, we need to level the playing field with tariffs and stricter rules about imports. Free trade isn't free -- it comes at a HUGE cost to American workers. Do we want to continue paying that cost so the 1% can get richer?
"An Apple executive says “We don’t have an obligation to solve America’s problems. Our only obligation is making the best product possible.” He might have added “and showing a big enough profits to continually increase our share price.”
The problem in a nutshell : Civilization is a hunting ground for piracy or wage slave capitalism. Both are aspects of totalitarianism which seeks profit without concern for environmental or social cost. Though management is human, it operates as a mob.
Notice how elitevil didn't need Apple back when the people were snookered on kapitalist koolaid. Then, elitevil were cheering their most wicked, illegal monopolist, Micro$oft, But today, kapitalism has such a bad rap, now they are parading Apple around on their shoulders. Elitevil deserved to be pummeled then, and elitevil deserves to be pummeled now. Keep bearing down on them, people. It's their karma, their destiny. And if you don't help fulfill it, the society will remain jinxed.
The financial insanity about which Reich is writing - besides revealing the greed, mendacity, and venality of the elites - serves a a major distraction.
Paul Hellyer, an ex-Canadian Minister of National Defense, has been calling for a public disclosure of alien technology which have been obtained and "reverse-engineered" following UFO crashes. He has stated that these technologies can provide humanity with a definitive viable alternative to fossil fuels and climate change.
Hellyer (who is on an advisory body to the Queen, works as an environmental campaigner and is credited with integrating Canada's armed forces) also said in 2005 that the U.S. military was preparing weapons to use against aliens, and they "could get us into a.....war without us ever having any warning."
He has declared that the "time has come to lift the veil of secrecy" and to have an "informed debate about a problem that doesn't officially exist."
He calls for major global initiatives to fully prepare global citizenry for the truth. He endorses a position taken by key exopolitical researchers who have suggested a "Decade of Contact" through which humanity can be prepared for the truth about extraterrestrial visitors through informed debate and education.
According to one of these researchers, Hellyer "is blazing a trail that many other senior politicians are destined to take. It will be wise if the world's senior politicians quickly learn more about this remarkable Canadian statesman and heed his important advise about data on extraterrestrial visitors and the 'profoundly important policy questions that must be addressed.'"
Hellyer has emphasized that understanding the evidence concerning the UFO phenomenon is vital to fully preparing citizens around the world for the truth concerning extraterrestrials, despite official denial and secrecy by those "in the loop."
As such Hellyer is the first senior politician to openly come out and declare what he knows and believes concerning critical and highly consequential truths about the extraterrestrial presence.
And who, pray tell, owns the patents on this alleged technology? You guessed right: corporations is who.
Sure as shootin' conditions in the U.S. seem to be inexorably aligning with Mussolini's famous statement that: "Fascism should more appropriately be referred to as corporatism" --- which is to say, the merging of state and corporate power.
Robert Reich is a very dedicated liberal, dedicated to keeping the individual enslaved to this giant unwieldy institution that is the US federal government. Why would Reich devote his energy to the federal government and not local governments? The stature of his place of employment, Berkeley, is dependent on the nationwide dialog being uppermost in the people's minds, i.e. nationalism must be nurtured for people like Reich to get fulfillment through their national-league institutions. This is the agenda of the liberal side of the elite establishment, that monstrosity with the over-arching agenda to plunder the earth and enslave the people.
The news today is that the people are finally breaking out of the chains of liberalism. This past three to four years has seen liberalism collapse into the black hole of conservatism in Merka. The elite establishment continues to consolidate as it loses its power/prestige.
The people aren't listening to Reich and his defunct ideas that the federal government has to create the jobz to keep us alive. We know how to build and manage our local economies, without elite interference, and we're busy building them. Thanks but no thanks, Reich. Our local economies are highly resilient, and sustainable, equitable, and just. We cultivate our enlightenment by sharing info freely, around the globe. We view the federal government with loathing suspicion. It will grovel up to us and beg to serve us, and when it finally drops its bargaining terms down to the ground, we'll grudgingly make a tentative deal with it. But we don't need it. And we'll break the deal in an instant when we need to. Because we're going to maintain the upper hand over the federal government. We need to crack its bones a few times more, to make sure we really got a hammerlock on it. Well, this is how the people maintain their freedom. I guess Reich can't see it from his perch there. Too bad for him.
"In his State of the Union address, President Obama will make the case that government has a vital role."
hahahaheeheeheehowlhowlheeheehee!
How about fighting back in a way that will expose in the corporate press the criminal elite? How about joining in an occupy movement near you. How about binging charges against old Commander and Chief, George Dubya, and VP the Dick Cheney, and Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, and Vice-secretary of Defense Wolfowitz, for the planning and facilitating of the events of 9/11; they engaged in a conspiracy for killing thousands of international citizens, for destroying property for insurance fraud, for inciting to war on false pretenses, for perjury, and for treason. They did it.
Wouldn't that be a good idea to sort of put some sand in the grease of the 1% NWO elite? The Occupy movement could form a National Assembly and make the charges, form a trial for the public to view and to comment upon. Prime time stuff. Bradley Manning could host.