Momentous change is approaching in American politics. Conceivably, the
turning point has already arrived, too indistinct to recognize. We are
witnessing the demise of the reigning economic ideology. A deep shift of
this kind is a very rare event, one that comes along only every thirty
or forty years. Economic disorders accumulate that the orthodoxy cannot
answer and may even have caused. Eventually, the ideological
presumptions are discredited by real-world contradictions.
The last time this happened was in the 1970s, when economic liberalism
foundered and collapsed. Ossified intellectually, unable to
adjust to changed circumstances, the liberal order did not know how to
deal with economic consequences like inflationary stagnation. As the
long postwar prosperity lost its energy, so did liberal politics.
Something similar is happening now to the Republicans. Their problem is
the underperforming economy, which must borrow to stay afloat and,
roughly speaking, lifts only half the boats. The conservative
order--inspired two generations ago by Milton Friedman and Friedrich von
Hayek and brought to power by Republican ascendancy--pushed government
aside so business and capital would be free to generate more lasting
prosperity. But their utopian promise was not fulfilled. Instead, the
right's principal product, one can say, was economic inequality.
The breakdown won't necessarily produce an immediate shift in power.
When the bottom fell out of liberal doctrine thirty years ago, what
first unfolded was confusion and political paralysis, then an awkward
retreat by the Democrats until they were finally displaced by the
aggressive new conservatives under Ronald Reagan. But it does mean
that Republicans have lost the political cohesion to advance their more
extreme measures (privatizing Social Security, freeing capital entirely
of taxation).
More to the point, the way is now open for alternative thinking: the new
ideas that can lead to a new governing order. These ideas must be
grounded in a determination to give people back their future. The
strange paradox of our times is that despite America's fabulous wealth,
most people's lives are shadowed by economic anxieties and real
confinements, the wounds that market ideology has imposed. They fear
that much worse is ahead for their children. Reform must re-establish
this fundamental principle: The economy exists to support society and
people, not the other way around. Only government can liberate them from
the harsh rule of the marketplace, the demands imposed by capital and
corporations that stunt or stymie the full pursuit of life and liberty
in this complex industrial society. This very wealthy country has the
capacity to insure that all citizens, regardless of status or skills,
have the essential needs to pursue secure, self-directed lives. This
starts with the right to health, work, livable incomes and open-ended
education, and to participate meaningfully in the decisions that govern
their lives. The marketplace has no interest in providing these. It is
actively destroying them.
A coherent alternative agenda that will fulfill these principles does
not yet exist. Nor will a liberal-progressive program emerge
miraculously if the Democratic Party should somehow regain power in the
next few years, since many Democrats in Congress have internalized the
market ideology and collaborate with the right. But elements of that
alternative agenda are already ripe for discussion. Before we explore
some of them, however, we should examine the economics of why the right
failed.
History's Goat
The economic engine is running on empty. It looks robust only if you
ignore the underlying conditions. Household savings were negative last
year for the first time since 1933; that is, families kept up by
spending more than they earned and by borrowing to do so. The national
economy, encompassing private-sector business and government as well as
households, also had negative savings in the fall quarter of 2005,
despite bountiful corporate profits.
The household accounting reflects a common reality: Wage incomes,
adjusted for inflation, are stagnant or falling. The weekly wage for 92
million people in nonsupervisory jobs (82 percent of the private-sector
workforce) has declined for three consecutive years, largely because
total working hours shrank across the economy. Even per capita income--a
broader measure that includes the billionaires--declined for four years
in a row under Bush. One in six manufacturing jobs has been lost since
2000 (39 percent in communications equipment, 37 percent in
semiconductors). These losses are explained as free-market
"efficiencies" but mainly represent the global relocation of American
production.
The cumulative effect is an economy that doesn't produce enough to pay
for what it wants and needs. The conservative order, notwithstanding its
proclaimed values, makes up the difference by borrowing. In five years,
Bush has added $2.5 trillion to the federal debt with more to
come (thanks to his regressive tax cutting, deficit spending, the war in
Iraq and the subpar economy). In the same five years, the national
economy as a whole took on even more debt--$2.9 trillion--to pay for the
ever-swelling trade deficits. The creditors are our trading partners,
led by China and Japan. The collective indebtedness is growing much
faster than the nation's collective income--always an ominous sign for a
debtor. George W. Bush may wind up as history's goat because he had the
bad luck to inherit the effects of twenty-five years of rightward
governance (including Bill Clinton's tenure). Government shifted tax
burdens downward, favored military spending over productive domestic
investment, encouraged multinationals to disperse jobs and production
overseas and embraced the Federal Reserve's hard-money monetary policy,
which suppressed working-class wages. Fortunes were shifted upward,
fabulously.
The era produced a great ideological irony: Starting with Reagan, the
right repeatedly finessed its contradictions with debt--the
borrow-and-spend "sin" they once assigned to liberalism. In 1981,
Reagan's first year as President, the federal debt surpassed $1 trillion
for the first time ever. Twenty-five years later, despite fiscal
restraint under Clinton, the federal debt has surpassed $8 trillion.
The Republicans now find themselves in a corner with no good choices. If
Bush withdrew the stimulus of federal deficits, economic growth would
collapse. The sensible course would require a massive shift in
priorities--moving money and benefits from the wealthy few to the
struggling many--but that is ideological heresy and would double-cross
the GOP's monied patrons. Bush could confront the huge trade deficits by
imposing unilateral limits on imports, but that is also a humiliating
heresy he won't touch. So conservatives are likely to muddle on, hoping
the economy will somehow work itself out of its weaknesses. Progressives
should get busy now developing alternative ideas for the major shift
that must inevitably follow.
For Life and Liberty
You wouldn't know it from reading the newspapers, but substantial and
often overwhelming majorities of Americans have repeatedly endorsed
governing concepts that conventional politicians dismiss as radical or
unrealistic: Universal healthcare. A job for everyone who wants to work,
guaranteed by the government. Secure retirements. Stronger enforcement
of environmental laws. Stronger defenses against encroaching corporate
power. Union protection for workers against exploitative employers. The
list goes on. These widely endorsed goals assume an activist government
that nurtures people and society first, ahead of corporations and
capital. Imagine a political agenda that sets out to give the people
what they say they want.
The heart of the problem is the deterioration of work and wages. There
are many other elements damaging the pursuit of life and liberty; but as
old-school liberals always understood, if wages and working conditions
are not moving in the right direction, you won't accomplish much toward
healing other social injuries and disorders. What follows is a short
list of provocative ideas meant to stimulate imaginations.
§ Repair wages. This should start with government acting as
the "employer of last resort" and involves a large and permanent program
of federally financed jobs, open to anyone ready and willing to work and
closely integrated with skill training and education. For most workers,
the public jobs would be temporary, a safe harbor until opportunities
improve in private employment. What might the people do? Any work that
helps address the vast inventory of unmet public needs--a broad program
of public investment that rebuilds neighborhoods, reclaims ruined
ecosystems or restores production. Local citizens and governments would
choose the priorities, not Washington.
The most dramatic benefits would obviously accrue to the poor--injecting
jobs with reliable (and legal) cash incomes into desolate urban and
rural communities, a financial platform to stimulate private enterprise
and redevelopment. Young people could hold part-time public jobs,
conditioned on staying in school, and bring cash home to the family,
while getting hands-on experience and productive skills--a powerful
alternative to dead-end lives. The federal job guarantee would also
bolster the broad working class: a new safety net for the
people displaced by recessions, offshoring or corporate downsizing.
Wages could be scaled upward for the public jobs, based on the skill
levels involved, and the displaced industrial workers would have access
to retraining.
Above all, a permanent program of public employment, properly conceived,
would boost wages. It would mop up surplus labor (about two times larger
than official unemployment) and create a new wage floor, generating
upward pressure in the labor market. In a more bountiful era, this might
seem unnecessary, even inflationary. But today's economy has things
upside down: It proliferates the low-wage service jobs that cannot
sustain families, while it gradually eliminates the high-wage
manufacturing jobs that provide middle-class incomes. Public jobs,
together with a sustained campaign to raise the minimum wage and other
measures, would gradually shift the flow of rewards in the other
direction.
Employers will not like this, obviously, and will argue that rising
wages are bad for the economy--higher prices, lower profits. But is that
really so? The steady deterioration of working-class wages over the past
thirty years did not produce a healthier economy. Someone should ask
working people whether they would choose cheaper prices at Wal-Mart or
better incomes for themselves. The current labor market does indeed
benefit the more affluent Americans who have been enriched by what
happened to the price of labor. Now it is time to reverse the flow and
heal the wounded--that is, restore a balanced prosperity.
§ Deregulate labor. The destruction of worker rights (the
right to organize a union, established by the 1935 National Labor
Relations Act) is a great failure of regulatory government and
a critical factor in the deterioration of wages and working
conditions. Union density has declined to 8 percent of the
private-sector workforce, yet a poll last year found that 53
percent of workers would like to be represented by a union--if they
could. The gap between aspirations and reality is maintained by
systematic and often illegal corporate tactics that block workers from
exercising their rights.
One answer might be to eliminate the National Labor Relations
Board--free the workers of regulation. Federal law and regulators are
quite lame in policing the corporate illegalities, but workers and
unions are prohibited by law from using effective tactics like secondary
boycotts, sit-down strikes occupying workplaces and mass mobilizations.
A newly enacted labor law would be grounded in constitutional
rights--free speech, freedom of assembly, the Thirteenth Amendment
prohibiting involuntary servitude--rather than politically vulnerable
regulatory law.
Rethinking labor rights is another opportunity to build bridges
across class differences by creating a broader set of rights that apply
to all employees, regardless of union status. That would involve basic
protections against managerial abuses, and also new rights of
self-expression and the right to participate in decision-making within
the firm. The best companies already do this, because they know the free
flow of information among employees stimulates innovation and efficiency
reforms. Labor law effectively inhibits unionized workers from even
meeting with nonunion colleagues without the boss's consent.
Ultimately, labor-law reform should encourage an economy
of worker ownership in which employees share
responsibility for the firm with management and share
more equitably in the returns. The top-down corporate structure is a
major source of inequality. Does anyone imagine that employees, if they
had a voice, would ratify the scandalous executive pay for CEOs?
§ Tax corporate behavior. Major corporations used to be part
of the liberal social contract. They were the institutional partners
that distributed health insurance, pensions, labor guarantees and other
progressive benefits to workers and communities (reimbursed by federal
tax deductions). But during the last generation, companies have resigned
from this role, turning on their employees and extracting "profit" by
expropriating the value that belonged to their workers: wages, pensions,
healthcare benefits and good working conditions.
Government has to step in and fill the void to avert social calamity.
The old arrangement helped build the middle class, but it was never as
good as it sounded. Roughly half the country was left out. Moreover, the
voluntary nature gave managements the power to set the terms--and the
freedom to break promises--which were challenged only by unions.
Universal health insurance is the most pressing imperative because
health costs continue to soar as the burden is shifted to employees.
Pensions may become a larger crisis in the long run. The right's
twenty-five-year experiment with individual pension accounts has failed,
leaving even middle-class workers unprepared for retirement. Instead of
tinkering with the failed concept, reformers should create an entirely
new national pension: universal, mandatory savings under government
supervision that, alongside Social Security, will insure comfortable
retirement for all. One model is the pension plan already enjoyed by
federal employees and members of Congress [see Greider, "Riding Into the
Sunset," June 27, 2005].
Companies need to pay, meanwhile, for their antisocial behavior. They
collect hundreds of billions in tax breaks and subsidies, yet abuse
society in return--degrading the environment and communities, ignoring
the national interest, offloading their obligations. Corporate taxation
has declined since the 1960s from more than 20 percent of federal
revenue to less than 10 percent. Despite their profitability, scores of
major corporations pay zero taxes (some even collect refunds). One
plausible remedy is to refashion the corporate income tax as an
important new mechanism for enforcing corporate obligations to society.
Imagine a reformed tax code that clears away all the corrupted loopholes
and sets the basic corporate tax rate higher, at around 45 percent.
Corporations would then be able to reduce their tax liability--perhaps
by 15 points or more--by demonstrating that their performance adheres to
higher social standards. Does the company, for instance, increase wages
for workers in step with its rising productivity, as economists assume,
or does it pocket the money for the insiders and shareholders? A
positive record could knock several points off the tax rate. Does the
company have an egregious history of trashing environmental laws or
fraudulent dealings in financial markets? It would be ineligible for
reductions. If the company is increasing its American workforce,
augmenting pensions and healthcare, encouraging democratic relations
with employees, it could be rewarded at tax time. This leverage would
penalize bad behavior at the bottom line and reinforce the tattered
regulatory laws. The performance ratings would be public--a "market
signal" that tells investors and consumers which companies are the white
hats and which are the rogues.
§ Develop an industrial policy for essential needs. Economic
deregulation produced real economic gains, like stimulating
technological innovation, but it also fed inequality in sly ways.
The deregulated system raised costs for the least affluent, while larger
business customers were able to bargain for lower prices. Financial
deregulation (enacted by Democrats in 1980) legalized usurious lending
and created a large pool of families (now around 12 million) who can't
afford a bank account and get ripped off by predatory lenders.
Deregulation of electric u tilities led to Enron and the price-rigging
scandals. That sector, meanwhile, notoriously ignores its culpability
for producing global warming.
The point is, some consumer goods are too essential to be left to the
profit-seeking enthusiasms--and reckless disruptions--of private
enterprise. People need them to live and are thus always prey to
exploitation. Family finances will benefit and so will the environment
if government selectively re-regulates industrial sectors producing for
essential needs: banking and finance, energy, elements of transportation
and telecommunications, for starters.
The basic approach is restoring a franchise relationship in which firms
accept government-imposed obligations in exchange for limited
competition and an assurance of moderate profits. Market space can be
preserved for smaller, innovative firms. New rules can avoid the
inflexibilities of the old system. But the notion that corporations have
a right to annex common public assets and turn them into profitable
commodities has to be stopped. Companies are buying the water. What's
next--selling us clean air?
A prime candidate for essential-needs regulation is the drug industry.
Among its many outrages, the drug companies ride free on the expensive
basic research financed by government, then convert it into private,
overpriced products--paying nothing at all back to the original
financiers, the taxpayers. If citizens ever understood this scam, they
would be angry enough to demand a nationalized drug industry.
At the very least, citizens are entitled to reasonable pricing and a
share of the profits from the medicine they paid to create.
Re-regulation of commerce also requires some rules accepted as everyday
practice in business. When government hands out public money to a
company, it should demand an enforceable contract: written agreement
from the corporate recipient about what the public gets in return and
the right to recover the money if the agreement isn't fulfilled. When
government puts up public capital for a private development as tax
breaks or infrastructure, it should get equity in return. If businesses
don't like these terms, they don't have to take the public's money.
These ideas and others can gain political traction if reformers reclaim
the language of freedom. It starts with a liberating message for people:
The failure lies in the system, not yourselves. When the conservative
order stripped away government protections for society, control was
handed over to another master--the marketplace--that is even more remote
from accountability and far less sympathetic to the
human condition. That old order is collapsing. Now life and liberty can
be restored. Government helps by creating the proper foundations. People
will do the rest for themselves.
© 2006 by The Nation
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