The boiling, surging, churning and corporatizing economy of the United
States is racing far ahead of its being understood by political
economists, economists, politicians and the polis itself. Tidbits from
the past week add up to this view, to wit:
--The giant, shut-down Bethlehem steel plant in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
will soon become a $600 million casino and hotel complex. With tens of
millions of Americans lacking the adequate necessities of food, fuel,
shelter, health care and a sustaining job, this project is part of a 25
year trend by the economy, moving away from necessities and over to
wants and whims. Among the fastest growing businesses for three decades
in America are theme parks, gambling casinos and prisons.
--Our Constitution launched "we the people" to "establish justice,
.promote the general welfare and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves." We're losing ground year after year on all three accounts.
Yet to what does Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. devote his /entire/
annual report on the federal judiciary this January 1, 2007? He called
for a pay raise for judges, calling the current pay ranging from
$165,200 to $212,000 (with a great retirement plan) a "constitutional
crisis."
--General Motor has introduced yet another prototype electric car-called
the Chevrolet Volt-to distract attention from its ongoing engine
stagnation and provide a little cover for its gas guzzling muscle cars
displayed at the Detroit Auto Show. This procrastinatory tactic by GM
has been going on since the 1939 New York World's Fair to keep people
looking far into the amorphous future so as to not focus on the dismal
today year after year while gasoline prices sky rocket and oil imports
swell. We're still waiting for some of GM's engineering prototypes from
1939 to hit the road in the 21^st century.
--Just as there are stirrings behind more shareholder rights over the
companies they own and more disclosure by management of large
corporations relating to executive pay and accounting information, the
rapid rise of huge pools of capital controlled by private equity firms
and Hedge Funds are buying larger and larger public companies and taking
them out of the regulatory arenas into secrecy.
Corporate morphing to escape public accountability has been going on for
a long time. Note the coal corporations digging deep under residential
streets in Pennsylvania and other neighboring states decades ago. As the
homes began to cave in (this is called 'subsidence'), the coal companies
disappeared by collapsing themselves only to be succeeded by their next
of (corporate) kin.
Today, this corporate morphing is far more ranging and far larger in the
economy, drawing trillions of dollars from pension funds and
institutional investor firms which themselves are largely closed off
from workers and small investors whose money they shuffle around.
Corporate attorneys are super-experts in arranging ways for corporate
capital to escape not just the tax laws of the U.S. but also the public
regulatory frameworks of the Securities and Exchange Commission and
other public "law and order" entities.
Independent and academic corporate analysts have barely begun to figure
out the consequences of this seismic shift of capital structures.
--"Private Firms Lure C.E.O.'s With Top Pay" was the headline in the
January 8^th edition of /The New York Times/. The subtitle was
astonishingly worded as "Less Lavish Packages at Public Companies." The
reporters go on to say, in essence, if you think that Home Depot's
departed C.E.O., Robert L. Nardelli's $200 million plus take home pay
package was a lot, you haven't seen what's happening behind the curtains
at the large private equity firms buying up ever bigger public
companies. "Public company chieftains are deciding that they no longer
want to be judged by their shareholders and regulators, and are going to
work for businesses owned by private equity," write the authors.
One such migrant executive, Henry Silverman, went from big riches
running the conglomerate Cendant, to making $135 million just from
selling one piece of Cendant, Realogy, to a private equity firm. "There
is no reason to be a public company anymore," said this happy corporate
prophet.
Now go to the other side of the tracks. In the last quarter century the
value of the U.S. corporations has risen 12-fold, according to /The Wall
Street Journal. /C.E.O. pay has skyrocketed similarly. But workers
today, on average, are still making less, in inflation adjusted dollars,
than workers made in 1973-the high point of worker wages!
Citing data from the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern
University, /New York// Times'/ columnist, Bob Herbert, reports that
between 2000 and 2006 the combined real annual earnings of 93 million
American workers rose by $15.4 billion. That rise is "less than half of
the combined bonuses awarded by the five Wall Street firms for just one
year."
Class warfare in reverse is what's going on. The super rich and their
corporations against the workers, redistributing the workers' wealth
into their own pockets and coffers. Mr. Herbert frequently frets about
no one in the political parties saying or doing anything about this
state of despair. He defines "political parties" as the two major
Parties, though knowing full well that there are smaller parties and
independent candidates who have campaigned across the country trumpeting
the need for economic justice in very specific terms.
So long as most progressive writers ignore these people in the electoral
arenas who are laboring to break down the barriers that keep these
issues of economic justice over corporate power abuses from moving into
elections and government, they will be bellowing in the wind.
Social justice movements in the United States have come from small
starts that are duly recognized.
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