The Occupy Wall Street Movement and the Coming Demise of Crony Capitalism
by:
Ravi Batra, Truthout | News Analysis
In 1978, to the laughter of many and the derision of a few, I wrote a
book called, "The Downfall of Capitalism and Communism," which predicted
that Soviet communism would vanish around the end of the century,
whereas crony or monopoly capitalism would create the worst-ever
concentration of wealth in its history, so much so that a social
revolution would start its demise around 2010. My forecasts derived from
the law of social cycles, which was pioneered by my late teacher and
mentor, P. R. Sarkar. Lo and behold, Soviet communism disappeared right
before your eyes during the 1990s, and now, just a year after 2010,
middle-class America, spearheaded by a movement increasingly known as
"Occupy Wall Street (OWS)," is beginning to revolt against Wall Street
greed and crony capitalism. Will the revolt succeed? It surely will,
because the pre-conditions for its success are all there.
The first question is this: Why does rising wealth disparity create
poverty? My answer is that it causes overproduction and hence
unemployment and destitution. It is all a matter of supply and demand.
Inequality goes up when official economic policy does not allow wages to
catch up with the ever-growing labor productivity, so that profits soar
and rising productivity increasingly raises the incomes and bonuses of
business executives. I have detailed this process in an earlier article.
Then money sits idly in the vaults of bankers and big-business CEOs and
restrains consumer demand, leading to overproduction and hence layoffs.
The toxic combination of mounting layoffs and absent job creation
raises poverty, which, according to official figures, is now the highest
in 50 years.
The next question is: how has the government either restrained wages
relative to productivity or made the rich richer and the poor poorer? It
is easy to see that almost all official economic measures adopted since
1981 and contained in the following list have devastated the middle
class. The list includes:
1. The Reagan income tax cut of 1981 that benefited the rich, but made
it necessary to sharply raise all other federal taxes, paid mostly by
the poor and the middle class, to finance that tax cut.
2. Unenforced antitrust laws, leading to mergers among large and
profitable firms, but killing high-paying jobs in numerous industries.
3. Permitting the oil industry mergers in the 1990s that are now
preventing oil prices from falling in the middle of the worst slump
since the 1930s.
4. Permitting relentless mergers among pharmaceuticals and health
insurance companies, so that America, far more than any other nation,
now spends almost 15 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) on
health care that is mediocre by European and Japanese standards.
5. Unchecked use of outsourcing that kills high-paying jobs in manufacturing and services.
6. Ignoring the growth of the trade deficit that has destroyed our manufacturing base.
7. The 1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act under President Clinton
that led to reckless lending by banks and an unprecedented housing
bubble, which collapsed in 2007 to trigger the ongoing slump.
8. The Bush tax cuts and bailouts that further benefited the rich while nearly doubling the government debt.
9. And finally, the decimation of the real minimum wage by President
Reagan and other Republicans. (In 1981 the hourly minimum wage bought $8
worth of goods compared to $6 by the end of Reagan' presidency in
1988, and to mere $5.15 in 2006 under Bush.)
Looking at this nine-point list, is there any government program that a
big business CEO would hate? Stated another way, is there any measure
that has helped the middle class? I can't think of any. Thus, over the
past three decades whatever the government did, ostensibly to help the
people, actually ended up hurting them. Mergers, outsourcing and free
trade raise productivity, but also lower wages, whereas the other
provisions of the above list directly enrich the wealthy. The nine-point
list is really a list of exploitation.
Let us now look at President Obama's record since January 2009 when he
took office. The president's first act was to engineer another bailout, à
la George W. Bush. The idea was that the $800 billion package of
assisting banks and faltering industries would save or create some four
million jobs. Did the measure succeed in its avowed purpose?
According to the latest estimate from the Congressional Budget office,
the bailout created nearly 1.5 million jobs. Even if we accept the
administration's claim of four million, the bailout was extremely
wasteful and enormously enriched the rich. Dividing 800 billion by four
million yields 200,000. In other words, the government spent $200,000 to
create one job. When the average wage is less than $50,000 per year,
where did the other $150,000 go? This suggests that companies that hired
those four million people received $150,000 for each job they created.
Thus, three-fourths of the bailout, or $600 billion, went to businesses,
and a mere one-fourth benefited the unemployed. This is the best case
for the Obama measure. It is clear that the bailouts, Bush's and
Obama's, were extremely wasteful and hugely enriched the opulent.
The fact is that government deficits are not working and have always
benefited the wealthy. Not surprisingly, the fastest and the sharpest
rise in income and wealth inequality has occurred since 1981, when the
culture of mega-deficits first began. Lasting prosperity occurs only
when wages rise in proportion to productivity, as was the case through
much of American history, especially from 1940 to 1980. Whenever wages
trail productivity, debt and profits soar, only to be followed by
overproduction and soaring poverty and misery for the middle class. Such
was the case in the 1920s and the 1930s and such again has been the
case since 1981.
If President Obama really wants to create millions of jobs, then all
the economic measures adopted since Reagan's presidency must be
abandoned. Of course, the Republicans would oppose him tooth and nail in
this resolve; they would scream about the president hurting job
creators, who in fact are job destroyers. Big business has decimated
American jobs through mega-mergers, outsourcing, oil speculation and by
shifting factories to Mexico and China. The nation can only prosper if
the destructive ability of job destroyers is restrained through
increased taxes or the creation of free markets.
When the government bails out mega banks and Wall Street firms, it
amounts to shooting the economy in the foot. Our president seeks to
bring about change, which was his campaign slogan. But once elected, he
got sidetracked by thinking that change is possible through compromise.
This has never happened before. Never in history have the exploited
prospered by cooperating with the exploiter.
Compromise is what produced the government's nine-point list of
measures described above. The Republicans were able to impose these
measures whenever some Democrats compromised with them. When Reagan
raised the gasoline tax and excise taxes in 1982, it was through the
cooperation of the Democrats, who cooperated again in 1983 when Social
Security and self-employment taxes went up sharply to pay for the
massive income tax cut of 1981. The repeal of the Glass-Stiegel Act, the
Bush tax cuts and bailout were all the handiwork of Republican
lawmakers and right-wing Democrats.
America does not need another dose of increased government spending,
but a rational economic policy that generates free-market capitalism to
take the place of the current monopoly capitalism. In 1776, the nation
declared independence; coincidentally, the same year Adam Smith, the
father of modern economics, demonstrated how small businesses generate
lasting prosperity for all, not just a privileged few. That is what we
need again. It is well known that small firms have created the bulk of
American jobs in recent years. This is then the best argument for
breaking up business conglomerates not only to create jobs, but also to
lower the oil price and the cost of health care.
The government should also adopt strong, not toothless, measures to
eliminate the trade deficit, which is now running at $500 billion per
year. This alone will create five million manufacturing jobs.
Eliminating the trade deficit will raise US GDP by the same amount, and
to produce that much output, new workers will be needed. Suppose it
costs a business $100,000 to hire a worker, including salary, benefits
and profit. Dividing 500 billion by 100,000 yields five million. In
other words, eliminating the trade shortfall will generate five million
new jobs, paying the average wage and benefits.
The trade deficit can be eliminated by setting up a low export-exchange
rate, the way China and other Asian nations have done. But first, the
government must see the value of balancing our trade and then proper
economic policy can be devised to reach the goal.
Outsourcing is now the biggest job destroyer. The government should
impose a hefty tax on this practice. This way, if a company has to
outsource some work, it will compensate the nation for creating
joblessness in the economy. Finally, we need to eliminate the federal
budget deficit. This can be done by repealing the Bush tax cuts for the
wealthy and by enacting a small tax on financial transactions, while
preserving crucial programs for the retirees. There is no reason to cut
Social Security and Medicare, because President Reagan raised taxes
sharply to guarantee the benefits to retiring baby boomers. In short,
President Obama should do away with the nine-point list of exploitation
mentioned above. He will then be able to bring about the change that he
promised during the election campaign in 2008.
Einstein once defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over
again and expecting different results. By now, we should know that
excessive government spending is one such insanity. It creates very few
jobs and primarily benefits the rich. In fact, I have shown
mathematically to some audiences that, under reasonable assumptions,
increased government debt goes completely into the pockets of the
opulent. As the latest piece of evidence, from September 2010 to
September 2011, the deficit rose $600 billion, but only 400,000 jobs
were added.
I call upon the OWS movement to demand that the above nine-point list
of exploitation be repealed, so that a free-market capitalism of small
firms is reborn. This will strengthen the president's hand and enable
him to face Republican lies and tactics that are only meant to further
weaken the economy and force the president out of power. We need to make
sure that Mr. Obama is re-elected, provided he accepts the repeal
agenda, because the Republicans always do the same thing over and over,
namely make the rich richer and the poor poorer. Additionally, we should
also work to defeat Republican incumbents and rightist Democrats who
will compromise to maintain the status quo and possibly cut Medicare.
Our efforts are bound to succeed. I am an economist and historian and
made many forecasts in the past about the economy and social change.
While 5 percent of my economic forecasts have been wrong, to my
knowledge I have never made an error about forecasting a revolution. My
latest estimate is that monopoly capitalism will go the way of Soviet
communism by 2016.
O' brave protesters of the OWS movement, your effort will not only
shape the 2012 elections, they will also end, once and for all, the
brutality of the rich and powerful, who are responsible for the sorry
state you are in. The change that you are about to bring will be
glorified as what Abraham Lincoln did for black Americans. I hope that,
with your support, Mr. Obama will be the harbinger of that change.
When money sits idly in the vaults of bankers and big-business CEOs and restrains consumer demand, leading to overproduction and hence layoffs. The toxic combination of mounting layoffs and absent job creation raises poverty, which, according to official figures, is now the highest in 50 years.
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