Capitalism’s malicious work

Capitalism’s malicious work

By Jonathan Power

February 25, 2020

Capitalism rules the world. Correct. But Bernie Sanders has his doubts about it. Good. It is a malicious system in many ways but as Winston Churchill might have said, it is better than all the alternatives. Nevertheless, it’s time overdue to tame the beast.

After the Second World War, the Western world did make a big effort to mitigate some of its worst effects. In the US there was the GI bill to help returning soldiers get started in life.

Later, there was Medicaid for poorer people. In Europe, there was a widespread attempt to replicate the free health services pioneered by the Scandinavian countries and New Zealand.

Then
in the 1980s came Thatcherism and Reaganism. Their governments set about a
heavy-handed pruning of the social welfare safety net. Poverty rose
dramatically. Fortunately for their people, the governments of the rest of
Europe, by and large, did not emulate the Anglo-Saxons.

President Bill Clinton and Prime Minister Tony Blair in the late 1990s introduced what they said was the “Third Way” – something between naked capitalism and over-demanding socialism.

Clinton tried but failed, to fashion a fairer health system, although, paradoxically, he cut welfare payments for the poorest in the mistaken belief that this would drive the poor to find jobs (Later he admitted his mistake). In Britain, the child poverty rate plummeted.

Then came the Great Recession of 2008. This indeed was the result of wicked capitalism. The crash of the big New York bank Lehman Brothers triggered a tsunami of bankruptcies, unemployment and increased poverty across the world.

The bankers responsible got a government slap on the knuckles. The poor lost their jobs and saw their welfare payments cut. Their taxes went on rescuing the banks.

“Austerity” became the “in” political word. Germany used its economic muscle to push it down the throats of the weaker European economies- Greece, Spain, Italy and Portugal in particular.

Britain under the Conservative government embraced it with enthusiasm. The National Health Service became underfunded, welfare payments for the poor stagnated, libraries and nurseries were closed.

Police were laid off in large numbers. Knife crime went up. In the US, President Donald Trump tried to eviscerate Barack Obama’s health reforms.

The
ugly, unacceptable, face of capitalism became the norm.

The ideas of the twentieth century’s greatest economist, John Maynard Keynes, which asserted that in a time of recession the government should spend more – the reverse of what a household should do – were ignored except in Obama’s America, in Sweden, Portugal and Poland. They all had reasonable growth.

Ironically, Trump has benefited from Obama’s Keynesianism which brought back growth to the US.

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Trump in his wisdom continued Obama’s economic policy. Hence the continuing growth and falling unemployment in the US. In most of Europe where austerity was practised it went up.

Over
the years income distribution has worsened, the concentration of wealth in the
bank accounts of the top 10% has become more pronounced than it has been since
the days of the early Industrial Revolution.

As London School of Economics professor Branko Milanovic has written, “Since the late twentieth century, the share of capital income in total income has been rising – that is, an increasing portion of a country’s national income belongs to the profits made by big corporations and the already wealthy.

A rising share of capital income in total income implies that capital and capitalists are becoming more important than labour and workers, and so they acquire more economic and political power”.

This
is a result of globalization, the weakening of trade unions and the flight from
the developed world to the developing world of manufacturing jobs and wage
stagnation.

Policies were fashioned with little or no thought for those who were on the receiving end of the hard edge of so-called progress.

Needless to say, for those developing countries to which investment and jobs moved globalization was a good thing. But it should not have been done at the expense of industrial workers in declining industries.

Western
governments should have retrained these workers for newer jobs. But apart from
in Scandinavia too little has been done. In America very, very little.

The problems are getting worse.

The relatively new big tech industries have become the most adept companies at avoiding tax. In Ireland, for example, where Apple has its European headquarters, it has paid a minuscule annual tax, as low as 0.005% in some years. This is a common phenomenon.

At home in the US, a number of major companies pay no corporate taxes at all. Rich individuals think dodging taxes is a competitive sport.

An estimated 8% of the world’s household financial wealth is hidden in tax havens. Around the world, governments have been making their tax systems tilt towards the better off.

This
inequality distorts democracy.

Donald
Trump, a well-known tax avoider, “bought” the presidency. Michael
Bloomberg is trying to do it now. Around congresses and parliaments the world
over a hoard of lobbyists working for well-to-do individuals and companies
successfully seek legislation that works in their favour.

A soon-to-be-published book, “Deaths of Despair” written by the Nobel prize-winning economist Angus Deaton and Anne Case, focuses on why, in the last few years, life expectancy in the US has fallen after a century of increase.

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Over the last two decades among the poorer part of the white population deaths of despair from suicide, drug overdose and alcoholism have risen dramatically.

They now claim hundreds of thousands lives each year (Blacks and Latinos have suffered much less – indeed, Blacks have progressed economically, socially and politically rather fast).

The
American Dream, the authors say, is in decline. For the white working class
today’s America has become a land of broken families and few prospects.

The
authors posit with a great deal of evidence that if one has a college degree
all these problems are avoided. But for those who don’t, life is “nasty,
brutish and short”, to quote Thomas Hobbes, the seventeenth century
founder of modern political philosophy.

The authors blame the fast spread of opioid use (a derivative of opium), a phenomenon that has been encouraged by a handful of unscrupulous, greedy, drug companies.

But this is only the tip of an iceberg on which sits the weakening position of workers, the growing power of corporations and, above all, (this is why Europe doesn’t suffer the same problem) a rapacious health care system that redistributes working class wages into the pockets of the wealthy.

Capitalism,
they write “which over two centuries has lifted countless people out of
poverty is now destroying the lives of blue-collar America”.

It is time overdue for a socialist/social democrat to come to power in America.

Will the poorer whites of America vote against their own economic interest as they did for Trump last time, for reasons of nationalism, ignorance, rage and racism?

That
is the big question of our day. It would be a calamity for them if they did.

Copyright:
Jonathan Power.

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2 Responses to "Capitalism’s malicious work"

  1. Sam   February 26, 2020 at 4:53 pm

    I cannot disagree more. Very twisted facts, almost in some dream world. Trump continued Obama’s economic plans!!! Trump destroyed Obama’s economy. Obama passed out money to banks, auto and insurance companies.. Trump cut regulations that Obama imposed, setting the US economy on fire. In my community, like most in the USA, jobs are plentiful, wages are up. Families are happy. Our problems are immigration is driving up housing costs and increasing street people and petty crime.

    Reply
  2. ann   February 26, 2020 at 12:29 pm

    Hmm. Sweden mentioned as some positive exception. Most of the growth ( if that is something to strive for) is in finansial sector and the private household are in record debt. We are the sole country in the world allowing unlimited profit from taxpaid schools and healthcare. And then there is the problem with pensions and healthinsurance – relative poverty is growing rapidly and our government are buying weapons instead and betraying wissleblowers.

    Reply

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