America's Race To The Bottom
by David Michael Green
www.opednews.com/, December 11,
2009
I sure hope that there is a full and speedy
recovery to the massive recession we are all now suffering under.
But, I'll be honest. I doubt that there
will be. Most of the upticks following our latest national downturns
have been dismal enough that economists have had to invent a new
term for them. The phrase is jobless recovery, and the implications
are as ugly as they sound.
What it means is that GDP rises, but life
remains crappy for real people with real jobs. If they're lucky
enough to have one, that is.
Where does the money from rising GDP go,
then? Funny you should ask. It goes exactly where it's been going
for the last three decades. Not to the public, and not to raising
the living standards of ordinary folks. But, rather, to the über-class.
My guess is that The Great Recession as
some are calling the current disaster (presumably to avoid using
the D word) will be followed by what history will record as the
The Tepid and Rather Jobless, Thank You Very Much, Recovery. If
that.
And, more importantly, my guess is that
this will be the latest and greatest click yet of what is the
most massive ratcheting project of the last three decades, perhaps
the most wholesale redistribution of wealth in human history.
Consider the numbers...
The ratio of executive salary to the average
paycheck during the mid-twentieth century was about thirty to
one. In the last decade it has ranged from three hundred to over
five hundred to one.
The richest four hundred Americans were
worth an average of about $13 million each in the middle of the
century, using today's dollars. Now they average over $260 million
each.
The top taxpayers in America now pay the
same proportion of their income in taxes as those earning less
than $75,000 per year. Those taxes on the wealthy went from being
more than half of their income fifty years ago to about a sixth
today.
In the past three decades, the income
of the richest Americans quadrupled, while the income of the lowest
ninety percent actually fell. Today, the median wage is lower
than it was in the 1970s, even though productivity has grown by
nearly fifty percent.
All told, from the 1930s through the 1970s,
America produced the biggest and richest middle class in human
history. But then many of us made the mistake as I did of assuming
that this had become, based on a solid society compact, the default
status quo for the foreseeable future.
In fact, it was instead an aberration.
And it was contingent.
It was an aberration because we are now
speedily returning (if we haven't already arrived) to the days
prior to the New Deal, when the rich had everything and the middle
class was small and insecure. And it was contingent because the
good old days depended on a combination of elite satiation and/or
a strong progressive defense of an equitable economic order.
But both have disappeared in the Age of
Reagan. Today, there are seemingly no bounds conceivable to what
the already astonishingly wealthy will do in order to further
magnify their holdings. No suffering of the struggling middle
class let alone impoverished brown people inconveniently sitting
on top of desirable resources somewhere abroad represents the
slightest impediment to a greed which long ago ceased to have
any passing relationship with utility. We are simply talking here
about sociopaths people who cannot fathom a reason to alter their
predatory behavior under any circumstances, even when the lives
of millions are at stake, and even when another pile of millions
of dollars in their investment portfolio does nothing to improve
their condition because they are already so rich to begin with.
Okay, well, that's not exactly a new thing.
Unless, say, you're a geologist and you happen to think that human
beings are a new thing. But what is new is that the other possible
protection against the gutting of the middle and working classes
that is, the existence of a progressive bulwark against greed
has all but disappeared. At the level of elites, this has transpired
because the Democratic Party has simply joined the GOP in becoming
a corporate tool, serving the interests of Goldman Sachs and a
few others, with near complete disregard for the public interest.
At the mass level, Americans have embraced their own petite bourgeois
form of greed, and have become stupider and Republicaner with
each passing year.
The result is that the aberration is ending,
albeit slowly and somewhat fitfully, and the country is returning
to its natural state, where outrageous disparities of wealth are
common. So common, in fact, that no serious political movement
exists to redress ths injustice. So common that the wealthy go
to churches where Jesus the proto-socialist who talked about camels
and needles has been morphed instead into the First Coming of
Ayn Rand. So common that a guy can run for president incessantly
repeating the word change, invoking the greatest moral struggles
of history, and come to office during a time of multiple crises
for a deeply stressed American public, only to turn out to be
just another Wall Street hack, busy diverting the remaining chunks
of the commonwealth to the plutocracy.
It's not exactly a mystery how we ended
up here, although there's more obfuscation on this question than
there are hypocritical sinners at a GOP family values convention.
And that's a lot. Every American government since Reagan has essentially
been consumed with the task of denuding the middle and working
classes of their paltry share of the national pie, in order to
deliver those dollars into the hands of wealthy political benefactors.
This includes Democrats as well as Precambrians. Indeed, probably
the president least tenacious in pursuing this project, of the
five we've been blessed with these last three decades, was George
H. W. Bush. That really tells you something, right there, doesn't
it?
Yes, it's true that even a mixed economy
system practicing both Keynesianist and monetarist countercyclical
macro-economic strategies will experience oscillations in growth.
(Although, remember when, a decade ago, people were speculating
about whether the business cycle had forever been tamed? Remember
when people thought Alan Greenspan walked on water? Seems like
a lot longer than ten years ago now...) But at the same time,
government policies on economic and political issues really do
matter, especially when it comes to cutting up the pie.
If you adopt policies that decimates unions,
you're gonna wind up decimating unions. Never particularly high
in America, and peaking historically at about thirty-five percent,
the share of workers who are organized in this country is now
down to about seven percent. Guess what sort of effect that is
going to have on worker negotiating power over wages, benefits,
safety, general treatment and respect?
If you adopt trade policies that undermine
labor at every turn, you're gonna wind up with a lot of unemployed
Americans competing against low-wage Mexican, Chinese and Indian
workers overseas. This wasn't exactly hard to see coming as NAFTA
and the WTO were being negotiated, two of the biggest priorities
of the Clinton administration. It was even less hard to see when
Republicans created tax incentives for companies to ship jobs
outside America, and when John Kerry was either too stupid or
too fully coopted to turn that slam-dunk issue into the Willie
Horton of the 2004 presidential campaign.
If you adopt policies that slash taxes
on the already wealthy, guess what that's going to do to the distribution
of wealth in the country? Guess what impact it will have on the
federal government's revenues and debt? Guess who will be stuck,
in the future, paying for the loans to finance the share of revenue
that the wealthy are excused from today? Plus interest, of course.
And guess what that will mean for social
needs spending as the government grows so deeply indebted that
its creditors force it to make cuts in outlays, like some banana
republic getting the whip hand from the IMF? Will those cuts be
on the military, or on healthcare? Wars or food stamps? We know
they won't be on service to the debt. That interest we now pay
on the $12 trillion or so we've already borrowed is currently
one of the biggest single items in the federal budget, and cannot
be defaulted upon without producing disaster. We already know
from the Clinton administration the answer to these questions
about spending priorities. Even in the flushest of times, this
supposed Democratic president slashed welfare spending.
So how shocking is it, when you add it
all together, to find that anti-American labor, trade, tax and
spending policies turn out to hurt the middle and working classes?!?!
The only thing really shocking about the entire affair is that
voters have been swallowing whole that baited hook for thirty
years now. And that they will likely do so again, in 2010 and
2012, as they perceive the failure of Democratic Party liberalism',
and knee-jerk their way into a reign of repeated GOP pillaging,
after just rejecting it in deserved disgust only a year or two
ago.
Of course, new Republican governments
won't be any more successful at generating public prosperity than
Democrats, not least because neither has much interest in doing
so, except perhaps incidentally. What the Grand Old Pricks might
be able to pull off, however, is some more raghead slaughtering,
fag bashing, or terror traumatizing in order to keep the hoi polloi
focused on anything and everything but the emptying of their wallets.
Ultimately, the game will end, and we'll
wind up looking like the British following the Second World War
a great empire bled dry, all its people running around with bad
teeth. Right now, Republicans and Democrats are essentially competing,
as in a game of musical chairs, to avoid being the party in charge
when the fictions of our economic condition can absolutely no
longer be sustained. Kinda like what you see in California, the
once great state. Looks to me like the Democrats lost. Now there's
a shocker, huh? the party of Obambi getting reamed by the party
of Tom The Hammer DeLay.
Politicians continue to play the same
old cards about resurrecting the same old prosperity. No one will
say the truth about how the US standard of living will probably
never be restored for the bottom ninety-eight percent, while elites
now have the kind of wealth that European kings once had to conquer
entire continents in order to acquire. In fact, none of our courageous
politicians will even tell you that you can't afford to have tax
cuts and full governmental services at the same time. They're
too busy borrowing it all from their kids and ours. Well, really
just ours. Anyhow, isn't responsibility kinda boring? Isn't that
whole honesty thing so twentieth century?
The simple and sad fact is that greedy
elites will always use their power to acquire unseemly quantities
of wealth, unless one or both of two conditions obtain. The first
is that they are socialized to be slightly less greedy, slightly
more patriotic, and remotely compassionate about those who have
nothing. They may also recognize, as Henry Ford did, that their
long-term prospects are rather heavily tied to those of all the
rest of us.
The other option is that we, acting through
genuinely progressive politics, distribute the cash more fairly.
Even if we do this, the wealthy will still have ridiculous amounts
of absolute wealth, of course, and truly sickening amounts of
relative wealth. It's just that the rest of us will be a bit less
impoverished. Perhaps all full-time workers would be guaranteed
a living wage, for example. What a concept, eh? Perhaps if we
throw all-in with our subversive little Bolshevist revolution,
we'll go so far as to even join the rest of the world's developed
countries in supplying our people with healthcare. Radical, man.
We got part of the way to a more just
society during the middle chunk of the twentieth century, though
it was a minor miracle that we did. And it probably really required
the Great Depression to do it, along with the twin legislative
forces of nature more commonly known as Franklin Roosevelt and
Lyndon Johnson.
We may actually get there again.
Though if I had to guess, I suspect instead
that the next stop is Palinism.
Whether we'd have the brains subsequently
to ever transcend that disaster for a moderately equitable American
economic order is a real question.
Whether we even could at that point is
quite another.
David Michael Green is a professor of
political science at Hofstra University in New York. He is delighted
to receive readers' reactions to his articles
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