“Even
now, someone somewhere is penning a book with a snappy title The
End of Capitalism,” columnist Philip Stephens, associate editor
of the Financial Times wrote recently. Not to worry, he continued,
that’s not about to happen. However, eight days earlier Martin Wolf,
associate editor and chief economics commentator at the same paper
observed that what was “until recently, the brave new financial
system is melting away before our eyes.” On the night of September
18 members of Congress were summoned to a Capitol Hill conference
room where they were told that if they did not act quickly to approve
a radical revamp of how the government deals with the economy, capitalism
might indeed collapse. That’s before President George W. Bush said,
“If money isn’t loosened up, this sucker could go down.”
Not
to worry, cautioned the editor of the conservative German newspaper
Die Weit. “These are all trials and crises, but they will
not spell the end of America’s
distinctiveness.”
“The
country will never convert to socialism, nor will it become a mega-state.
Faced with similar circumstances, that might be the response of
the pessimistic Europeans. America’s culture of optimism
- which all too often gets on the Europeans’ nerves because they
consider it to be naïve and superficial - also has the power to
identify a setback as exactly that and not the end of the world,”
the paper editorialized. That was a few days before the U.S. Treasury
took responsibility for the well-being of distressed financial institutions
all over the world.
No,
the U.S. is not about to become
socialist any time too soon. That alternative has not been placed
before the public in a way that could be considered preferable to
what we’ve got. Besides, a system ceases to be when it is replaced
by something else. But with each passing day, as the crisis has
deepened, it has become more and more obvious that “unfettered”
capitalism and “market fundamentalism” and the neo-liberal policies
they produce are discredited. Indeed, most of the world had rejected
them before the current crisis began.
“The
globalization agenda has been closely linked with the market fundamentalists
- the ideology of free markets and financial liberalization,” economist
Joseph Stiglitz told Nathan Gardels on the Huffington Post
recently. “In this crisis, we see the most market-oriented institutions
in the most market-oriented economy failing and running to the government
for help.” Everyone in the world will say now that this is the end
of market fundamentalism.
“In
this sense, the fall of Wall Street is for market fundamentalism
what the fall of the Berlin Wall was for communism - it tells the
world that this way of economic organization turns out not to be
sustainable,” said Stiglitz. “In the end, everyone says, that model
doesn’t work. This moment is a marker that the claims of financial
market liberalization were bogus.”
Conservative
commentator and political operative, Newt Gingrich, has come up
with the terms “crony capitalism” and “bureaucratic capitalism,”
both of which he says will be the outcome of the Bush Administration’s
bailout scheme. The former will mean “a welfare state for rich investors,”
he says, the latter “salary caps and other government regulatory
requirements which would drive the ‘private’ out of ‘private enterprise’.”
There’s
a lot of talk out there about the bailout being “socialism for the
rich.” That’s all so much seemingly clever rhetoric designed to
make a political point, but of no substance. Nothing the Bush Administration
is pushing (with the help of a Democratic Congress) bears any resemblance
to anything that could remotely be called socialism. In
fact, it looks far more like Italy
under Mussolini than the USSR
under Brezhnev. As truthdig.com columnist Robert Sheer noted
last week, “what is proposed is not the nationalization of private
corporations but rather a corporate takeover of government. The
marriage of highly concentrated corporate power with an authoritarian
state that services the politico-economic elite at the expense of
the people is more accurately referred to as ‘financial fascism’.”
The
new Treasury Department fund “will share many characteristics of
the expanding government-sponsored pools known as sovereign funds,”
wrote Landon Thomas, Jr. in the New York Times September
23.
“The
new fund, assuming it is approved by Congress, could pull the United States deeper into a form of capitalism
in which the most powerful financial entities are not risk-happy
investment banks, but more cautious state-sponsored entities,” wrote
Thomas. “While not necessarily a third economic way, this general
approach presumes that the government - in addition to the private
sector - plays a crucial role in deciding how best to deploy a nation’s
investment capital.”
“This
gets to the point of state capitalism and defining what the role
of the government is in a free-market economy,” Douglas Rediker,
a former investment banker at the New America Foundation in Washington,
told Thomas.
“The
result of the bailout would be that the government would virtually
control many of the largest financial institutions in the country,”
wrote Dan La Botz in Monthly Review online. “The U.S. government and the banks
of the country would suddenly be fused - or perhaps entangled would
be a better word - into one extremely powerful political-economic
entity. While the proposal does not envision state control of the
economy as a long-term proposition, merely long enough to save the
bankers, still the impact of the current proposals now being debated
in Congress will be far-reaching. The American government and the
people have suddenly found themselves at a turning point which was
not foreseen and for which no one was prepared.”
“If
you wanted to devise a name for this approach, you might pick the
phrase economist Arnold Kling has used: Progressive Corporatism.,”
wrote Times columnist David Brooks the same day. “We’re not
entering a phase in which government stands back and lets the chips
fall. We’re not entering an era when the government pounds the powerful
on behalf of the people. We’re entering an era of the educated establishment,
in which government acts to create a stable - and often oligarchic
- framework for capitalist endeavor.”
“After
a liberal era and then a conservative era, we’re getting a glimpse
of what comes next,” wrote Brooks
I
can hardy wait.
An
inevitable consequence of globalization is that many of the critical
problems facing the planet today can only be solved through international
cooperation and coordination. These include: climate change and
other threats to the biosphere, aids and other infectious diseases,
human migration and international finance.
The
current economic crisis is an international one yet the recourse
chosen by Washington to deal with it globally
is to “press” other countries to adopt measures similar to those
adopted in the U.S.
Under such circumstances the chance of a collective effort to restructure
world capitalism would seem remote, if possible. But the demand
for such is out there and how our country responds will go a long
way in determining the contours of international affairs for decades
to come. One has only to grasp the nature of the remarks at the
recent opening of the United National General Assembly to appreciate
the seriousness of the challenge.
Last
week in New York, one after another, heads-of-state rose to the Assembly rostrum
to drive home the message: the “credit crunch” in the U.S. is much more than a crisis in U.S. banking; it reflects
a problem threatening economic devastation across the globe. It
requires an international cooperative effort in which diktat, posing as “leadership”,
cannot be tolerated. Don’t even think about handing the problem
to the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund. The UN itself
should be the arena for countries to discuss a solution for the
global financial crisis, said Brazil’s President, Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva: “The global nature of this crisis means that the
solutions we adopt must also be global, and decided upon within
legitimate, trusted multilateral forum, with no impositions.”
Arguably
some of the strongest remarks to the UN came from the leaders of
Latin American countries but the most fundamental challenges came
from traditional U.S. allies such as France
and Germany.
These are capitalist countries and for the foreseeable future will
remain so. But they have a strikingly different view of how the
international economy should function.
German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, even revealed that an attempt had been
made to enlist Washington in a collective effort to head off the crisis. At last year’s
meeting of the major industrial powers, she said, she had - in the
world of the New York Times - “strongly urged both the United
States and Britain to be more rigorous in supervising financial
activities, and even offered specific proposals to be applied to
banks and other institutions.” But the U.S.
was unresponsive, she said, while seeming “to express a certain
exasperation that the United States
was now asking Europe for help, after inflicting
damage on the rest of the world that could have been avoided.”
“At
the moment, I don’t think Japan needs to launch a program similar
to that of the United States,” Japanese Vice Finance Minister Kazuyuki
Sugimoto told reporters in Tokyo, while the European Union let it
be known that its members would not be putting up money to rescue
banks. “This crisis originated in the
US and is mainly hitting the US,” German Finance Minister
Steinbeck said last week. In Europe and Germany, such a package would
be “neither sensible nor necessary.”
The
U.S. “has not only turned away from decades of rhetoric about the
virtues of the free market and the dangers of government intervention,
but it has also probably undercut future American efforts to promote
such policies abroad,” wrote the New York Times’ Nelson Schwartz
from Paris September 18. And most of the other governments are none
to happy about it. Japanese commentators were quick to note that
the Treasury bailout is precisely what Washington
told them not to try when that country faced an economic crisis
only a few years ago. (A condition of help for South
Korea when it faced an economic crisis in the
90s was that Seoul not bail out banks and other failing enterprises.)
Last
Friday, editors of the center-right German newspaper Allegemeine
Zeitung compared the U.S. financial crisis to 911
saying “this time, the attack on all-American doctrines is not the
work of some foreign enemy. It comes from within, from the depths
of the system. Largely unobstructed by its own state controls, American
capitalism has created its own suicide bomber whose explosives -
derivatives - have had an even greater effect than the flying bombs
of the jihadists. The whole world - and not just New
York - has a new ground zero now - Wall Street.”
French
political leaders immediately seized on the latest bailout moves
to trumpet their own version of “economic patriotism.” “We’re not
going to accept to pay for the broken dishes of a failed regulation”
and a “corruption of capitalism,” said French Prime Minister Francois
Fillon. Nicolas Sarkozy has called for a world to “learn the lessons
of the worst financial crisis since the 1930s.” He proposed to “moralize”
capitalism, freeing it from speculators whom he labeled “the new
terrorists.” Last week, as President Bush went on television to
admit the crisis is grave, Sarkozy stoutly defended capitalism but
observed that “A certain idea of globalization is drawing to a close
with the end of a financial capitalism that had imposed its logic
on the whole economy and contributed to perverting it.”
“The
crisis is not a crisis of capitalism,” said Sarkozy. “It is the
crisis of a system that is far from the values of capitalism and
betrayed capitalism.”
In
2006, long before there was any acknowledgement of the chaos to
come (I put it that way because working people in the U.S. were
already facing home foreclosures),when the world’s elite gathered
at Davos, Switzerland, chancellor Merkel had observed that “What
we have is a completely new balance of power in the world today.”
That
too was evident in the General Assembly debate. In prior years no
one would have expected Latin American governments to openly challenge
Washington and Wall Street’s
conduct in the international economy. However, over a brief recent
period, left-leaning political forces have taken power electorally
in a number of countries, having in common a rejection of the exploitative
policies of the World Bank and IMF, and the influence of the same
“market fundamentalists” that the Asians are repulsing and who have
led the U.S., itself, into the present
economic cul-de-sac.
No
one was surprised that Cuban first vice-president Jose Ramon Machado
Ventura would tell the UN that the drive for profits was increasing
poverty and that the current crisis threatened the “existence of
mankind.” “Fabulous fortunes cannot be wasted while millions are
starving and dying of curable diseases,” he said. “For a large part
of the non-aligned nations, the situation is becoming unsustainable.
Our nations have paid and will continue to pay the cost and consequences
of the irrationality, wastefulness and speculation of a few countries
in the...north.”
“The
prevailing world order, unjust and uncontained, must be replaced,”
Machado Ventura said.
“We
don’t want to conceive of the idea that the rescue of the dignity
of the world’s poor does not have the same priority or the same
urgency of saving the institutions that operate the most powerful
financial centre in the world,” said Dominican Republic president
Leonel Fernandez. “We need an international financial plan that
is as urgent and as bold as the one to save Freddie Mac, Fannie
Mae, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch and American International Group.”
Fernandez added that while $700 billion is being set aside to rescue
U.S. financial institutions, for something like
$50 billion millions around the world could be spared a miserable
existence.
“We’re
not going to accept to pay for the broken dishes of a failed regulation”
and a “corruption of capitalism,” said French Prime Minister Francois
Fillon. Sarkozy called for a world to “learn the lessons of the
worst financial crisis since the 1930s.” “Let’s create a regulated
capitalism,” he said.
On
September 24 in Berlin, German Finance Steinbruck repeated Merkel’s charge that Washington
had, last year, resisted specific calls for regulations in the financial
marketplace. “Crisis management alone will not rebuild the lost
confidence,” he said. “We must civilize financial markets, and not
just through moral appeals against excess and speculation. Self-regulation
is no longer sufficient.” The US belief in “laisser-faire
capitalism; the notion that markets should be as free as possible
from regulation; these arguments were wrong and dangerous,” he said.
“This largely under-regulated system is collapsing today.”
Steinbeck
went on to propose new regulations and said that amid the current
economic crisis the US is poised to lose its role
as a global financial “superpower.” The new world will become “multipolar”
with the emergence of stronger, better capitalized centers in Asia
and Europe, he said.
Meanwhile,
Oskar Lafontaine, leader of Germany’s fast growing and increasingly
influential Left Party, said the world is confronted with more than
a banking or economic crisis and – in the words of Der Spiegel
– “but rather one of the entire intellectual and moral direction
of Western society.” “We no longer have a social market economy
because of the regimes of the international financial markets,”
Lafontaine said the consequence of which is increased privatization
of the social services and a threat to the retirement security of
millions of people. Lafontaine said the Left party wants the re-creation
of a Bretton Woods-style system of foreign exchange controls with
fixed trading bands, controls on international capital flows and
on financial products.
“We
believe that financial products should be forced to get official
stamps of approval just like pharmaceutical products,” Lafontaine,
the former head of the country’s Social Democratic Party, said.
“Because the bitter truth is that many extremely greedy bankers
don’t even understand themselves what they’ve done. These are people
who started something without knowing what they were doing and it’s
ended in disaster.”
“When
enough banks have been nationalized or gone bust, when the last
reputations have been properly shredded, and when prices of Fifth
Avenue apartments and Mayfair town houses have fallen finally to
earth, politicians are going to have to think hard about the lessons
of the financial crash of 2008,” wrote Stephens of the Financial
Times. “Even now, someone somewhere is penning The End of Capitalism.
Experience tells us snappy book titles should be treated with caution.
The global financial system will never be the same again. But just
as history survived the collapse of communism, so the market economy
will weather the demise of Bear Stearns, Lehman, Merrill Lynch and
HBOS.”
”The
credit crunch and the financial firestorm have also provided a neat
metaphor for the big shift in economic power in the world,” writes
Stephens. He goes on to endorse the call for “more global governance:
credible international rules.”
“Capitalism
will survive these financial shocks,” said Stephens. Probably it
will; in any case it’s good to have faith.
On
Monday, the House of Representatives voted down the final draft
of the bailout plan hurriedly crafted by the Administration and
Congressional leaders from the two major parties. This
set the stage for what was certain to be desperate attempts to put
together a compromise that could win legislative approval. This
takes place against a backdrop of widespread public opposition to
the original plan and ever greater turmoil in the foreign money
markets and on Wall Street.
Meanwhile,
the dangers and challenges over the next few weeks and months are
enormous. On the world scene, the U.S. could join in an international
– and more democratic - effort at reconstructing capitalism in an
effort to save it, or the White House – whoever lives there – and
the Congress could lead us along a path of international isolation
in which the rest of the world goes about its business, leaving
us in economic mire. On the home front, the policymakers
could enshrine a new form of corporate and more authoritarian capitalism
or enact policies bent toward greater equality, solidarity and social
and economic justice (things real socialists have never ceased advocating).
The latter is what we should be insisting.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National
Coordinating Committee of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy
and Socialism and formerly worked for a healthcare union. Click
here
to contact Mr. Bloice. |