Archive for the 'Economics' Category

How the free flow of capital subverts democracy

One of the most anti-democratic and destabilising features of global capitalism is the lack of control governments have over the flow of capital and corporations; capital and corporations freely move to wherever profits are highest, costs are lowest and governments are most fearful of the way global markets will react to their policies.

So if the people of a country happen to vote in a government that implements policies largely for the benefit of the people rather than largely for the benefit of private investors and their profits, market traders will move capital to some other economy offering an environment more conducive to “business needs,” in the process inflicting devaluation, inflation and unemployment. Government policy, therefore, ends up being formulated under a grotesque framework whereby profits are sacrosanct, trumping all other considerations.

The assumption underlying all this is that the market knows best, probably one of the most damaging of ideas of our time. In fact so damaging that it could render the planet uninhabitable.

Noam Chomsky has a piece in the Irish Times today that goes into a little of the history of this in light of current events. Here’s a little taste:

Bretton Woods was the system of global financial management set up at the end of the second World War to ensure the interests of capital did not smother wider social concerns in post-war democracies. It was hated by the US neoliberals - the very people who created the banking crisis writes Noam Chomsky

Financial liberalisation has effects well beyond the economy. It has long been understood that it is a powerful weapon against democracy. Free capital movement creates what some have called a “virtual parliament” of investors and lenders, who closely monitor government programmes and “vote” against them if they are considered irrational: for the benefit of people, rather than concentrated private power.

The United States effectively has a one-party system, the business party, with two factions, Republicans and Democrats. There are differences between them. In his study Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age, Larry Bartels shows that during the past six decades “real incomes of middle-class families have grown twice as fast under Democrats as they have under Republicans, while the real incomes of working-poor families have grown six times as fast under Democrats as they have under Republicans”.

External links:

Participatory economics, an economy proposed as an alternative to contemporary capitalism.

Voting has consequences

Bob Herbert, for the New York Times:

I don’t for a moment think that the Democratic Party has been free of egregious problems. But there are two things I find remarkable about the G.O.P., and especially its more conservative wing, which is now about all there is.

The first is how wrong conservative Republicans have been on so many profoundly important matters for so many years. The second is how the G.O.P. has nevertheless been able to persuade so many voters of modest means that its wrongheaded, favor-the-rich, country-be-damned approach was not only good for working Americans, but was the patriotic way to go.

Global capitalism: a wonderful thing for the rich and inept

Julia Finch, for the Guardian:

Huge bonuses for City high flyers will be hard to rein in


NZ election now about trust

No Right Turn:

Espiner agrees that the election is now all about trust, but he characterises it as trust in economic management. I’d characterise it differently. Recessions aren’t about poor macroeconomic statistics, but about people - people who are going to lose their jobs, and need to fall back on the state in their time of need. The question then is who do we trust to care for the victims (remembering that any of us could end up as one of them), minimise the damage, and ensure they can get on with their lives when the economy picks up again? The people who slashed welfare benefits? Or the people who have maintained them? The people who slashed health spending? Or the people who have expanded it? The people who don’t care about the poor? Or the people who do?

I have a theory about climate change deniers

How many anti-capitalist climate change deniers do you know? Do they even exist? I presume there are at least some out there but the only deniers I personally know are also ardent advocates of market economics. Go through a list of prominent sceptics and you also invariably find within it a little club of market economy advocates.

Maybe they subconsciously realise what many don’t want to talk about; that climate change has happened under the market economy’s watch.