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.

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