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By Rowan Wolf (about the author) Page 1 of 1 page(s)
For OpEdNews: Rowan Wolf - Writer Economists state that "Higher unemployment might become the norm as result of (the) recession."
The problem is that this is not simply a "recession," but the collapse
of the heavily skewed global economic system. The follies of monopoly
capitalism, combined with the funny money financial schemes, have hit
the world hard. However, they have hit the United States particularly
hard, and may have permanently damaged the economic dominance of the
United States. Even
before this collapse/implosion, the United States was in a shaky
position. We have an economy recrafted on consumerism and a service
economy. Productive capacity has been hamstrung since the 1980s as
increasingly manufacturing - even infrastructure and security critical
activities - were relocated to "cheaper" places in the world. The
question raised early in this movement was "Can a nation that produces
nothing survive?" Unfortunately, the United States may soon be able to
answer that question in the negative. The globalization/corporatization movement pushed by Republican
neo-conservatives, and Democratic neo-liberals have auctioned the
economic and political sovereignty of the United States by chasing the
grail of making money out of nothing. Now we are in a situation where
the dollar may be replaced as the standard currency and for oil. We may
be waving goodbye to the petrodollar, and that is bad news for the
country that prints those dollars - the United States. Hocked to the ears and beyond to Dubai banks, China and Japan, the
United States has it's butt blowing in the wind and survives at the
pleasure of those creditors. If any of them choose to call the loans,
or sell off the their dollar reserves, then what is a now dire
situation in the United States may take on the hue of the "good old
days." Therefore, we (and the economists) can well say "the world has
changed," and that change means ongoing higher levels of unemployment
and underemployment, and falling wages - for most of the population. Speaking from a different perspective, the Goldman Sachs International Vice President stated at a panel in Britain: People should "tolerate
the inequality as a way to achieve greater prosperity for all"... "we
should not ... be ashamed of offering compensation in an
internationally competitive market which ensures the bank businesses
here and employs British people." One has to wonder if this is the world that those at Goldman Sachs
and other profiteering finance firms have always had in mind -
extracting the the wealth of the global population and returning to
their perceived "natural" order of the royalty and the serfs. Perhaps,
Lord Griffiths of Fforestfach sees no real issue with stagnant wages
and high unemployment for the masses. After all, it leaves more for the
"deserving" at the top. However, it seems unlikely that he can truly
believe that extreme inequality somehow creates "prosperity." The
pronouncement itself makes absolutely no sense. However, being one of
the big winners in the monopoly economy, perhaps he is only concerned
about the prosperity of those with extreme wealth. This two class society where the few get bonuses, compensation, and
investment windfalls in the millions of dollars, while the majority of
the population (here and globally) scrabble for leftovers, is possible
only if we accept the constraints of the current system. It is only
inevitable if we accept Lord Griffiths world view that extreme
inequality somehow increases prosperity. However, I do not think that
the population of the planet will share the inevitability of this
skewed world view. 10/19/09. Raum. Associated Press. Higher unemployment might become the norm as result of recession 10/21/09 Quinn & Hall, Times/UK, Goldman Sachs vice-chairman says: 'Learn to tolerate inequality'
The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
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