| Democracy - Not "The Free Market" -
Will Save America's Middle Class
By Thom Hartmann
OpEdNews.Com
Here are a couple of headlines for those who haven't had the time to
study both economics and history:
1. There is no such thing as a "free market."
2. The "middle class" is the creation of government
intervention in the marketplace, and won't exist without it (as millions
of Americans and Europeans are discovering).
The conservative belief in "free markets" is a bit like the
Catholic Church's insistence that the Earth was at the center of the Solar
System in the Twelfth Century. It's widely believed by those in power,
those who challenge it are branded heretics and ridiculed, and it is
wrong.
In actual fact, there is no such thing as a "free market."
Markets are the creation of government.
Governments provide a stable currency to make markets possible. They
provide a legal infrastructure and court systems to enforce the contracts
that make markets possible. They provide educated workforces through
public education, and those workers show up at their places of business
after traveling on public roads, rails, or airways provided by government.
Businesses that use the "free market" are protected by police
and fire departments provided by government, and send their communications
- from phone to fax to internet - over lines that follow public
rights-of-way maintained and protected by government.
And, most important, the rules of the game of business are defined by
government. Any sports fan can tell you that football, baseball, or hockey
without rules and referees would be a mess. Similarly, business without
rules won't work.
Which explains why conservative economics wiped out the middle class
during the period from 1880 to 1932, and why, when Reagan again began
applying conservative economics, the middle class again began to vanish in
America in the 1980s - a process that has dramatically picked up steam
under George W. Bush.
The conservative mantra is "let the market decide." But there
is no market independent of government, so what they're really saying is,
"Stop corporations from defending workers and building a middle
class, and let the corporations decide how much to pay for labor and how
to trade." This is, at best, destructive to national and
international economies, and, at worst, destructive to democracy itself.
Markets are a creation of government, just as corporations exist only
by authorization of government. Governments set the rules of the market.
And, since our government is of, by, and for We The People, those rules
have historically been set to first maximize the public good resulting
from people doing business.
If you want to play the game of business, we've said in the US since
1784 (when Tench Coxe got the first tariffs passed "to protect
domestic industries") then you have to play in a way that both makes
you money AND serves the public interest.
Which requires us to puncture the second balloon of popular belief. The
"middle class" is not the natural result of freeing business to
do whatever it wants, of "free and open markets," or of
"free trade." The "middle class" is not a normal
result of "free markets." Those policies will produce a small
but powerful wealthy class, a small "middle" mercantilist class,
and a huge and terrified worker class which have traditionally been called
"serfs."
The middle class is a new invention of liberal democracies, the direct
result of governments defining the rules of the game of business. It is,
quite simply, an artifact of government regulation of markets and tax
laws.
When government sets the rules of the game of business in such a way
that working people must receive a living wage, labor has the power to
organize into unions just as capital can organize into corporations, and
domestic industries are protected from overseas competition, a middle
class will emerge. When government gives up these functions, the middle
class vanishes and we return to the Dickens-era "normal" form of
totally free market conservative economics where the rich get richer while
the working poor are kept in a constant state of fear and anxiety so the
cost of their labor will always be cheap.
When conservatives rail in the media of the dangers of "returning
to Smoot Hawley, which created the Great Depression," all they do is
reveal their ignorance of economics and history. The Smoot-Hawley tariff
legislation, which increased taxes on some imported goods by a third to
two-thirds to protect American industries, was signed into law on June 17,
1930, well into the Great Depression. In the following two years,
international trade dropped from 6 percent of GNP to roughly 2 percent of
GNP (between 1930 and 1932), but most of that was the result of the
depression going worldwide, not Smoot-Hawley. The main result of
Smoot-Hawley was that American businesses now had strong financial
incentives to do business with other American companies, rather than bring
in products made with cheaper foreign labor: Americans started trading
with other Americans.
Smoot-Hawley "protectionist" legislation did not cause the
Great Depression, and while it may have had a slight short-term negative
effect on the economy ("1.4 percent at most" according to many
historians) its long-term effect was to bring American jobs back to
America.
The fact that the "marketplace" was an artifact of government
activity was well known to our Founders. As Thomas Jefferson said in an
1803 letter to David Williams, "The greatest evils of populous
society have ever appeared to me to spring from the vicious distribution
of its members among the occupations... But when, by a blind concourse,
particular occupations are ruinously overcharged and others left in want
of hands, the national authorities can do much towards restoring the
equilibrium."
And the "national authorities," in Jefferson's mind, should
be the Congress, as he wrote in a series of answers to the French
politician de Meusnier in 1786: "The commerce of the States cannot be
regulated to the best advantage but by a single body, and no body so
proper as Congress."
Of course, there were conservatives (like Hamilton and Adams) in
Jefferson's time, too, who took exception, thinking that the trickle-down
theory that had dominated feudal Europe for ten centuries was a stable and
healthy form of governance. Jefferson took exception, in an 1809 letter to
members of his Democratic Republican Party (now called the Democratic
Party): "The care of human life and happiness, and not their
destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good
government."
But, conservatives say, government is the problem, not the solution.
Of course, they can't explain how it was that the repeated series of
huge tax cuts for the wealthy by the Herbert Hoover administration brought
us the Great Depression, while raising taxes to provide for an active and
interventionist government to protect the rights of labor to organize
throughout the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s led us to the Golden Age of the
American Middle Class. (The top tax rate in 1930 under Hoover was 25
percent, and even that was only paid by about a fifth of wealthy
Americans. Thirty years later, the top tax rate was 91 percent, and held
at 70 percent until Reagan began dismantling the middle class. As the top
rate dropped, so did the middle class it helped create.)
Thomas Jefferson pointed out, in an 1816 letter to William H. Crawford,
"Every society has a right to fix the fundamental principles of its
association." He also pointed out in that letter that some people -
and businesses - would prefer that government not play referee to the game
of business, not fix rules that protect labor or provide for the
protection of the commons and the public good.
We must, Jefferson wrote to Crawford, "...say to all [such]
individuals, that if they contemplate pursuits beyond the limits of these
principles and involving dangers which the society chooses to avoid, they
must go somewhere else for their exercise; that we want no citizens, and
still less ephemeral and pseudo-citizens [like corporations], on such
terms. We may exclude them from our territory, as we do persons infected
with disease."
Most of the Founders advocated - and all ultimately passed - tariffs to
protect domestic industries and workers. Seventy years later, Abraham
Lincoln actively stood up for the right for labor to organize, intervening
in several strikes to stop corporations and local governments from using
hired goon squads to beat and murder strikers.
But conservative economics - the return of ancient feudalism - rose up
after Lincoln's death and reigned through the Gilded Age, creating both
great wealth and a huge population of what today we call the "working
poor." American reaction to these disparities gave birth to the
Populist, Progressive, and modern Labor movements. Two generations later,
Franklin Roosevelt brought us out of Herbert Hoover's
conservative-economics-produced Great Depression and bequeathed us with
more than a half-century of prosperity.
But now the conservatives are back in the driver's seat, and heading us
back toward feudalism and serfdom (and possibly another Great Depression).
Only a return to liberal economic policies - a return to We The People
again setting and enforcing the rules of the game of business - will
reverse this dangerous trend. We've done it before, with tariffs,
anti-trust legislation, and worker protections ranging from enforcing the
rights of organized labor to restricting American companies' access to
cheap foreign labor through visas and tariffs. The result was the
production of something never before seen in history: a strong and vibrant
middle class.
If the remnants of that modern middle class are to survive - and grow -
we must learn the lessons of the past and return to the policies that in
the 1780s and the late 1930s brought this nation back from the brink of
economic disaster.
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is an award-winning,
best-selling author and nationally syndicated daily talk show host. www.thomhartmann.com
His newest book is "We
The People: A Call To Take Back America," an illustrated and
edited collection of his columns first published by CommonDreams.org |