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March 28, 2012
Conversing with the Lefties at the Left Forum: Panel With speakers Andy Mazzone, Dr. Michael Hudson, and Dave Kelley
By Scott Baker
I recently had the great pleasure of being able to set up a panel for the Left Forum, held at New York City's Pace University, March 16-18. The theme for this year was Occupy The System: Confronting Global Capitalism. This is how our panel went.
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Common Ground-USA
Common Ground-NYC by Common Ground-NYC
(Cross-posted to GroundSwell Magazine - a Georgist publication of Common Ground-USA: http://commonground-usa.net/)
*** Update - the video of the event is now available on the Robert Schalkenbach home page http://schalkenbach.org/ and also here: http://vimeo.com/39290842
I recently had the great pleasure of being able to set up a panel for the Left Forum, held at New York City's Pace University, March 16-18. The theme for this year was Occupy The System: Confronting Global Capitalism.
This was our panel abstract, worked on with the panel members in pre-panel discussions lasting several weeks:
Abstract:
Toxic Mortgages, Ultra-leveraged derivatives, CDOs, SIVs, Liar Loans -- these are just a few of the ways in which the 1% siphons money from the 99%, with the help of sycophant legislators, regulators, and other groups that are supposed to protect consumers and keep things fair. Tax policies now favor speculation over working. From this, and the banks' ability to create money from nothing, a Land Bubble inevitably follows, as does a collapse. To "save the system," the FRB bailed out the financial institutions with, as one retired Fed official put it, "liquidity on steroids" -- recently reportedly cumulatively totaling $29 Trillion! But, beneath all the derivatives and the alphabet soup of investment vehicles lies a critical failure of capitalism: the unearned ability of the rentier class to monopolize natural resources and location. With the 1%'s monopoly on what's vital for survival, the 99% has no choice but to pay all that remains after bare needs are met. In order to create a just society, monopolies must be taxed, including the value of their holdings of prime locations and natural resources. This would free up the Commons, decrease corruption, expand opportunities, reduce poverty, and give true productivity power back to the 99%! But how? Attend a panel discussion led by business, legislative, and academic experts to learn how to create a sane and sustainable model that rewards work and true innovation, not speculation and monopoly.
Our panelists were Andy Mazzone, Dr. Michael Hudson, and Dave Kelley, and it was moderated by CGNYC member Dr. Cay Hehner. Some of these panelists will be familiar to readers of GroundSwell, some will not be. Here are the bios on each, from the panel description submitted to the Left Forum:Dr. Cay Hehner:
Affiliation: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation
Bio: Dir. of Education, Henry George School of Social Science, NYC, 2004-Spring 2011; Board Member, Robert Schalkenbach Foundation 2009, Aug 7-Address, "The End of Capitalism as We Know It" Council of Georgist Organizations Conference, Cleveland, OH. 2006, 21 July-Address: "Henry George and Karl Marx" Council of Georgist Orgs Conference, Evanston, IL 2005-Article: "Monopoly Globalization," Henry George News, Jan.-Apr. Master's degree in Economics & a PhD. in Philosophy, Free University, Berlin
Dr. Michael Hudson:Affiliation: University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC)
Bio: President of the Institute for the Study of Long-term Economic Trends (ISLET); Wall Street Financial Analyst; Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City; Author of Super-Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (1968 & 2003), Trade, Development and Foreign Debt (1992 & 2009) and of The Myth of Aid (1971); PhD in Economics, NY University (1968)
Andrew Mazzone:Affiliation: Instructor at the Henry George School of Social Science
Bio: Instructor & Board member of the Henry George School of Social Science (2009-present); Chairman/President of Xiom Corp from inception (1998-Oct. 30, 2009); Chairman of the Board (Jul. 1, 2003-Jan. 2004), Steam Clean USA, Inc.; Worked at Metco (1970-Feb. 15, 1995), a subsidiary of the Perkin Elmer Corp (A Fortune 500 company), ending as President; Degrees from Babson College, Babson Park, Massachusetts, in Finance & an advanced degree in Economics, with a specialty in economic history.
David I. Kelley:
Affiliation: Economic Adviser to Dennis Kucinich
Bio: David I. Kelley is one of the country's leading authorities on pension present value issues. Mr. Kelley received his M.A. from the University of Connecticut. He is a registered representative and a registered principal with the National Assoc. of Security Dealers, as well as a Certified Financial Planner. He is a frequent lecturer on pensions and present values for family law bar associations, Judicial Colleges, and companies across the U.S.
The complete entry is here: http://www.leftforum.org/panel/monopoly-land-bubble-and-financial-crisis-tactics-fight-1
Total : $16 trillion
Therefore, says Mazzone, a tax of just 20% on unearned, in some cases, monopoly, income, would produce the amount of last year's Federal budget: $3 trillion. Taxing unearned income does not affect productivity or initiatives. The effect of untaxing labor and sales at the same time, while alone unable to stop the monopolization of Land [iii] by the elites, together with a Georgist tax on Land and monopolies, would add to the national wealth pie through greater opportunity and productivity gains. It would also eliminate the highly destructive effects of commodity speculation and would slow resource depletion and pollution. The taxing of monopolies is not strictly Georgist, though it may be complimentary. Yet, in this writer's opinion, the precise method of calculating the "surplus" Mazzone speaks of needs to be worked out more thoroughly, though he has told me elsewhere that a strict formula may not be possible. Life is not always neatly divisible by 2!
Michael Hudson
It was Hudson's turn next.
He began by pointing out that financial reform and tax reform must go together to be effective and illustrated how far awry the banking industry has gone, moving from a business-supporting role to a business-destructive role. The original idea of the 19th century economists, Hudson said, was to have the banks align with industry, wherein instead, they now primarily speculate in the derivatives markets, or even buy back their own shares. The recent rise in stock prices -- as opposed to top-line revenue -- is in many cases simply due to near zero interest rate loans being used by companies to finance stock buybacks, which primarily benefit large stockholders, significantly including the occupiers of the C-suites. Small wonder. The stock market, thanks to the Fed's liquidity infusion primarily, has doubled in the last three years, while commodities have in some cases done better than that. Of course, the bailouts and guarantees are well known by now. This continues a trend begun even in Jimmy Carter's time, accelerated by both Republican and Democratic Administrations since then. The net result: who would want to make a 30-year loan at 4% under those conditions, when you can double your money in 5, and even get bailed out if you bet wrong? None of these changes, supposedly in the name of "efficient markets" has much helped the 99%, or at least not the bottom 80% or so. This distortion of the banking model would be impossible under a Georgist system that taxed resources and prime locations accurately, returning that rent to public rather than private hands.
Hudson points out in a speech previously cited that even today's implementation of Georgism is far too tepid, taking 1% of market price instead of a more appropriate 10%. However, assuming for the moment that truly committed Georgists would swallow hard and then go along with this, along with untaxation of labor, then bank mortgage loans, currently comprising 80% of all bank loans, Hudson tells us, the other 20% being for corporate takeovers, itself a dubious use of money, except for those holding stock options, would be just on houses, not on the land beneath them. This is about half the typical loan.
The bankers, Hudson said, have aligned themselves with the landowners, becoming one and the same in many cases, discouraging taxes on Land while encouraging taxes on labor, thus raising the price of labor, though not the return to labor. This recent alignment may come as a surprise to some in the mostly young Occupy movement so prevalent at the Left Forum, but it is, according to Hudson, a recent development. The labor theory of value, he tells us, was meant not only to determine prices, but also to isolate that portion of surplus that was economic rent.
But, beginning from when the landed aristocracy siphoned off land for itself, the banks have seen where the money is, and as always, they "follow the money." Ricardo, still taught, unlike George, was a "lobbyist for the banking class" Hudson says, unwilling to speak against his benefactors. This is where things began to go wrong, he says. For example, the Ricardo brothers devised the first Greece loan, at high interest, that was unpayable. The result, says Hudson, is that for the first time in history, going into debt, as opposed to saving, is seen as the way to make one rich. Of course, this only works if various debt bubbles, the biggest being on land, continue to rise. Clearly, this has not happened. What has happened is that the financiers have been allowed to borrow at well less than 1% - through 2014, according to the most recent Fed chairman promise -- and loan out money at a higher rate, if they loan it out at all, and don't simply plow it into the derivative markets, as previously described. Hudson said that except for the University of Missouri, where he teaches, the theoreticians don't believe that what has happened can happen, and they even have the mathematics to prove it! (This naturally brought some laughs from the audience, who knows much better than the egghead economists). Hudson said he had to stop teaching at the New School some 40 years ago, because he had been told by his bosses that he was "confusing" his students, with all his talk about Land Rent and that he was "just as bad as Henry George"! Well, maybe, I think, he was just as good! [iv]
Although in the past, the State Department had asked him how the dollar standard was making other countries pay for the exchange disadvantage and to finance American imperialism, they said it would be an unfriendly act -- to them -- for him to publish his findings in his book, Superimperialism . He did so anyway, marking him as an iconoclast.
Hudson traced the historical roots of the crisis back to the medieval era. Under free trade imperialism, workers were taken care of to keep prices low, and to make manufacturers competitive. Prior to the 13th century, Hudson says, the banks followed Christian doctrine and didn't charge interest, after that they charged agagio -- a fee for foreign exchange conversion commission. However, in the nineteenth century, Ricardo took this 500-year old theory and turned it against the landlord by a "thoroughly wrong-headed" idea of the soil having original and indestructible powers; fertilizer wouldn't help, neither would mechanization -- nature provide all. Ricardo, Hudson says, is where "it all began to go wrong" and extractive rent started being charged.
The bankers realized that to make money you needed a division of labor, while they financed industry. But this did not stop the financialization of industry.
Hudson does see some silver linings in the clouds, in terms of recent British banking reform, but he says the Americans are opposing this, so it may not last.
Hudson has a less benign view of the reason for America's post-WWII growth than Mazzone, pointing to the adoption of the dollar as the monetary standard world-wide. This, he says, forced the world's poorer countries to pay up for U.S. goods in U.S. dollars. In a different time and place, Mazzone has agreed that the dollar is in many ways, based on oil. Since oil and its derivative products are now indispensable for modern life, this does have the effect of making oil-based dollars better than gold-based dollars. Now, however, partly as a result of shortages due to peak oil -- though oil demand has actually declined in the U.S. -- and peak demand world-wide, the weakening dollar, and, perhaps most of all, the speculative element in the oil futures markets, oil has again topped $100/barrel. The last time it did this was the summer of 2008, when it hit a record $147/barrel, only to collapse 7 months later to just $35, even though world-wide demand had gone down less than 10% in that time, not by 3/4, as implied by the price drop. I wish the panelists had addressed the damage from speculation a bit more, to counter the ever-repeated mantra that commodity prices are due simply to supply and demand and the magic of "price discovery" (perhaps this is more "magical thinking" than actual magic?). Thinkers and regulators from Robert Reich and Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) (http://community.nasdaq.com/News/2012-03/wall-street-to-blame-for-high-gasoline-prices.aspx?storyid=126703) to CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler have all said that speculation is now a significant part of commodity prices, though they fall short of the 60% (and above) figure cited by Global Research and others (http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8878).
This speculative excess, whatever the true percentage of final costs, is responsible for a struggling middle class in America, and outright starvation elsewhere (http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8778).
Hudson broke down the typical American blue-collar family budget this way:
40% - Rent
15% - FICA -- (FICA is 6.2% for employer and employee = 12.4% + 2.9% for Medicare = 15.3% FICA is capped at $110,100)
10%-15% - Interest on credit card debt and other loans. It's worth noting that credit card debt is among the most usurious in the world and would have been banned during most points in human history, when debt rarely exceeded 8%.
10% - Other taxes. Income/Excise/Sales taxes -- these would of course disappear under a Georgist system.
This totals to 75%-80% of take home pay, leaving very little for everything else -- gas, clothes, education, etc. These extractive expenses also make it impossible for the American worker to compete. It is not the high wages workers take home that is the problem, it's the high extractions from those wages. When Alan Greenspan -- whom Hudson says he once had to fire -- asked why the laboring class is struggling so badly despite being in a recovery, this is the answer. Again and again in the presentations, it was made clear that the destructive ability of the rentier class to absorb all surpluses and simultaneously create ever-greater universal debt cannot be over-emphasized. This includes credit-card debt, education debt -- which, Hudson pointed out, is over a trillion dollars and which cannot be wiped out in bankruptcy. The economy, says Hudson, is loaded down so much that it cannot compete. Hudson contrasted the situation in America with that of Germany, where only 20% of income goes to rent, where health care is free, construction costs are half ours but the quality is much better, the economy is generally less criminalized, and workers less unionized (this last one puzzles me as to why it should make workers better off, but I am willing to concede that there are other ways to enhance workers' lives than by union-striking and demands, at least in other countries). Germany doesn't have much of a FIRE sector either, which is, Hudson says, what comprises most of the American economy today.
Hudson was not done castigating the banks; pointing to the growth in loans being almost entirely due to bank-to-bank loans, loans to pension funds, marketing in derivatives, but not bank-to-consumer loans. Capital formation these days is due to corporate retained earnings, and corporate commercial paper issued to mutual fund companies. Whereas formerly, capitalism was designed to: increase output, raise living standards, and expand the economy through increased industrialization, now it serves to: borrow money (buying debt from banks, the only product they sell), move production to cheaper locales offshore, and actually shrink the economy through debt repayments paid for with de-industrialization. [v]
Today, says Hudson, we have financial conquest instead of military conquest, though you must still have the military behind you (800 American bases). The military itself has been privatized as well. This model is in direct contrast to the Classical model, which was to tax the Land monopoly away. While Land has become more valuable, it has become also less taxed, taxes being levied on labor and capital instead. He concludes: Americans said, "we will pay labor higher wages, eliminate tariffs,' in disagreement with the British economists of the turn of the last century. Another disagreement concerns the use of the public sector, which historically was considered a "fourth factor of production" and the means by which a society would out-compete and undercut other nations, and not through privatization of infrastructure, which in reality does the opposite, by making costs of business higher.
Another interesting historical narrative was presented by Hudson wherein a choice was made to merge banking, industry and the government in Germany, which Marx-critic Herbert Somerton Foxwell (17 June 1849 - 3 August 1936) said would allow pre-WWI Germany to out-compete England and move towards Socialism. Despite this superior German-industrial banking model, however, the world moved towards the Anglo-American "Vampire-Squid" model, facilitated by military force in WWI and II.
Hudson said the parasite took over the host after WWI, gradually forcing us into a model whereby banks get money for producing nothing. Acknowledging the theme of the forum, Hudson said the Occupy movement basically has it right in fighting parasitism, and returning to Classical Liberalism, whereas Hayek had it wrong about progress leading to a shrinking government. Instead, government has expanded, being sold off and grown for the highest bidder. Landowners meanwhile, most often the banks, have profited from Balzac's observation: "Every family fortune is made by long forgotten theft." Hudson even went as far as to state a controversial position that America should have taken the side of Germany in WWI. This, of course, would have eliminated the cause of WWII, which was, as James Galbraith has said in a TV series (now on Youtube), perhaps not much more than a final major battle of WWI. As both Galbraith and Hudson observed, the severity and duration of WWI were greatly underestimated -- Hudson says expectations were that the war would be over in 6 weeks since the allies "would run out of money." It is telling that money materializes when it has to, and perhaps says more than anything about the priorities of the ruling banking class.
What banks ought to do, says Hudson, is make money by monetizing equity, not selling more debt. While America did learn the lesson of too much debt from WWI, and canceled the debt form Germany post-WWII, the banking class is now undoing the positive results of the Marshall Plan and seems determined to introduce a neo-feudalist society.
The rentier class fought back after WWI, untaxing land, mining, etc., and the result, as Hudson drew on the board, is a graph something where the FIRE sector goes in an ever increasing upward curve and the rest of the economy flat-lines.
This is, Hudson says, almost the exact opposite of everything the Classical economists, including George, talked about. The Occupy Wall Street group represent a rejection of neo-liberalism and are actually fighting for what Adam Smith fought for, taxing the Land and fighting against the rentiers.
Hudson concluded that despite recent anti-governmental denigration, the government must plan the economy or the banks will. The financial planning is to take over industry, decrease wages, increase output, squeeze out a surplus to pay their debts, and shrink the economy. This is the system we have today.
David Kelley
Kelley is not a theoretician like the previous two speakers. He is a businessman and adviser to perhaps the greatest progressive voice in Congress today, Dennis Kucinich. [vi] So, his observations and solutions tend to be more practical and political. This was part of an intentional mix as well, since I wanted to present something as a practical alternative, so familiar to these kind of Leftist meetings. After all, we had promised "tactics to fight the 1%" right in our title.
Kelley started off by gently chiding his co-author collaborator and saying "Michael was being na????ve" in not understanding the cost of wars $14,500/avg. for a family of 4, about this much for health care too. There was no way to deny the harm of the enormous shift in wealth over the past 40 years. Kelley and Hudson had previously worked out that the total income share -- including collected rent, dividends, capital gains, etc - of the top 1% has gone from 37.8% in 1979, to 57.5% in 2003, and finally to 66% in 2010. This result is, Kelley pointed out, without going into the nuanced financial sector breakdown of Mazzone and Hudson, an unsustainable "gushing of wealth to the top" [vii] . You cannot have incomes of workers stagnant for nearly half a century and expect a consumer society to continue, Kelley said. Breaking with partisan politics, Kelley said the answer is not the Democratic party, e.g. the suppression of options like universal health care -- which Kucinich has tried to introduce several times. The Democratic Party has been bought out, Kelley says. Bank of America was cited, referring to a recent Matt Tiabbi article (click here), as a criminal enterprise.
Kelley said that the banks have not grown too big to fail, they have grown too big to succeed - a finding demonstrated empirically, that beyond a certain size banks actually start to lose efficiency of scale. 40% of corporate finance is now in the FIRE sector, said Kelley, and they produce nothing but simply extract rent, while 120 million Americans are virtually sharecroppers. This set of profits should not be added to the real economy, but instead by subtracted from the total, as it really reduces the real economy. Interest charges and monopoly charges of rent reduce the real economy. Taking this to its logical conclusion, Kelley said "This means that if we get to 100% of profits from the FIRE sector, that's perfect. We manufacture nothing, we just have this (extractive) element. "It's a zero net sum game. This is ridiculous," Kelley said.
As another example, Kelley said a non-producer like hedge fund manager John Paulson, who famously made $12.9 billion shorting the housing bust on the way down, made what 855,456 minimum wage earners made in one year. Kelley asks us, as Henry George surely would have, whether one man laboring for four years is worth what nearly a million people laboring for 1 year makes. (Of course, this actually understates the damage, as many of those minimum wage earners were losing their jobs and possibly their homes, while Paulson was making a small-country sized fortune.) This is not only morally repugnant, says Kelley, but economically inefficient and unsustainable. This, perhaps more than any of the models and historical references presented by the previous speakers, drove home the harm caused by the elevation of the rentier class, to the audience, which gasped audibly. This message was in the best tradition of Liberation Economics, as practiced by Henry George.
Dave Kelley advised me, during the writing of this article, that he did not address a more basic problem in his example. The "wealth creation" of John Paulson was a zero-net sum gamble, which transferred wealth from one group to another. Of course, the group that guaranteed much of these loans was AIG, which was bailed out by taxpayers to the tune of $182.5 billion. Thus, taxpayers made good on the bets that Paulson had made with others. On the other hand, those 855,456 people were likely involved in producing real wealth, i.e. real goods and services. This makes the pay of Paulsen and the minimum wage cohort even more disturbing because, essentially, he got paid for gambling and the others got paid for productive (we assume) work.
Kelley pointed to the example of bailed out CEOs who failed, then lived to fail again, like John Meriwether, who bankrupted two companies. [viii] Although Kelley didn't use the term, I think he would agree this is a form of neo-feudalism, and certainly about as far from Georgism as it is possible to get.
Well, we know from George how to fix that, impose a Land Value Tax on the full rental value of the Land!
The Wall Street financiers are not the best and the brightest [ix] said Kelley.
"How is this just?" he asked, his voice rising in incredulation, and echoing the sentiment of the crowd. We are told, Kelley said, quoting Margaret Thatcher that, "There Is No Alternative" (this has sometimes been called TINA by Thatcher, and then later, economists, usually more critically than her - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_is_no_alternative). Yet Germany, which was cited by Hudson earlier, has just 81.5 million people, and the 4th highest manufacturing base in the world. Turning to a solution, Kelley pointed to Kucinich's bill, HR2990, the N.E.E.D. Act, which would simply spend debt-free money [x] into the real economy, for infrastructure, education and even Social Security. (The benefits of Greenbacking, as this bill would do, are beyond the scope of this paper, but it is agreed by Hudson and Mazzone, both Georgist experts, and indisputable, that Henry George was a Greenbacker as well, coming right out and saying so at least once - http://www.monetary.org/henry-georges-concept-of-money-ful/2010/12).
Kelley used several depressing examples of oppositional smear-politics and lies from the ill-fated Kucinich campaign to demonstrate the sorry state of political dialog in America today. Clearly, this is not new -- Tammany Hall counted out Henry George in the 1886 Mayoral race too. But it is exactly the sort of thing that must be addressed if we are ever to have a society not rule by rentiers. The political answer says Kelley, is OWS, direct action, and embarrassing people with their lies.
Questions and Answers
Naturally, the audience had many questions for the panel, and moderator Dr. Cay Hehner handled them deftly and in order, until it was finally time to leave the room.
Q: Why don't industrialists criticize financial firms and their practices?
A: Hudson: There is nothing to criticize if you are doing the same thing. Hudson had the chance the elaborate on the financialization of industry, turning them effectively into banks. With Mazzone's prompting, he brought up the case of General Electric as an example -- a firm that many people still think of as the quintessential manufacturing industrial, but which, thanks to GE Capital, has now been turned in large part into a bank. GE Capital famously flamed and burned, while finding new ways to create credit and turning that into profit, for a while. For a while, said Hudson, GMAC provided most of the profits to GM. Even countries, Hudson said, have been financialized, forced to sell off parts of themselves to outside buyers -- an example being Greece, which is selling off some of its smaller islands. Greece may be going toward the Iceland model, Hudson says, as a monetarily sovereign nation again, out of the Euro. In this author's opinion, this would be a healthy development in the long run, and a good example to the world.
Q: How does the financial sector enable its own recovery by staging a global Land grab?
A: Hudson explained that post-WWII, the countries were divided up by the Allied powers, the earliest example of a "Land grab." He gave an example of how the financiers indebted Greece permanently. The debt crisis in Greece is being used to privatize everything, and turn the economy into a "toll booth economy." Greece has had a dictator imposed upon them, because a democratic election would have gone against the rentiers (and Germany). That's why Greece is going the way of Iceland.
Workers too, says Hudson, have been forced to become stockholders, actually put in the perverse position of wishing for the company's stock to rise and benefit their pensions, while tacitly supporting the downsizing of their own employment and wages as drags on profits. It is, as Hudson put it, "Making labor vote for its own downfall." Returning to the malfeasance of so-called "private equity" Hudson pointed out that one half of all pension funds have gone broke, and used as an example, Sam Zell's pension-raiding corporate takeover of the Tribune media empire that ultimately resulted in chapter 11 bankruptcy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Zell). He suggested that pensions should move towards a German-type system of pay-as-you-go instead of invested pensions that must make a certain return to be "solvent [xi] ". Occupy Wall Street, said Hudson, is on the right track in calling for restructuring the financial system, not simply fixing it. Nothing less will do.
Q: (Hudson) said 80% of all loans are mortgages, and banks are not making loans to businesses. Could you talk about that?
A: Kelley pointed out that banks do not loan to start businesses, or as venture capitalists, but only against collateral or against receivables, explaining why small businesses cannot get off the ground with new credit. "Banks no longer fund companies. They only loan to each other for casino games."
Q: If you eliminated the deductions and subsidies, what would happen to the FIRE sector?
A: Hudson, who is an adviser to the Chinese Government, also said that real estate is included in Chinese financial statements but not in American ones, an important point to Georgists who want to see Land get its proper accounting, but still falling short of the true solution of taxing land itself to prevent bubbles (China is having its own land bubble). Hudson also said that the real estate sector in America has not paid taxes since 1945, due to alleged, and repeated, depreciations, nor have mining companies, as taxes have been shifted onto labor instead.
I wish he'd had time to delve into this more, but we finally had to go.
Epilog
Cay Hehner, I, a member and another former member of CGNYC, and two interested parties, all went to dinner in Little Italy afterwards, to catch up, celebrate a successful panel, and generally enjoy New York's sidewalk caf???? scene.
Why do we do this? The Left Forum was "occupied" by activists young and old, some of whom had been doing this for years or even decades -- indeed in some cases their messages at the exhibition space could have been from the 1960s. That is not a selling point! They, like Georgists, have seen more promising times. Yet, we persist, out of a sense that "justice must be done" or camaraderie, habit, obligation, or any combination of these, and more.
We don't seem to be winning.
Part of the advantage of being the 1%, or maybe even the .1%, is that there are so few of you to disagree. You can get on with your plan because, after all, all the .1% could fit in a gathering at Davos. The 99%, on the other hand, even if they accept that the system is unfairly rigged, and instead take a direct interest in making a more just and sustainable model, squabble, disagree, and even take constructive criticism as a philosophical attack, or worse. This results in a splintering of activist groups well beyond what would be caused by mere political-economic disagreements. A great deal was made of solidarity and comradeship at the Left Forum, since numbers are about all the 99% has left, when money, power, and Land have all been mostly taken away. But where the policy meets the road, disagreements remain, and personalities clash, sometimes fatally for the common cause. This splintering, of course, simply helps the elites remain in power. We need more venues like this to find our commonalities, to bind and plan, and figure out ways to regain our rightful heritage.
Perhaps in the end, we do what we do because we must, because to go along with an unjust system is simply psychically intolerable. Hopefully, we can find kindred souls who feel the same along the way. I know I did.
[i] Former President of the HG School, Dan Kryston, died on January 6, 2012. The school has been undergoing significant changes since then.
[ii] Hudson says the word "rentier" is no longer used on most college campuses, just as classical economics, with its Ricardian roots, and Georgist emphasis on land, is no longer taught either. He says it's mainly wage and price theory that is being taught to vulnerable freshmen. Thus, he says, you will find a better analysis of economics in French novels than in universities. Hear his recent radio interview here, especially the end part on land: click here
[iii] Land is capitalized in this paper to indicate the classical definition of ALL material resources as Land. Actual land will be indicated by a lower case "l.'
[iv] Classical economics has been completely erased except at a few alternative schools like the Henry George School, and the emphasis is on taxing labor or fixed capital (not the misnamed Capital Gains), and not on taxing Land, as it was under previously. Read Mason Gaffney's "The Corruption of Economics" to see how Henry George, and with him, Classical economics with its emphasis on Land, had been systematically expunged by the land-grant universities and their benefactors.
[v] In perhaps a more honest age, today's "private equity" was called "corporate raiding." The ability of the raider to self-enrich from the remnants of plundered businesses and workers, is beyond the scope of this paper, but the modern celebration of these former scoundrels speaks for its success - for them at least.
[vi] Kucinich lost his recent primary for a redrawn and gerrymandered Ohio district to a technical incumbent whom Kelley says fought a dirty and under-handed campaign, something Kucinich refused to engage in. Although Kelley, and his scheduler and I, had tried to get Kucinich to appear at the Left Forum, the strain and attention brought on by the campaign, ending March 6, 2012, made this impossible.
[vii] Other observers have noted that the top 1% now owns 90% of the wealth, an even more staggering disparity than mere income numbers suggest, and a reminder that, left unchecked, wealth begets wealth, accumulating forever, even if unearned.
[viii] I have documented similar failures, from George's time forward, here in this newsletter, and cross-posted to Op Ed News: "The Least Productive People in the World," http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Least-Productive-Peopl-by-Scott-Baker-100220-21.html. Meriweather, Kelley advises, adopted strategies of massive leveraging along with sophisticated mathematical models in his undertakings. In 1998 he and his stable of math geniuses crashed with the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management when his system failed in spectacular fashion. The Federal Reserve organized a private banking rescue of the "billionaire's boys club" because it was thought too dangerous to let it fail. In 2009 JWM Partners LLLC, his next endeavor, closed after its primary fund lost nearly half of its value. His next hedge fund seemed to have difficulties raising money. At one point he had only raised some $29 million.
[ix] Andy Mazzone and I have a friendly little spat to decide what is the best label to attach to the elite 1% parasite class. He says they are the smartest, but I, and now Kelley, think that is not it at all, and that their advantage is more due to something like psychopathy, which has now come to be rewarded much as productivity used to be.
[x] The author has 2 petitions supporting elements of this bill: http://www.change.org/petitions/end-the-debt-crisis-with-debt-free-united-states-notes and http://www.change.org/petitions/reclassify-the-fed-s-account-from-private-to-public and is an adviser to a petitioner seeking redress for false statements about the equivalency of United States Notes and Federal Reserve Notes on the treasury website. See v. treasury: http://tompainetoo.com/.
[xi] I have documented elsewhere that State Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports (CAFRs) have shown a similar (deliberate?) confusion between ability-to-pay and ability-to-pay-from-market-returns, thereby justifying politically the gutting of pension payouts and the preserving of principal for failed fund advisors, and their complicit State comptrollers, to gamble further with. For example, there is ~$140 billion in the NY State Pension fund, with net payouts of ~$5 billion/year, after contributions, yet because returns have been so subpar over the last few years, pensioned employees are being told they must make due with less, while the fees of the advisors are never cut, and nor are their political supporters' careers much threatened by a public that assumes TINA. Under a pay-as-you-go system, like Social Security, a ~$140 billion pension could continue to pay out ~$5 billion/year for a long time, with a modest tax increase at some future point. Alternatively, the fund could be invested in a State Bank, investing in the State instead of far-flung places like China, which actually compete with America's workforce. This is another case of American workers being forced to vote for their own downfall.
Scott Baker is a Managing Editor & The Economics Editor at Opednews, and a former blogger for Huffington Post, Daily Kos, and Global Economic Intersection.
His anthology of updated Opednews articles "America is Not Broke" was published by Tayen Lane Publishing (March, 2015) and may be found here:
http://www.americaisnotbroke.net/
Scott is a former and current President of Common Ground-NY (http://commongroundnyc.org/), a Geoist/Georgist activist group. He has written dozens of articles for Common Ground's national publication, GroundSwell, and has advocated for the Georgist Land Value Tax to public and political audiences.
He is also New York State Coordinator and Senior Advisor for the Public Banking Institute
Scott has a dozen progressive petitions on Change.org which may be found here:
http://chn.ge/10nUAmJ
Scott was an I.T. Manager for a major New York university for over two decades where he earned a Certificate for Frontline Leadership.
He had a video game published in Compute! Magazine: Click Here
Scott is a graduate and adjunct faculty of the Henry George School of Social Science in New York City.
Scott is a modern-day Renaissance Man with interests in economics, science and all future-forward topics.
He has been called an "adept syncretist" by Kirkus Discoveries for his novel, NeitherWorld - a two-volume opus blending Native American myth, archaeological detail, government conspiracy, with a sci-fi flair http://amzn.to/10nUoDV
Scott grew up in New York City and Pennsylvania. He graduated with honors and a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from Pennsylvania State University and was a member of the Psychology honor society PSI CHI.
Today he is an avid bicyclist and ride co-leader in a prominent bike advocacy organization.
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