Monday, June 9, 2014

Chomsky. Transcript. Freemarket fantasies. Capitalism in the Realworld. Harvard. 13 Apr 1996.


For those who are interested in the real world, a look at the actualHistory suggests some adjustment, a modification of free market theory, to what we might call "really existing free market theory." That is, the one that's actuallyapplied, nottalked about. And the principle of reallyexisting freemarkettheory is: freemarkets are fine for you, but not for me. That's, again, near a universal. So you, whoever you may be, you have to learn responsibility, and be subjected to market discipline, it's good for your character, it's ToughLove, and so on and so forth. But me, I need the nannyState, to protect me from marketdiscipline, so that I'll be able to rant and rave about the marvels of the free market, while I'm getting properlysubsidised and defended by everyone else, through the nannyState. And also, this has to be riskfree. So I'm perfectlywilling to make profits, but I don't want to take risks. If anything goes wrong, you bail me out. So, if ThirdWorlddebt gets out of control, you socialise it. It's not the problem of the banks that made the money. When the S&Ls collapse, you know, same thing. The public bails them out. When american investmentfirms get into trouble because the mexican bubble bursts, you bail out GoldmanSachs. And, the latest Mexicobailout, and on and on. I mean, there's case after case of this. In fact of the leading, top, hundred leading transnationals in theFortunelist of transnationals, there was a recent study of how they, how they related to theStates in which they, they're all somewhere, you know, so they're all mostly here, in some NationalState, it turns out that all hundred of them had benefited from industrial policies, meaning, Stateintervention in their behalf. All hundred had benefited from theState in which they're based. And twenty of the hundred had been saved from total disaster, that is, collapse, by just Statebailout. When people talk about globalisation of theEconomy, remember that the nannyState has to be verypowerful in order to bail out the rich. And nothing is changing in that regard. Twenty out of a hundred, again, were saved from collapse by this, including a number here. Well, that's reallyexisting Freemarkettheory. There are many examples of it quite close to home. So, we could start with our own Governor, GovernorWeld, who is described by the BostonGlobe as a libertarian with a religious belief in freemarkets. And then a couple of days later, they reported that through various scams he had, his administration was able to sharplyincrease federal subsidies toMassachusetts, so that, way beyond what they were before, so that he could parade as a fiscalconservative. And that's prettycommon. Just the year before, you may recall, if you have long memories, they had to closeGeorgesBank, therichestfishingarea in the world, because it was being overfished, thanks to a combination of deregulation and subsidies to the fishingindustry, which have that odd consequence that you tend to get overfishing. So it looked as if the groundfish were wiped out, and they had to close it off. It didn't take long for the religious libertarian fanatic, WilliamWeld, to take thenextjetplane down toWashington, hat in hand, asking for a federal bailout. They wanted the federalGovernment to declare it a natural disaster. And the reason was, as he explained, with, presumably, some scientists in tow, that there was some strange kind of predatory fish. Sound of laughter. Which no one had yet found, but they would find it, don't worry. So some kind of predatory fish had come and, sort of, wiped out all the, you know, theCod and theHaddock, and all those things. So it was a naturaldisaster, and therefore the general public had to, sort of, pay off the results of deregulation and subsidising the fishingindustry. Well, that's the way to be a libertarian with religious fervor. Another one is the leader of the conservative revolution, NewtGingrich. Nobody is morepassionate about the market than he is, in particular about what he, his own district, which he calls a NormanRockwellworld of jetplanes and fiberoptics, as indeed it is. Except, if you ask where jetplanes and fiberoptics came from, you discover that the public paid for them, and stillpays for them. And in fact, he manages to get more federal subsidies for his district than any suburbancounty in the country outside the federalsystem. So, you can haveConservatism flowering among the malls, and so on. Or you can go back to theReaganites, who were also verypassionate about freemarkets for everyone else. Meanwhile, they boasted to the american businesscommunity correctly, that they had done more, that they had instituted moreprotection than any postwar american administration, in fact, more than all of them combined. They had doubled importrestrictions, blocking, and helped, and poured public funds into major industries to enable them to recapitalise, to protect the, in fact reconstruct, the steelindustry, and the automotiveindustry, and semiconductors, and so on, which would have disappeared if they had opened the markets. TheThatcherites inEngland were about thesame. Governmentexpenditures relative toGNP stayed prettyconstant, although anything that went to the general population collapsed. Meanwhile, militaryindustry shot up, armssales were booming, that's all publiclysubsidised stuff, armssales to nice guys like-SaddamHussein and -GeneralSuharto, and others. Well, that's reallyexisting freemarkettheory. What are the core policies? Well, theWashingtonConsensus, which is basicallydesigned for theThirdWorld to make it that way and keep it that way, it's now being applied not just to theThirdWorld countries, but to the rich industrial societies, with theUnitedStates and Britain in the lead. However, it's with a twist. Since it's being applied at home, this is really existing freemarkettheory that's being applied at home, meaning nuanced. So, powerfulGovernment to protect the rich, and marketdiscipline and ToughLove for everyone else. And you see that veryclearly. Go through the various elements of theWashingtonConsensus. Thefirstone is to, about reducingGovernment. Well, that's false. We're notreducingGovernment, we're switching it. Shifting it around. So, social spending is indeed way down since the1970s when this stuff started, accelerated after 1980, but it was starting in themid70s. The kind of a benchmark example is AFDC, the main supportsystem. That was cut virtually in half from about1970to1990 with obvious effects on poor families and children, and so on. It was a part of a general war against women and children that was conducted by the conservatives under the name of familyvalues. It's interesting that they were able to get away with that. It tells you something about the intellectualculture. Well, one part was the reduction ofAFDC from, by roughly half from about1970 to about1990. It's now, essentiallygone. That's, the purpose of that, as you know, is so that sevenmillions, couple of million, I think fiveorsixmillionkids, average sevenyearsold can learn responsibility. That's part ofToughLove. Meanwhile, another part of theGovernment has been verystable, and in fact is going up, namely, thePentagonsystem, which remains at approximatelyColdWarlevels. In fact, it's higher now than it was underNixon, although, you know, the big enemy has disappeared, which tells you exactly how much, tells a rational person at least, exactly how much they were worried about the russian threat. Not only does it remain atColdWarlevels, but it's going up under the initiative of the fiscalconservatives. TheHeritageFoundation, which, you know, sort of a rightwingfoundation that designs the budget for theGingrichArmy, are calling for an increase in thePentagonsystem, as is Gingrich, as indeed was Clinton. So that goes up. And I should say that cutting of social spending. Social spending is being cutverysharply, verymuch over public opposition. At the time of the 1994 congressional election, you know, the big landslide, over sixty of the public wanted socialspending to increase, okay? It went verysharply down. What about thePentagonspending going up? Well that's, the public is (six to one) opposed to that, which gives you some one, oneaspect of a big picture about what's happening to americanDemocracy, and somewhat of a change, not a huge change. [skip] The, so one part of the system is going up, Pentagonspending. Another part is going down, socialspending. And thesame is true in other domains. Like, for example, legal aid for the poor is being slashed and virtuallydestroyed. On the other hand, the securitysystem, theState, Governmentsecuritysystem, State and Federal, that's going up. So, prisons are going way up. The prisonpopulation, crime hasn't really, hasn't changed for about twentyyears, but. And incidentally, UScrimerates are not off the spectrum, contrary to what a lot of people believe. Crimerates are sort of at, toward the high end of the industrial world, but not off the spectrum, with oneexception, namely, murderwithguns, but that's a special feature of american society, which doesn't have to do with crimerates. Apart from that, crimerates are kind of toward the high end, not going up. The prisonpopulation tripled during theReganyears. It's going up evenfaster now. And I think the reason is another aspect of the Third World model, namely, the superfluous population. There is a big superfluous population, they don't contribute to wealth protection. Well, we're civilised folks. We're not like the people that we fund inColombia who go out and murder them. So, we throw them into jail. And that's going way up evenmore. And there's also kind of like a sidebenefit to this. Putting moreandmorepeople in jail, and in fact, under harsher and harsher conditions, is a technique of socialcontrol for everybody else. I mean when you're, if you're, you know, someday down the road if you decide to run aDictatorship, and you want to reallyharm people, it's kind of likeHitler inGermany or something, you know that you're going to carry out policies that are going to cause people a lot of harm, you've got to control them somehow. And there aren't many ways to do it. Everyone hits on the same ways. What you do is engender fear and hatred, and you know, make them hate the guy who looks a little different, or whatever it may be, and then you punish those bad guys because they're reallyawful, and, you punish them reallyhard, and so on, and that makes people evenmorefrightened. You can just see that happening right around you. And building up the perception of crime. Crime has a, like a, what they call in literarytheory a subtext, you're supposed to understand, criminal has the word, little word black in front of it. Just like welfare mother, you know black. Rich blackwelfaremother. Sound of laughter. And criminal means, you know, that blackguy who's coming after you. So what you want to do is, this has the dual effect of getting rid of the superfluous population, basically unskilled workers, close raceclasscorrelation. And also demonising them, so everybody else is scared and frightened and they'll be willing to accept what's happening to them too, and not look at where the source is. So that part of the, the drugwar is basically for this, it has almost nothing to do with drugs, but it has plenty to do with criminalising an unwanted population, and scaring everybody else. [Skip] And so does the harshening of prisonconditions, which is really, it's. TheUnitedStates is off the map on this. We're in violation of international conventions, constantlycondemned inHumanRightsforums, and getting muchworse. The reinstitution of chaingangs was of course bitterlycondemned. But you know, that's that badSouth, Alabama. Well, it's now [in]Illinois. TheStateSenateOfIllinois last, a week or two ago legislated chaingangs. Not for violent criminals, incidentally. For people who are found with drugs, or, you know, robbed a store, or something like that. TheChicagopress pointed out that this carries a, this is kind of reminiscent ofSlavery. But the legislator, the Senator, StateSenator who put it through [Who?] said that this is just another aspect of what he calledToughLove. And then he explained that some people work better under humiliation. So it's reallygood to restore elements ofSlavery, and again, the subtext is everybody else gets scarred. You know, those guys have to walk around like slaves in chains, we must be in real danger, so therefore, we'll accept what's happening to us. That's theLogic. [skip] So prisons are going up and it's. And that has a lot of sidebenefits apart from just getting rid of the superfluous population. It is a source of cheap labor. So, prisonlabour is going way up. Cheap labour, you don't have to worry about unions, no benefits, they don't get out of line. And that also, naturallyundercuts wages elsewhere. So what, just like forcing welfaremothers to work. You know, raising children isn't work, as anybody knows who's had children, so you have to drive them to work. Kind of like people who go to, you know, FidelityInvestment to figure out scams about how to deal with the securitymarket. You reallywant these people to work. But since there's no jobs for them, they're going to work at lowpaid or publiclysubsidised wages, which will undercut other wages. The same with prisonlabour. In fact, the scale of prisonconstruction, which is a kind of Keynesian stimulus to theEconomy anyway, but its scale has become so enormous that even highTechindustry, you know, the guys who are usually just ripping off thePentagonsystem, they're beginning to look at it, figuring out, recognising that highTechsurveillancedevices, and so on, may be another way to, sort of, get. To transfer public funds to make sure that highTechindustry keeps moving. It's reached, it's not at the scale of thePentagon, but it's going up. Well, that's oneaspect of what's called reducingGovernment. ModifyingGovernment, to be moreprecise. Another aspect of it is what's called devolution, reducing, moving Governmental power from the Federal to the State level. And that has a kind of a rationale which you hear all over the time, place. For example, there was an op-ed a couple of weeks ago in theNewYorkTimes byJohnCogan, HooverInstitute atStanford, who has pointed out what he called a philosophical issue that divides theDemocrats from theRepublicans. The philosophical issue is that the democrats believe in bigGovernment and entitlements, and the republicans believe in getting power down closer to the people, to theStates, because they're kind of populisttypes. Well, it takes about maybe threesecondsthought to recognise, realise that moving power down to theStates, in funding and so on, is just moving it away from the people for a perfectlyelementary reason: there's a hidden part of the system, of the powersystem that you're not supposed to know about or think about, and that's private power. Now, it takes a big corporation, like say, GeneralElectric or Microsoft to sort of pressure theFederalGovernment, but even middlesizedguys have no problems withStateGovernments, they can control them quiteeasily. And in case anyone was toodull to figure this out by themselves, the same day as Cogan's op-ed in theNewYorkTimes, which is a typical one, there was a story in theWallStreetJournal aboutMassachusetts, which had a headline that read, “What Fidelity Investment Wants, It Usually Gets.”, okay? And then the story went on to say that FidelityInvestment, thebiggestinvestment firm inMassachusetts, wanted evenmore-subsidy and -support from theStateGovernment than it alreadygets, and it was threatening if it didn't it would move over the border toRhodeIsland, where it just owns the place. So therefore, the passionatelylibertarianGovernor quicklyrearranged, you know, taxsubsidies, and one thing or another, so that Fidelity got what it wanted. Well, Fidelity couldn't have done that with the federalGovernment. It couldn't have said, you know, You give us even more or we're going to move to Switzerland or something. Sound of laughter. I mean, other guys can do it maybe, but notFidelity. Raytheon, which is thebiggestmanufacturingproducer, did the same thing. Raytheon, incidentally Fidelity is not, it's not that Fidelity is poor, they just announced recordprofits a couple days ago. Same with Raytheon, just announced recordprofits, but you know, having big problems, so they wanted evenbigger taxsubsidy, and direct subsidy, and taxwriteoffs, which just means transfer of taxes to, from theMA, and they threatened that if they didn't get them they were going to go toTN, so of course they got them. The legislature passed a specialLaw giving what they called defenseindustry specialextra subsidies. Notice that Raytheon is publiclysubsidised in thefirstplace. That's where its money comes from. But now it has to be additionallysubsidised so that its profits will be evenhigher than the recordprofits it just made. Same withFidelity. And that's the kind of game anybody can, you know, even way down to muchsmaller businesses can play with theStates. The consequences of devolution are quitestraightforward. It means that any funding that goes to, say, block grants that go to theStates, you can be reasonablyconfident that they'll end up in the deep pockets of richpeople, not, you know, in the hands of hungry children or poor mothers or anything like that. That's how you get power down to the people. Okay, that's devolution. In fact, quitegenerally, when you look at it, what's called Governmentcutting is more or less costtransfer. It's almostneverreduction, sometimes it's increase. So let's take what's, take Healthreform. Reform is a word you always ought to watch out for. Like when Mao started the cultural revolution, it wasn't called a reform. Reform is a change that you're supposed to like. And watch, as soon as you hear the word reform, you kind of reach for your wallet and see who's lifting it. Anyhow, there are things calledHealthreforms. And Healthreforms are supposed to, you know, cutGovernmentcosts. Well, they do cut one kind of cost, but of course they raise another kind of cost. There's a veryrespectable outfit called theNationalBipartisanLeadershipCouncil, headed by twoexPresidents, Ford and Carter, and it just did a study of the costtransfereffects of the plannedHealthreforms. It concluded that they would add about tenbillionsUSD a year extracosts, but those extracosts will come from wages and higher premiums, which means it's a highlyregressive tax on the poor. Highlyregressive tax, you know, if it comes from wages and premiums, of course. And that's tenbillionsUSD a year. They alsoestimated that it will increase the number of uninsured by fifteen-to-twentypercent up by, this is by the year 2002. So up to about fiftyfourmillions by the year2002. Well, that's a cost. A big cost, unmeasurable cost. And so you find all the way across the board. And furthermore it's no big secret. So, like, theWallStreetJournal had a headline which pointed out that, when the reforms were, you know, moving throughCongress, it said, “Rich Gain, Poor Lose, Tradeoffs for the Middle Class.” okay? Which is right. That's exactly what the reforms are intended to do. You have to remember, by middleclass, they mean the people right below the veryrich. So they don't mean the median, you know, they're not talking about people with thirtythousand a year income, they mean, so what it really means is, Great for the rich, superrich, tradeoffs for the nearrich, ToughLove for everybody else, which is mosteveryone. When you close public hospitals and that sort of thing, you knowexactly who's going to suffer. Well, let's go to, what are, take say, NY, which has a conservativeGovernor and a conservativeMayor. And they're carrying out veryextensive conservative taxcuts, because they're fiscalconservatives. The taxcuts, theNewYorkTimes pointed out in a small item, all benefit business. So, by accident, all the taxcuts benefit business. Well, there are also taxincreases, which are compensating for the taxcuts. But they don't call them taxincreases. What they call them is, the phrase is, Reduction of subsidies for public transportation and for tuition in public universities. Well, subsidy is another interesting word, kind of like reform. It's a subsidy if public funds are used for public purposes. That's called a subsidy. It's notcalled a subsidy when they go to private wealth. That's reform. So the, so they're cutting down subsidies for public transportation. Well, that's just a tax. If you pay twentypercent more for getting on the subway, that's a tax. Same if you pay higher tuition at citycollege. And that's a highlyregressive tax. So, who rides the subways, and who goes to citycollege? So what they're doing is shifting, cutting taxes for business, for the rich, and increasing taxes for the poor, which are going to compensate for that. And that's called fiscalConservatism and cuttingGovernment. Well, so it is across the board. Take, I'll come to other examples, but if you think about it, all the. Take a look, a close look at the things that are called cuttingGovernment, and you notice that they quitecharacteristically have this property. Thenextelement of theWashingtonConsensus is making the taxsystem moreregressive. Ok, we don't have to talk about that, it's statedopenly. The thing that isn't statedopenly is the reason. This is supposed to be in order to increase investment and give everyone jobs. But it's a reallyweird way to do that. I mean, the country is alreadyawash in capital. The people whose taxes are being cut don't know what to do with their money. If you want to increase growth, there's another approach that might be used, Stimulate weakdemand by progressive taxes, that is, put moremoney into the hands of people who can spend it. That increases growth, that would increase growth, but that's not the right way to do it. The right way to do it is by cutting financial gains so that you can have evenmorespeculation against currencies. The, so that's thesecondpart, make the taxsystem moreregressive. What about deregulation? Well, sameeffect. Deregulation is a costshiftingmeasure. So for example if you deregulate. If you allow industries to, as they have done already, to deposit toxicwastes without cost, because you have deregulation, it increases their profits, but it also increases water- and sewage-rates, which is a regressive tax on everybody else who's got to pay that. Also, it has further costs. Some of them you can't estimate. For example, the costs in, say, Health, and quality of life, and so on. No way to give numbers to those. And there's also going to be the eventual cost of cleanup. But that's going to be a public cost, remember. Incidentally, a good one, because when you clean up the wastes, that increases theGrossNationalProduct, and we all like to see that go up. But, the public will pay those costs. So what it is is just another form of radical costshifting: increase wealth for the rich, and decrease it for everyone else. So, it fits the experiment'sdesign. In general, it's kind of like a shortterm profitgain for some, a verysmall some, and a big cost for everyone else. What about deregulating the labourmarket? Well, sameprocess. Actually that was done by simply criminalbehavior. The best review of this I know is inBusinessWeek. TheReaganadministration, as they point out, essentiallyinformed the corporateworld that they were not going to enforce theLaws. There areLaws, you know, much hatedLaws like theWagnerAct that give you the right to organise, and theReaganadministration simplyinformed business they weren't going to enforce them. So the number of illegal firings went up by about a factor of six. And similarly across the board. They alsoinformed business they were not going to enforce theOSHAregulations, HealthAndSafetyRegulations. So the number of days lost to injury, and the number of injuries, and so on, also shot up. And in fact, that was a great way to undermine unions, and the right to organise, a whole pile of policies like that, which was part of deregulating labourmarkets. Another part of deregulation of labourmarkets is to make them more, what's called moreflexible. Meaning, you don't have any security and no guarantee, the number of temporaryworkers goes right up, way up, no benefits, you neverknow if you're going to have a job tomorrow. That's reallygood for theEconomy. That's good for having jobs. Some of themostprofitable corporations, the ones whose- way up on theFortune500list, and booming, are the ones that, what they call, sell manpower, you know, likeManpowerIncorporated. Selling temps, which is terrific for making labourmarkets flexible. It happens to destroy everybody'slife, but that doesn't reallymatter. It's, again, the similarity to theThirdWorld is veryclose. Back in nineteen, this is what's called economichealth. When you, when this is carried, happens, you call it an economicmiracle, another technical term. So for example, Brasil. There's a terrific economicmiracle under the neoNaziGenerals that we installed with great selfadulation back in the[19]60s. And by1971, it had become the latinamerican darling of the businesscommunity. And thePresident, theGeneral who ran the place, pointed out that theEconomy is doing fine, it's just that the people aren't. Well we just, we have a NobelPrizewinner, who just won theNobelPrize lastyear, lasttime, RobertLucas ofChicago, and he was interviewed by theWallStreetJournal and said, We've been doing great, and have been for a long time. He didn't even bother to add what the brasilian general did. It's only the people who aren't doing well. What he means by We is the topfivepercent or maybe toptenpercent, and that's right. We've been doing great, we're doing fine, theEconomy's fine. By now we don't evenworry about the fact that the people aren't doing so well. I won't bother repeating theStatistics, which you know, and he knowsperfectlywell. Okay, that's economicmiracles. We're now beginning to get one ourselves. What about privatisation? Well, again, the effects of that are obvious. So, say, in the latest economicmiracle inMexico, privatisation meant, as usual, Handing over public assets to friends of thePresident, or, you know, other rich people, or international investors at a fraction of their cost. And in fact, inMexico, the number of billionaires during the economicmiracle went up evenfaster than the percentage of people on the povertyline, as some were doing well, and the people didn't happen to be doing so well. In fact, it was a catastrophe for them even before the collapse. So that's privatisation. What about propertyrights, increase of propertyrights? That's veryimportant, in fact it's a critical aspect of the what are called misleadingly theFreeTradeAgreements, which actually have strong protectionist elements in them. TheUruguayRound and NAFTA, and so on. And one of them is increase of intellectualpropertyrights. I won't go into the details, but what it amounts to is guaranteeing that major corporations have a monopoly on theTechnology and Knowledge of the future. And they extended those to the, by various devices, so that it's about fiftyyears before you can interfere with owned property, which comes from public subsidy, usuallythrough research, and then is handed over to some private corporation, and nobody else is allowed to touch it. So increasing propertyrights has a big effect. Highlyprotectionist measure which is central to the new tradeagreements, and has a longlasting effect, way down the road on organizing the internationalEconomy in who gains and who loses. Last element of theWashingtonConsensus is reducing tradebarriers. And here there's another scam that you ought to keep your eyes on. What's called trade inEconomics is a veryodd notion. So, for example, if FordMotorCompany moves parts fromIndiana toIL for assembly, and then moves them back toIndiana, that's notcalled trade. But if FordMotorCompany takes parts made inIndiana and moves them across the border toMexico, where you can get muchcheaper labour and you don't have to worry about, you know, pollution and so on, and they get reassembled inMexico and then sent back to, say, IL for valueadded, that's called exports and imports. It never had anything to do with the mexicanEconomy, or, in fact, anyEconomy, it was all internal to theFordMotorCompany, but it's exports and imports. So, how big an element is that? Well, about fiftypercent ofUStrade. So about fiftypercent of what's calledUStrade is actually internal to individual corporations. Meaning, controlled by a veryvisible hand with all sorts of methods around for distortion of markets, and you know, robbery, and so on and so forth. About thesame forJapan. And for the world, you know, it's hard to get numbers, but what's estimated for the world is around fortypercent of trade. Agreements like, say, theUruguayRound, you know, GATT, if that increases what's called trade, what it actually does is increase investor-rights, that is, it increases the power of transnationalcorporations. You have to really look prettyclosely to figure out what the effect is on trade in any meaningful sense. For example, it may increase crossborderoperations, but decrease trade, in a meaningful sense of trade, meaning something that's not under the control of, kind of, corporateMercantilism. Going on with this, it's perhaps worth noticing that theveryconcept of-Capitalism and -markets, has virtuallydisappeared. So for example, if you take the current issue ofForeignAffairs, there's an article byJosephNye of theKennedySchool, I think maybe he's Dean of theKennedySchool, who explains that there's a big new weapon in the hands of american diplomats. American diplomats, he says, has a, diplomacy has a force multiplier. And the reason is because of the attraction ofDemocracy and freemarketenthusiasms in theUnitedStates. That's given, those things have given theUS a real force multiplier. Then he spells it out. It comes fromColdWarinvestments in highTechnology: electronics, aviation, telecommunications, and so on. That's our freemarketenthusiasms and Democracy. Well, where did electronics and, you know, aviation and telecommunications come from? Well, from public funds. They didn't have anything to do with the freemarket. They came from public funds, which were transferred to highTechnologyindustry, under the conscious guise, deceit of security. And it was conscious. So, Truman's firstSecretary of theAirForce, back in 1948, pointed out to Congress that "the word to use is not subsidy. The word to use is security." And in fact the whole system was designed that way, and stays that way. So that's the tribute to-Democracy and -freemarkets. The tribute to-Democracy and -freemarkets is, You rob the public by deceit to pay, put to enrich the rich. That's  freemarkets and Democracy. And it's published without comment. Another article in, and probably nobody notices, you know, because the concept ofCapitalism, just like the concept ofDemocracy, is just gone. Nobody knows what it is. Democracy means, Deceive people into doing what the rich people want. And markets means, Making sure, make sure the public subsidise the rich. Or to take another example, take, say, theWallStreetJournal, which you'd think would be the last holdout of somebody who remembers what Capitalism is. Well they had a front, lead article a couple of weeks ago, on various strategies that States, meaning, like, StatesOfTheUnion, were using to try to be morebusinessfriendly. And they picked twoexamples, VA and MA, who are sort of competing to see who can most sponsor entrepreneurial values, and be mostbusinessfriendly, and so on. And they said, well for a while it looked like, they have somewhat different strategies, that's why they were describing them. For a while MA was doing better, then it turned out VA is doing better, now VA is doing better, they're morebusinessfriendly, moregungho about business, and so on. All right, you read the article. Turns out it's not VA and MA. What it is, is the suburbs ofWDC, some of which are inVA, and the others of which are inMA. And what are the two business strategies, entrepreneurial strategies? Well, the suburbs ofWDC figured they could rip off the NationalInstituteOfHealth and others to develop Biologybased industries, so they were looking forBioTechnology, and so on. They figured that's going to be the big cashcow. And VA, which is more business friendly, decided that the old cashcow, thePentagon, would probably be thebestway to rip off public funds. So they were concentrating on electronics and telecommunications, and so on. And it turned out that VA had the betterstrategy, the better businessstrategy. They made a better guess about which public funds to rob. And that's what it means to have entrepreneurial values. And it's, again, reported without comment. This just continues virtuallywithout a break. TheNew, I'll give you one last example. TheNewYorker had a rather good article, actually. You know the, by now the story about what's happening to theEconomy and to the population, which used to be what, you know, crazies on the left talked about, it's now, sort of, hit the public, you know, so you can, you read it in the newspapers. TheNewYorker had an article in which they reviewed the figures on decline of real wages, and you know, increase in profits, and the story you're familiar with, by a guy namedThomasCassidy. Wasn't a bad article, actually, he sort of repeated the familiar facts. And then he ended up by saying, Look, no one's to blame for this, it's just the market in its infinite and mysterious wisdom. It just has these effects and there's nothing you can do about it. Then he gave threeexamples, exactlythreeexamples in the article, of the market in its infinite and mysterious wisdom, namely: Grumman, McDonaldDouglass, and HughesAircraft. Maybe this is some kind of subtle irony that I'm missing, but these are three prototypes of publiclysubsidized corporations. Grumman, Hughes, McDonaldDouglass? They wouldn't exist for twominutes if it wasn't for huge public subsidy. So that's the market in its infinite and mysterious wisdom. When Clinton was announcing his grand vision of the free marketfuture at theAPECconference inSeattleWA, he did the same thing. It was in theBoeingterminal, that's where he announced it, and he gave Boeing, Boeing, as the example of the grand vision of the free marketfuture, and there were big headlines in all the newspapers, and a lot of applause about our love of the free market, and so on. It's unnecessary to comment. But it is kind of interesting. What it means is, that the concept of Capitalism and markets has disappeared as fully as the concept ofDemocracy, which is an interesting fact about the modern period, and a kind of a natural effect of, you know, of applying theWashingtonConsensus at home, because you really have to drive out any understanding of what's going on, namely, that it's really existing free markets that are being imposed. Well, all of these current measures share one fundamental principle, and I guess we're at the heart of it. Well, two related fundamental principles. One is, They transfer wealth to the wealthy. And thesecond is, They transfer decisionmakingpower to the wealthy. So, all of them have the effect, just think them through, what all, every one of them has the effect of putting morepower to make decisions into the hands of unaccountable privateTyrannies, what we call corporations. Basicallytotalitarian institutions, but they're mostlyunaccountable. And that's the effect. Think through the examples. Every case of theWashingtonConsensus applied at home has exactly this effect. And a good part of the propagandasystem has thesamegoal. In this case, surelyconscious. So the propagandasystem is designed, has been for years, to demonise unions, which makes a lot of sense. Unions are a democratising force in which the mass, one of the few ways in which the large mass of the population can pool limited resources and work together for some commonGood. So that's that Bad thing, Democracy. So naturally you want to demonise and destroy unions, and that's been going on forever. And the other leading propagandatheme, and I don't mean by that, you know, like, just what you hear in the newspapers- read in the newspapers and so on, like the entertainmenindustry and Television and everything else, is antiPolitics. Meaning, setting up a picture, it's called antiPolitics, the picture, but a veryspecific kind of antiPolitics, you have to establish the image, you know, get into people's heads, that theGovernment is the enemy, the federalGovernment. StateGovernments are okay, because they can be sort of controlled by business anyway, so it doesn't matter. But the federalGovernment is sometimes a little toobig to be pushed around, so it's the enemy. And it cannot be, nobody can dream of the possibility, that theGovernment is of, by, and for the people. That's impossible. It's an enemy to be hated and feared. Not that there aren't a lot of things wrong with it, but that's not, what's wrong with it, from their point of view, is it has a big defect. It's potentiallyinfluenceable by the population, and bigenough to stand up against private power. And that's the defect. So you have to regard it as the enemy. It cannot be of, by, and for the people. It's a kind of a, ThemVersusUs business. Them is theGovernment, which is the enemy. Us is all of us nice people, you know, sober workingman, his loyal wife, maybe extra job these days. The hardworking executive toiling twentyhours a day, you know, for the benefit of all, the friendly banker who's out there trying to find, to give you money. That's Us. Sound of laughter. And then there's Them. Them is the outsiders, the unamericans, you know, the agitators, the unionorganisers, bigGovernment, and so on. And it's sort of, UsVersusThem. That's the picture. That has been rammed into people's heads for at least fiftyorsixtyyears by intensive propaganda everywhere. Movies, Television, textbooks, just constant. And not by accident. This is, this part is all extremelyconscious. We have a huge publicrelationsindustry which spends billionsUSD a year, dollars a year on exactly this sort of thing, and consciously. They eventell you about it. Well why is it happening now, not, say, thirtyyears ago? Oneproposal is, It's the market in its mysterious wisdom. We can put that aside. This is perfectlyconscious socialpolicy, and also, hence, under socialcontrol. Second is, We live in leanandmeantimes, we've got to tighten our belts. Complete nonsense. I mean, all you have to do is look at the businesspress. They're just ecstatic, you know, and have been for years. BusinessWeek just came out a couple of days ago with the annual issue on the top onethousandcorporations. The headline is, “1995 Was One for the Books.” America's Most, and subline: “America's Most Valuable Companies Grew Even More Valuable by a Record Thirty Five Percent.” That's these leanandmeantimes we're in. Another headline in BusinessWeek reads, “The Problem Now, What to Do with All That Cash”. Sound of laughter. As the coffers of corporateAmerica are overflowing with surging profits. Another one talks about theGovernment, reallygreatGovernment. It says, “theGingrichCongress represents a milestone for business, never before have so many goodies been showered so enthusiastically on america's entrepreneurs.” The headline of that one, incidentally, is “Return to the Trenches.” You know, like, we've got to ask more, feeding frenzy has to go on from the nannyState. FortuneMagazine, you know the other big business journal, I mean, they can't even find the adjectives in the last couple of years to describe what's going on. Oneyear it's "dazzling", you know. Thenextyear "stupendous." I mean, I'm waiting for theFortune500issue to see what adjectives they come out with next week. What they've been, doubledigit profitgrowth for an unheralded four years, with prettystagnant sales, and, fortunately, wages going down. CEOsalaries are going through the roof, and it's uncorrelated with performance. That's another interesting aspect of it. There have been, now, studies of it, so it's just some other thing, it has nothing to do with markets, or anything else. The, I mean, while wages continue to decline, as does familyincome, and so on. Well, you know, nobody who even looks at the businesspress can believe that there are leanandmeantimes. As I said, the country's just awash with capital. Their problem is they don't know what to do with it. So therefore, get more. Another theme that's around now is, you have to have what's called downsising in order to be competitive. Well, theBureauOfLabourStatistics came out with its figures, up to thelastyear they have them for it, 1993, from1983to1993 the category of executives, managers, and administrative personnel grew thirtypercent. Okay, that's downsising. The fastest growing whitecollarpopulation happens to be securityguard. Well yeah, that's connected with turning it into a ThirdWorldcountry. You take a walk down SanSalvador, you know, you'll see plenty of securityguards. You know, richpeople have to be protected. And furthermore, all these prisons you're throwing people into, they need securityguards. So yeah, there's, they're administrative personnel, and that's increasing, but so are, same in corporations. So there's no downsising going on, except for workingpeople. That's quite different. Why is it happening now? Anyway those are. Let's go back to why it's happening now. Well, fact is, it's alwaysgoing on, just depending on the weapons at hand. Business, american business particularly, is highlyclassconscious, and veryopen about it incidentally. And it's alwaysfighting a bitter classwar. You go back onecenturyago, into what were called theGay90s, when incidentally, the internationalEconomy was about as, the internationalEconomy was pretty much as, like it is now in terms of capitalflows and so on, it hasn't become moreglobalised in terms of trade and capitalflow and so on, than it was then, maybe less so. About a century ago, it looked as if the game was over. You know, they were talking about the end ofHistory, perfection had been reached in theDevil-take-the-hindmost society, where everybody's for themselves, and enrich yourselves, and so on. It was monstrous for the workingpeople. Verybrutal in fact, here. That was onecentury ago. Well, you know, it didn't end. You know, inEurope particularly, the socialcontract was slowlyimposed not easily. It didn't happen here. By theRoaring20s, as they were called, labour had no voice. This is the, you know, the age of massproduction of automobiles, and so on. Labour was out of it. It was a businessrunsociety almostcompletely, and it looked permanent. Again, you know, utopia of the masters, end ofHistory, all this talk. In the nineteenthirties, it proved to be wrong. There was a lot of popular organising, popular protest. It rammed through elements of the socialcontract that had been achieved inEurope decadesearlier. And that just caused hysteria in the businesscommunity. You read the businesspress, it was talking about, you know, the hazard facing manufacturers, and, the rising politicalpower of the masses, and, how we're going to face disaster unless we figure out some way to reverse this, and control their minds, and control them, and so on. A huge propagandacampaign began right after theWagnerAct was passed, 1935. In the, in those, in the nexttwoyears theNationalAssociationOfManufacturers, it's publicrelationsbudget multiplied by a factor of twenty, as they recognised that force alone is not going to be enough. TheUS has a veryviolent laborHistory, and plenty of workers were getting killed, but it was clear that this wasn't going to be enough. They had to have huge propaganda. It was sort of put on,  that's when all this harmonybusiness that I was talking about got designed. You know, it's a specific design as to how to carry out what they called scientific methods of strikebreaking by controlling communities, and so on. Well, it was put on hold during the war, and then it picked up right after theSecondWorldWar was over, with an enormous propagandacampaign. I mean, you can't believe the scale until you look at it, and the purpose was veryexplicit. The purpose was to “win the everlasting battle for the minds of men,” which have to be indoctrinated with the capitalist story, as we sell our preferred way of life, and on and on. These are all just quotes from mainstreamPRliterature. And it was very substantial, and aimedprecisely at what I described. They describe what they're doing, and you can see it in the propaganda, the schools, the entertainmentindustry, everything else. Well, what happened in the1970s? What happened is, there were some changes in the internationalEconomy, and in Technology and so on, which just put new weapons into the hands of the masters. One crucial factor, which everyone points to, is an enormous growth in financial capital, financial transactions, it just boomed, shortrange financial transactions. That came about, partly, because of the dismantling of the postwar BrettonWoodssystem of regulated currencies which kind of made currencies free-floating. TheNixonadministration just dismantled it. Partly it came about for technical reasons. I mean, the telecommunicationsrevolution, which was of course publiclysubsidised, at that point made it possible to transfer funds veryrapidly. So, like, you can, by now it's estimated at around a trillion dollars a day just shift up and back from onemarket to another, veryshort term transactions. All aimed, and at a huge, and, aimed at something: they're all aimed at low growth and high profits and low wages. And that's, that is a factor that's driving policy in that direction. I don't think it's by any means an uncontrollable factor, but it is a, it's definitely a factor. And that's just put a lot, and this, the changes in the composition of capital transactions are verystriking. Around, from about maybe, the time when you have data, like, latenineteenthcentury up until about1970, rough estimate was that about ninetypercent of capitaltransfers had to do with the realEconomy, you know, with investment and trade, tenpercentspeculation. By1990, the figures had reversed. By 1995, the latestUNCTAD, you know, UNEconomicCommissionestimate was about fivepercent realEconomy, ninetyfivepercentspeculation, shortterm speculation, like, against currencies, which is, essentially, aimed at driving down growth and increasing profits and lowering wages. This was understoodveryquickly by the late 70s. And there were proposals made, for example byJamesTobin, Yaleeconomist NobelPrizewinner, at anAmericanEconomicAssociationPresidentialAddress1978, simply, suggested a simple reform, Low tax, verylow tax, on shortterm financialtransactions, just to slow it down, you know, throw a little sand in the gears. Probably work, it's been called theTobinTax, but it's notgetting anywhere, because the weapon is a veryimportant one. That weapon has been usedveryefficiently for all the purposes that have been described. And there are other things. Is it out control? There’s nothing we can do? Well, there’s no reason to believe that. I mean, Elementary reforms, likeTobinTax, could have, maybe have big effect. Furthermore moreglobally, all of these interchanges, as I mentioned,  internationalEconomy is notmoreintegrated than it was onehundredyearsago by most measures. In fact, less in many respects. And the transactions that are going on are mostlywithin big threeregions, theUnitedStates, Japan and Europe. That’s under politicalontrol, that’s not out of politicalcontrol. Democratic societies in these three areas could control this. The idea that it’s somehow, you know, impossible to control all over the world, it’s just nottrue. You look at the flows, they’re internal to highlydeveloped rich societies, where theoretically there are democraticGovernments [which] could impose all sorts of restriction. Furthermore, all this talk about corporateGreed and everything is reallycrucially beside the point in my point of view. I think it should be recognised it is a verydeep regression from what workingpeople and a lot of others understandverywell well over onecentury ago. Talk about Greed is nonsense. Corporations are Greed by their nature. They’re nothing else. They’re instruments for interfering with markets to maximise profit and wealth and marketcontrol. You can’t make them more or less greed. I mean maybe, you can force. It’s like taking a totalitarianState and asking it to be lessbrutal. Yeah maybe, you can get totalitarianState lessbrutal, but that’s not the point. The point is, Not the totalitarianState to be lessbrutal, But to get rid of it. Sound of applaud. Like onehundredandfiftyyears ago, that was understood. I mean, if you read the labour press, there was a verylively press right around here, Lowell, Lawrence, places like that, run by artisans and what they called factorygirls, women from farms working there, and they weren’t askingAutocracy to be lessbrutal. They were saying, Get rid of it. In fact, that makes perfect sense. These are humaninstitutions, nothing grave in stone about them. They were created early in this century with their present powers. They come from thesame intellectual roots as the other forms ofTotalitarianism, namely Stalinism and Fasicism. They have no morelegitimacy than they do. So it’s not a. Yeah, let’s makeAutocracy lessbrutal, that’s a shortterm possibility. But we should have the sophistication of the factorygirls ofLowell onehundredandfiftyyearsago and recognise that this is just degrading and intolerable, and as they put it, Those who work in the mill should own it, along with everything else, and that’s Democracy. We don’t haveDemocracy.

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