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Issue no. 51, 1 December 2009:
Inequality as policy: The United States Since 1979
John Schmitt
Since the end of the 1970s, the United States has seen a dramatic increase
in economic inequality. While the United States has long been among the most
unequal of the world’s rich economies, the economic and social upheaval that
began in the 1970s was a striking departure from the movement toward greater
equality that began in the Great Depression, continued through World War II,
and was a central feature of the first 30 years of the postwar period.
Despite the magnitude of the rise in inequality, the political discourse
in the United States refers only obliquely to these developments. The public
debate generally acknowledges neither the scale of the increase in inequality nor,
except in the most superficial way, the causes of this sudden and sustained
turn of events.
This short essay seeks to provide an alternative view of the postwar period
in the United States, particularly of the last three decades. My argument is
that the high and rising inequality in the United States is the direct result
of a set of policies designed first and foremost to increase inequality. These
policies, in turn, have their roots in a significant shift in political power
against workers and in favor of their employers, a shift that began in the
1970s and continues through today.
Global commons and common sense
Jorge Buzaglo
Globalisation is the result of economic growth and technical progress.
Production systems have attained global reach. However, the rules and
institutions that regulate the systems’ relations of production and exchange
are still mostly national. Furthermore, national regulation systems have been
drastically eroded in the past three decades of deregulation, liberalisation
and privatisation. The present global economic crisis is clearly the result
of this inconsistency or contradiction.
We could say with Marx in the famous Preface to the Contribution that the
global ‘material productive forces of society [have] come into conflict with
the existing relations of production […] From forms of development of the
productive forces these relations turn into their fetters.’
For Marx this should mark the ‘beginning of an era of social revolution.
The changes in the economic foundation lead sooner or later to the transformation
of the whole immense superstructure.’ Be that as it may, many — including many
members of the economic and political establishment — seem to agree on the
necessity of new, global rules and institutions for the management of the
largely unregulated global economic and financial system.
Managerialism and the demise of the Big Three
Robert R Locke
This essay is about the crisis of US automobile management and the difficulties
that management educators and practitioners in America have had facing up to that
crisis. It focuses on Detroit’s Big Three but it also looks at the role Japanese
firms played in transferring JMS (Japanese Management Systems) to America,
particularly the transfer of TPS (the Toyota Production System) to Georgetown,
Kentucky. It opens (I) with a discussion of the triumph of a science-based “New
Paradigm” in business school management education and in industry, with reference
to its critics, in order to establish the institutional framework within which
US automobile management expanded and operated after World War II; then (II) a
more general discussion ensues in which U.S. managerialism and JMS are compared,
and the pathways and barriers to the transfer of JMS to America both to US firms
and to Japanese transplants are explored, before in the last part (III) the focus
narrows to a specific case of transfer: H. Thomas Johnson’s analysis of Toyota’s
successful alternative Production System (TPS) at Georgetown and how it
supersedes in theory and practice the managerial methods of the Big Three.
The demise of neoliberalism?
Bill Lucarelli
In a broader historical context, capitalist crises are functional and strategic.
These crises signify the culmination of one process and the beginning of another.
In a continuous, latent process of transformation, all of the subterranean,
conflicting forces come to the surface and bring to light the very paradoxes of
history itself. Through the dynamics of catharsis and reconstruction, capitalist
crises provide the material basis by which profitability is restored once again.
The “slaughtering of capital values”, to paraphrase Marx, is a necessary, though
irrational means which allows the restructuring of production to establish the
material and technological basis for yet another phase of accumulation. The recovery,
however, is neither automatic nor entirely endogenous. The outcome will ultimately
depend upon the complex relation of class forces. As Dobb quite perceptively contends:
“To study crises was ipso facto to study the dynamics of the system, and this study
could only be undertaken as part of an examination of the forms of movement of class
relations and of class revenues which were their market expression” (Dobb, 1937: 81).
Money manager capitalism and the global financial crisis
L. Randall Wray
This paper applies Hyman Minsky’s approach to provide an analysis of the causes of the
global financial crisis. Rather than finding the origins in recent developments, this
paper links the crisis to the long term transformation of the economy from a robust
financial structure in the 1950s to the fragile one that existed at the beginning of this
crisis. As Minsky said, “stability is destabilizing”: the relative stability of the
economy in the early postwar period encouraged this transformation of the economy.
Today’s crisis is rooted in what he called “money manager capitalism”, the current
stage of capitalism dominated by highly leveraged funds seeking maximum returns in
an environment that systematically under-prices risk. With little regulation or supervision
of financial institutions, money managers have concocted increasingly esoteric
instruments that quickly spread around the world. Those playing along are rewarded
with high returns because highly leveraged funding drives up prices for the underlying
assets. Since each subsequent bust only wipes out a portion of the managed money, a
new boom inevitably rises. Perhaps this will prove to be the end of this stage of
capitalism—the money manager phase. Of course, it is too early to even speculate on
the form capitalism will take. I will only briefly outline some policy implications.
IMF’s policies during the world recession
Mark Weisbrot
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) presented a response to CEPR’s latest paper,
which looked at the macroeconomic policies of 41 countries that currently have
agreements with the Fund. Our paper had found that 31 of the 41 countries had
implemented pro-cyclical policies, that is, either fiscal or monetary policies
that would be expected to exacerbate an economic downturn, when such downturns
were occurring in these countries.
A man for this season? Keynes
Walden Bello
The collapse of neoliberal economics, with its worship of the “self-regulating market,”
has had among its most significant consequences the revival of the great English economist
John Maynard Keynes. It is not only his writings that make Keynes very contemporary. There
is also the mood that permeates them, one that evokes the loss of faith in the old and the
yearning for something that is yet to be born.
Aside from their prescience, his reflections on the condition of Europe after the First
World War resonate with our current mix of disillusion and hope: In our present confusion
of aims, is there enough clear-sighted public spirit left to preserve the balanced and
complicated organization by which we live? Communism is discredited by events; socialism,
in its old-fashioned interpretation, no longer interests the world; capitalism has lost
its self-confidence. Unless men are united by a common aim or moved by objective principles,
each one’s hand will be against the rest and the unregulated pursuit of individual
advantage may soon destroy the whole.
Economic theory and the crisis
Alan Kirman
The first thing that comes to mind as one follows the debate among economists
about the crisis is that economic theory was locked into a bubble that has now
burst. The reactions have either been to ignore this and just to wait for the
crisis to pass or to herald the return of one of our old heroes, Keynes. Economists
seem to be victims of extremely short memories and an inability to anticipate the
next theoretical development. We periodically come to believe that we have hit
upon the “right model” and that all previous efforts can be consigned to the wastebasket
of history. When the current model turns out to be completely at odds with reality,
the reflex reaction is to go back to the previous model and to chide the modernists
for having lost sight of it. A number of economists have tried to add a little
historical perspective (in particular Reinhart and Rogoff (2008) have argued
that this crisis is but one of many similar events), but the debate overall
remains very short-sighted and ideologically motivated.
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