Worried about the global economic crisis? It’s all in your
head, says a leading financial expert.
And that’s the problem, according to Jeff Gates, author of
the highly-regarded Democracy at Risk: Rescuing Main Street from Wall Street, a sequel to The Ownership Solution:
Toward a Shared Capitalism for the 21st Century. The latter book was described by one reviewer as “the best book
on economics for a generation,” and praised by Ralph Nader as “a Capitalist
Manifesto, a blueprint for spreading the benefits of capitalism more
equitably.”
Gates, a former counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on
Finance (1980-87), identifies the source of the current economic crisis as a
“shared mindset” into which we have been induced to put our faith, to the grave
detriment of the majority but to the immense benefit of a very few.
While the events of September 2008 on Wall Street may have
come as a shock to many -- not least those who suddenly found themselves out of
work or on the streets -- they were “perfectly predictable” to a close-knit
group of “financial sophisticates,” Jeff Gates maintains.
But is there any evidence that this was a deliberate fraud?
“Systems analysts offer an acronym (“POSIWID”) to identify
systemic flaws: the purpose of a system is what it does,” Gates says.
“In financial systems, results are downstream of the
‘Chicago model’ -- a shared mindset from which today’s results flow. Over the
past half-century, this market-fundamentalist perspective evolved into the
‘Washington’ consensus to emerge as the guiding principle of the World Trade
Organization (WTO) now taking this model to global scale.”
What exactly does he mean by the “Chicago model”?
“At the core of this worldview lies a premise whose purpose
is easily stated: ‘maximize financial returns and -- trust us -- all else will
be fine.’ Faith in that perspective ensured today’s results,” Gates explains.
“As this ‘Chicago’ frame of mind gained the force of law
through the ‘law and economics’ movement, the result became a globalized
operating system best described as ‘money-on-autopilot.’ There lies the blame
for this collapse -- in that narrow ‘consensus’ perspective.”
The “law and economics” movement referred to by Gates also
traces its origins to the University of Chicago. As key opponents of financial
regulation, this movement was heavily funded by the same Olin Foundation that
also supported neoconservatism through its funding of neocon think tanks such
as the American Enterprise Institute.
This “Chicago” state of mind, Gates argues, had far-reaching
consequences that could have been easily foreseen by its advocates.
“The results of this purpose-driven ‘operating system’ were
guaranteed to concentrate wealth and income and thereby undermine both
democracies and markets. By equating personal freedom with financial freedom,
we were induced to freely embrace the very forces that now jeopardize freedom,”
Gates says.
“Nowhere in this operating system is there any provision for
the values essential to the long-term health of communities: fiscal foresight,
civil cohesion and environmental sustainability. Money is the only value
granted a voice.”
Jeff Gates’ latest book, Guilt By Association: How
Deception and Self-Deceit Took America to War, traces the corruption that plagues American politics to a network
who “share an ideological bias sympathetic to Israel.” It should be read by
concerned citizens everywhere, but especially in the United States, where the
“Chicago” mindset has been most deeply embedded in its economic and foreign
policy-making.
Endorsed by former U.S. Ambassador Edward Peck and Illinois
Congressman Paul Findley (1961–1983), Guilt By Association identifies
those who have promoted aggressive economic and foreign policies that have been
“ruinous” not only to America’s reputation but also to “moderate and secular
Jews.” The latter, Gates points out, are often unfairly portrayed as “guilty by
association” with the behaviour of these “elites and extremists.”
Who are these “elites and extremists,” and how do they make
America appear “guilty by association”?
“When waging unconventional warfare, Defense Secretary
Robert Gates points to the perilous role of ‘the people in between.’ Thus, for
instance, while pro-Israelis induced the U.S. to wage war in Iraq with false
and flawed intelligence, ‘the people in between’ created, promoted and reported
intelligence ‘fixed’ around that pre-determined goal,” Gates explains.
“In the financial domain, ‘the people in between’ are
securities bundlers, rating agencies and, most fundamentally, those who induce ‘the
mark’ (the public) to put their faith in the financial premise that enables
this ongoing fraud.
“All flows downstream from a ‘consensus’ perspective -- regardless
whether the deception is a shared belief in Iraqi weapons of mass destruction
or a consensus faith in the infallibility of unfettered financial markets. The
modus operandi is identical -- the displacement of facts with beliefs.”
Perhaps not coincidentally, the intellectual roots of
neoconservatism can also be traced to Chicago, where University of Chicago
Professor Albert Wohlstetter’s cadre of students included Richard Perle and Paul
Wolfowitz. Wohlstetter himself had been a protégé of another University of
Chicago Professor, Leo Strauss. Considered to be the “intellectual godfather”
of the neocons, Strauss significantly advocated a “philosophy of deception.”
Through their failure to identify the source of the problem,
government responses to the ongoing economic crisis will only make matters
worse, maintains Gates.
“Lawmakers seek to solve a systemic problem well downstream
of its source. By piling on more interest-bearing debt without addressing the
underlying problem, they are unleashing long-term financial forces destined to
make a bad situation worse -- at a staggering cost,” he says.
“We can anticipate stagnation and inflation while ‘the
people in between’ continue to amass more assets (at distressed prices) and
collect more interest on more taxpayer-secured debt. The pace is poised to
quicken in this policy-enabled redistribution of wealth -- from the bottom to
the top.”
Maidhc
Ó Cathail is a widely published writer based in Japan.