The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act passed this week
will define Barack Obama�s presidency. But it is really just the younger
sibling to the Troubled Assets Relief Programme.
To separate the now trillions being handed out to the
banksters from the $800 billion being handed out to the lottery winners is to
be ingenuous. The elder sister�s patrons are already blackmailing Obama,
wailing for more trillions or they will plunge the economy into even greater
financial crisis.
�You ain�t seen nothing yet,� they hissed to Treasury
Secretary Geithner, who, according to economist Michael Hudson, quickly
�pledged government financing for as much as $2 trillion. . . . to spur new
lending and address banks� toxic assets, seeking to end the credit crunch hobbling
the economy.�
Hudson calls it �Stage One of a two-stage plan,� so far
unannounced, to transfer trillions more to people who, in any sane world, would
be behind bars, the purpose being to re-inflate the bubble economy that made
them wealthy beyond their dreams while leaving wages stagnant and creating
little meaningful work.
The �change� president is continuing the Bush-Paulson
giveaway, allowing the process of creating a few giant Wall Street-based trusts
which will act as the economy�s central planners in the new �socialism for the
rich.� Any talk of nationalisation should be seen in this context. �Washington
has given them $9 trillion so far, with promises now of another $2 trillion -- and
still counting.� Instead of sputtering about capping CEO bonuses, if he is
serious, why hasn�t Obama reversed the Clinton-Rubin repeal of the
Glass-Steagall Act, responsible for the massive speculation for the past two
decades?
But this is in fine American tradition, albeit taken to the
extreme. Bankers have always worked hand-in-glove (either that or
dagger-in-hand) with politicians. Nineteenth century Democratic President
Grover Cleveland vetoed a bill to give Texas farmers $100,000 to buy seed grain
during a drought, saying, �Federal aid in such cases encourages the expectation
of paternal care on the part of the government and weakens the sturdiness of
our national character.� However, he thought nothing of giving bondholders $5
million the same year. After WW II, Keynesianism provided an intellectual gloss
to government handouts to failing industries, especially military, with workers
similarly being lectured about belt tightening as executives quietly deposited
their bonuses and accumulated their stock options.
To pretend that throwing all this money at a sick economy
will heal it is the height of folly. To understand the way out of the crisis,
compare the situation with the world food crisis. Is the current economic
crisis due to too many people? That may sound foolish -- it is -- but that is
how many economists address the food crisis. Leaving aside the debate about an
optimal global (or US) population size, the correct answer to both is: the
crisis is due to extremely skewed distribution of wealth and lack of access by
the poor to basic food (and increasingly now in the US -- shelter).
The current crisis simply can�t be addressed without facing
the accumulation of 30 years of creeping -- under Bush II, accelerating -- income
redistribution in favour of the rich. The wealthiest one percent have increased
their share of returns to wealth -- dividends, interest, rent and capital gains
-- from 37 percent a decade ago to nearly 70 percent today. This is the highest
proportion since records started, worse than the situation in the 1920s, which
incidentally preceded the 1930s. Without facing up to this, no stimulus package
will bring prosperity to the homeless and jobless. Certainly, no tax reductions
will bring any positive effect when more and more are too poor to pay taxes,
and the rich, who benefit from this, will spend not on basics, but luxury
goods, probably imports, or just spirit the extra funds into offshore accounts
to avoid any worries.
The centrepiece of the stimulus package, much like President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt�s, is job creation. House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer
said that �millions and millions and millions of people will be helped, as they
have lost their jobs and can�t put food on the table of their families.� All
well and good, though there is no guarantee that even if millions of jobs are created
in the short term that this will translate into a systemic recovery. This was
the case under FDR. It took WWII -- government-enforced socialism for all -- to
drag the US out of depression.
This brings us to the other distortion that has continued to
weaken the US economy since the days of Reagan (really, since WWII): the
inexorable militarisation of the US economy, spending money on unproductive -- indeed
destructive -- commodities, which only sap the economy�s vitality, providing no
general-use infrastructure which can benefit all, no goods which can be
consumed or traded except to foreign dictators quelling rebellions. The soaring
trade and budget deficits are a direct result of the joint US obsession with
weapons and tax reduction. As the Soviet Union found during its economic crisis
in the 1980s, spending an exorbitant amount -- almost a trillion dollars by the
US today -- on military nonproduction is simply unsustainable. America accounts
for nearly half of all global military spending, an amount larger than the next
45 nations together.
Just as the answer to the food crisis is promoting land
redistribution, providing peasants with ready access to the means of feeding
themselves, so the answer to the world economic crisis is wealth redistribution,
putting money in the hands of the poor, who will be likely to spend it locally
on basics, supporting themselves and their local communities. The most
successful of Obama�s stimulus projects will put money into their hands which
will be rapidly spent on, say, house repairs, starting new small businesses,
paying wages to daycare workers, and the like.
The original stimulus package included a clause requiring American
steel to be used in spending, a perfectly rational �protectionist� policy. �Buy
American� should not to be denounced per se. It is nothing more than an
application of �think globally, but act locally.� Any spending to stimulate the
economy should of course rely on local production wherever possible. It is the
government�s role to make sure it is more economical to buy and sell locally
than truck and fly goods thousands of miles. If this violates WTO rules, then
work to change those irrational rules, for as well as hurting local economies,
they promote ecologically harmful global warming.
The days of relying on both corporate agriculture and global
finance and industry are numbered, the very opposite of the conclusion proposed
by Henry Kissinger in The Independent on 20 January. There, he gloats of
the �unique opportunity for creative diplomacy� which the present crisis
provides. True, he admits that it struck �a major blow to the standing of the
United States,� encouraging every other country to �seek to make itself
independent, to the greatest possible degree, of the conditions that produced
the collapse.� So far so good. But his prescription, strangely, is more �common
action,� a political new world order (NWO), corresponding to the international
economic one now in existence, the alternative being �chaos.�
But political decisions are already largely coordinated
among countries at such gatherings as the recent WEF and the upcoming G20.
These gatherings of the most powerful political and economic leaders occur like
clockwork, and any independence shown by mavericks, such as Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez or Iranian President Ahmedinejad, is ruthlessly attacked and
subverted, if possible. No, the NWO, relying on increasing world corporate
control -- legimitated by use of the likes of the UN -- has come to an impasse
not by some fluke, but because it is wrongheaded. It has produced �chaos,� and
it must be abandoned.
Kissinger calls for �a new Bretton Woods,� finessing the
important point that this was a financial institution set up primarily by the
victorious US to meet its own global needs. It would be more apposite to call
for �a negation of Bretton Woods.� His provides a choice between �an
international political regulatory system with the same reach as that of the
economic world� (that is, consolidate the current inequalities) versus a
dismantling of the current global monster, and of course opts for the first
alternative. But, it, ably administered by Kissinger et al, is the one that
brought us to this impasse. The �chaos� Kissinger fears is really the
democratic awakening of the people. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union and
the apparent eclipse of socialism, they have been lulled into accepting the
soothing promises of politicians in thrall to their ever more powerful
corporate masters.
�The extraordinary impact of the president-elect on the
imagination of humanity is an important element in shaping a new world order,�
enthuses Kissinger. But will Obama�s stimulus package be an opening salvo in
the battle for even greater imperial overreach, or will Obama listen to the
millions of simple Americans who stumped for him and reject this ominous NWO
proposed by his patron?
Food is a human right, but production to feed mainly
corporate profit will merely lead to more food crises. Similarly, fulfilling
all our basic needs should be a human right as enshrined in the vaguely worded
UN Declaration of Human Rights, which should be dusted off and promoted as part
of the inspiration for Obama�s defining policy tackling the current economic
�chaos.� A truly new world order requires stimulating real people, not yielding
to banksters� threats and the failed policies of Kissinger et al. There Is No
Other Alternative.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at www.geocities.com/walberg2002.