Anti-Democratic
Nature of US
Capitalism
is Being
Exposed
Bretton
Woods was
the system
of global
financial
management
set up at
the end of
the second
World War to
ensure the
interests of
capital did
not smother
wider social
concerns in
post-war
democracies.
It was hated
by the US
neoliberals
- the very
people who
created the
banking
crisis
writes Noam
Chomsky
By Noam
Chomsky
12/10/08
"Irish
Times" - --
THE
SIMULTANEOUS
unfolding of
the US
presidential
campaign and
unraveling
of the
financial
markets
presents one
of those
occasions
where the
political
and economic
systems
starkly
reveal their
nature.
Passion
about the
campaign may
not be
universally
shared but
almost
everybody
can feel the
anxiety from
the
foreclosure
of a million
homes, and
concerns
about jobs,
savings and
healthcare
at risk.
The initial
Bush
proposals to
deal with
the crisis
so reeked of
totalitarianism
that they
were quickly
modified.
Under
intense
lobbyist
pressure,
they were
reshaped as
"a clear win
for the
largest
institutions
in the
system . . .
a way of
dumping
assets
without
having to
fail or
close", as
described by
James
Rickards,
who
negotiated
the federal
bailout for
the hedge
fund Long
Term Capital
Management
in 1998,
reminding us
that we are
treading
familiar
turf. The
immediate
origins of
the current
meltdown lie
in the
collapse of
the housing
bubble
supervised
by Federal
Reserve
chairman
Alan
Greenspan,
which
sustained
the
struggling
economy
through the
Bush years
by
debt-based
consumer
spending
along with
borrowing
from abroad.
But the
roots are
deeper. In
part they
lie in the
triumph of
financial
liberalisation
in the past
30 years -
that is,
freeing the
markets as
much as
possible
from
government
regulation.
These steps
predictably
increased
the
frequency
and depth of
severe
reversals,
which now
threaten to
bring about
the worst
crisis since
the Great
Depression.
Also
predictably,
the narrow
sectors that
reaped
enormous
profits from
liberalisation
are calling
for massive
state
intervention
to rescue
collapsing
financial
institutions.
Such
interventionism
is a regular
feature of
state
capitalism,
though the
scale today
is unusual.
A study by
international
economists
Winfried
Ruigrok and
Rob van
Tulder 15
years ago
found that
at least 20
companies in
the Fortune
100 would
not have
survived if
they had not
been saved
by their
respective
governments,
and that
many of the
rest gained
substantially
by demanding
that
governments
"socialise
their
losses," as
in today's
taxpayer-financed
bailout.
Such
government
intervention
"has been
the rule
rather than
the
exception
over the
past two
centuries",
they
conclude.
In a
functioning
democratic
society, a
political
campaign
would
address such
fundamental
issues,
looking into
root causes
and cures,
and
proposing
the means by
which people
suffering
the
consequences
can take
effective
control.
The
financial
market "underprices
risk" and is
"systematically
inefficient",
as
economists
John Eatwell
and Lance
Taylor wrote
a decade
ago, warning
of the
extreme
dangers of
financial
liberalisation
and
reviewing
the
substantial
costs
already
incurred -
and
proposing
solutions,
which have
been
ignored. One
factor is
failure to
calculate
the costs to
those who do
not
participate
in
transactions.
These
"externalities"
can be huge.
Ignoring
systemic
risk leads
to more
risk-taking
than would
take place
in an
efficient
economy,
even by the
narrowest
measures.
The task of
financial
institutions
is to take
risks and,
if
well-managed,
to ensure
that
potential
losses to
themselves
will be
covered. The
emphasis is
on "to
themselves".
Under state
capitalist
rules, it is
not their
business to
consider the
cost to
others - the
"externalities"
of decent
survival -
if their
practices
lead to
financial
crisis, as
they
regularly
do.
Financial
liberalisation
has effects
well beyond
the economy.
It has long
been
understood
that it is a
powerful
weapon
against
democracy.
Free capital
movement
creates what
some have
called a
"virtual
parliament"
of investors
and lenders,
who closely
monitor
government
programmes
and "vote"
against them
if they are
considered
irrational:
for the
benefit of
people,
rather than
concentrated
private
power.
Investors
and lenders
can "vote"
by capital
flight,
attacks on
currencies
and other
devices
offered by
financial
liberalisation.
That is one
reason why
the Bretton
Woods system
established
by the
United
States and
Britain
after the
second World
War
instituted
capital
controls and
regulated
currencies.*
The Great
Depression
and the war
had aroused
powerful
radical
democratic
currents,
ranging from
the
anti-fascist
resistance
to working
class
organisation.
These
pressures
made it
necessary to
permit
social
democratic
policies.
The Bretton
Woods system
was designed
in part to
create a
space for
government
action
responding
to public
will - for
some measure
of
democracy.
John Maynard
Keynes, the
British
negotiator,
considered
the most
important
achievement
of Bretton
Woods to be
the
establishment
of the right
of
governments
to restrict
capital
movement.
In dramatic
contrast, in
the
neoliberal
phase after
the
breakdown of
the Bretton
Woods system
in the
1970s, the
US treasury
now regards
free capital
mobility as
a
"fundamental
right",
unlike such
alleged
"rights" as
those
guaranteed
by the
Universal
Declaration
of Human
Rights:
health,
education,
decent
employment,
security and
other rights
that the
Reagan and
Bush
administrations
have
dismissed as
"letters to
Santa
Claus",
"preposterous",
mere
"myths".
In earlier
years, the
public had
not been
much of a
problem. The
reasons are
reviewed by
Barry
Eichengreen
in his
standard
scholarly
history of
the
international
monetary
system. He
explains
that in the
19th
century,
governments
had not yet
been "politicised
by universal
male
suffrage and
the rise of
trade
unionism and
parliamentary
labour
parties".
Therefore,
the severe
costs
imposed by
the virtual
parliament
could be
transferred
to the
general
population.
But with the
radicalisation
of the
general
public
during the
Great
Depression
and the
anti-fascist
war, that
luxury was
no longer
available to
private
power and
wealth.
Hence in the
Bretton
Woods
system,
"limits on
capital
mobility
substituted
for limits
on democracy
as a source
of
insulation
from market
pressures".
The obvious
corollary is
that after
the
dismantling
of the
postwar
system,
democracy is
restricted.
It has
therefore
become
necessary to
control and
marginalise
the public
in some
fashion,
processes
particularly
evident in
the more
business-run
societies
like the
United
States. The
management
of electoral
extravaganzas
by the
public
relations
industry is
one
illustration.
"Politics is
the shadow
cast on
society by
big
business,"
concluded
America's
leading 20th
century
social
philosopher
John Dewey,
and will
remain so as
long as
power
resides in
"business
for private
profit
through
private
control of
banking,
land,
industry,
reinforced
by command
of the
press, press
agents and
other means
of publicity
and
propaganda".
The United
States
effectively
has a
one-party
system, the
business
party, with
two
factions,
Republicans
and
Democrats.
There are
differences
between
them. In his
study
Unequal
Democracy:
The
Political
Economy of
the New
Gilded Age,
Larry
Bartels
shows that
during the
past six
decades
"real
incomes of
middle-class
families
have grown
twice as
fast under
Democrats as
they have
under
Republicans,
while the
real incomes
of
working-poor
families
have grown
six times as
fast under
Democrats as
they have
under
Republicans".
Differences
can be
detected in
the current
election as
well. Voters
should
consider
them, but
without
illusions
about the
political
parties, and
with the
recognition
that
consistently
over the
centuries,
progressive
legislation
and social
welfare have
been won by
popular
struggles,
not gifts
from above.
Those
struggles
follow a
cycle of
success and
setback.
They must be
waged every
day, not
just once
every four
years,
always with
the goal of
creating a
genuinely
responsive
democratic
society,
from the
voting booth
to the
workplace.
* The
Bretton
Woods system
of global
financial
management
was created
by 730
delegates
from all 44
Allied
second World
War nations
who attended
a UN-hosted
Monetary and
Financial
Conference
at the Mount
Washington
Hotel in
Bretton
Woods in New
Hampshire in
1944.
Bretton
Woods, which
collapsed in
1971, was
the system
of rules,
institutions,
and
procedures
that
regulated
the
international
monetary
system,
under which
were set up
the
International
Bank for
Reconstruction
and
Development
(IBRD) (now
one of five
institutions
in the World
Bank Group)
and the
International
Monetary
Fund (IMF),
which came
into effect
in 1945.
The chief
feature of
Bretton
Woods was an
obligation
for each
country to
adopt a
monetary
policy that
maintained
the exchange
rate of its
currency
within a
fixed value.
The system
collapsed
when the US
suspended
convertibility
from dollars
to gold.
This created
the unique
situation
whereby the
US dollar
became the
"reserve
currency"
for the
other
countries
within
Bretton
Woods.
Noam Chomsky
is professor
emeritus of
linguistics
at the
Massachusetts
Institute of
Technology.
His writings
on
linguistics
and politics
have just
been
collected in
The
Essential
Chomsky,
edited by
Anthony
Arnove, from
the New
Press.
© 2008 The
Irish Times