Welcome to the
vast inane. Today the “sequester” - mindless, across the board cuts of military and
domestic spending designed to be abhorrent - will go into effect. Republicans
claimed a “big victory” as
House Speaker John Boehner shut down any negotiations and sent the House home.
The cuts will cost jobs and add to the headwinds facing the economy. The
sequester will be followed by operatic melodrama over keeping the government
open after the end of March and keeping the government from defaulting on its
debt beginning in the middle of May.
The deficit is
falling faster than any time since the demobilization after World War II,
Americans are afflicted with mass unemployment and falling wages, but Washington
will be traveling into the vast inane for the foreseeable future.
The media is
focused on the possible effects of the cuts. But what is actually being
sequestered is any sensible debate about the fundamental changes needed to
revive the middle class and make this economy work for working families once
more. The old economy - and the failed economic ideas that drove it - benefited
the few, while undermining the broad middle class, even before the collapse.
Sadly, that old
economy is back. Consider the unsustainable imbalances that contributed directly
to the Great Recession:
Global trade
imbalances: The U.S. trade deficit is still over $1 billion a day. The trade
deficits with China remain the largest bilateral imbalances in history. This
costs the U.S. good jobs and undermines wage growth. The Chinese suppress
consumption in their own country to sustain their
export-led growth. This imbalance is destabilizing and unsustainable, but is not
up for discussion. Instead, the administration and the Republican leadership
push traditional corporate trade accords that will only add to
the problem.
Gilded-Age
Inequality: In the two years coming
out of the Great Recession, the top 1 percent captured an obscene 121 percent of
the income growth, while the remaining 99 percent lost ground. The rich pocketed all the new income
growth and then some. Corporate profits are setting new records as a percentage
of the economy; wages are setting new lows. As Nobel Prize-winning economist
Joseph Stiglitz has argued, extreme inequality not only crushes the middle
class, it saps the demand needed for a prosperous economy.
It also corrodes
our democracy and corrupts our politics. In his State of the Union address,
President Obama called for raising the minimum wage, but deficit jockeying is
consuming the limited congressional calendar, curtailing any discussion of even
this modest reform. Also needed are measures to empower
workers to organize and bargain collectively for a fair share of the profits and
productivity they help to produce. Corporate tax reform should offer lower rates
to those companies that create jobs at home rather than
abroad and that limit the divergence between the median wages of workers and the
compensation of the top executives. Instead, Republicans are waging war against
unions and basic worker rights, and CEOs continue to receive million-dollar
short-term incentives to plunder their own
companies.
Starved Public
Investment: All the posturing about cutting government - with the president
bragging about bringing discretionary spending down to levels of the economy not
seen since Eisenhower and Republicans vowing to cut it to pre-industrial levels
- ignores the painful reality that America is starving public investments vital
to its future.
Our dangerous
and decrepit infrastructure costs lives while making our economy far less
competitive. If we are to be a high-wage country, we need to rebuild,
modernizing and hardening our infrastructure to better withstand the extreme
weather that is surely our fate.
We aren’t even doing the basics in education - from universal
preschool to affordable college and advanced training. Instead we’ve decided to use testing and piecemeal privatization to
substitute for investment. It hasn’t and
won’t work.
We should be
doing more, not less, public investment in research and development,
particularly in clean energy and the green industrial revolution that is already
sweeping the world. Some of this
could be achieved from changing priorities - ending obscene
subsidies to Big Oil and Big Pharma, reducing our bloated Pentagon
budgets - but any progress gets sabotaged by the fixation on cutting, not
investing wisely.
Bloated Finance:
Wall Street’s financial wilding inflated the housing
bubble and then blew up the economy, doubling our national debt in the process.
Deemed too big to fail, the big banks were bailed out at the cost of trillions.
Financial reform tried to strengthen accountability, but the big banks have
emerged from the crisis bigger and more concentrated than ever. The financial
subsidy they pocket from the reality that they won’t be
allowed to fail makes it difficult for small banks to compete. The guarantee
also encourages gambling with other people’s
money, for they pocket the winnings confident that we will cover their losses.
Progressive Democrats in the Senate - Sherrod Brown, Jeff Merkley, Bernie
Sanders and others - as well as conservative
Republican bankers and pundits have called for breaking up the big banks. But
this barely registers in the public debate.
President Obama
had it right when he said in his State of the Union address, “We just can’t cut
our way to prosperity.” We need to move beyond the “vast inane” in
Washington if we are to begin even to consider what must be
done to revive the American middle class.
Two years ago,
Occupy Wall Street showed what it took to
“change the conversation,” as
the pundits described it. It will take a much more powerful and disruptive
movement to actually begin to drive the reforms we need.
AN/DT