http://www.pww.org/index.php/article/articleview/13769/


OPINION: Finances and the current crisis: How did we get here and what is the 
way out? Part 1

Author: Sam Webb 
People's Weekly World Newspaper, 09/27/08 20:49   

  
If there were such a thing as a perfect economic storm, I would say we are 
close to it. 

The housing crisis continues and shows no sign of ending; credit and money 
markets are either churning or freezing up; the stock market is gyrating; 
unemployment is leaping upward (sharply so in the communities of the nationally 
and racially oppressed); poverty is up and wages are down; oil and food prices 
are climbing; the value of the dollar is falling sharply compared to other 
currencies; the level of indebtedness is astronomical and will be difficult to 
unwind in the near term. And we sit on the edge of a financial collapse with 
all the accompanying dislocation and hardship that it would bring. 

Falls on working people 

While we are for the stabilization and the restoration of the orderly 
functioning of financial markets, we advocate a plan that not only restores 
market liquidity, but also addresses the pressing crisis on Main Street and 
revives the overall economy. 

Unfortunately, I don’t think that such a plan is in the offing. A bargain 
appears to have been struck between Bush and Paulson and leaders of both 
parties. It is better than what was initially proposed, but does little to 
stimulate the economy or attend to the crisis of everyday living experienced by 
millions of ordinary Americans - who, it should be said, played by the rules. 
In fact, the plan goes in the opposite direction - it asks the American people 
to pony up to the tune of $700,000,000,000 even though they had no hand in 
causing this crisis. 

The main opposition at this point is from conservative Republican House members 
and John McCain who, quiet as it is kept, propose in their plan to give 
billions to Wall Street in the form of tax breaks and are allergic to stiff 
regulatory measures. Few Democrats and especially progressive Democrats, 
including Barack Obama, are happy with the outcome, but they don’t see any 
alternative at this point. 

Whether Democrats should have held out for a better deal will certainly be 
debated. I believe they should have, but from their viewpoint a gun was at 
their head; the elections, which they are likely to win, are in a few weeks; 
and the possibility of a complete meltdown of our financial markets can’t be 
simply ruled out. 

Despite the opposition, I expect that a final settlement will be reached soon. 
In the meantime, the labor-led people’s movement should press its views and 
organize protest actions. It is obvious that McCain, standing on the grounds of 
“putting the country first,” will try to exploit the understandable anger of 
millions of Americans in hopes that this anger will propel him into the White 
House. Thus the larger movement must continue to expose his demagogy, as we 
struggle for a far better settlement. 

In any event, the struggle continues. 

One line of needed action is to contain the housing crisis. As long as it 
continues, the overall economy will continue its slide downward and markets 
will continue to churn. The easiest thing is for the government to announce and 
enforce a moratorium on forecloses, debt forgiveness, and a renegotiation of 
mortgage terms going forward. 

Another is to pass a stimulus bill of a half trillion dollars, paid for by 
repealing the Bush tax cuts and a special tax on financial transactions and 
institutions. 

Still another is to impose a new regulatory environment on financial markets, 
including making illegal certain kinds of financial instruments and financial 
players, like hedge funds. 

A fourth is to rapidly end the Iraq war and to initiate a peace process in 
Afghanistan that helps the people of that country. The Afghan people are 
exhausted by endless war and at the same time the American people are learning 
again that occupations don’t work and are very costly. 

Finally, a debate over the merits of public takeover of our financial and 
energy complex is in order. Can our country, given the challenges we face now 
and into the 21st century, afford to allow these industries to remain in the 
hands of profiteers? Wouldn’t our country be better served if they were in the 
public trust and operating in the interest of the public welfare? 

Only a single skirmish 

We should see this struggle over the bailout package as a skirmish, albeit an 
eventful and seismic one, but a skirmish nonetheless in a protracted struggle 
that labor and its allies can win. We should also appreciate the new 
ideological and practical opportunities obtained at this juncture of the class 
and democratic struggle. 

Indeed, it is fair to say that the prevailing ideologies and practices that 
have driven U.S. capitalism for the past three decades have run up against 
their own contradictions and conjured up new and old oppositional forces both 
domestically and internationally. Viewed broadly, what we are seeing is a 
massive ideological, political and economic defeat for U.S. capitalism. 

Financialization, financial-led globalization and neo-liberalism are not yet 
corpses. But their future is very problematic, although I would add that 
history tells us that discredited ideologies and practices never exit from the 
stage voluntarily. They have to be pushed, and pushed by a new political 
coalition that commands broad-based support, is united in action, and possesses 
the skills to construct a people’s alternative. But isn’t such a coalition, of 
which we are a part, forming before our very eyes? 

Moreover, this coalition is ready to strike the first and absolutely necessary 
blow in a few weeks, that is, to elect Barack Obama and bigger majorities in 
the House and Senate by a landslide. 

If people haven’t enough reasons to join this effort, the current implosion on 
Wall Street and the new constraints it will place on the federal budget should 
give them reason to roll up their sleeves and get the job done on Election Day. 
Let’s be clear - the importance of this election has exponentially grown 
because of events of recent weeks. 

>From another angle (and I am not going to develop this point here), the 
>implosion of U.S. financial markets has delivered a debilitating body blow to 
>the hopes of U.S. imperialism for unrivaled hegemony in the 21st century. When 
>combined with the Iraq disaster, the worldwide anger over global 
>neo-liberalism and structural adjustment policies, and the emergence of new 
>global powers in nearly every region of the world - China in the first place, 
>it signals a new stage in the hegemonic crisis of U.S. imperialism and the 
>final chapter of a unipolar world. 

Giovanni Arrighi, a world systems theorist, says that at the end of what he 
calls a systemic cycle of capitalist accumulation, leading hegemonic states 
invariably pursue a path of financial expansion, and its aim is to re-inflate 
its declining powers. The Dutch pursued this path in the 17th century to be 
followed by the British in the 19th and early 20th century - successfully for a 
while, but in the end to no avail. Both eventually lost their leading position 
in the world capitalist economy and were replaced by another hegemonic state 
that established the rules, conditions and institutional framework for capital 
accumulation and system-wide governance. 

Much the same fate, according to Arrighi, now awaits U.S. imperialism. The only 
question that Arrighi doesn’t answer is: will U.S. imperialism adapt peacefully 
to new world realities or will it engage in, to use his words, a policy of 
“exploitative domination” to maintain its standing in the world? Bush tried the 
latter, but failed and will leave the White House in January completely 
discredited. 

Interwoven with longer-term processes 

While the present turbulence was triggered by mountains of borrowing on thin 
capital reserves, predatory lending, dubious and risky financial products like 
credit default swaps and collateralized debt obligations, deregulation, a 
shadow financial market and bubble economics, it is also the outgrowth of 
longer-term processes that account for the new dynamics of financial markets 
and go back to the mid-70s. 

At that time, the U.S. economy was stumbling along, battered by the combination 
of inflation, high unemployment, slow economic growth and a declining rate of 
profit across U.S. industries. The confluence of these conditions prompted Paul 
Volcker, then chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank, to drive up interest rates 
(the Volcker shock) to nearly 20 percent (the Russians were not the first to 
experience shock therapy). Not surprisingly, this spike in interests rates 
reined in inflation, restored confidence in the dollar (investors are adverse 
to holding dollars when inflationary pressures are eroding its value), and 
attracted mobile capital around the globe to U.S. financial and real estate 
markets. 

It also generated an unprecedented shift of wealth in favor of the very 
wealthiest families and financial institutions and set off an explosion in the 
financial sector in terms of its size, scope of activities, debt obligations 
and players. 

At the same time, rising interest rates slowed down the economy, big swathes of 
industry shut their doors permanently, union jobs were lost, wages stagnated, 
the social safety net was hollowed out, entire communities nearly collapsed, 
non-financial corporations were weakened, and the working class and labor 
movement were thrown on the defensive and have remained there since. Not since 
the Great Depression has productive capital been destroyed, living standards 
driven down, and the relative strengths of competing financial and 
non-financial corporations reshuffled so fast and so broadly. 

Much the same was occurring in the newly industrializing countries and the 
global South. In these countries finance-led globalization was responsible for 
massive drops in living standards, astronomical indebtedness to U.S. banks, 
privatization of industries and services, currency devaluations, and 
unconscionable poverty. It was the convergence of these conditions that set 
into motion the eruption of political movements in Latin America that are 
either winning or contesting for state power. 

Of course, it took more than shock therapy in the form of high interests rates 
to effect changes of this magnitude. If Volcker struck the first blow, it was 
the Reagan administration entering the White House less than a year later that 
was the main political agent of this upheaval in ideology, politics and 
economics. 

The Reagan counterrevolution 

At the ideological level, the Reaganites said that government is best that 
governs least; that markets are self-correcting, efficient and a fair 
distributor of wealth; that income inequality is a good and natural thing; that 
deregulation and privatization are the best fix for what ails the private and 
public sector; that we lived in a post-civil-rights era where affirmative 
action had no place; and that tax cuts for the rich trickle down to working 
people, thereby lifting all boats. 

At the political level, the Reaganites framed the agenda of struggle and 
employed state power in its varied forms with a ruthlessness seldom seen. 
Remember PATCO - the air traffic controllers union that Reagan crushed early in 
his first term. 

Finally, at the economic level, the Reaganites dismantled much of the old 
Keynesian model of capital accumulation and economic governance at the state 
and corporate level - a model that had its origins in the New Deal and was 
sustained and expanded by successive administrations in the next three decades. 
It rested on a measure of class compromise, societal obligations, formal 
equality and expansive macro economic policies that favored broadly shared 
prosperity. 

In its place, they constructed a new model of accumulation and economic 
governance, popularly called neo-liberalism. In contrast to the preceding 
model, its main features included flexible production networks on a global 
scale, union busting, deregulation, low-wage labor, low inflation, the free 
flow of goods, services and capital, the shrinkage and privatization of the 
public sector, the re-embedding of racist and sexist practices into the economy 
and state, the restructuring of the state’s role and functions (not withdrawal 
from the state, as some incorrectly suggest), and, not least, the reassertion 
of finance. 

It is against this backdrop that I will discuss financialization in Part 2. (To 
read Part 2, click here.) 

Sam Webb (swebb @ cpusa.org) is chairperson of the Communist Party USA. 







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