The expectations that American, European and Japanese capitalism will 
somehow come out of the current crisis on a stronger and more vibrant 
basis seem grounded more on habits of mind rather than hard reality. It 
is entirely possible that these economies will recover but not on the 
basis described by Engels or Schumpeter. Unemployed auto workers or 
computer programmers cannot be assured of being swept along in a new 
upward cycle. It is entirely possible that the reserve army of the 
unemployed will never be called into action for the 21st century 
equivalent of Ford Motor in the 20s and 30s, or IBM in the 50s and 60s. 
That goes a long way in explaining why there has been a recent drop in 
unemployment as more and more Americans have given up trying to find a 
job. These are members of the reserve army who have simply torn off 
their uniforms and gone AWOL.

full: 
http://louisproyect.org/2012/01/17/mitt-romney-karl-marx-and-the-myth-of-creative-destruction/

---

NY Times Op-Ed October 6, 2013
When Wealth Disappears
By STEPHEN D. KING

LONDON — AS bad as things in Washington are — the federal government 
shutdown since Tuesday, the slim but real potential for a debt default, 
a political system that seems increasingly ungovernable — they are going 
to get much worse, for the United States and other advanced economies, 
in the years ahead.

 From the end of World War II to the brief interlude of prosperity after 
the cold war, politicians could console themselves with the thought that 
rapid economic growth would eventually rescue them from short-term 
fiscal transgressions. The miracle of rising living standards encouraged 
rich countries increasingly to live beyond their means, happy in the 
belief that healthy returns on their real estate and investment 
portfolios would let them pay off debts, educate their children and pay 
for their medical care and retirement. This was, it seemed, the postwar 
generations’ collective destiny.

But the numbers no longer add up. Even before the Great Recession, rich 
countries were seeing their tax revenues weaken, social expenditures 
rise, government debts accumulate and creditors fret thanks to lower 
economic growth rates.

We are reaching end times for Western affluence. Between 2000 and 2007, 
ahead of the Great Recession, the United States economy grew at a meager 
average of about 2.4 percent a year — a full percentage point below the 
3.4 percent average of the 1980s and 1990s. From 2007 to 2012, annual 
growth amounted to just 0.8 percent. In Europe, as is well known, the 
situation is even worse. Both sides of the North Atlantic have already 
succumbed to a Japan-style “lost decade.”

Surely this is only an extended cyclical dip, some policy makers say. 
Champions of stimulus assert that another huge round of public spending 
or monetary easing — maybe even a commitment to higher inflation and 
government borrowing — will jump-start the engine. Proponents of 
austerity argue that only indiscriminate deficit reduction, accompanied 
by reforming entitlement programs and slashing regulations, will unleash 
the “animal spirits” necessary for a private-sector renaissance.

Both sides are wrong. It’s now abundantly clear that forecasters have 
been too optimistic, boldly projecting rates of growth that have failed 
to transpire.

The White House and Congress, unable to reach agreement in the face of a 
fiscal black hole, have turned over the economic repair job to the 
Federal Reserve, which has bought trillions of dollars in securities to 
keep interest rates low. That has propped up the stock market but left 
many working Americans no better off. Growth remains lackluster.

The end of the golden age cannot be explained by some technological 
reversal. From iPad apps to shale gas, technology continues to advance. 
The underlying reason for the stagnation is that a half-century of 
remarkable one-off developments in the industrialized world will not be 
repeated.

First was the unleashing of global trade, after a period of 
protectionism and isolationism between the world wars, enabling 
manufacturing to take off across Western Europe, North America and East 
Asia. A boom that great is unlikely to be repeated in advanced economies.

Second, financial innovations that first appeared in the 1920s, notably 
consumer credit, spread in the postwar decades. Post-crisis, the pace of 
such borrowing is muted, and likely to stay that way.

Third, social safety nets became widespread, reducing the need for 
households to save for unforeseen emergencies. Those nets are fraying 
now, meaning that consumers will have to save more for ever longer 
periods of retirement.

Fourth, reduced discrimination flooded the labor market with the pent-up 
human capital of women. Women now make up a majority of the American 
labor force; that proportion can rise only a little bit more, if at all.

Finally, the quality of education improved: in 1950, only 15 percent of 
American men and 4 percent of American women between ages 20 and 24 were 
enrolled in college. The proportions for both sexes are now over 30 
percent, but with graduates no longer guaranteed substantial wage 
increases, the costs of education may come to outweigh the benefits.

These five factors induced, if not complacency, an assumption that 
economies could expand forever.

Adam Smith discerned this back in 1776 in his “Wealth of Nations”: “It 
is in the progressive state, while the society is advancing to the 
further acquisition, rather than when it has acquired its full 
complement of riches, that the condition of the labouring poor, of the 
great body of the people, seems to be the happiest and the most 
comfortable. It is hard in the stationary, and miserable in the 
declining state.”

The decades before the French Revolution saw an extraordinary increase 
in living standards (alongside a huge increase in government debt). But 
in the late 1780s, bad weather led to failed harvests and much higher 
food prices. Rising expectations could no longer be met. We all know 
what happened next.

When the money runs out, a rising state, which Smith described as 
“cheerful,” gives way to a declining, “melancholy” one: promises can no 
longer be met, mistrust spreads and markets malfunction. Today, that’s 
particularly true for societies where income inequality is high and 
where the current generation has, in effect, borrowed from future ones.

In the face of stagnation, reform is essential. The euro zone is 
unlikely to survive without the creation of a legitimate fiscal and 
banking union to match the growing political union. But even if that 
happens, Southern Europe’s sky-high debts will be largely indigestible. 
Will Angela Merkel’s Germany accept a one-off debt restructuring that 
would impose losses on Northern European creditors and taxpayers but 
preserve the euro zone? The alternatives — disorderly defaults, higher 
inflation, a breakup of the common currency, the dismantling of the 
postwar political project — seem worse.

In the United States, which ostensibly has the right institutions (if 
not the political will) to deal with its economic problems, a 
potentially explosive fiscal situation could be resolved through 
scurrilous means, but only by threatening global financial and economic 
instability. Interest rates can be held lower than the inflation rate, 
as the Fed has done. Or the government could devalue the dollar, thereby 
hitting Asian and Arab creditors. Such “default by stealth,” however, 
might threaten a crisis of confidence in the dollar, wiping away the 
purchasing-power benefits Americans get from the dollar’s status as the 
world’s reserve currency.

Not knowing who, ultimately, will lose as a consequence of our past 
excesses helps explain America’s current strife. This is not an argument 
for immediate and painful austerity, which isn’t working in Europe. It 
is, instead, a plea for economic honesty, to recognize that promises 
made during good times can no longer be easily kept.

That means a higher retirement age, more immigration to increase the 
working-age population, less borrowing from abroad, less reliance on 
monetary policy that creates unsustainable financial bubbles, a new 
social compact that doesn’t cannibalize the young to feed the boomers, a 
tougher stance toward banks, a further opening of world trade and, over 
the medium term, a commitment to sustained deficit reduction.

In his “Future of an Illusion,” Sigmund Freud argued that the faithful 
clung to God’s existence in the absence of evidence because the 
alternative — an empty void — was so much worse. Modern beliefs about 
economic prospects are not so different. Policy makers simply pray for a 
strong recovery. They opt for the illusion because the reality is too 
bleak to bear. But as the current fiscal crisis demonstrates, facing the 
pain will not be easy. And the waking up from our collective illusions 
has barely begun.

Stephen D. King, chief economist at HSBC, is the author of “When the 
Money Runs Out: The End of Western Affluence.”


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