Thomas Palley representing the American centre-left.

Paul P

Markets And the Common Good
Copyright Thomas I. Palley

Like a modern-day Rip Van Winkle, there are indications that the
Democratic Party may finally be awakening from its long slumber and
realizing it lacks a compelling identity. That lack of identity is
especially clear regarding the economy, and it contrasts with
Republicans who have long emphasized free markets.  The current moment
of Republican unraveling offers Democrats an historic opportunity to
close this identity gap and change the direction of American politics.

The Republican free market message resonates with deep-seated cultural
attachments to individualism and freedom, and their message tacitly
treats free markets as identical to society. Democrats should
challenge this message with one about “markets and society,” meaning
that markets should serve both individuals and society. Whereas free
markets are especially good at promoting the interests of individuals,
there are important societal interests (such as democracy and
community) that they fail to address and may actively harm. That calls
for institutions other than markets to represent those interests, and
also for thoughtfully balancing markets with society’s other
interests.

For most of the past 30 years voters have regarded Republicans as the
party they feel most comfortable with managing of the economy. This
standing has enormously benefited Republicans in both elections and
their ability to determine the daily economic policy agenda. The
public is not made up of policy experts and people have neither the
time nor the willingness to become informed on technical economic
policy issues. Thus, the party that gains the public’s confidence and
frames the economic debate has a huge advantage. It is consistently
given first mover advantage and the benefit of the doubt, while the
party on the outside must always defend before it can propose.

Now, due to a combination of failed policies and policy excess, the
continuation of Republican economic policy dominance is an open
question. The economic recovery following the last recession has been
the weakest since World War II. And most importantly, there may be
increasing support for the belief that the Republican Party is less a
party of small government and efficient markets and more a party of
profits for big business and tax relief for the super-wealthy.

These developments create a momentous opportunity for Democrats, but
at this stage they face a choice between a Phoenix and cuckoo
response. One would imitate the Phoenix, a mythical bird that
periodically incinerates itself to emerge revived and regenerated from
the ashes. The other would imitate the cuckoo, which lays its eggs in
the nests of smaller birds and has them raise its offspring in place
of the original eggs.

The cuckoo strategy is being pressed by new Democrats who aim for a
softer version of the current policy program, inaugurated by Ronald
Reagan in 1980. According to this strategy, Democrats should use the
current moment to occupy the economic policy nest created by
Republicans and redecorate it. This would involve continuing with the
themes of budget austerity, free trade, and deregulated markets that
Republicans pioneered. However, these themes would be softened by
“compassionate” initiatives like greater income supports for the poor
and tax incentives to help low paid workers save.

Significant steps in line with such a strategy have already been taken
by former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, who has established his
Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution. The goal is to build an
intellectual infrastructure that can be paired with the political
expertise of the former Clinton administration, thereby establishing
policy hegemony within the Democratic Party.

In sharp contrast, a Phoenix strategy would build on the progressive
legacy of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal and Harry Truman’s Fair Deal,
bringing back to life the economic logic and vision that inspired
them. This is a far more difficult enterprise that not only aims to
wrest control of the policy debate, but also to redirect it. Instead
of merely making minor adjustments to the Republican framework, a
Phoenix strategy would dramatically alter understandings of the nature
of markets and their relation to society.

Changing the understanding of markets is key. Economic conservatives
have hoodwinked Americans into accepting a view of the economy that
saddles them with economic fatalism. Compare this to the
Roosevelt-Truman era, when people believed the economy could be shaped
by policy. The conservative lie is that “natural” market forces mean
little can be done about low wages, disappearing pension and health
benefits and degenerate competition predicated on international
outsourcing. This is Margaret Thatcher’s infamous TINA--there is no
alternative. It is untrue. Changing tax laws, the method of providing
health insurance, the conduct of monetary policy and the rules
governing corporations, labor markets and international trade can
transform the market into a force for race to the top progress rather
the race to the bottom exploitation.

Labor Democrats, African-Americans and immigrants constitute the
natural core constituency of a Phoenix strategy since these groups are
dealt the worst hand and face the most blighted future under the
current policy regime. However, that constituency must be broadened to
include middle class America if it is to sustain lasting political
victory. This can be accomplished because questions about the nature
of markets and their relation to society are central to all Americans.
Not only is individual economic well-being at stake, so too are values
regarding family and community.

A successful Phoenix strategy cannot rest on taking from the top draw
a list of policy proposals cobbled together over the past 20 years.
Instead, it will require a clear articulation of the purpose of
society and the relation of markets to society. In short, the
development of a philosophy in which markets serve society, rather
than society serving markets, is necessary. Out of this statement and
vision can then flow a new progressive policy agenda in which all
elements are mutually reinforcing.

This is exactly what radical conservatives accomplished 40 years ago
with their capstone notion of free markets, which, in turn, drove
policies of free trade, deregulation, attacking unions and small
government. The conservative philosophical trick was to assert the
existence of natural free markets and then claim an identity between
markets and the interests of society. That trick worked well, but the
fallacy of its assumptions is now showing up in the corruption in
political markets and the gross inequities evident in markets more
generally.

A markets and society agenda resonates strongly with themes that run
deep in America’s identity. Americans are committed to individualism
and freedom, but they are also committed to democracy and country.
Markets speak to individualism and freedom. Society speaks to
democracy and the common-good embodied in country. That is an agenda
that can trump the conservative position that deregulated free markets
are all that is needed.








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