Corporate capital has pulled the plug on America

http://peoplesworld.org/corporate-capital-has-pulled-the-plug-on-america/



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by: Sam Webb
November 23 2010

tags: capitalism, economy, globalization, public workers, education, ultra-right

The conventional wisdom is that corporate capital has an enduring
commitment to science, education, transportation, health and
nutrition, public amenities, urban development, equal opportunity, and
more. Business executives are considered solid citizens as well as
savvy investors. We are told that they are interested in the
modernization of the state, economy, and society as well as their own
enterprises.

There was at one time a grain of truth to this portrayal of the
corporate class. Coming out of World War II, a broad alliance, with
U.S. corporations occupying a dominant position, expanded the public
sector, trained a skilled workforce, steadily improved wages and
social benefits, renovated the infrastructure, built a national system
of interstate highways, invested in public education, struck down the
most egregious barriers of racial exclusion, and promoted vigorous
economic growth.

Corporate capital's principal reason for being was still
profit-making, but its profit-making strategy was tethered to the
modernization of the domestic economy, state and society.

To a degree, it was a win-win situation insofar as both the
corporations and the people gained, even though very unequally, from
this arrangement. The socialist Michael Harrington, in an analysis of
this era, wrote:

"The welfare state was thus not simply the result of socialist and
liberal conscience and working class struggle. It was also a function
of a capitalist socialization process, a way of allowing the system to
absorb the enormous productivity of the new forms of collective
labor."

But the arrangement didn't last. By the mid-1970s, this commitment of
significant sections of the corporate elite began to fray, and then in
the decades that followed it came apart at the seams, as the
transnational corporations, with the assistance of right-wing
extremists occupying powerful positions in government, drastically and
negatively restructured the state, economy and society.

By the first decade of this century, the effects were apparent.

On one side we have experienced a historically unprecedented shift of
wealth and power to the moneybags on Wall Street and across America.

On the other side, we have seen the deterioration of infrastructure,
the destruction of the social safety net, the undermining of the
public school system, the decay of urban and rural communities, the
privatization of public assets, the growth of poverty and inequality,
the hollowing out of the manufacturing sector and massive loss of
jobs, the dismantling of regulations on corporate misbehavior, the
lowering of workers' wages, the lifting of barriers inhibiting
international capital flows, the imposition of unfair trade
agreements, and a faltering - now stagnant - domestic economy.

It isn't pretty!

What explains the change of heart of big sections of the transnational
corporate class? Why did they pull the plug? Are they meaner than
capitalists and wealthy families of the previous era? Perhaps, but
that really doesn't answer the question.

The explanation in my view lies in the evolution, dynamics and profit
imperatives of the world economy over the past three decades.

The markets, supply of exploitable labor, and investment strategies of
U.S. transnational corporations are worldwide in scope now.

Their production sites stretch across regions and time zones, thanks
to new technologies that, in effect, reduce time and distance (think
Internet).

That doesn't mean that domestic production sites, consumption markets
and workforces are of no consequence, but their importance to the
transnational masters of the world is far less today. Unlike in the
early postwar period, the corporate planning unit is a world economy,
now cluttered with powerful foreign-based corporations and new state
competitors like China and India.

This being so, the commitment of major sections of the transnational
elite to a people-friendly public sector, a vibrant national economy
and a modern society has waned in recent decades. In fact, this elite
is turning the state into its personal ATM machine and a military
juggernaut to enforce its will at home and abroad. It's not an
exaggeration to say that this social grouping has become a parasite
sucking the life out of our government, economy and society, while
living in bubbles of luxury, racial exclusion and class privilege and
exploiting labor globally.

This new reality has ominous implications for the future of the American people.

It doesn't alter the strategic necessity of defeating right-wing
extremists, whose plan is to regain complete control of the federal
government in 2012.

Why? Because, in the midst of the deepest economic crisis since the
Great Depression, this supposedly "neo-populist" political bloc (tea
partiers and their far-right Republican allies) is leading the charge
for, doing the dirty work of, that grouping of the transnational
corporations.

So we have to keep at it - maybe make some adjustments to take into
account the objective basis for broadening and deepening the people's
coalition. Let's also keep in mind: the stakes couldn't be much
higher, both now and in 2012.

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