“Karl Marx
got it right, at some point capitalism can destroy itself,” said Mr.
Roubini, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. “We thought
markets worked. They’re not working.”
The world economy is in shambles and about to get
worse, according to even mainstream economists. How bad is anybody's
guess. Some things, however, are certain: the recovery that politicians
have been promising for years existed only in their heads. The reality
of the situation is now apparent to millions of people across the globe,
who before clung to the empty promises of economic recovery. This new
found consciousness will inevitably find expression in the political
realm and, more importantly, the streets.
A key aspect of this sudden mass awareness is in
response to high unemployment and the deeply unpopular measures that
politicians are forcing upon working people, both byproducts of the
Great Recession. Politicians are blaming "the markets" for demanding
austerity measures, but "markets" are simply places where wealthy people
invest their money. To guarantee a profitable return on their money
these investors demand that labor laws be squashed and social programs
be eliminated, all over the world.
Spain, for example, is one of many countries having austerity measures forced down their throats. Reuters reports:
"’Analysts see the shaking up of the country's
inflexible labor laws [laws that protect workers] and the easing of
hiring and firing [so older, activist, or slower workers can be fired]
as vital to restoring the country's competitiveness. The labor reforms
are crucial. They will help to restore growth [profits] in the long
term. Growth is the only way out of these adverse fiscal trends,’ said
Luigi Speranza, analyst at BNP Paribas." (May 27, 2010).
To summarize, creating new laws that enable Spanish corporations to work their workers harder will be better for profits.
Greece faces a similar austerity plan, according to the Guardian:
"Tax increases, spending cuts, and wage reductions
and a sweeping privatisation programme have led to violent protests in
Greece, with many arguing that the International Monetary Fund and
European Union have demanded too high a price for their financial
support." (August 2, 2011).
In the United States these policies find expression
in the attack against public-sector unions and the targeting of Social
Security, Medicare and Medicaid for cuts, while mass unemployment is
allowed to act as a very efficient way to lower wages for all workers.
Politicians have made it clear that economic growth,
especially corporate profits, will increase in response to these
anti-worker policies. They are only partially right. Corporate profits
in fact have been on the rise, but the austerity measures have been
responsible for the depressed economies throughout Europe and the U.S.
When workers’ wages are lowered and social programs are decimated,
working people and the poor are left with little money for any purchases
other than the bare necessities. Without consumer demand for their
products, corporations curtail operations even more. This global dynamic
has been decades in the making, with the recession having finally
forced the issue into the forefront.
The Reagan and Thatcher administrations were the
first western representatives during the post World War II era of this
now-dominant trend, which aimed at pushing back the social programs and
wages won by the labor movements. Their policies were in response to the
lower corporate growth rates that began in the 1970s and continue to
this day. Now, all of Europe is suffering because banks and corporations
demand a more profit-friendly business environment: universal health
care and education programs are in jeopardy plus wages and other
benefits are under attack.
For the wealthy and corporations this is a life and
death struggle. The Great Recession has already bankrupted the banks and
corporations who were not fit enough to survive under a crumbling
market economy. The existing companies are thus forced to squeeze more
work for less pay out of their workers, since labor is the most flexible
cost of any business. Pushing labor costs down -- and by extension
cutting social programs -- is thus the priority of the corporations and
their paid-for politicians across the globe, since the global economy is
tightly connected and they all play by the vicious rules of the market.
In fact, the intensity with which the corporate elite is pursuing these
policies is a reflection of their negative outlook for the global
economy.
This constitutes a new era in global capitalism, one
that mimics the market economy of past generations. The 2008 recession
was not a temporary phenomenon but the ushering in of a new period in
which the corporate elite attempt to restructure social relations,
meaning that past assumptions regarding wages and social programs must
be destroyed, as a new, more profitable equilibrium is sought between
the corporate elite and working people.
Implied in this nation-by-nation restructuring is a
restriction of democracy, since these anti-worker policies negatively
affect the vast majority of the population. The riots in London are an
expression of this, as are the mass demonstrations throughout Europe as
well as the Middle East. In the United States democracy is circumvented
via the so-called Super Congress, whose duty it is to cut Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security. Austerity programs throughout Europe are
being implemented against the wishes of the general working populations.
Also included in this attack on working people is the
corporate elite's doubled efforts to divert the working class anger
towards fake populist movements -- like the Tea Party in the U.S. -- or
against minorities, such as Muslims and immigrants in the U.S.
This will require that working people stay focused on
who exactly is attacking them, while focusing on measures that can
serve as alternatives to what the corporate elite are forcefully
implementing.
The most immediate and important demand of working
people must be taxing the rich and corporations, since social programs
need to be funded and expanded, and a massive jobs program with a strong
green component is desperately overdue. It's not by coincidence that
taxing the rich is rarely used in austerity plans; and when on rare
occasions the rich are taxed, it's at low levels with high publicity, so
the angry public will think the illusion of "shared sacrifice" is a
reality.
For example, in the U.S. President Obama is again
calling to end the Bush tax cuts for the rich (after allowing them to
continue less than a year ago). It is doubtful that the Bush tax cuts
will be ended, but if they were, it would be insufficient. Working
people must demand that taxes on the rich be raised to at least
pre-Reagan levels (70 percent), while President Eisenhower levels would
be best (90 percent). Over the decades the tax burden has shifted
dramatically, causing wealth to accumulate into the bank accounts of the
top 1 percent of the population, the same people who are now demanding
that social programs be destroyed so that their investments are secured
and their corporate profits remain high.
Since illusions of an economic recovery have now been
shattered, it's up to working people to demand that their labor unions
and community groups unite to tax the rich and corporations in order to
finance a massive jobs program. Fortunately, the AFL-CIO is organizing
actions for the first week of October to demand jobs and oppose cuts to
Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid. Many within the labor movement
are calling for massive demonstrations across the country for October 1.
It will take these types of actions to unite working people to fight
for a positive solution to the economic crisis.