BOTTOM
LINE
The
true costs of Reagan
and extreme capitalism
by
Sam Smith
Next year will mark the 25th anniversary
of that remarkable moment when this country began to turn its
back on values that had sustained it throughout its first two
centuries - values that included balancing power and wealth with
concern for, cooperation with, and compassion towards others
in the community we called America. In their place came a psychotic
faith in the ubiquitous virtue of the market, a faith almost
creationist in its absence of objective foundation, intellectually
barren when not actually dishonest, and as monomaniacal as the
creed of the religious fundamentalist. Every other aspect of
existence - religion, family, morality, creativity, politics,
community, tradition, ethnicity - was declared merely a byproduct
of the marketplace.
True, America had always been a
highly commercial culture. And it had gone through periods -
such as that of the 19th robber barons or the 1920s - when its
better nature was submerged or perverted by a corrupt culture
of greed, but in these prior instances it had been generally
clear who the true beneficiaries were and there had been little
effort, even by these lucky few, to pretend, for example, that
the luck of the Goulds, Carnegies or Rockefellers were but a
tax cut away from the rest the country.
With Reagan, however, that all changed.
For the first time in our history, the self-serving delusions
of the privileged few became the standard for the whole nation,
propagated in politics, on campuses and in the media. Even liberals
would begin to adopt the language of extreme capitalism. Few
asked for the evidence to support its thesis or examine critically
its deceptive logic.
To give some sense of the cultural
eruption that had occurred, consider some remarks from the 1960s.
The first were delivered in 1964 by Lyndon Johnson:
"The Great Society rests on
abundance and liberty for all. It demands an end to poverty and
racial injustice, to which we are totally committed in our time.
But that is just the beginning. The Great Society is a place
where every child can find knowledge to enrich his mind and to
enlarge his talents. It is a place where leisure is a welcome
chance to build and reflect, not a feared cause of boredom and
restlessness. It is a place where the city of man serves not
only the needs of the body and the demands of commerce but the
desire for beauty and the hunger for community.
"It is a place where man can
renew contact with nature. It is a place which honors creation
for its own sake and for what it adds to the understanding of
the race. It is a place where men are more concerned with the
quality of their goals than the quantity of their goods.
"But most of all, the Great
Society is not a safe harbor, a resting place, a final objective,
a finished work. It is a challenge constantly renewed, beckoning
us toward a destiny where the meaning of our lives matches the
marvelous products of our labor."
That same year, Ronald Reagan had
this to say: "We were told four years ago that 17 million
people went to bed hungry every night. Well, that was probably
true. They were all on a diet." And two years later: "Unemployment
insurance is a pre-paid vacation for freeloaders."
Reagan was still just a brash voice
for the wealthy, the greedy, and the lucky, a Bill O'Reilly with
charm. But by the time he ran for president, the crudity and
the covert cruelty had been transformed into a faith, a philosophy,
and a political platform, in part due to a small group of rightwing
economists and other academics, but mostly thanks to the new
prime minister of England, Margaret Thatcher. As Newt Gingrich
noted, "Margaret Thatcher was the forerunner who made Reagan
possible. The 1979 campaign was the direct model from which we
took much of the 1980 Republican campaign."
Time Magazine would later exude,
"By the mid-1980s, privatization was a new term in world
government, and by the end of the decade more than 50 countries,
on almost every continent, had set in motion privatization programs,
floating loss-making public companies on the stock markets and
in most cases transforming them into successful private-enterprise
firms. Even left-oriented countries, which scorned the notion
of privatization, began to reduce their public sector on the
sly. Governments sent administrative and legal teams to Britain
to study how it was done."
To be sure, Reagan and Thatcher
can not be blamed for everything that followed. For example,
both Clinton and Blair were more effective in destroying their
own party's traditions of social democracy than Reagan had been.
As Gingrich remarked, "in a lot of ways Tony Blair is Margaret
Thatcher's adopted son." Still it was Thatcher and Reagan
that got things rolling. Every president and prime minister,
regardless of party, who followed took their country further
to the right
What Reagan was up to was easily
apparent to the modestly observant. In 1985 Haynes Johnson noted
in the Washington Post:
"His appeal has been to private
instead of public interests, the self instead of selfless interests.
Absent is any call for public service, for common effort, for
shared sacrifice, for actions that extend beyond the gratification
of the individual, for a wise perspective on the experience of
the past and a clear definition of the unmet challenges of the
future. The result of this sort of thinking leads to greater
celebration of selfishness. It means a greater green light for
a new wave of greed so evident in these mid-1980's."
That same year, I wrote:
"I'm worried. I don't think
even the president's critics are taking the Reagan phenomenon
seriously enough. This is not just another bad president we're
facing, but an administration that is attempting a massive revolution
in economics, social and moral values, foreign policy, class
and racial relationships, and civil liberties. . .
"We laugh at its error, hyper-simplicity
and naiveté, but as Goebbels pointed out in 1926: 'There
is no need for propaganda to be rich in intellectual content.'
"I do not propose that Reagan
and his aides are fascists, but I do suggest that they could
well - because of their ignorance, selfishness and egotism -
be leading us into a proto-fascist period in which America would
accept accelerated depreciation of its democratic values based
on the faulty premises so effectively sold by the Reagan crowd.
"Stand back a minute and look
around you. We face a massive deficit and what does our president
want to do to correct it? Increase still further military spending
even at the cost of destroying programs that have been an integral
part of American life for decades. Forget about the issue of
priorities and think what this says about who holds power in
this country. When people starve to feed the military machine,
democracy is in deep trouble. In truth, the Reagan administration
is an attempt to turn the military-industrial combination from
a complex to a full autocracy.
"Part of the problem stems
from the cultural background of the Reagan elite; they are used
to being bosses, they now have the key to executive washroom
of the world, America, and damned if anyone else is going to
get in. This executive suite mentality helps perhaps to explain
why the Reagan people are so abysmal at the ordinary politics
of compromise and negotiation. They're best at telling people
what to do, only now instead of it being a branch manager it's
a senator, an interest group or another once sovereign nation.
Listen to them talking about why they won't help this or that
segment of the population; their rhetoric is that of a CEO announcing
the closing of a plant to improve the profitability of the company.
. .
"We must cast this struggle
in its true nature: the protection of traditionally honored American
values, rights and goals against the would-be usurpation of a
small, wealthy, power-hungry elite that is increasingly turning
this into a government for the few and against the people. The
Reagan administration's big lies must be called what they are.
The hypocrisy and the Orwellian perversion of language must be
hit at every turn. Americans must be reminded that after the
blacks suffer, the poor suffer, the farmers suffer, they are
next. They must learn that the smile on the face of their president
is that of the Cheshire cat. And that they are being politically
robbed of their heritage, their rights and their money.
This was the real Reagan, one that
barely surfaced in his lifetime and had largely disappeared by
the time of his absurd death fest, in no small part thanks to
a media that quickly adopted the icon's language, clichés
and premises. Reagan transformed American politics into show
business and the media was glad to join the cast. The fatuous
banalities passing for sound philosophy or ex cathedra statements
pretending to be arguments passed deep into the mind of America.
Reagan had taught us that truth and reality were no longer important.
One indicator of the power of this
lesson came in a 1996 Nexis search of news media by Norm Solomon.
He found that:
- "Free enterprise" had
been used in 3,489 stories, "free market" in 9,345,
and "property rights" in 6,802.
- "Labor rights," however,
showed up in only 440 stories; "economic justice" in
592; and "economic democracy" in only 38.
- "Welfare reform" was
mentioned in 22,013 stories but "corporate welfare"
in only 2,351 and "corporate welfare reform" only 17
times.
Reagan was still calling the shots
nearly a decade after leaving office.
O
So where has all this left us? To
paraphrase Ronald Reagan, are you better off than you were 25
years ago?
The media doesn't even ask this
question, but if it did here are just a few of things it would
discover, much of it easily retrievable from its own clip files:
- "The traditional pension,
an employee benefit that was widely available until the early
1980's has been vanishing from the American workplace ever since.
More than two-thirds of older households - those headed by people
47 to 64 - had someone earning a pension in 1983. By 2001, fewer
than half did" - New York Times
- In the 1980s about two-thirds
of corporations included health care benefits with their pensions.
Today only about a third do.
- In April 2004, the nation's trade
gap hit a record $48 billion, precisely the sort of thing extreme
capitalism, free trade, and globalization was supposed to prevent.
- The top one percent's share of
household wealth had dropped from 1929 to 1981 from 44% to 27%.
By 1998 it was back up to 39%.
- "The Congressional Budget
Office says the income gap in the United States is now the widest
in 75 years. While the richest one percent of the U.S. population
saw its financial wealth grow 109 percent from 1983 to 2001,
the bottom two-fifths watched as its wealth fell 46 percent"
- CBS
- "[Edward N. Wolff, an economist
at New York University] found that the average net worth of an
older household grew 44 percent, adjusted for inflation, from
1983 to 2001, to $673,000. But much of that growth was in the
accounts of the richest households, which pushed the averages
up. When Mr. Wolff looked at the net worth of the median older
household - the one at the midpoint of the economic ladder, a
better indicator of what is typical - the picture changed. That
figure declined by 2.2 percent, or $4,000, during the period,
to $199,900.
For a generation to emerge from two bullish decades with less
wealth than its parents had 'is remarkable,' Mr. Wolff said.
Based on economic growth and market returns over those 18 years,
he said, their wealth "should be up around 30 or 40 percent."
- New York Times
- Meanwhile, for households of all
ages, between 1983 and 1998 the average household net worth of
the poorest 40% in the U.S. declined 76%.
- "The biggest indicator of
a healthy society - average life expectancy - dropped. People
in the U.S. now don't live even as long as people in Costa Rica.
Meanwhile the U.S. infant mortality rate has risen, so much so
Cuba has a better success rate of bringing healthy children into
the world." - CBS
- In 1983, 50 corporations controlled
most of the news media in America. By 2002, six corporations
did.
- Between 1981 and 1997, children
3-12 spent 25% less time playing, an hour less a week eating
meals, one-half hour less a week sitting and talking with someone
at home.
- The number of Americans without
health insurance climbed 33 percent during the 1990's, according
to the U.S. Census Bureau.
- Farmers in 1999 were getting 36%
less for their products in real dollars than in 1984.
- In 1980 there were less than 500,000
people in prison in the U.S. By 2000 there were two million.
In 1980, 8% of the prisoners were there for drug offenses; by
1998, 28% were.
- Ninety percent of young white
male workers are now doing worse than they would have 20 years
ago. Adjusted for inflation, the income of a recent male high
school graduate declined 28% between 1973 and 1997.
- Wages for the bottom 10% of all
wage earners fell by 9.3% between 1979 and 1999
- Median student-loan debt, 1977:
$2,000. 1997: $15,000
- Ratio of executive pay to that
of a factory worker in 1980: 42 to 1. Ratio of executive pay
to that of a factory worker in 1998: 419 to 1. Annual pay of
a factory worker if it had kept pace with executive salaries:
$110,000
- In 1977, the disclosed wealth
of the top ten senators was $133 million. In 2001 it was $1.83
billion.
- In 1982, U.S. foreign debt was
less than 5% of GDP; by 2002 it was almost 25%
- Between 1973 and 2001, the incomes
of the poorest 20% went up 14%, that of the 20% in the middle
went up 19%, but the richest 5% went up 87%.
- The real value of the minimum
wage peaked in 1969 at over $7 an hour. Its real value is now
at $5 an hour.
- Eighty-six percent of stock market
gains between 1989 and 1997 flowed to the top ten percent of
households while 42 percent went to the most well-to-do one percent.
- In 1998 the top-earning one percent
had as much income as the 100 million Americans with the lowest
earnings.
- Two-thirds of American households
headed by a person between the ages of 47 and 64 in 1998 had
the same pension wealth or less in real dollars than they did
in 1983. Almost 20% of all near-retiree households could expect
to retire in poverty.
- 1973 to 1995 was the only time
in American history that real earnings declined.
- By the turn of the century poor
black families were working 190 hours more a year - and poor
white families 22 hours more -- than in 1979 for roughly the
same pay.
- The two richest men in America
-- Bill Gates and Warren Buffet -- own more assets than the bottom
45% of the country.
o
Economic deterioration is not the
only damage done by a quarter century of extreme capitalism.
Money, after all, is just another form of power, the type you
can carry around in your pocket. Once you accept the idea that
power in one form is its own justification, there is nothing
to stop the principle from extending to every aspect of life.
The elements of extreme capitalism - including winner take all,
damn the damage, zero tolerance for those who can't make you
richer, contempt for activities without monetary profit, disrespect
for the less fortunate - spread like a virus to our communities,
our schools, our police departments, and our foreign policy.
Here is only a partial list of the
other pain that resulted:
- Anti-trust laws, once considered
the great mediator of commercial excess, have been steadily eroded.
- Organized labor has become a mere
shadow of its former self; the rights of workers are damaged
in ways that would have caused national turmoil had they been
attempted when America was still a social democracy.
- Between 1980 and 2000, the U.S.
per capita spending on schools increased 32%. The per capita
spending on prisons grew 189%
- California built 21 prisons between
1980 and 1998; it built just one college.
- From the inauguration of a full-scale
war on drugs in 1985 to 1998, the number of deaths per 100,000
for drug-induced causes almost doubled. In other words, having
a drug war proved twice as deadly as not having one.
- Employers have become notoriously
less loyal to their workers forcing an increasing number to become
economic nomads. This not only creates burdens for the individual
but disrupts the stability of communities.
- Despite the endless talk of free
markets, those doing the talking have jammed Washington with
thousands of additional lobbyists whose job it is to make damn
sure that such free markets don't exist.
- As media has become increasingly
monopolized, the cultural choices of Americans have become more
limited as have the possibilities for artists who might supply
those choices. It is not an accident that America has produced
so little significant art, music, or theater since 1980; extreme
capitalism has no interest in it.
- There has been a massive shift
towards the language of capitalism in all aspects of our conversation
and speech, making our words more clichéd, less meaningful,
less enjoyable, and less human. To an extraordinary degree we
now speak to each as salesmen rather than as fellow citizens.
This makes for a pretty seedy culture, full of insincerity and
deceit while short on cooperation, individual creativity and
shared goals.
- The age of Social Security coverage
is rising as the public is being taught not to expect that either
Social Security or Medicare will continue to serve as they do
at present.
- There has been a dramatic increase
in homelessness.
- Efforts to control individual
rebellions against the banal and life-draining culture of extreme
capitalism have produced increasingly authoritarian, militaristic
and punitive tactics such as the war on drugs, zero tolerance,
and the conversion of public schools into quasi-detention centers.
We drug our students for daring to be restless, the very students
who, in another time, would have become the creators, the thinkers
and the wise that a society so badly needs.
- Advertising has invaded every
aspect of our life making existence increasingly one long commercial.
- Our environment has steadily and
dangerously deteriorated, but extreme capitalism has taught us
not to care and so we approach crises like an oil shortage critically
unprepared.
- Medicine has been converted from
a public service to a corporate exploitive enterprise.
- The number of laws in our society
has exploded, bearing little relationship to population growth,
cultural complexity or any other rational factor. The number
of lawyers have grown with it; in Washington there are nearly
seven times as many attorneys as three decades ago. It now takes
longer, requires more paper, and stirs up more intimations of
liability to do almost anything worthwhile than it once did.
While our rhetoric overflows with phrases like "entrepreneurship"
and "risk-taking," the average enterprise of any magnitude
is actually characterized by cringing caution with carefully
constructed emergency exits leading from every corner of chance.
- Our public school system has steadily
declined, all the more so as corporate and bureaucratic principles
are laid on top of on the very non-corporate business of teaching.
- We increasingly use corporatized
prisons without adequate public supervision and prison slave
labor to serve corporate interests.
- Our voting turnout has declined.
- Corruption, both corporate and
political, has increased to the point that it is no longer deviation
but an assumed part of our culture. We all live in a Mafia neighborhood
now.
- Employing the techniques and goals
of corporate monopolization to our foreign policy we have become
more hated and fearful than at any time in our history. We have
reacted with a spiral of panicked and brutal responses that have
simply made things we worse.
- We have lost interest in our Constitution
and democratic ideals and have made our government serve first
and mainly the interests of our largest corporations. There is
a technical name for this: it is called corporatism or fascism.
None of this has made us happier,
wealthier, healthier, safer or better custodians of this land
to pass on our children. We lack glory, gladness, grace and decency,
having traded them in for tricks, treachery and greed.
This is the bottom line of extreme
capitalism. but placated by Prozac, persuaded by prevarication
and pacified by prohibition, we ignore our drift towards the
mean and the brutish and continue to accept the lie that we are
the better for it.
[Some of the stats
come from an article written by Sam Smith for Tompaine.com]
-2004

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