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CrisisPapers Donating Member (271 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 09:59 AM
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Reverse Henry-Fordism
| Ernest Partridge |

There are no sellers without buyers.

That's the first law of practical economics. Everyone knows this to be true, whether or not one has ever taken a course in Economics. Everyone except, apparently, a few Ph.D economists who seem to forget this rule when they are hired by the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, etc., from which they migrate, back and forth, between offices in Republican administrations and these right-wing think tanks.

For these worthies, the "first law" is replaced by the dogmas of deregulation, "trickle-down" and market fundamentalism: impoverish the masses, throw money at the rich who will then invest it, and then "the invisible hand" of the unregulated free market will bring forth a cornucopia of goods and services.

Never mind that there will be few if any buyers for these consumer goodies.

Henry Ford saw the fallacy of such a policy when he raised the wages of his workers. His competitors in the auto industry were aghast. "Why did you do that?," they asked. Ford is said to have replied, "If I don't pay them more, who will buy my cars?"

It took awhile, but Ford was eventually proved to be right. In 1935, in the depths of the great depression, Congress passed the Wagner Act which greatly enhanced the power of labor unions to bargain collectively on behalf of their members. And after World War II, the G.I. Bill allowed millions of returning war veterans to go to college and then to enter the work force as trained professionals. The ranks of the middle class swelled, and as a result of this gain in disposable income, so did the nation's economy. In an ongoing and sustainable economic symbiosis, the investments of the capitalists "trickled down" to increase the worker's productivity, income and purchasing power, which in turn "percolated up" to provide generous returns on these investments. Like the fabled golden goose, this economic arrangement promised a perpetual production of "golden eggs" of shared prosperity.

Then came Reaganomics, which allowed the ruling oligarchs with their insatiable appetites for "more, still more," to dismantle the unions, to cut back workers' salaries and benefits, to ship manufacturing and management jobs overseas, to starve the tax base through loopholes, regressive tax rates, and off-shore incorporations, and to strip the government of its Constitutionally stipulated function of regulating commerce. (Article One, Section Eight). As most citizens have consequently drifted toward poverty and serfdom, and the government has been taken "to the bathtub" to be drowned, the upward "percolation" has been drying up. Rather than protect and perpetuate the economic system that produced their wealth, the privileged class is cooking and devouring the golden goose.

This is how a once-flourishing economy shrivels up and dies: the few who own and control the nation's wealth refuse to share that wealth with the many who produce that wealth.

Ahead lies ruin for rich and poor alike.

For those with eyes to see, and a willingness to see, the consequences of this unconstrained and unregulated greed are apparent and irrefutable: a constriction of the economy which, unless met immediately with decisive and painful countermeasures, must lead to economic collapse. We can expect no such countermeasures from the Bush ("the fundamentals are sound") administration. With the bursting of "the housing bubble," consumer debt has reached its limit: the national credit card is maxed out. Under Bush, the cost of food has doubled, and of gas has tripled. (Neither food nor fuel are counted in Bush's phony Consumer Price Index, which consequently understates the gravity of current inflation). As the average family spends more on necessities such as food, medical care, home heating and transportation to and from work, "luxuries" simply must drop out. No more vacations. Fewer trips to the movies and to restaurants. Fewer purchases of new cars (the old one will have to do for a few more years). Businesses fail, workers are fired, stocks plunge, unemployment rises, the dollar falls, the cost of imported goods (which means, due to outsourcing, most consumer goods) rise. Still less disposable income to pay for higher priced goods and services. More businesses fail, more workers are fired, etc. Down, down, down, goes the spiral.

"No sellers without buyers." It's so obvious, so indisputable, even tautological. How can anyone doubt this fundamental rule of practical economics, much less promote policies that defy it? Answer: because just as history is written by the victors, political/economic dogma is written and taught by those with great wealth and power. And anti-government, trickle-down, market absolutism are the dogmas of those who own and control the nation's wealth: dogmas that Friedrich Nietzsche called "a master morality," and that John Kenneth Galbraith characterized as a "moral justification for selfishness."

History provides numerous examples of such "justifications" by those privileged with wealth and power. Out of the middle ages came the doctrine of "the Divine right" of royalty to rule in luxury. This was supplanted by the Protestant claim that personal wealth was the sign of Divine grace. In the gilded age of the late nineteenth century, the Robber Barons embraced the theory of "social Darwinism;" their wealth proved their superior "fitness" to survive. And now we have the regressive dogmas of Reaganism, of Bushism, and, let's admit it, to some degree at least, of Clintonism: "trickle down," unconstrained capitalism, the wealth of the few as the key to the wealth of all others. "The rising tide" that lifts all yachts, the regressives assure us, lifts the dingys as well.

The fundamental error of "trickle down" economics is not that it is false, but that it is a pernicious half-truth. As noted above, in a healthy economy, investments do in fact yield results that "trickle down" to the benefit of the workers and the public at large. But as Abraham Lincoln correctly noted in his first inaugural address, "Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if Labor had not first existed." Thus "trickled-down" benefits of investment presuppose the "percolated-up" wealth that is produced by labor. An economic theory that touts "trickle-down" benefits of investment to the neglect of the production of labor and the well-being of the workers, is a theory that must fail in its application.

The doctrines of regressive economics - "trickle down," market absolutism, minimalist government - are dogmas in the literal sense of that word: like creationism and dialectical materialism (Marxism-Leninism), they are believed and promulgated independently of evidence and practical experience. If they are applied and fail, there is always an excuse at hand that does not allow a suspicion that the dogma itself may be flawed. In contrast, progressive economics is empirical, experimental and pragmatic: constant in ends, and adaptable in means. As with numerous schemes in FDR's New Deal, the progressive policy is tried and, if it fails, it is discarded and a new approach is attempted, and so on until policy is found that "works." (For an expansion of this point, see my "Beautiful Theory vs. Baffling Reality.").

The public must reject these false dogmas of regressive economics, and the sooner the better; better for both the public in general and for the oligarchs. The longer that these dogmas dictate public economic policy, the greater will be the fall and the greater will be the retaliation of the people against their oppressors.

No untried utopian schemes need to be invented to replace the current kleptocracy. Only a restoration of a system that has proven itself in the past: a regulated capitalism combined with a social democracy dedicated to the welfare of all citizens and founded on the consent of an informed public as manifested in honest, accurate and verifiable elections. And that latter condition presupposes the existence of a free, independent and diverse media, along with a public education system staffed with well-paid, competent and dedicated teachers.

In short, what is required is a return to the liberalism - "the New Deal," "The Fair Deal," "The New Frontier," "The Great Society" - that Ronald Reagan and the regressives have abolished in the past twenty-seven years. The programs and policies of Reagan's liberal predecessors were all imperfect, as are all human endeavors, but unlike the regressive politics of today, these earlier administrations had within themselves the means of adaptation, correction and improvement.

We the people know the way out of the political and economic morass in which we find ourselves. But if we are to escape, we must do so ourselves. We can expect no help from the corporate media or from the politicians of both political parties that have led us into the present crisis.

(Note: These ideas are presented and defended at greater length in "Remedial Economics for Regressives;" Chapter 9 of my book in progress, Conscience of a Progressive).

-- EP
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whistle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 10:06 AM
Response to Original message
1. Correct and repukes want only a small base of sellers and very large bases of buyers
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liberal N proud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 10:09 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. That is where it all falls apart
For the buyers to have the purchasing power, they must be able to earn the money. Small business to large all pay workers a salary that enables them to purchase what they are making or selling.
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AndyTiedye Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 11:12 AM
Response to Original message
3. They Are Not Capitalists
Edited on Tue Jun-17-08 11:12 AM by AndyTiedye
Their favorite customer is the military.
They use their influence to get no-bid contracts.
They use their control of the media to promote endless war.

No free market, no competition.

It is not capitalism anymore when robber barons buy the government.

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unblock Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 12:43 PM
Response to Original message
4. neither "supply-side" nor "demand-side" economic is entirely right or wrong
the key is having a reasonable balance. there are indeed times when there is insufficient capital and onerous restrictions and the supply-side is artificially and counter-productively dampened.

however, this is not one of those times. in fact, we haven't been in one of those times since reagan popularized the concept. today we are awash in capital that has no good place to go, hence the boom-bust cycle as everyone flocks to the latest investment craze. dot-com, real estate, now commodities.

we have such an imbalance that now we need a major demand-push. people are strapped and just working off their debts and can't be the engine they're supposed to be.

trickle-up will work very well, as capital will quickly identify ways to extract any new-found money in the hands of consumers. business will boom as soon as people have some room to breathe.

it's not always the right solution, but it certainly is in these times.
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Ytzak Donating Member (287 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 02:40 PM
Response to Original message
5. The system and the madness they preach is consumerism.
Edited on Tue Jun-17-08 02:41 PM by Ytzak
It has little to do with capitalism, law of supply and demand, or whether a product is needed or not. They are economic policies placing emphasis on consumption. Yes, there are no sellers without buyers. But with the right policies and the right advertisement, and a good knowledge of demographics, people will hock their soul to buy the newest trinket, blouse, pair of shoes, or pet rock. It is easy to create buyers.
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Psyop Samurai Donating Member (873 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 04:56 PM
Response to Original message
6. Excellent..., concise..., bookmarking..., thanks! nt
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johnaries Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 10:59 PM
Response to Original message
7. THANK YOU!
The doctrines of regressive economics - "trickle down," market absolutism, minimalist government - are dogmas in the literal sense of that word: like creationism and dialectical materialism (Marxism-Leninism), they are believed and promulgated independently of evidence and practical experience.


Which is why I've started calling it "Trust Me" economics.
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DCKit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-18-08 09:46 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. Too Funny! "Trust Me" is just too apt. I shudder.
"Blinded by Greed" doesn't begin to describe our corporate overlords. They won't be happy until they've got all the toys, yet fail to realize that once the rest of us are impoverished, there will be no more income.

Where do they think they can go to be safe from a poverty stricken, starving and disenfranchised world populace? We WILL eat the rich - if we have to.
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Daveparts Donating Member (854 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jun-18-08 10:47 AM
Response to Original message
9. The Servants of Pilate
“Religion and government are similar in many ways and yet they are polar opposites. The Christian religion dictates that we must live by faith and that good works alone are not enough; we are saved by grace, of which the cornerstone is our faith. Jesus said, you will know them by their fruits. Good government, however, requires good works, then by your fruits shall we have faith in the government. The Christian religion also requires we live by a code of conduct and a set of laws; that our transgressions are forgiven but not accepted. To live in a free democracy, however, we must accept behavior we don’t like, even if we consider it wrong. For my freedom is dependent on theirs and theirs on mine. I must accept it, whether I forgive it or not.

“These two opposing forces sometimes make it difficult for us balance the scales of justice. All people of good will want only fairness while those whose only God is the shekel seek only advantage. Through this difficulty in the balance, they sow disharmony. They are willing to destroy all that we have built here, in our long history, for mere money. Jesus, the suffering servant of mankind, was sold out for forty pieces of silver so it should not be at all that surprising that the United States, the suffering servant of liberty, would be sold out as well.

“The question before all of us then is, can we recover our balance? Those in our opposition proclaim that we have come to tear down this nation, to destroy, in bloody revolution, all the institutions upon which we have built our greatness. I, for my part, proclaim that we have come not to tear down these institutions but to reestablish them on the foundations already laid out before us, by rights decreed to us by Thomas Jefferson in The Declaration of Independence.

“They say that we are injuring this country by continuing this trauma. I say our country did not achieve greatness by sticking to the paved road. There have been many bumps and wagon ruts along the way. Liberty and democracy are not fragile like an infant that must be protected from every bump and jostle; true democracy thrives on the rough and tumble. For what is fragile is not democracy, but the illusion of democracy.

“If you were to visit the National Zoo, you would see many of the animals displayed in their native habitats. But it is an illusion! It is only the illusion of their native habitat and it is created for you! For the viewer to believe; not the animals, for they know that they are confined and that they are not free. Our founding fathers had legislative bodies, with town halls and court systems. They knew, however, that the final authority was not theirs; it was only the illusion of liberty. They dedicated their lives and fortunes in the fight for true liberty, for they knew that the pale illusion was but a cruel charade.

“Then, like now, the discovery of this illusion demanded action. It is impossible to stay impartial when you discover that you’ve lost your liberty. Are those who oppose us merely content to watch the illusion, like the visitor in the zoo? To see only what is placed before their eyes without questioning what is behind the freshly painted scenery? Unable to understand our anger at what we see as the loss of liberty and wondering why we pace so in our cage?
(John Smith)
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