The United States and the
New Century
excerpted from the book
Wealth and Democracy
a political history of the
American rich
by Kevin Phillips
Broadway Books, 2002, paper
p405
Lance Packard, The Ultra-Rich (1989)
The fact that free enterprise remains
the most successful method of stimulating economic growth does
not mean it requires a reward system that creates and sustains
increasingly grotesque accumulations of family wealth... They
have the potential of being hazardous politically. And in a democratic
society, they are becoming inexcusable socially
p405
U.S. Senator Bill Bradley, 1996
Money not only determines who is elected,
it determines who runs for office. Ultimately, it determines what
government accomplishes-or fails to accomplish. Congress, except
in unusual moments, will listen to the 900,000 Americans who give
$200 or more to their campaigns ahead of the 259,600,000 who don't.
Real reform of democracy, reform as radical as those of the Progressive
era and deep enough to get government moving again, must begin
by completely breaking the connection between money and politics.
p405
Lewis Lapham, Harper's (2001)
How else to describe the new (2001) administration's
legislative agenda-elimination of the inheritance tax, revision
of the bankruptcy laws, the repeal of safety regulations in the
workplace, easing of restriction on monopoly, etc. except as an
act of class warfare? Not the aggression that Karl Marx and maybe
Ralph Nader had in mind, not the angry poor sacking the mansions
of the rich, but the aggrieved rich burning down the huts of the
presumptuous and troublemaking poor.
p411
Turn-of-the-millennium efforts by the U.S. economic and opinion-
l molding elites to build a new global governmental and legal
system pushed far beyond the previous high-water marks of transnationalism-
the expansions resting on the maritime, naval, and colonial frameworks
of the Spanish, Dutch, and British. Under the American flag, by
contrast, corporations have been out in front because, since the
nineteenth century, it has been their lot-as the ultimate vehicles
of U.S. ingenuity and acquisitiveness-to play many of the expansionist
roles previously associated with the Spanish church, the Dutch
merchant marine, and the British navy. This may slight the quasi-governmental
importance of the Dutch and British East India companies, but
no other major nation has matched the United States for the overall
centrality of private corporations (including banks) in its economic
growth and political life.
p413
Corporate power retreated during the Progressive and New Deal
eras ... and then again between the mid-1960s and late 1970s.
The early twenty-first century should see another struggle because
corporate aggrandizement in the 1980s and 1990s went beyond that
of the Gilded Age-the parallels of political corruption and concentrated
wealth-to frame issues of abandoning American workers, communities,
and loyalties. It is not hard to imagine a twenty-first-century
debate over a more sophisticated economic version of the old East
German offense of republikflagt - flight from the nation.
The erosion within the United States of
popular and national sovereignty, some of it tied to corporate
behavior, also crystallized as a concern between 1995 and 2000.
Public influence shrank as unelected experts became ever more
prominent in national decision-making. Judges and the Federal
Reserve Board enlarged their roles while corporate and bank influence
over Congress and the White House climbed in tandem with the dollar
totals of huge federal campaign contributions and lobbying outlays.
Voters began to understand themselves to be on a seesaw-popular
influence fell as that of the economic elites rose.
Loss of national sovereignty has become
a popular concern. The small bits of jurisdiction given to international
organizations before the 1990s never became a national issue,
save to the political fringe. That changed between 1993 and 1995
as the enactment and implementation first of the North American
Free Trade Agreement and then of the framework and mechanics of
the World Trade Organization seemed to push democratic precepts
aside ... the term "democratic deficit" emerged in scholarly
articles and press coverage as the transnational deliberations
of NAFTA, the WTO, and the European Union began to yield rulings
that set aside local and national legislation and regulatory decisions
from North America to Southeast Asia. In Washington the well-established
Center for Strategic and International Studies questioned the
full legitimacy of rules promulgated by elites "quite removed
from the political process."
Rearranging layers of government to suit
themselves, as U.S. corporations did during the Gilded Age, helped
trigger the Progressive response and era. It confirmed how corporations,
allowed to grow too big and powerful, could become what Henry
Demarest Lloyd assailed in his book Wealth Against Commonwealth.
A century later, corporate-keynoted globalization was becoming
the new social Darwinism. Survival of the fittest had jumped onto
an international stage. This time, global law and regulation,
not domestic overinterpretation of the U.S. Constitution, was
expected to favor the economic lions and suppress social and environmental
priorities-a startling reenactment of the techniques damned a
century earlier by Progressive critics.
Parallel late-1990s public arousal came
as a shock just weeks before the century's end. The many trade
officials and corporate executives gathering for the WTO "Millennial
Round" of meetings in Seattle in December 1999 were stunned
as thousands of activists blocked meeting hall entrances chanting,
"We don't want you. We didn't elect you. And we don't want
your rules."
p421
... the popular reactions in mid-eighteenth-century Holland and
early-twentieth-century Britain against opulent aristocratic and
financial elites raise a different possibility: the emergence
during the first third of the twenty-first century of a U.S. radicalism
seeded by economic and political pessimism. We have seen how a
portion of the Dutch people, seeking a return to lost values,
mounted a "Patriot Revolution." Major elements of the
British population, seething against wealth and unfairness, used
the new Labor Party to build a British welfare state-worker and
lower-middle-income circumstances improved markedly-around the
much higher tax rates imposed by war and politics on the upper
and upper middle classes.
In Globalization and History, economists
Kevin O'Rourke and Jeffrey Williamson make the point that pre-1914
globalization came to an end when "a political backlash developed
in response to the actual or perceived distributional effects
of globalization." A gathering trend toward capital controls,
immigration restraints, tariffs, and abandonment of the gold standard,
together with democratic enfranchisement and the rise of the welfare
state, operated to tilt economics toward "deglobalization"
and increased emphasis on equality for some three to four decades
after 1918. Inequality did reverse in the rich nations, and the
two men suggest that such forces may be building again: "The
record suggests that unless politicians worry about who gains
and who loses, they may be forced by the electorate to stop efforts
to strengthen global economy links, and perhaps even to dismantle
them."
Belief that Americans faced with the onset
of decline would not be radical ignores both the polarization
and wealth concentration of the eighties and nineties and the
vein of recurring hostilities noted in chapter 10. The crash of
2000-2001 added a new layer of potential popular recrimination:
that of individuals against corporations and the financial sector
alike for insider dealings and false assurances, accompanied by
a new politics of personal finance that demands recompense and
regulatory safeguards. Abuses were identifiable well before the
stock market implosion.
Beyond proposals for wealth taxes and
curbs on corporate salaries ... potential radicalism could respond
to several peculiarly American situations. To begin with, high
taxes on the assets, incomes, or consumption patterns of the rich-or
all three-could be used in the twenty-first century to fund the
late-twentieth-century promises of entitlements like Social Security
and Medicare. Inheritance taxation, rather than being ended, could
be rearranged to diminish wealth concentration in a new way: by
taxing individuals on their cumulative inheritances over a certain
amount rather than collecting from decedents' estates. Some left-leaning
groups have urged federal rather than state chartering of corporations
as well as an end to interpretations that entitle corporations
to the protection of individual persons under the U.S. Constitution.
In Britain, changes that seemed impossible in 1902 or 1904 became
serious discussions in 1909, law in 1913, and were supplanted
by even tougher statutes in 1919 or 1938.
Economic nationalism, in turn, could be
pursued to make the United States more self-sufficient again,
imposing import duties to recapture the U.S. internal market for
domestic producers and workers. Despite the poor prospects for
long-term success, attempts could find reward at the ballot box.
The United States, as a dominant continental power with a large
and rich domestic market, is better placed to follow such a strategy
than maritime-periphery nations like the Dutch and British ever
were.
If economic trauma has stimulated radicalism,
so has war, both directly and indirectly. The immediate effects
have usually been to divert reform, to submerge divisions in patriotism
and temporary unity. But at a certain point in each leading world
economic power's history, as we have seen, some major war proves
too burdensome, economic prospects and divisions worsen, and the
politics of frustration takes a critical leap forward.
As the twenty-first century gets underway,
the imbalance of wealth and democracy in the United States is
unsustainable, at least by traditional yardsticks. Market theology
and unelected leadership have been displacing politics and elections.
Either democracy must be renewed, with politics brought back to
life, or wealth is likely to cement a new and less democratic
regime-plutocracy by some other name. Over the coming decades,
American exceptionalism may face its greatest test simply in convincing
the American people to continue to believe in its comfort and
reassurance.
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