Filmed and edited by Leigha Cohen
(Noam Chomsky spoke at Third Boston Symposium on Economics on February 10th 2014, sponsored by the Northeastern University Economics Society http://www.northeastern.edu/econsocie... in Boston, MA.)
(Noam Chomsky spoke at Third Boston Symposium on Economics on February 10th 2014, sponsored by the Northeastern University Economics Society http://www.northeastern.edu/econsocie... in Boston, MA.)
Let’s suppose that for some perverse reason, we’re interested in
ruining an economy and a society. So, to
make the problem interesting, we should select a difficult case, I’ll say not a
Central African Republic where it could be done very easily. So let’s pick a
rich and powerful society. And best of all, let’s select the richest and most
powerful society in history, one with incomparable advantages, one that’s
fortunately close at hands, namely, our own.
So, a good way to start to ask what would be signs of a successful
economy. Well, to begin with, it should have a people who are eager to work,
plenty of badly needed work, that should be done, and ample resources to
combine idle hands with needed work. And that picture helps us sketch what a
failed economy would look like, the opposite in all respects. And we don’t have
to look very far. Right here, there are tens of millions of people eager to
work but with no jobs. Many of them have simply dropped out of the work force
in despair. There are ample resources to provide employment but they are hidden
away where they cannot be accessed in the overflowing pockets of the super rich
and corporate sector, in particular, big banks which have been generously
rewarded for having created the crises serious enough to have almost brought
down the domestic and even the global economy. There are vast amounts of work
to be done. The infrastructures collapsing; schools badly need repairs and
teachers, the transportation, energy systems have to be radically reconstructed. And there’s a great deal of more ranging from construction work to scientific
research.
But the system is so dysfunctional that it cannot put eager hands
to needed work, using the resources that would be readily available if the
economy were designed to serve human needs rather than wealth beyond the dreams
of avarice for a privileged few.
It’s actually hard to think of a more serious indictment of a socio
economic system. Well, as you all know, the dysfunctional economy has been
accompanied by very highly concentrated wealth and with it, of course,
political power follows at once from concentrated wealth that, in turn, yields
legislation that drives the cycle forward. Inequality has reached historic heights. In the past decade, 95% of growth has gone to 1% of the population,
actually, to a small proportion of those. Meanwhile the general population has
faced stagnation or decline. Median real income in the United States is below
its level in 1989. For male’s median real income is below what it was in 1968.
The labor share of output has fallen to its lowest levels since World War Two.
And poorer sectors have suffered severely. The United States has the highest
poverty rate in the OECD aside from Turkey. That’s perhaps not too surprising
because the US also ranks near the bottom in measures of social justice in the
OECD.
For African Americans, household wealth has virtually disappeared
during the latest crisis. We should recognize that the grim legacy of slavery
which is one of the original sins of American society along with the virtual
elimination of the indigenous population. That legacy has never been overcome.
There was some amelioration, but not much.
These things didn’t just happen like a tornado. They are the
results of quite deliberate policies over roughly the past generation, the
period of the neoliberal, so-called, assault on population which has had
similar effects elsewhere as well. That’s hardly surprising, either.
The fundamental doctrine of neoliberalism was well expressed by
Adam Smith. What he called “the vile maxim of the masters of mankind.” All for
ourselves and nothing for other people. And if the masters are given free
reign, we should expect the kinds of social and economic disaster that we now
see before our eyes.
Well, there are alternatives. Nobel laureate economist Joseph
Stiglitz points out that “there are alternatives. But we will not find them in
the self-satisfied complacency of the elites, whose incomes and stock
portfolios are once again soaring. Only some people, it seems, must adjust to a
permanently lower standard of living. Unfortunately, those people happen to be
most people.” In short, the vile maxim at work. These developments should not
be confused with idealized workings of capitalism and free markets. On the
other hand, quite the contrary, the policies are carefully designed to protect
the masters from market discipline. That’s always been true back to the 18th
century and to ensure that they can rely on beneficence of the powerful nanny
state that they carefully nurtured for their benefit.
But let’s continue the exercises of figuring out how to ruin an
economy. Suppose we are intent on making the scandal even worse. There are some
good ways to proceed. So, modern economies depend very heavily on R&D,
research and development. Fundamental work comes primarily from the dynamic
state sector on which the advanced economy heavily relies. Almost most of the
IT revolution, biology-based industries and much else. Actually that’s a
pattern that traces far back but it’ s become much more critical since the
Second World War, as impact of science and technology on the society and
economy have greatly expanded.
So, a good way to ruin an economy and a society would be to cut
back on R&D and federal R&D. And we can read about how that is done
from the first issue of the triple-A journal, the American Association for the
Advancement of Science journal, Science the first issue in 2014. Here’s what it
says. “The 2014 budget will continue what has been a “decades-long slide in the
ratio of federal R&D budget to the GDP.” This ratio is often used as a
measure of how much a nation values basic research. This ratio, which has
fallen 25% in the last decade alone. And that’s continuing.”
“In the meantime, elsewhere
internationally, investment in science is rising as nations throughout the
world connect investment in R&D to the development of their human capital
and their future prosperity. For example, the European Union’s flagship
research program, Horizon 2020, is set to receive a nearly 30% boost in 2014.
The Chinese government’s investment in R&D has been increasing by
percentages in the double digits for the last several years and is poised to
become the world leader.”
You can draw the consequences without any comment. What’s happening
here is a very natural development of the imposition of the business model of seeking
short term profit. The future and society, they’re someone else’s business.
Another way to undermine a healthy economy is to encourage the
growth of financial institutions. Giving them free reign by deregulation and
using state power to underprice risk. These are crucial features of the
neoliberal era. From the 1970s and accelerating since, there’s been enormous
expansion of the financial sector in economy. By 2007, right before the latest
crush, it had reached about 40% of corporate profits. Well, economic growth has
continued during this period, though not at the earlier pace. But it’s rather
artificial. It’s sustained by repeated bubbles. The each decade had its
bubbles, savings loan bubble under Reagan, the tech bubble in the late Clinton
years and of course, the housing bubble under Bush. When the last of these
boosts created a financial crisis, it has had severe consequences for much of
global economy and near depression conditions persist for much of the domestic
population. The cost of the latest housing bubble itself, in loss output, was
estimated by the Congressional Budget Office to be around $20 trillion. That’s
largely the fault of the FED, which was mesmerized by quasi-religious doctrines
about efficient markets, and therefore could not comprehend what was very
obviously happening right before their eyes as housing rate rose far beyond
trend lines, going back a hundred years and the bubble that could have been
predicted wasn’t.
Well, the primary mechanism for rewarding the agents of crises is
the government insurance policy known informally as “too big to fail.” That
guarantee goes far beyond the direct bailouts that it extends to cheap credit,
artificially high credit ratings and many other devices. And the scale is huge.
There’s recent IMF study which found that virtually the entire profit of the
major banks traces to tacit government insurance, reaches the level of $83
billion a year according to analyses in the business press, the Bloomburg News.
The insurance policy, of course, leads to underpricing of the risk. Hence,
making the next crisis is more likely.
After the most recent crisis, several prominent economists,
including Nobel Laureates, raised the question of the general impact of
financial institutions in the Casino economy of the neoliberal period. And they
also pointed out that it had not been much studied by economists. They suggest
that inquiry would show that these institutions might be harmful to the
economy. There are some who have gone much farther. So, perhaps the most
respected financial correspondents in the English speaking world is Martin Wolf
of the London Financial Times. He concludes that “an out-of-control financial
sector is eating out the modern market economy from inside, just as the larva
of the spider wasp eats out the host in which it has been laid.”
Well, as in other developed societies, the economy, the US
economy—it’s actually state capitalist economy—but it’s partially market-based
and markets have both positive and negative features. So, that tells another
good way to ruin an economy and a society: undermine the positive features and
amplify the negative features. And in fact, huge resources are devoted to these
tasks. The great benefit of markets is that they’re supposed to provide
consumer choice. It’s only partially true even in principle but put that aside.
This beneficial consequence results from informed consumers making rational
choices as you learned in your economic courses. That’s the core principle of
the markets.
And as you all know, there’s an enormous industry which is devoted
for undermining this principle by creating uninformed consumers who will make
irrational choices. That’s known as the advertising industry. In a functioning
market economy, ads would provide information to consumers about the products
that are available. All you have to do is turn on the TV set to see the goal is
exactly the opposite. It is to undermine markets by delusion and manipulation
making sure that there are uninformed consumers who will make irrational choices.
And in part, these efforts reflect another tendency that undermines
markets, that’s the rise of oligarpoly which has actually advanced considerably
in recent years. That offers opportunities to avoid price wars by tacit
collusion that shifts the goals of business to product differentiation which is
often quite meaningless. And it requires massive advertising to delude
consumers. From en economic point of view, that’s mostly waste and that’s
enormous in scale. Well, these are among the ways to undermine the positive
features of markets.
There’s negative features of markets intrinsic to them called
market efficiency. That’s ignoring externalities. So, when a firm makes a risky
transaction, if it’s paying attention, it takes care to cover its own risk. But
it does not consider systemic risk. That is the risk that the loss will effect
others and maybe bring down the market as, say, when AIG insurers collapsed,
tanking the economy, or actually it would have tanked the economy, if the nanny
state hadn’t ridden to the rescue. Here, the government insurance policy plays
a crucial role in amplifying a harmful feature of markets.
Actually, there’s a much more serious case of ignoring
externalities, namely distraction of the commons. There’s a standard notion
which you have heard called the tragedy of the Commons, which is supposed to
mean that if the commons are held by the general public, they will be
destroyed. So, therefore they have to be privatized. Actually if you take a
look at the facts, the opposite is usually true. It’s privatizing that destroys
the commons and for good reasons.
We should be aware of that today, the most significant case of
destroying the commons is environmental catastrophe. Informed and rational
people can hardly ignore the fact that the drive for short term profits is
leading directly to severe economic threats. And imminent ones are within the
next generation or two, but that’s another externality that is ignored. And in
this case, there’s no one around who can bail out the perpetrators. They can’t
run, cap in hand, to the nanny state and say bail me out. Or the future
generations whose chances of decent survival, they’re placing it at great risk.
Well, a future historian, there may not be one in fact, but if
there is one, such a historian will look back on the current scene with some
amazement. There are some who are trying to impede the threat of environmental
catastrophe. There are others who are devoted to accelerating it. Who are they?
Well, in the forefront of the struggle to overcome the threat are those we call
primitive. The first nations in Canada, indigenous people in Latin America, aboriginals in Australia, tribal communities in India and their counterparts
all over the world. And the leading the latest disaster are the richest and
most powerful countries in the world, the ones that have unique advantages,
primarily the United States and Canada. Canada, in particular, has become the
scrooge in the world with its activities ranging from tar sands to mining
activities that are destroying much of the world. These are countries with
unique advantages and they’re in the lead to the race to destruction.
The suicidal drive is conducted with considerably euphoria in
what’s called the century of energy independence in which North America becomes
the Saudi Arabia of the 21st century. The excitement is scarcely tainted by
reflection on what the world would look like as fossil fuels are consumed with
unrestrained exuberance. There’s even gloating of the fact that Europe is
reducing its efforts to move toward sustainable energy. Reason? It can’t
compete with U.S production based on the cheaper energy that is destroying the
world and a society.
The corporate sector has announced quite openly that it’s carrying
out major propaganda campaigns to convince the public that climate change, if
it’s happening at all, does not result from human activity. These efforts are
aimed at overcoming the excessive rationality of the public which continues to
be concerned about the threats that scientists overwhelmingly regard as near
certain and quite ominous. All of that makes sense, under prevailing ideology
and prevailing institutional structure which is directed towards pursuing the
viral maxim of the masters of mankind. And in this case, it goes well beyond
ruining an economy.
6 comments:
Very Cool...leigha Cohen
Fantastic transcription!
Academic Transcription
That is the risk that (inaudible) effect others...
what I heard:
That is the risk that the loss will effect others...
youtu.be/6mhj-j0z-fk?t=15m42s
"Inequality has reached historical heights."
should have used "HISTORIC" not "HISTORICAL"
Thank you! I'm so sorry for responding so late.
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