Chomsky on the Bailout: The Roots and History of Financial Liberalisation
Below are some snippets from a Chomsky’s piece in the Irish Times:
The initial Bush proposals to deal with the crisis so reeked of totalitarianism that they were quickly modified. Under intense lobbyist pressure, they were reshaped as “a clear win for the largest institutions in the system . . . a way of dumping assets without having to fail or close”, as described by James Rickards, who negotiated the federal bailout for the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management in 1998, reminding us that we are treading familiar turf. The immediate origins of the current meltdown lie in the collapse of the housing bubble supervised by Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, which sustained the struggling economy through the Bush years by debt-based consumer spending along with borrowing from abroad. But the roots are deeper. In part they lie in the triumph of financial liberalisation in the past 30 years – that is, freeing the markets as much as possible from government regulation.
Such interventionism is a regular feature of state capitalism, though the scale today is unusual. A study by international economists Winfried Ruigrok and Rob van Tulder 15 years ago found that at least 20 companies in the Fortune 100 would not have survived if they had not been saved by their respective governments, and that many of the rest gained substantially by demanding that governments “socialise their losses,” as in today’s taxpayer-financed bailout. Such government intervention “has been the rule rather than the exception over the past two centuries”, they conclude.
Financial liberalisation has effects well beyond the economy. It has long been understood that it is a powerful weapon against democracy. Free capital movement creates what some have called a “virtual parliament” of investors and lenders, who closely monitor government programmes and “vote” against them if they are considered irrational: for the benefit of people, rather than concentrated private power.
Investors and lenders can “vote” by capital flight, attacks on currencies and other devices offered by financial liberalisation. That is one reason why the Bretton Woods system established by the United States and Britain after the second World War instituted capital controls and regulated currencies.*
In dramatic contrast, in the neoliberal phase after the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970s, the US treasury now regards free capital mobility as a “fundamental right”, unlike such alleged “rights” as those guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: health, education, decent employment, security and other rights that the Reagan and Bush administrations have dismissed as “letters to Santa Claus”, “preposterous”, mere “myths”.
“Politics is the shadow cast on society by big business,” concluded America’s leading 20th century social philosopher John Dewey, and will remain so as long as power resides in “business for private profit through private control of banking, land, industry, reinforced by command of the press, press agents and other means of publicity and propaganda”.
“Human Rights: health, education, decent employment, security and other rights”
This is how Chomsky is misleading and dishonest. human ‘rights’ do not mean they have the right to have these things given to them. it just means they have the right TO them,
let me explain.
we can say, we have the right to bear arms. but this does not mean that if you want a firearm, and you can’t afford it, then you have hiaving your rights violated. It means, if you have a firearm, it is not illegal for you to posses it.
so, lets bring this back to Chomsky.
Chomsky can express his opinion that he thinks people should be given education, or that people should have healthcare if they cannot affort it. But to say they are ‘rights’ is not correct.
especially where he shows his support for ‘full employment’ as being a right. this is rediculous. how on earth can this be a ‘right’. it may not be possible to fulfill this right unless other rights are violated.
please read ‘the ethics of liberty’ for a good explanation of ‘rights’.
Firearms are just a little bit different from health care coverage, public education and industrial policies that create jobs… I think.