There have been rumblings in
the corners of the Tea party movement for some time, but the minute president
Obama announced that he was going to ask wealthy Americans to kick in a small
bit more in taxes to help pay for some infrastructure improvements in his jobs
proposal, the Republicans have been clutching their pearls and gasping for
breath like Aunt Pittypat awaiting the arrival of the marauding Yankees.
GOP leader Rush Limbaugh
called for the smelling salts, saying "If [Obama] would get all of this
actually passed, it would represent perhaps a fatal blow to the US private
sector ... I don't know how anyone could even argue about the fact that this is
on purpose anymore. To boldly lie that it's not class warfare? It is class
warfare. Specifically and purposefully class warfare."
Republican economic guru
Paul Ryan dolefully declared, "Class warfare may make for good politics,
but it makes for rotten economics. We don't need a system that seeks to divide
people. We don't need a system that seeks to prey on people's fear, envy, and anxiety."
Indeed. What could be more destructive to the average American than to ask the
upper one per cent to kick in what amounts to tip money? The guilt they will
feel at such unfairness is bound to create a profound spiritual crisis
throughout the land.
A false hope
One would have thought that
in 2011, the term "class warfare" would be as out of fashion as Nehru
jackets, but after watching the Republicans spend the first two years of
Obama's presidency apoplectic over what they defined as hard core socialism put
in practice, it stands to reason the old standard would make a comeback. No
matter what you call it, rich people complaining about taxes is evergreen. It
is also completely ridiculous.
The fact is that the
mega-rich have been gobbling up a greater and greater share of the national
wealth for several decades now: in 1976 the top 1 per cent of households
received 8.9 per cent of all pre-tax income - by 2008, its share had more than
doubled to 21.0 per cent. Between 1979 and 2009, the top 5 per cent of American
families saw their real incomes increase 72.7 per cent, according to Census
data. Over the same period, the lowest-income fifth saw adecrease in
real income of 7.4 per cent (by contrast, the 1947-79 period all income groups
saw similar income gains, with the lowest income group actually seeing the
largest gains). And perhaps most astonishingly, the tax rate for the highest
earners was 91 per cent in 1960, 70 per cent in 1980 and only 35 per cent
today, the lowest ever with the exception of a couple of years in the late 80s
and early 90s.
And it's not as if these
people have been suffering during this recession. Unlike the bottom 99 per
cent, they've quite smartly recovered from the 2008 unpleasantness. For
instance, according to a recent New York Times report,
executive pay at 200 big US
companies last year went up by an average 23 per cent over 2009 - the median
executive salary was 10.8m USD. Meanwhile, the average American family's
household net worth declined 23 per cent between 2007 and
2009.
Considering this somewhat
ostentatious disparity, one would think that those who are doing well would
decide to lay low and quietly count their money so as not to draw undue
attention to their good fortune. One might even have expected them to take up
good works and be especially generous in order to deflect the anger and
resentment that any sentient being could see might result from such blatant
unfairness. But no. They have instead waged a public campaign of extravagant
whining, complaining incessantly that they are being scapegoated for the
nation's economic ills and throwing tantrums at the mere suggestion that they
might need to contribute a little bit more in taxes to make up for the carnage
their bad bets left in their wake.
The mega-rich balk back
It started early on in the
crisis, when Jake de Santis an executive for the bailed out too big to fail
insurance company AIG took to the pages of the New York Times to
complain that he was being treated unfairly and so was going to give his $750,000
annual bonus away and then quit his job. Evidently, he expected people
to feel sorry for him.
Since then we have been
treated to regular scoldings from the masters of the universe (for our own
good, mind you.) JP Morgan Chase chairman Jamie Dimon famously declared,
"When I hear the constant vilification of corporate America , I
personally don't understand it. I would ask a lot of our folks in government to
stop doing it because I think it's hurting our country". Blackstone Group
Chief Executive Officer Steven Schwarzman said, "Financial institutions
will feel under siege and they will retreat. Their entire world is being shaken
and they're being attacked personally. We don't need those financial
institutions insecure."
Just last month yet another
anonymous finance executive sniffed to The Hill, "It's
not healthy for rich people to feel maligned."
It's only a matter of time
before these poor victimised millionaires seek some sort of anti-discrimination
protection.
"Few can believe that suffering, especially by others, is in vain. Anything disagreeable must have beneficial economic effects."- JK Galbraith
It's easy to make light of
all this - they are just that silly. But the truth is that in the age of Citizens
United, these complaints carry a great deal of weight with both
political parties. After all, as Willie Sutton said about banks: they are where
the money is. The irony is that the more the politicians pander to these
besieged plutocrats, the deeper the country's problems become. Their bizarre
insistence on austerity in the face of 10 per cent unemployment is making
things worse for everyone, including themselves.
Martin Wolf the economics
editor of the Financial Times, explained "premature fiscal
tightening is, warns experience, as big a danger as delayed tightening would
be. There are no certainties here. The world economy - or at least that of the
advanced countries - remains disturbingly fragile. Only those who believe the
economy is a morality play, in which those they deem wicked should suffer
punishment, would enjoy that painful result." Somehow, the Very Serious
People have managed to turn the blame back on the people, insisting that it's
the average workers who have created America's economic woes with their fat social
security checks and extravagant old age medical care. Combined with their
irresponsible willingness to take the mortgages the banks were begging them to
take, it's a strong indictment. So they must be taught a lesson - the debt
shall be laid at their feet so that they will never again make the mistake of
thinking that they are better than they ought to be.
Return of the protesters
The problem is that it's not
at all clear that the people are willing to be the sin-eaters in this crisis.
Having just lost their nest eggs, still reeling from debt, unemployed or career
stymied they aren't anxious to sign on to austerity schemes that will make them
even more insecure. Being required to do it on the orders of those who caused
the problem in the first place - the same people who have recovered quite well
and insist that they are far too valuable to waste their time paying for
government - is not sitting well.
The polls show that large
majorities believe the wealthy should pay more in taxes and that the social safety
net should not be sacrificed on the alter of the deficit. They want the
government to intervene to create jobs. Those sentiments have been stable
throughout the crisis and yet the people's wishes are ignored. As a result they
are becoming more and more disillusioned with the system. And they are starting
to take to the streets.
It's too soon to know if the
nascent Occupy Wall Street movement will grow or if it will have staying power.
Who knows if the protesters will be able to endure the police responses or
stave off the inevitable infighting. Perhaps it will break into sub groups or
morph into something else entirely. But the focus on Wall Street alone should
be enough to make the 1 per cent take pause and question their assumptions.
When you have everyone from students to airline pilots looking to the same
institutions as the source of their woes, it's time to take a look in the
mirror (or a position in pitchforks.)
Is this a class war? Yes,
probably. And it's one of those really long wars, the kind that goes on
forever. But in this latest battle, there's little doubt who fired the first
shot. When the financial crisis hit, the Masters of the Universe evaded
responsibility and defiantly demanded more sacrifice from their victims. They
enlisted their favoured politicians to hold the people hostage and then
complained about being unloved despite their crimes. They have won all the
early skirmishes - but the people are gathering their forces and starting to
fight back.
"The top 1 per cent have the best houses, the best educations, the best doctors, and the best lifestyles, but there is one thing that money doesn't seem to have bought: an understanding that their fate is bound up with how the other 99 per cent live Throughout history, this is something that the top 1 per cent eventually do learn. Too Late."Joseph Stiglitz
Heather Digby Parton
writes the liberal political blog Hullabaloo. You can read her blog here.
There's been a lot of talk about "class warfare," but I think the ubiquitous class structure labels (lower, middle, upper) are losing their usefulness (especially considering the incredible shrinking middle class) for helping us understand our economic differences and conflicts. I suggest we try these class categories: Dependent, Working, Rich, Crazy Rich. Right now the Crazy Rich are causing a lot of damage to our economy. I explain further at http://www.ragingwisdom.com/?p=79
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