Made in the U.S.A.: Socialism for the Rich. Capitalism for the Rest.
Once we take care of the pandemic, we need
to sort this out.
Opinion Columnist
I understand why Democrats are fuming.
Donald Trump ran
up budget deficits in his first three years to levels seen in our
history only during major wars and financial crises — thanks to tax cuts,
military spending and little fiscal discipline. And he did so prepandemic, when
the economy was already expanding and unemployment was low. But now that Joe
Biden wants to spend more on pandemic relief and prevent the economy from
tanking further, many Republicans — on cue — are rediscovering their deficit
hawk wings.
What frauds.
We need to do whatever it takes to help
the most vulnerable Americans who have lost jobs, homes or businesses to
Covid-19 — and to buttress cities overwhelmed by the virus. So, put me down for
a double dose of generosity.
But, but, but … when this virus clears, we
ALL need to have a talk.
There has been so much focus in recent years
on the downsides of rapid globalization and “neoliberal free-market groupthink”
— influencing both Democrats and Republicans — that we’ve ignored another, more
powerful consensus that has taken hold on both parties: That we are in a new
era of permanently low interest rates, so deficits don’t matter as long as you
can service them, and so the role of government in developed countries can keep
expanding — which it has with steadily larger bailouts, persistent deficit
spending, mounting government debts and increasingly easy money out of Central
Banks to finance it all.
This new consensus has a name: “Socialism for the rich and capitalism for the rest,” argues Ruchir Sharma, chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, author of “The Ten Rules of Successful Nations” and one of my favorite contrarian economic thinkers.
“Socialism for the rich and capitalism for
the rest” — a variation on a theme popularized in the 1960s — happens, Sharma
explained in a phone interview, when government intervention does more to
stimulate the financial markets than the real economy. So, America’s richest 10
percent, who own more than 80 percent of U.S. stocks, have seen their wealth
more than triple in 30 years, while the bottom 50 percent, relying on their day
jobs in real markets to survive, had zero gains. Meanwhile, mediocre
productivity in the real economy has limited opportunity, choice and income
gains for the poor and middle class alike.
The best evidence is the last year: We’re in the middle of a pandemic that has crushed jobs and small businesses — but the stock market is soaring. That’s not right. That’s elephants flying. I always get worried watching elephants fly. It usually doesn’t end well.
we raise taxes on the rich and direct more
relief to the poor, which I favor, when you keep relying on this much stimulus,
argues Sharma, you’re going to get lots of unintended consequences. And we are.
For instance, Sharma wrote in July in
a Wall Street Journal essay titled “The Rescues Ruining
Capitalism,” that easy money and increasingly generous bailouts fuel the rise
of monopolies and keep “alive heavily indebted ‘zombie’ firms, at the expense
of start-ups, which drive innovation.” And all of that is contributing to lower
productivity, which means slower economic growth and “a shrinking of the pie
for everyone.”
As such, no one should be surprised “that
millennials and Gen Z are growing disillusioned with this distorted form of
capitalism and say that they prefer socialism.”
In the 1980s, “only 2 percent of publicly traded companies in the U.S. were considered ‘zombies,’ a term used by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) for companies that, over the previous three years, had not earned enough profit to make even the interest payments on their debt,” Sharma wrote. “The zombie minority started to grow rapidly in the early 2000s, and by the eve of the pandemic, accounted for 19 percent of U.S.-listed companies.” It’s happening in Europe, China and Japan, too.
And it’s all logical. Prolonged and
increasingly generous bailouts, where governments are willing to buy even
corporate junk bonds to prevent foreclosures, added Sharma, “distort the
efficient allocation of capital needed to raise productivity.”
The past few years should have been an era
of huge creative destruction. With so many new cheap digital tools of
innovation, so much access to cheap high-powered computing and so much easy
money, start-ups should have been exploding. They were not.
“Before the pandemic, the U.S. was
generating start-ups — and shutting down established companies — at the slowest
rates since at least the 1970s,” wrote Sharma. “The number of publicly traded
U.S. companies had fallen by nearly half, to around 4,400, since the peak in 1996.”
(The number of start-ups has increased in the pandemic, but that may be because
so many businesses closed.)
Alas, though, big companies are becoming
huge and more monopolistic in this easy money, low interest rate era. It is not
only because the internet created global winner-take-all markets, which have
enabled companies like Amazon, Google, Facebook and Apple to amass cash piles
bigger than the reserves of many nation-states. It’s also because they can so
easily use their inflated stock prices or cash hordes to buy up budding
competitors and suck up all the talent and resources “crowding out the little
guys,” Sharma said.
Meanwhile, he added, as governments keep
stepping in to eliminate recessions, downturns no longer play their role of
purging the economy of inefficient companies, and recoveries have grown weaker
and weaker, with lower productivity growth. So it takes more and more stimulus
each time to prop up growth.
This is all actually making our system
more fragile.
Now that so many countries, led by the U.S., have massively increased their debt loads, if we got even a small burst of inflation that drove interest on the 10-year Treasury to 3 percent from 1 percent, the amount of money the U.S. would have to devote to debt servicing would be so enormous that little money might be left for discretionary spending on research, infrastructure or education — or another rainy day.
Sure, we could then just print even more
money, but that could threaten the status of the dollar as the world’s reserve
currency and raise our borrowing costs even more.
So, yes, yes, yes — we must, right now,
help our fellow citizens, who are hurting, through this pandemic. But instead
of more cash handouts, maybe we should do it the way the Koreans, Taiwanese,
Singaporeans, Chinese and other East Asians have been doing it — cash
assistance to only the most vulnerable and more investments in infrastructure
that improve productivity and create good jobs. The East Asians also focus on
making their governments smarter, particularly around delivering things like
health care, rather than bigger — one reason they have gotten through this
pandemic with less pain.
Biden plans a big infrastructure package
soon. He totally gets it. I just hope that Congress, and the markets, don’t
have debt fatigue by the time we get to the most productive medicine:
infrastructure.
Going forward, how about more inclusive
capitalism for everyone and less knee-jerk socialism for rich people.
Economies grow from more people inventing and starting stuff. “Without
entrepreneurial risk and creative destruction, capitalism doesn’t work,” wrote
Sharma. “Disruption and regeneration, the heart of the system, grind to a halt.
The deadwood never falls from the tree. The green shoots are nipped in the
bud.”
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