If you think we're done with neoliberalism, think again
The global application of a fraudulent economic theory brought the west to its knees. Yet for those in power, it offers riches
George Monbiot
The Guardian, Monday 14 January 2013 20.30 GMT
How they must bleed for us. In 2012, the world's 100 richest people
became $241 billion richer. They are now worth $1.9 trillion: just a
little less than the entire output of the United Kingdom.
This is not the result of chance. The rise in the fortunes of the
super-rich is the direct result of policies. Here are a few: the
reduction of tax rates and tax enforcement; governments' refusal to
recoup a decent share of revenues from minerals and land; the
privatisation of public assets and the creation of a toll-booth economy;
wage liberalisation and the destruction of collective bargaining.
The policies that made the global monarchs so rich are the policies
squeezing everyone else. This is not what the theory predicted.
Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman and their disciples – in a thousand
business schools, the IMF, the World Bank, the OECD and just about every
modern government – have argued that the less governments tax the rich,
defend workers and redistribute wealth, the more prosperous everyone
will be. Any attempt to reduce inequality would damage the efficiency of
the market, impeding the rising tide that lifts all boats. The apostles
have conducted a 30-year global experiment, and the results are now in.
Total failure.
Before I go on, I should point out that I don't believe perpetual
economic growth is either sustainable or desirable. But if growth is
your aim – an aim to which every government claims to subscribe – you
couldn't make a bigger mess of it than by releasing the super-rich from
the constraints of democracy.
Last year's annual report by the UN Conference on Trade and Development
should have been an obituary for the neoliberal model developed by Hayek
and Friedman and their disciples. It shows unequivocally that their
policies have created the opposite outcomes to those they predicted. As
neoliberal policies (cutting taxes for the rich, privatising state
assets, deregulating labour, reducing social security) began to bite
from the 1980s onwards, growth rates started to fall and unemployment to
rise.
The remarkable growth in the rich nations during the 50s, 60s and 70s
was made possible by the destruction of the wealth and power of the
elite, as a result of the 1930s depression and the second world war.
Their embarrassment gave the other 99% an unprecedented chance to demand
redistribution, state spending and social security, all of which
stimulated demand.
Neoliberalism was an attempt to turn back these reforms. Lavishly funded
by millionaires, its advocates were amazingly successful – politically.
Economically they flopped.
Throughout the OECD countries taxation has become more regressive: the
rich pay less, the poor pay more. The result, the neoliberals claimed,
would be that economic efficiency and investment would rise, enriching
everyone. The opposite occurred. As taxes on the rich and on business
diminished, the spending power of both the state and poorer people fell,
and demand contracted. The result was that investment rates declined,
in step with companies' expectations of growth.
The neoliberals also insisted that unrestrained inequality in incomes
and flexible wages would reduce unemployment. But throughout the rich
world both inequality and unemployment have soared. The recent jump in
unemployment in most developed countries – worse than in any previous
recession of the past three decades – was preceded by the lowest level
of wages as a share of GDP since the second world war. Bang goes the
theory. It failed for the same obvious reason: low wages suppress
demand, which suppresses employment.
As wages stagnated, people supplemented their income with debt. Rising
debt fed the deregulated banks, with consequences of which we are all
aware. The greater inequality becomes, the UN report finds, the less
stable the economy and the lower its rates of growth. The policies with
which neoliberal governments seek to reduce their deficits and stimulate
their economies are counter-productive.
The impending reduction of the UK's top rate of income tax (from 50% to
45%) will not boost government revenue or private enterprise, but it
will enrich the speculators who tanked the economy. Goldman Sachs and
other banks are now thinking of delaying their bonus payments to take
advantage of it. The welfare bill approved by parliament last week will
not help to clear the deficit or stimulate employment: it will reduce
demand, suppressing economic recovery. The same goes for the capping of
public sector pay. "Relearning some old lessons about fairness and
participation," the UN says, "is the only way to eventually overcome the
crisis and pursue a path of sustainable economic development."
As I say, I have no dog in this race, except a belief that no one, in
this sea of riches, should have to be poor. But staring dumbfounded at
the lessons unlearned in Britain, Europe and the US, it strikes me that
the entire structure of neoliberal thought is a fraud. The demands of
the ultra-rich have been dressed up as sophisticated economic theory and
applied regardless of the outcome. The complete failure of this
world-scale experiment is no impediment to its repetition. This has
nothing to do with economics. It has everything to do with power.
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