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The Rise and Fall of Neoliberal Capitalism David M. Kotz Harvard University Press February, 2015 1 The Golden Age of Capitalism 2 Homelessness after 1980 3 Three Puzzles 1. Why had the previous form of capitalism been replaced by a harsh new form? 2. Why had long-discredited free-market economic ideas returned? 3. How could a capitalist economy bring sustainable economic expansions if wages stagnate or fall? 4 Outline 1. What is the contemporary form of capitalism, that arose around 1980? 2. Why did it arise? 3. How has it worked? 4. Why did it give rise to a big financial crisis and Great Recession in 2008? 5. What lies ahead? 5 Neoliberalism as Ideas only 6 Broader Meaning of Neoliberalism Neoliberalism is a coherent, mutually reinforcing set of economic and political institutions, together with supporting dominant ideas. The coherence of the institutions of neoliberalism is their support for the predominant role of market relations and market forces in the regulation of economic activity. 7 Neoliberalism: Capital Fully Dominates Labor 8 Location of Neoliberal Institutions Global economy State-economy relation Labor market Corporate sector 9 Examples of Institutions of Neoliberal Capitalism Globalization Deregulation Weakening of social regulation Privatization and contracting out of public goods and services Cutbacks in social programs Tax cuts for business and the rich Marginalization of collective bargaining Casualization of jobs Unrestrained competition Market principles penetrate inside corporations Financialization 10 Neoliberal Capitalism and the Capital Accumulation Process Neoliberal capitalism -- and the previous regulated capitalism -- are institutional structures that promote and stabilize the process of capital accumulation. History shows a sequence of such “social structures of accumulation” emerging and, after one or a few decades, eventually is replaced by a new institutional structure. 11 Big Business Representatives Affiliated with the Committee for Economic Development,1944 Champion Paper Coca-Cola Eastman Kodak Fidelity & Casualty Co General Foods Goldman, Sachs & Co Hormel Foods J. P. Morgan & Co. Quaker Oats R.H. Macy and Company Scott Paper Studebaker Union Pacific Railroad Co. 12 Big Business Representatives Affiliated with the Committee for Economic Development, 1948 Allegheny Ludlum Steel Anderson, Clayton and Co Arkansas Power & Light Company Bankers Trust Company B. F. Goodrich Bristol-Myers Bausch and Lomb Optical Champion Paper Chicago, Indianapolis & Louisville Railway Cincinnati Street Railway Company Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company Coca Cola Colgate-Palmolive Continental Insurance Co Corning Glass Works Crown Zellerbach Eastman Kodak Federated Department Stores Ford Motor General Electric General Foods General Mills Goldman, Sachs & Co Hormel Foods International Harvester J.P. Stevens Lehman Brothers Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass National Broadcasting Co New York Life Insurance Co. Northern Pacific Railway Company Northwest Bancorporation Owens-Illinois Glass Pennsylvania Railroad Company Philco Procter & Gamble Quaker Oats R. H. Macy Scott Paper Shell Union Oil Co Sinclair Coal Company Texas Power and Light Company United Air Lines 13 CED on Collective Bargaining "To compensate for the weakness of their individual bargaining position, wage earners need the right to combine into organizations for collective bargaining.“ – 1944 “America cannot afford industrial strife… It would put in jeopardy not only the attainment of our domestic goals of high production and employment but the existence of our free economy as well.” -- 1947 “International peace and prosperity depend, to a large degree, upon the achievement of industrial peace and prosperity in this country.” -- 1947 14 CED on Keynesian Policy “Constructive policies respecting taxation and public expenditure … and enlightened control over credit and money can greatly retard or prevent excessive swings of the business cycle….” and maintain “the flow of buying power needed to sustain high level of employment and productivity” – 1946 “…monetary and fiscal policies are essential functions of government ... [that] encourage or discourage financial expansion." -- 1948 15 CED on Social Programs The federal government “should continue to provide…a program of … unemployment insurance and old-age pensions – for the benefit of those who are unable to work or … are for any reason unable to find sufficiently remunerative employment to protect themselves against want. Such individual protection against hazards should be extended as rapidly as possible.” – 1944 16 New View of Trade Unions Henry Ford II in 1946 stated that the corporation had "no desire...to turn back the clock...We do not want to destroy the unions" Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952: “I have no use for those -regardless of their political party -- who hold some foolish dream of spinning the clock back to days when unorganized labor was a huddled, almost helpless mass.... Today in America unions have a secure place in our industrial life. Only a handful of unreconstructed reactionaries harbor the ugly thought of breaking unions. Only a fool would try to deprive working men and women of the right to join the union of their choice. 17 Why Big Business Supported Regulated Capitalism 1) Big business had been unable to crush organized labor and decided to strike a deal 2) Fear that the great depression would return 18 Fear that Depression Would Return “This generation, after the worst depression … in our history, knows that our economy can have great fluctuations of production, employment and prices.” “We also know what the costs of extreme swings in business conditions are: … ● the resulting deep sense of injustice and frustration; ● the growing receptivity to futile or dangerous ideas that appear to promise relief from all ills…” (emphasis added) – 1948 CED document. 19 Why Big Business Supported Regulated Capitalism 3) Strength of Socialist and Communist parties in the Developed capitalist countries. 4) Emergence of a large bloc of Communist Party ruled states. 20 Selected Business Roundtable Members, 1972 and 1979 Allied Chemical Corporation*+ Aluminum Company of America* American Can Company*+ American Electric Power Company* AT&T+ Atlantic Richfield Company*+ B.F. Goodrich+ Bank of America+ Bethlehem Steel Corporation*+ Burlington Industries, Inc.*+ Burlington Northern, Inc.*+ Campbell Soup Company*+ Champion International Corp.*+ Chase Manhattan Bank*+ Chrysler Corporation*+ Citibank*+ Coca Cola+ Consolidated Edison* Corning Glass Works*+ Crown Zellerbach Corp.*+ Dow Chemical Company*+ E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company*+ Eastern Air Lines*+ Eastman Kodak Company*+ Exxon Corporation*+ Federated Department Stores, Inc.*+ * Member in 1972 + Member in 1979 Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.*+ Ford Motor Company*+ General Dynamics Corporation*+ General Electric Company*+ General Foods Corp.*+ General Mills, Inc.*+ General Motors Corporation*+ Gulf Oil Corp.*+ International Harvester Company*+ International Nickel Co.*+ International Paper Co.*+ J.C. Penney Co., Inc.*+ J.P. Stevens+ Kennecott Copper Corporation*+ Mobil Oil Corporation*+ Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of N.Y.+ Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc.+ Procter and Gamble+ R.H. Macy & Co., Inc.*+ Scott Paper Company*+ Sears, Roebuck and Co.*+ Shell Oil Company*+ Texas Power & Light Co.* United Aircraft Corp.* United States Steel Corporation*+ 21 Business Roundtable Reports late 1970s 1977 report called for tax cuts for business to spur investment. 1979 report called for cuts in social security benefit levels with more reliance on private savings for retirement income. 1979 report criticized cost to business of social regulations. 1979 report proposed that the finding of an “adverse health effect” from bad air quality should be limited to conditions resulting in “permanent damage or incapacitating illness.” 22 Business Roundtable Reports 1981 “The business community feels strongly that all four parts of the economic recovery plan [Reagan Administration’s plan for cuts in social spending, tax cuts, regulatory reduction, and tight monetary policy] are essential, interrelated, and must be acted upon...” “An economic crisis confronts the American people and requires far-reaching changes in economic policy.” 23 Right Wing Think Tanks Expenditures in Million of Dollars 1970 1980 American Enterprise Institute 0.9 9.7 Hoover Institution 1.9 5.7 Heritage Foundation NA 5.3 2.5 20.7 5.5 9.2 Total Brookings Institution 24 Political Donations 1964: More big business donations go to Lyndon Johnson than to Barry Goldwater. Johnson won an overwhelming victory over Goldwater in the 1964 presidential election. 1980: Big business donations go overwhelmingly to Ronald Reagan. Reagan defeated the incumbent President Jimmy Carter. 25 Figure 3.4. Rate of Profit in the U.S. Nonfinancial Corporate Business Sector 18% 16% 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 26 1) Effect of Declining Rate of Profit Business Roundtable slide show 1973: “After-tax profits peaked in 1966 ... but declined sharply in the ensuing period of cost-squeeze” “Starting in 1966 ... unit labor costs accelerated sharply, and the aftermath was excessive inflation and a severe profit squeeze.” 27 2) Expansion of Social Regulation Starting in late 1960s government social regulation expanded greatly: 1) Environmental regulation 2) Occupational safety and health regulation 3) Consumer product safety regulation This was not part of the original bargain. 28 More Reasons Why Big Business Supported Neoliberal Restructuring by the late 1970s 3) Intensifying international competition put pressure on big business to cut wages, taxes, and costs of complying with government regulation. 4) The Great Depression came to appear as a historical accident, and perhaps a result of government mistakes rather than any problem of the capitalist economy. 29 Role of Free-Market Ideas Free-market theory claimed deregulation of business and markets, privatization, and tax cuts for business and rich “investors” would benefit everyone. These measures would unleash saving and investment, creating jobs and leading to faster growth. Everyone would benefit. 30 A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats (large and small) 31 Average Annual GDP Growth Rate, U.S. 4.5% 4.0% 4.0% 3.5% 3.0% 3.0% 3.0% 1973 - 1979 1979 - 2007 2.5% 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% 0.5% 0.0% 1948 - 1973 32 Personal Saving as a Percentage of Disposable Personal Income 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0% 33 Investment in Two Periods 10% 9.0% 9% 8% 7.3% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3.6% 3.0% 3% 2% 1% 0% 1948-73 Average Rate of Capital Accumulation 1979-2007 Net Private Investment as a Percentage of Net Domestic Product 34 Consumer Spending as a Percentage of GDP 72% 70% 68% 66% 64% 62% 60% 58% 35 Three Developments in Neoliberal Capitalism 1) Increasing inequality 2) Asset bubbles 3) Financial institutions’ risky behavior 36 Annual Growth Rates of Wages and Salaries and Corporate Profit 6% 5.3% 5% 4.5% 4.2% 4% 3.3% 3.0% 3% 2% 1.7% 1% 0.4% 0.1% 0% 1948-1966 1966-1979 1979-2007 2000-2007 Wages and Salaries Corporate Profits 37 Percentage Increase in Average Real Family Income for Quintiles and the Top 5% 140% 131.4% 120% 103.0% 112.6% 108.6% 99.6% 100% 86.7% 80% 74.0% 60% 51.7% 40% 28.2% 18.0% 20% 0% 11.0% 0.6% Lowest fifth Second fifth Third fifth Fourth fifth Highest fifth 1948 to 1973 Top 5 percent 1979 to 2007 38 Income Shares of the Richest 1% and Richest 0.1% as a Percentage of Total Income, 1920-2007 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Top 1% Top 0.1% 39 The Rising Tide Lifted only Some Boats 40 House Price Index Relative to Homeowners’ Equivalent Rent 160 150 140 130 120 110 100 41 Three Unsustainable Trends Three developments three trends unsustainable over the long run 1) Rising levels of household and financial sector debt 2) Toxic financial assets spread throughout the financial system. 3) Growing excess productive capacity 42 Debt of Sectors of the U.S. Economy as a Percentage of GDP, 1948-2007 140% 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% Financial Sector Debt Nonfinancial Corporate Sector Debt Household Sector Debt 43 Outstanding Value of CDOs in the Global Economy, Billions of US Dollars $1,600 $1,400 $1,200 $1,000 $800 $600 $400 $200 $0 44 Capacity Utilization in Manufacturing for Business Cycle Peak Years 90% 87.7% 88% 86.6% 86% 84% 81.7% 82% 80.1% 79.7% 80% 78.6% 78% 76% 74% 72% 1960 1969 1973 1990 2000 2007 45 Explaining the Crisis of 2008 Three Developments Structural Crisis Three Trends Rising Inequality Rising Household and Financial Sector Debt Falling Consumption Great Recession Neoliberal Institutions Asset Bubbles Financial Institutions’ Risky Behavior Spread of Toxic Financial Assets Excess Productive Capacity Real Estate Bubble Deflates Falling Investment Financial Crisis Financial Institution Insolvency 46 What Lies Ahead? The U.S. economy and much of the global economy are stuck in a structural crisis. Austerity policy represents an attempt to double down on neoliberalism – but it cannot work as it did before 2008. History suggests that stagnation will continue unless and until there is major institutional restructuring. 47 Three Possible Directions of Restructuring 1) Statist, nationalist form of capitalism 2) Regulated capitalism based on capital-labor compromise 3) Transition to an alternative socialist system 48 The Rise of a Strong Popular Movement? If strong a strong popular movement arises, the capitalists might be pushed to compromise, leading to another period of regulated capitalism. However, either statist or regulated capitalism would bring another long period of relatively rapid GDP growth. This would likely destroy civilization due to global climate change. 49 Socialism If a strong popular movement arises, this will open the possibility of transition beyond capitalism. A socialist system can bring rapid output growth but it need not do so. A planned economy in developed countries could bring increasing economic welfare with declining production of goods. Socialism would mean an economy that exists for working people rather than the other way around. 50