<http://montages.blogspot.com/2007/11/time-between-ashes-and-roses.html> A Time between Ashes and Roses
Observing that a majority of capitalists have abandoned the Republican Party for the Democratic Party (58% of campaign contributions have gone to Democrats and 42% to Republicans so far), Doug Henwood, the editor of the Left Business Observer, notes in his interview with Il Manifesto (Marco d'Eramo, "Primarie Usa: Pioggia d'oro sui candidati democratici," Trans. Yoshie Furuhashi, 4 November 2007, p. 3):
«L'unica soluzione -- conclude Henwood -- sarebbe per i
democratici un grande piano di opere pubbliche, visto che
le nostre infrastrutture -- ponti, strade, ferrovie, reti elettriche,
aeroporti - stanno letteralmente andando in rovina. Questo
piano consentirebbe aumento dell'occupazione, la ripresa
economica e anche succosi profitti per il capitale. Ma nessun
democratico si sogna di proporlo perché per finanziare
queste opere pubbliche bisognerebbe reintrodurre una
parziale progressività fiscale e questo, nei tempi che corrono,
è una tabù, un'eresia che ti può mandare al rogo
(politicamente parlando)».
The only solution -- concludes Henwood -- for the Democrats
would be a grand plan of public works, inasmuch as our
infrastructures -- bridges, roads, railroads, electrical grids,
airports -- are literally falling apart. This plan would allow job
growth, economic recovery, and also plenty of profits for capital.
But no Democrat dreams of proposing it because, in order to
finance these public works, it would have to introduce a little
fiscal progressivity, and this, for the time being, is a taboo, a
heresy that can condemn you to be burned at the stake
(politically speaking).
Moreover, a question may be asked: even if the Democrats were to propose "a grand plan of public works," would it be possible given the political economy of the United States?
In Japan, the worst impacts of deflation during the 1990s were mitigated by public works as well as government loans to the private sector. The net capital outlay of the Japanese government in 1995 was 7.9 percent of GDP, more than double the OECD average (Paul Atkinson and Paul van den Noord, "Managing Public Expenditure: Some Emerging Policy Issues and a Framework for Analysis," Economics Department Working Papers No. 285, OECD, 8 February 2001).
Trends in General Government Total Outlays by Economic Category, Percent of GDP SOURCE: Atkinson and Van den Noord, P. 6 Net Capital Outlays SOURCE: Atkinson and Van den Noord, p. 49
It was the option to which the Japanese government, which some call the "construction state" based on the alliance of "construction ministries and agencies (MLIT, MAFF), the construction 'tribe' of (largely LDP) politicians, and the construction and real estate businesses" (Jeffrey Broadbent, "The Institutional Roots of the Japanese Construction State," ASIEN 84, July 2002, p. 43), was naturally predisposed.
More to the point, the Japanese government could take this option because it had at its disposal gigantic postal savings, whose size in 2006 was "roughly 65% of Japan's GDP" (Thomas F. Cargill and Hal S. Scott, "Postal Savings in Japan and Mortgage Markets in the U.S.," FRBSF Economic Letter, 3 March 2006).
Not so with the US government. The massive US current account deficit puts downward pressures on the dollar: "The United States borrows a whopping $2.5 billion daily from abroad to service its burgeoning debt," a result of "a manufacturing base that has declined 60 percent since World War II" (Hamid Varzi, "A Debt Culture Gone Awry," International Herald Tribune, 17 August 2007). At the same time, higher energy prices and rising inflation in China make for more inflationary pressures. Combined, they cannot but narrow the options of the US government in fiscal and monetary policies even as US economy, which has barely begun to experience the deflation of debt-financed asset bubbles, heads into recession.
In short, there is no organized sector of the US population capable of pushing and willing to push for a solution to the problem of US economy that would favor US workers; and in any case, options available to US workers have already been narrowed considerably and will be narrowed further in the near future.
The US economy facing serious trouble does have a silver lining: for the first time after the end of World War 2, there is an objective potential to put an end to the dollar hegemony, the economic pillar of US imperialism. For everyone else besides hapless Americans, now may very well be a time between ashes and roses.
A time between ashes and roses is coming
When everything shall be extinguished
When everything shall begin.
-- Adonis, "An Introduction to
the History of the Petty Kings" -- Yoshie <http://montages.blogspot.com/>