"Gaming the System"
Capitalism benefits no one in particular and everyone in general. Overall, things get better. Politics benefits specific groups - the elites. - at the expense of everyone else.
Overall, things get worse.
by Bill Bonner
"See that? That’s sh*t.
And this... this is shinola."
- "The Jerk"
Dublin, Ireland - "We are reporting on a remarkable essay in the weekend Financial Times. In it, Ruchir Sharma explained what’s really ailing capitalism - too much government. As we've seen the ‘government’ - along with thought leaders in the press, politicians, academic economists, think tanks, the Deep State and Wall Street - have solved every problem that came our way... from the falling dominoes of Southeast Asia to the poverty and discrimination of Watts. But all this problem solving has left us with a much larger problem, $35 trillion worth of national debt.
How will they solve that one? At stake is the entire world economy... the dollar... US prosperity... and the Primary Trend - the whole shebang. Here’s a brief resume of what we learned yesterday.
Approximately 96% of the US economy was ‘capitalist’ in 1930. That is, people went about their business, as best they could, offering goods and services to each other. Then, the government (including state, local, and regulatory agencies) grew so much that only about half of the economy is now still free to do what it wants.
The rest is dictated by government budgets and regulations. As we’ve seen, almost all of this spending is squandered... on bombs, bailouts, and bamboozles. Beyond that, the whole economy is twisted into grotesque shapes by another arm of the government, the Fed.
We saw that the much-criticized ‘small government era’ of the Tea Party Republicans... and the ‘deregulation’ following Ronald Reagan... never happened. Government spending and regulation increased steadily. Military spending (funding the empire) and domestic spending (social programs) and welfare for rich and poor alike - all increased.
And it continues. Joe Biden has just given away $7.7 billion to voters who hadn’t paid their student debt. Donald Trump, meanwhile, is said to be offering tax cuts in exchange for campaign contributions. The Fiscal Times: "Trump Woos Wealthy Donors With Promises of Huge Tax Cuts."
Who’s going to pay for Biden’s student loan forgiveness or Trump’s tax cuts? You are, of course. That’s how politics works. Capitalism benefits no one in particular... and everyone in general. Overall, things get better. Politics benefits specific groups - the elites - at the expense of everyone else. Overall, things get worse.
Grosso modo, the more capitalism you have... the freer people are to get what they want honestly. The more politics you have, the more people ‘game the system,’ working out deals with politicians, and using the power of government for their personal wealth or aggrandizement.
It’s either one or the other. Capitalism or politics. Sh*t or shinola. The idea that there is a happy balance of the two... or that adding more sh*t to the shinola makes it even shinier... is just nonsense.
Large enterprises with lobbyists... and clerks... could manage Washington’s regulations and take advantage of its many bailouts, subsidies and other opportunities. They grew bigger. But big businesses represent past growth. Small businesses are the hope of the future. And with the weight of government on their backs, small companies can barely crawl, let alone sprint.
The rate of growth in productivity has been cut in half since the 1960s. At the top, big companies dominate major industries. At the bottom are the ‘zombies’ - companies that can’t even pay the interest on their debt. Weak and unproductive... like government itself, they waste valuable resources. In between, is a stagnant pool of mid-sized companies struggling to innovate and to survive in a hostile environment of laws, regulations, taxes, inflation and debt.
But wait... Wall Street got rich. The 1% got richer than ever. Surely all that ‘financialization’ and ‘inequality’ was capitalism’s fault, right? No, it wasn’t. Again, the feds are to blame. Sharma: "The spring from which capital flowed was governments and central banks. Including debt and equity, the size of financial markets grew from slightly larger than the global economy [world GDP] in 1980 to almost four times larger today…The driving force behind runaway financialization of capitalism was easy money flowing from the government."
Yes, it was the rotten money that ruined the barrel. But what now? Sharma: “Their [US policymakers] overconfidence needs to be contained before it does more damage. Capitalism is still the best hope for human progress, but only if it has enough room to work.” But there’s more to the story, isn’t there? It’s not just a matter of “overconfidence,” is it? The public may prefer shinola, but neither Biden nor Trump really sparkle, do they? Tune in tomorrow..."
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