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madfloridian

(88,117 posts)
Fri Mar 27, 2015, 07:23 PM Mar 2015

Galbraith 2006 The Predator State. Modern American capitalism not benign.

From Mother Jones 2006, James K. Galbraith presents The Predator State in terms that I understand...and I am NO economist.

The Predator State


Illustration: Tim Bower Mother Jones

Galbraith speaks of the America he grew up in.

It consisted of shared assets and entitlements, of which the bedrock was public education, access to college, good housing, full employment at living wages, Medicare, and Social Security. These programs, publicly provided, financed, or guaranteed, had softened the rough edges of Great Depression capitalism, rewarding the sacrifices that won the Second World War. They also showcased America, demonstrating to those behind the Iron Curtain that regulated capitalism could yield prosperity far beyond the capacities of state planning. (This, and not the arms race, ultimately brought down the Soviet empire.) These middle-class institutions survive in America today, but they are frayed and tattered from constant attack. And the division between those included and those excluded is large and obvious to all.

Today, the signature of modern American capitalism is neither benign competition, nor class struggle, nor an inclusive middle-class utopia. Instead, predation has become the dominant feature—a system wherein the rich have come to feast on decaying systems built for the middle class. The predatory class is not the whole of the wealthy; it may be opposed by many others of similar wealth. But it is the defining feature, the leading force. And its agents are in full control of the government under which we live.


He said predator states are meant to fail.

And there’s another thing about predatory institutions. They invariably fail in the end. They fail because they are meant to fail. Predators suck the life from the businesses they command, concealing the fact for as long as possible behind fraudulent accounting and hugely complex transactions; that’s the looter’s point.

That a government run by people rooted in this culture should also be predatory isn’t surprising—and the link between George H.W. Bush, who led the deregulation of the S&Ls, his son Neil, who ran a corrupt S&L, and Neil’s brother George, for whom Ken Lay sent thugs to Florida in 2000 on the Enron plane, could hardly be any closer. But aside from occasional references to “kleptocracy” in other countries, economic opinion has been slow to recognize this. Thinking wistfully, we assume that government wants to do good, and its failure to do so is a matter of incompetence.

But if the government is a predator, then it will fail: not merely politically, but in every substantial way. Government will not cope with global warming, or Hurricane Katrina, or Iraq—not because it is incompetent but because it is willfully indifferent to the problem of competence. The questions are, in what ways will the failure hit the population? And what mechanisms survive for calling the predators to account? Unfortunately, at the highest levels, one cannot rely on the justice system, thanks to the power of the pardon. It’s politics or nothing, recognizing that in a world of predators, all established parties are corrupted in part.


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Galbraith 2006 The Predator State. Modern American capitalism not benign. (Original Post) madfloridian Mar 2015 OP
Classic bait and switch pscot Mar 2015 #1
He is so right about why govt will not cope with climate hazards... madfloridian Mar 2015 #2
kr ND-Dem Mar 2015 #3

madfloridian

(88,117 posts)
2. He is so right about why govt will not cope with climate hazards...
Fri Mar 27, 2015, 09:41 PM
Mar 2015

It's too much money on the 99%, and the powers that be simply do not care about them.

Doesn't fit with drowning govt in a bathtub.

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