From: [email protected] (Dewayne Hendricks)
Date: May 23, 2010 10:46:07 PM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <[email protected]>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Schama: Are the Guillotines Being Sharpened?

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 2010
Schama: Are the Guillotines Being Sharpened?
By Yves Smith
<http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2010/05/schama-are-the-guillotines-being-sha
rpened.html>

Simon Schama tonight warns in the Financial Times that revolutionary rage is
close to the boiling point in Europe and the US :

Historians will tell you there is often a time-lag between the onset of
economic disaster and the accumulation of social fury. In act one, the shock
of a crisis initially triggers fearful disorientation; the rush for
political saviours; instinctive responses of self-protection, but not the
organised mobilisation of outrage.

Act two is trickier. Objectively, economic conditions might be improving,
but perceptions are everything and a breathing space gives room for a
dangerously alienated public to take stock of the brutal interruption of
their rising expectations. What happened to the march of income, the
acquisition of property, the truism that the next generation will live
better than the last? The full impact of the overthrow of these assumptions
sinks in and engenders a sense of grievance that "Someone Else" must have
engineered the common misfortune..At the very least, the survival of a
crisis demands ensuring that the fiscal pain is equitably distributed. In
the France of 1789, the erstwhile nobility became regular citizens, ended
their exemption from the land tax, made a show of abolishing their own
privileges, turned in jewellery for the public treasury; while the clergy's
immense estates were auctioned for La Nation. It is too much to expect a
bonfire of the bling but in 2010 a pragmatic steward of the nation's economy
needs to beware relying unduly on regressive indirect taxes, especially if
levied to impress a bond market with which regular folk feel little
connection. At the very least, any emergency budget needs to take stock of
this raw sense of popular victimisation and deliver a convincing story about
the sharing of burdens. To do otherwise is to guarantee that a bad situation
gets very ugly, very fast.

Schama knows this terrain cold; his chronicle of the French Revolution,
Citizens, made clear what a bloody affair it was. Even so, his account in
the Financial Times in some key respects understates the degree of
dislocation suffered by many in advanced economies. Schama depicts the
crisis-induced change as merely the end of rising expectations, but the
shock is deeper than that.

[snip]RSS Feed: <http://www.warpspeed.com/wordpress>




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