http://www.signandsight.com/features/1798.html
This interview can be re-titled as "Sorrows of Old Habermas"!!- DP

The age of privatisation is over. Politics not the market is responsible for
promoting the common good. Philosopher Jürgen Habermas talks to Thomas
Assheuer about the necessity of an international world order. *Die Zeit:
Herr Habermas, the international financial system has collapsed and a global
economic crisis is looming. What do you find most worrying about this? *

*Jürgen Habermas*: What worries me most is the scandalous social injustice
that the most vulnerable social groups will have to bear the brunt of the
socialised costs for the market failure. The mass of those who, in any case,
are not among the winners of globalisation now have to pick up the tab for
the impacts of a *predictable dysfunction* of the financial system on the
real economy. Unlike the shareholders, they will not pay in money values but
in the hard currency of their daily existence. Viewed in global terms, this
avenging fate is also afflicting the economically weakest countries. That's
the political scandal. Yet pointing the finger at scapegoats strikes me as
hypocritical. The speculators, too, were acting consistently within the
established legal framework according to the socially recognised logic of
profit maximisation. Politics turns itself into a laughing stock when it
resorts to moralising instead of relying upon the enforceable law of the
democratic legislator. Politics, and not capitalism, is responsible for
promoting the common good.

*You recently lectured at Yale University. Which images of this crisis
impressed you most?*

A seemingly endless loop of *melancholic Hopperian images* of long rows of
abandoned houses in Florida and elsewhere with "Foreclosure" signs on their
front lawns flickered across the television screens. Then you saw buses
arriving with curious prospective buyers from Europe and wealthy Latin
Americans, followed by the real estate agent showing them the closets in the
bedroom smashed in a fit of rage and despair. After my return I was struck
by the sharp contrast between the agitated mood in the United States and the
calm feeling of "business as usual" here in Germany. In the US the very real
economic anxieties coincided with the hot end-spurt of one of the most
momentous election campaigns in recent memory. The crisis also instilled a
more acute awareness of their personal interests in broad sectors of the
electorate. It forced people to make decisions that were, if not necessarily
more reasonable, then at least more rational, at any rate by comparison with
the last presidential election which was ideologically polarised by "9/11."
America will owe its first black president – if I may hazard a prediction
immediately before the election – and hence a major historical watershed in
the history of its political culture, to this fortunate coincidence. Beyond
this, however, the crisis could also be the harbinger of a changed political
climate in Europe.
*
What do you have in mind?*

Such tidal shifts change the parameters of public discussion and in the
process, the spectrum of political alternatives seen as possible. The Korean
War marked the end of the New Deal, Reagan and Thatcher and the waning of
the Cold War the end of the era of social welfare programs. Today, with the
end of the Bush era and the bursting of the last neoliberal rhetorical
balloons, the Clinton and New Labour programs have run their course too.
What is coming next? My hope is that that the neoliberal agenda will no
longer be accepted at face value but will be suspended. The whole program of
*subordinating the lifeworld* to the imperatives of the market must be
subjected to scrutiny.
*
According to the neoliberal slogan the state is just one player in the
economic field and should play as small a role as possible. Is this way of
thinking now discredited?*

That depends on what course the crisis takes, on the perceptual capacities
of the political parties and on the issues that find their way onto the
public agenda. In Germany, at any rate, things are *still strangely calm*.
The agenda that recklessly prioritises shareholder interests and is
indifferent to increasing social inequality, to the emergence of an
underclass, to child poverty, a low wage sector, etc., has been discredited.
With its mania for privatisation, this agenda hollows out the core functions
of the state, it sells off the remnants of a deliberating public sphere to
profit-maximising financial investors, and subordinates culture and
education to the interests and moods of sponsors who are dependent on market
cycles.
*
Are the consequences of the privatisation mania becoming apparent in the
financial crisis?*

In the United States the crisis is exacerbating the already apparent
material, moral, social, and cultural damage caused by a policy of
deregulation pushed to an extreme by the Bush administration. The
privatisation of social security and health care, of public transport, the
energy supply, the penal system, military security services, large sectors
of school and university education, and the surrender of the cultural
infrastructure of cities and communities to the commitment and generosity of
private sponsors are part of a social design whose risks and consequences
are difficult to reconcile with the *egalitarian principles* of a social and
democratic constitutional state.

*State agencies are incapable of conducting business in accordance with
economic imperatives.*

Yes, but certain vulnerable areas of life should not be exposed to the risks
of stock market speculation, which conflicts, for example, with basing
provision for the elderly on shares. In democracies there are also some
public goods, for example undistorted political communication, which cannot
be tailored to the profit expectations of financial investors; the *citizens
*'* need for information* cannot be satisfied by the culture of easily
digestible sound bites that flourishes in a media landscape dominated by
commercial television.
*
Are we experiencing a "legitimation
crisis<http://www.polity.co.uk/book.asp?ref=9780745606095>"
of capitalism, to quote the title of a controversial book of yours?*

Since 1989-90 it has become impossible to break out of the universe of
capitalism; the only option is to *civilize and tame* the capitalist dynamic
from within. Even during the post-war period, the Soviet Union was not a
viable alternative for the majority of the Left in Western Europe. This was
why in 1973 I wrote on legitimation problems "in" capitalism. These problems
have again forced their way onto the agenda, with more or less urgency
depending on the national context. A symptom of this are the demands for
caps on managers' salaries and the abolition of "golden parachutes," i.e.
the outrageous compensation payments and bonuses.

*But aren't such policies merely window dressing? There are elections coming
up next year.*

Yes, this is of course symbolic politics designed to divert attention away
from the failures of the politicians and their economic consultants. They
have been aware of the need for regulation on the financial markets for a
long time. I just reread Helmut Schmidt's crystal-clear article "Regulate
the New Mega-Speculators" from February 2007 in *Die Zeit*. Everyone knew
what was going on. In America and Great Britain, however, the political
elites viewed the *wild speculation as useful* as long as things were going
well. And Europe succumbed to the Washington
Consensus<http://www.cid.harvard.edu/cidtrade/issues/washington.html>.
In this regard there was also a broad coalition of the willing for which Mr.
Rumsfeld didn't need to advertise.

*The Washington Consensus was the notorious economic plan proposed the IMF
and the World Bank in 1990 that was supposed to provide the template for
economic reform, first in Latin America and then throughout half of the
world. Its central promise was "Trickle Down": led the rich become richer
and affluence will trickle down to the poor. *
Empirical evidence of the falsehood of this prognosis has been accumulating
for many years. The effects of the increase in affluence are so *
asymmetrical*, at both the national and the global level, that the zones of
poverty have grown before our very eyes.

*Let's confront the past a bit: How did it come to this? Did the end of the
communist threat strip capitalism of its inhibitions**?*

The form of capitalism reined in by nation-states and Keynesian economic
policies – which, after all, conferred historically unprecedented levels of
prosperity on the OECD
countries<http://www.oecd.org/document/58/0,3343,en_2649_201185_1889402_1_1_1_1,00.html>–
came to an end somewhat earlier, already with the abandonment of the
system of fixed exchange rates and the oil crisis. The economic theory of
the Chicago School
<http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Chicago-school-%28economics%29>already
acquired practical influence under Reagan and Thatcher. This merely
continued under Clinton and New Labour – and during the period as British
chancellor of the exchequer of our most recent hero Gordon Brown. However,
the collapse of the Soviet Union led to a *fatal triumphalism* in the West.
The feeling of being among the winners of world history is seductive. In
this case it contributed to inflating a theory of economic policy into a
worldview permeating all areas of life.

*Neoliberalism is a form of life. All citizens are supposed to become
entrepreneurs of their own labour power and to become customers...*

...and competitors. The stronger who win out in the free-for-all of the
competitive society can claim this success as their *personal merit*. It is
deeply comical how managers – though not just them – fall prey to the absurd
elitist rhetoric of our talk shows, let themselves be celebrated in all
seriousness as role models and mentally place themselves above the rest of
society. It's as if they could no longer appreciate the difference between
functional elites and the ascriptive elites of estates in early modern
societies. What is so admirable about the character and mentality of people
in leading positions who do their job in a halfway competent manner? Another
alarm signal was the Bush
Doctrine<http://www.economist.com/surveys/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10873479>announced
in Fall 2002, which laid the groundwork for the invasion of Iraq.
The social Darwinist potential of market fundamentalism has since become
apparent in foreign policy as well as in social policy.
*
But Bush wasn't alone. He was flanked by an impressive horde of influential
intellectuals. *

Many of whom have learned nothing in the meantime. In the case of leading
neoconservative thinkers like Robert
Kagan<http://www.theglobalist.com/AuthorBiography.aspx?AuthorId=174>,
the thinking in terms of *predatory categories* a la Carl
Schmitt<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Schmitt>has become only more
apparent after the Iraq disaster. His recent commentary
on the current regression of international politics into a nuclear armed and
increasingly unrestrained power struggle is: "The world has returned to
normal."

*But to repeat: What went wrong at the political level after 1989? Did
capital become too powerful vis-a-vis politics?*

It became clear to me during the 1990s that politics must build up its
capacities for joint action at the *supranational level* if it is to catch
up with the markets. There even seemed to be initial steps in this direction
during the early part of the decade. George Bush the elder spoke in a
programmatic way of a New World Order and seemed to want to make use of the
long blocked – and ridiculed! – United Nations! There was initially a sharp
increase in the number of humanitarian interventions enacted by the Security
Council. The politically intended economic globalisation should have been
followed by a system of global political coordination and a further legal
codification of international relations. However, the initial *ambivalent
efforts* lost momentum already under Clinton. The current crisis is making
us aware of this deficiency again. Since the beginning of the modern era,
the market and politics have had to be repeatedly balanced off against one
another in order to preserve the network of relations of solidarity among
the members of political communities. A tension between capitalism and
democracy always remains, because the market and politics rest on
conflicting principles. The flood of decentralsed individual choices
unleashed within more complex networks also calls for regulations after the
latest phase of globalisation; this is contingent on a corresponding
extension of political procedures through which interests are generalised.

*What does that mean? You continue to support Kant's cosmopolitanism and
advocate Carl Friedrich von
Weizsäcker<http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/05/02/news/obits.php>'s
idea of a global domestic politics. That sounds downright illusory – how
should we think of it? After all, you need only consider the current state
of the United Nations.*

I must admit that a reform of the core institutions of United Nations from
the ground up would not go far enough. To be sure, the Security Council, the
Secretariat, the Tribunals, and the powers and procedures of these
institutions in general must as a matter of urgency be made fit for a global
implementation of human rights and the effective prohibition on violence –
in itself an immense task. However, even if the United Nations Charter
<http://www.un.org/aboutun/charter/>could be developed into a kind of
constitution for the international community, this framework would still
lack a forum in which the militarised struggle of the major powers would be
transformed into institutionalised negotiations concerning the problems of
the global economy in need of regulation, including problem of climate and
environmental policy, of the distribution of contested energy resources,
scarce supplies of drinking water, etc. At this transnational level problems
of distribution arise that cannot be dealt with in the same way as
violations of human rights or infringements of international security – in
the final instance as prosecutable offences – but have to be worked out
through political negotiations.

*But an institution responsible for this already exists, the G8.*

That's an exclusive club in which some of these issues are discussed
in a *noncommittal
way*. As it happens, there is a revealing discrepancy between the overhyped
expectations associated with these events and the meager results of the
media spectacles that remain without consequences. The illusory weight of
expectation shows that the populations are very well aware – perhaps even
more acutely aware than their own governments – of the unresolved problems
of a future global domestic politics.

*That sounds suspiciously like the dreams of a ghost-seer.*

Just a few days ago most people would have regarded what is happening today
as unrealistic. The European and Asian governments are outdoing each other
with *regulatory proposals* to address the deficient institutionalisation of
the financial markets. Even the SPD in the CDU are presenting proposals on
accounting rules and capital adequacy ratios, on the personal liability of
managers, on improved transparency and oversight of the stock market, etc.
Of course, a tax on stock market transactions, which would already go some
way towards a *global tax policy*, is rarely mentioned. In any case, the new
"architecture of the financial system" announced with much fanfare will not
be easy to implement against US resistance. As to whether it would even go
far enough given the complexity of these markets and the worldwide
interdependence of the most important functional systems… International
treaties, which is what the parties currently have in mind, can be revoked
at any time. They cannot provide the basis for a watertight regime.

*Even if new powers were transferred to the International Monetary Fund,
that would not amount to a global domestic politics.*

I don't want to make predictions. Given the scale of the problems, the most
we can do is to think about constructive proposals. The nation-states must
understand themselves increasingly as members of the *international
community* – even in their own interest. That is the most difficult task
that needs to be tackled over the next couple of decades. When we speak of
"politics" with this stage in mind, we often think of the actions of
governments which have inherited the self-understanding of collective actors
who make sovereign decisions. However today the continuity of this
self-understanding of the state as a Leviathan, which developed since the
seventeenth century in tandem with the European system of states, has
already been broken. The substance and composition of what we used to call
"politics" in the international arena is constantly shifting.

*But how does that fit with the social Darwinism in international relations
which, as you claim, has again become prominent on the global political
stage since 9/11?*
Perhaps we should take a step back and look at a somewhat larger context.
Since the late eighteenth century, law has gradually permeated the
politically constituted power of government and stripped it of the
substantive character of mere "force" in the domestic sphere. In its
external relations, however, the state has preserved enough of this
substance, in spite of the growth of intertwined international organisations
and the increasingly binding power of international law. The concept of the
"political" shaped by the nation-state is nevertheless in a state of flux.
Within the European Union, for example, the member states continue to enjoy
their monopoly on legitimate force while nevertheless implementing the laws
enacted at the supranational level more or less without demur. This
transformation of law and politics is also bound up with a capitalist
dynamic which can be described as a periodic interplay between a
functionally driven opening followed in each instance by a socially
integrative closure at a higher level.
*
Does this mean that the market splits society apart and the welfare state
closes it up again?*

The welfare state is a late and, as we are now learning, fragile
accomplishment. Expanding markets and communications networks have always
had an explosive force with simultaneously individualising and liberating
consequences for individual citizens; but each of these breaches has been
followed by a reorganisation of the old relations of solidarity within a
more comprehensive institutional framework. This process began during the
early modern period as the ruling estates of the High Middle Ages were
progressively parliamentarised, as in England, or mediatised by absolute
monarchs, as in France, within the new territorial states. The process
continued in the wake of the constitutional revolutions of the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries and the welfare state legislative programs of the
twentieth century. This legal *taming of the Leviathan* and class antagonism
within civil society was no small matter. For the same functional reasons,
however, this successful constitutionalisation of state and society points
today – following a further phase of economic globalisation – towards the
constitutionalisation of international law and of the strife-torn world
society.
*
What role does Europe play in your scenario?*

Not the one it has in fact played in the crisis. It is not clear to me why
the recent crisis management of the European Union is being praised so
highly. Gordon Brown was able to bring the American finance minister Paulsen
to reinterpret the laboriously negotiated bailout with his memorable
decision because he brought the most important players in the Eurozone on
board through the mediation of the French president and against the initial
resistance of Angela Merkel and her minister of finance Peer Steinbrück. You
need only examine this negotiation process and its outcome more closely. For
it was the three most powerful among the nation-states united in the EU who
agreed as sovereign actors to coordinate their different measures which
happened to point in the same direction. In spite of the presence of Messrs
Juncker and Barroso, the way this classical international agreement came
about had almost nothing to do with a joint political will-formation of the
European Union. The *New York Times* duly registered, not without a hint of
malice, the Europeans' *inability to agree* upon a joint economic policy.

*How do you account for that?*

The present course of the crisis is making the flaw in the construction of
the European Union manifest: every country is responding with its own
economic measures. Because the competences in the Union, simplifying
somewhat, are divided in such a way that Brussels and the European Court of
Justice implement the economic freedoms whereas the resulting external costs
are palmed off on the member states, there is at present *no joint
will-formation* at the level of economic policy. The most prominent member
states are even divided over the principles governing how much state and how
much market is desirable in the first place. Moreover each country is
conducting its own foreign policy, Germany first and foremost. The Berlin
Republic, for all its quiet diplomacy, is forgetting the lessons that the
old Federal Republic drew from history. The government is exploiting the
extended room for manoeuvre in foreign policy it has gained since 1989-90
and is falling back into the familiar pattern of national power politics
between states, though the latter have long since shrunk to the format of
minor princedoms.

*But what could these princedoms do? What would be the next step? *

Are you asking me for my wish list? Since under the present conditions I
regard *graduated integration* or different speeds of unification as the
only possible scenario for overcoming the present stagnation, Sarkozy's
proposal for an economic government of the Eurozone can serve as a starting
point. This does not mean that we would have to accept the statist
background assumptions and protectionist intentions of its sponsor.
Procedures and political results are two different things. The "closer
cooperation" in the field of economic policy would have to be followed by
"closer cooperation" in foreign policy. And neither could be conducted any
longer through backroom deals behind the backs of the populations.
*
You won't find support for that even in the SPD.*

The SPD leadership is abandoning this idea to the Christian Democrat Jürgen
Rüttgers, the "labour leader" in the Rhine and Ruhr region. All across
Europe the social democratic parties have their *backs to the wall* because
they are being forced to play zero-sum games with shrinking stakes. Why
don't they embrace the opportunity to break out of their national cages and
gain a new room for manoeuvre at the European level? In this way they could
even set themselves apart from the *regressive competition from the left*.
Whatever "left" and "right" still mean today, only together could the
Eurozone countries acquire sufficient weight in world politics to be able to
exert a reasonable influence on the agenda of the global economy. The
alternative is to act as Uncle Sam's poodle and throw themselves at the
mercy of a global situation that is as dangerous as it is chaotic.

*Speaking of Uncle Sam – you must be deeply disappointed with the United
States. For you the US was supposed to be the draft horse of the new world
order. *

Do we have any alternative except to bet on this draft horse? The United
States will emerge weaker from the current dual crisis. However, it remains
for the present the liberal superpower and it finds itself in a situation
which encourages it to overhaul its neoconservative self-image as the
paternalistic global benefactor. The worldwide export of its own form of
life sprang from the false, centralised universalism of the Old Empires. By
contrast, modernity rests upon the decentralised universalism of equal
respect for everyone. It is in the interest of the United States not only to
abandon its counterproductive stance towards the United Nations but to place
itself *at the head of the reform movement*. Viewed historically, the
confluence of four factors – superpower status, the oldest democracy in the
world, the assumption of office of a, let's hope, liberal and visionary
president, and a political culture that provides an impressive sounding
board for normative impulses – represents an improbable constellation. Today
America is deeply distraught by the failure of the unilateral adventure, the
self-destruction of neoliberalism and the abuse of its exceptionalist
consciousness. Why shouldn't this nation, as it has so often in the past,
pull itself together and try to *bind* the competing major powers of today –
the global powers of tomorrow – before it is too late into an international
order that no longer needs a superpower? Why shouldn't an American president
– buoyed by a watershed election – who finds that his scope for action in
the domestic arena is severely constrained want to embrace this reasonable
opportunity – this opportunity for reason – at least in foreign policy?

*The so-called realists would dismiss your proposal with a jaded smile... *

I realise that many things speak against it. The new American president
would have to overcome the resistance of the elites within his own party who
are subservient to Wall Street; he would doubtlessly also have to be
dissuaded from succumbing to the reflexes of a new protectionism. In
addition, the United States would need the friendly support of a loyal yet
self-confident ally in order to make such a radical change of direction. A
West that is "*bipolar*"* in a creative sense* will become possible, of
course, only when the EU learns to speak with one voice in foreign policy
and, indeed, to use its internationally accumulated capital of trust to act
in a farsighted manner itself. The "Yes, but..." is obvious. Yet in times of
crisis there is perhaps more need of a somewhat broader perspective than the
advice of the mainstream and the petty manoeuvring of politics as usua

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