A visit at the end of the month of April would be close to May Day.

CB


A critical terrain of struggle

http://peoplesworld.org/a-critical-terrain-of-struggle/

by: Sam Webb
April 14 2010

tags: economy, banks, financial reform, labor

The AFL-CIO and its new president, Richard Trumka, are going to spend
a day on Wall Street at the end of this month. Trumka, along with
10,000 trade unionists and their supporters, are expected to gather in
Lower Manhattan where the wheels of the financial industry turn.

As you might guess, this isn't a sightseeing trip. Labor visits Wall
Street in a bullish mood. It is demanding more than cosmetic changes
dressed up as real reform. Don't expect President Trumka to ring the
bell that begins the Stock Exchange trading day, but it is likely he
will wring a few necks, in a figurative sense.

Not everyone on Wall Street is planning to welcome its visitors.
Kathryn S. Wylde, president and CEO of the Partnership for New York
City, for example, said that labor's action and economic plan are
"unfortunate." She went on to say, "This is a time when Americans
should be pulling together ... Demonizing Wall Street diminishes us in
the eyes of the world."

Hello! Wall Street, in case you don't know, Ms. Wylde, "demonized" and
"diminished" itself "in the eyes of the world." There is nothing that
Trumka can say that will do further damage to the Street's reputation.
It has already been done and it was self-inflicted.

Furthermore, in insisting that "Americans should be pulling together,"
she badly misreads the public mood. Ordinary people could care less
about making nice to the engineers of this massive crisis that has
left millions without jobs, homes and income. What Americans are
demanding is that these financial schemers and firms be held
accountable for their misdeeds of the past and be regulated in the
future.

The financial manipulators should be glad that that is all that is on
the people's agenda so far. They are lucky to retain their parasitic
wealth, remain in charge of our financial institutions, and escape
jail time for grand larceny on a scale that is unprecedented. Next
time they won't be so fortunate.

Be that as it may, the immediate point of contention is financial
regulation - will it be light or tough?

Should hedge and private equity funds be regulated? Should the
derivative market be tightly policed and transparent? Should capital
requirements be increased to cut down exposure to risk? Should
taxpayers' money bail out mega-banks and their shareholders and
bondholders? Should the oversight power of the Federal Reserve be
expanded? Should a consumer financial protection agency be
independent? Should the ratings agencies be overhauled?

Not surprisingly, the financial institutions prefer light regulation,
while the coalition opposing Wall Street, while not completely of one
mind, favors stronger regulation.

In a larger sense, from the standpoint of the top layers of financial
institutions - Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan
Chase, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo - the current legislative
struggle over financial regulation is but one battle, although a
crucial one, in an ongoing struggle to fully restore themselves to the
preeminent position in the global economy that they occupied for the
past three decades.

They like being captain of the ship, and the logic of the capitalism
(its unending and competitive chase for more and more profits)
pressures them in this direction too. After sitting at the pinnacle of
power, seeing their wealth exponentially multiply, and shaping the
dynamics and contours of the world economy, they are not about to
yield, or even slightly lessen, their power and privileged position
without a fight.

Call the financial czars whatever you like, but they are well aware of
their class interests. What is more, they are mindful of the fact that
the New Deal regulations hemmed them in for roughly four decades.
Admittedly none of these fat cats starved, but during that period they
did not enjoy the nearly unchallenged political and economic sway that
they were able to grab in the Reagan-Clinton-Bush era.

Thus the stakes are high. Whatever the outcome of the legislative
fight over financial reform, the struggle to curb and eventually
eliminate the power of finance capital will go on, and its outcome
will have a major impact on the politics and economics of our nation.
If finance capital has its way, the prospects of working people are
bleak - not to mention the probability of another deep crisis
increases. If, on the other hand, the power of finance capital is
progressively curbed in the course of successive and contentious
struggles, the future of the multi-racial working class and its allies
is far brighter.

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to