Stiglitz is someone who rose to the heights of policy-making and took a
good look and HONESTLY reported on what he saw --

He's no Marxist but he is a total realist about the failures of the most
recent version of capitalism --



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From: Portside <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, May 10, 2024 at 9:09 PM
Subject: Global Elections in the Shadow of Neoliberalism
To: <[email protected]>


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Global Elections in the Shadow of Neoliberalism
<https://portside.org/2024-05-10/global-elections-shadow-neoliberalism?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>


Joseph E. Stiglitz
May 1, 2024
Project Syndicate
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/2024-elections-grappling-with-authoritarian-populism-and-other-legacies-of-neoliberalism-by-joseph-e-stiglitz-2024-04>

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* Scandals, culture wars, and threats to democracy dominate the headlines
in this super election year. But anti-democratic populist authoritarianism
is itself the legacy of a misbegotten economic ideology. *

Zeng Peiyan, Klaus Schwab - World Economic Forum Annual Meeting Davos 2008,
by World Economic Forum (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)



NEW YORK – Around the world, populist nationalism is on the rise, often
shepherding to power authoritarian leaders. And yet the neoliberal
orthodoxy – government downsizing, tax cuts, deregulation – that took hold
some 40 years ago in the West was supposed to strengthen democracy, not
weaken it. What went wrong?

Part of the answer is economic: neoliberalism simply did not deliver what
it promised. In the United States and other advanced economies that
embraced it, per capita real (inflation-adjusted) income growth between
1980 and the COVID-19 pandemic was 40% lower than in the preceding 30
years. Worse, incomes at the bottom and in the middle largely stagnated
while those at the very top increased, and the deliberate weakening of
social protections has produced greater financial and economic insecurity.

Rightly worried that climate change jeopardizes their future, young people
can see that countries under the sway of neoliberalism have consistently
failed to enact strong regulations against pollution (or, in the US, to
address the opioid crisis and the epidemic of child diabetes). Sadly, these
failures come as no surprise. Neoliberalism was predicated on the belief
that unfettered markets are the most efficient means of achieving optimal
outcomes. Yet even in the early days of neoliberalism’s ascendancy,
economists had already established that unregulated markets are neither
efficient nor stable, let alone conducive to generating a socially
acceptable distribution of income.

Neoliberalism’s proponents never seemed to recognize that expanding the
freedom of corporations curtails freedom across the rest of society. The
freedom to pollute means worsening health (or even death
<https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/4485861-for-big-oil-deadly-childhood-asthma-is-the-cost-of-doing-business/>,
for those with asthma), more extreme weather, and uninhabitable land. There
are always tradeoffs, of course; but any reasonable society would conclude
that the right to live is more important than the spurious right to pollute.

Taxation is equally anathema to neoliberalism, which frames it as an
affront to individual liberty: one has the right to keep whatever one
earns, regardless of how one earns it. But even when they come by their
income honestly, advocates of this view fail to recognize that what they
earn was made possible by government investment in infrastructure,
technology, education, and public health. Rarely do they pause to consider
what they would have if they had been born in one of the many countries
without the rule of law (or what their lives would look like if the US
government had not made the investments that led to the COVID-19 vaccine).

Ironically, those most indebted to government are often the first to forget
what government did for them. Where would Elon Musk and Tesla be if not for
the near-half-billion-dollar lifeline <https://www.energy.gov/lpo/tesla> they
received from President Barack Obama’s Department of Energy in 2010? “Taxes
are what we pay for civilized society,” the Supreme Court Justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes famously observed
<https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/275/87/>. That hasn’t changed:
taxes are what it takes to establish the rule of law or provide any of the
other public goods that a twenty-first-century society needs to function.

Here, we go beyond mere tradeoffs, because *everyone* – including the rich
– is made better off by an adequate supply of such goods. Coercion, in this
sense, can be emancipatory. There is a broad consensus on the principle
that if we are going to have essential goods, we have to pay for them, and
that requires taxes.

Of course, advocates of smaller government would say that many expenditures
should be cut, including government-managed pensions and publicly provided
health care. But, again, if most people are forced to endure the insecurity
of not having reliable health care or adequate incomes in old age, society
has become less free: at a minimum, they lack freedom from the fear of how
traumatic their future might be. Even if multibillionaires’ well-being
would be crimped somewhat if each were asked to pay a little more in taxes
to fund a child tax credit, consider what a difference it would make in the
life of a child who doesn’t have enough to eat, or whose parents cannot
afford a doctor’s visit. Consider what it would mean for the whole
country’s future if fewer of its young people grew up malnourished or sick.

All these issues should take center stage in this year’s many elections. In
the US, the upcoming presidential election offers a stark choice not only
between chaos and orderly government, but also between economic
philosophies and policies. The incumbent, Joe Biden
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/joseph-biden-jr>, is committed
to using the power of government to enhance the well-being of all citizens,
especially those in the bottom 99%, whereas Donald Trump is more interested
in maximizing the welfare of the top 1%. Trump, who holds court from a
luxury golf resort (when he is not in court himself), has become the
champion of crony capitalists and authoritarian leaders around the world.

Trump and Biden have vastly different visions of the kind of society we
should be working to create. In one scenario, dishonesty, socially
destructive profiteering, and rent-seeking will prevail, public trust will
continue to crumble, and materialism and greed will triumph; in the other,
elected officials and public servants will work in good faith toward a more
creative, healthy, knowledge-based society built on trust and honesty.

Of course, politics is never as pure as this description suggests. But no
one can deny that the two candidates hold fundamentally different views on
freedom and the makings of a good society. Our economic system reflects and
shapes who we are and what we can become. If we publicly endorse a selfish,
misogynistic grifter – or dismiss these attributes as minor blemishes – our
young people will absorb that message, and we will end up with even more
scoundrels and opportunists in office. We will become a society without
trust, and thus without a well-functioning economy.

Recent polls show that barely three years after Trump left the White House,
the public has blissfully forgotten
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/05/us/politics/trump-presidency-election-voters.html>
his
administration’s chaos, incompetence, and attacks on the rule of law. But
one need only look at the candidates’ concrete positions on the issues to
recognize that if we want to live in a society that values all citizens and
strives to create ways for them to live full and satisfying lives, the
choice is clear.

*Joseph E. Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics and University Professor
at Columbia University, is a former chief economist of the World Bank
(1997-2000), chair of the US President’s Council of Economic Advisers, and
co-chair of the High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices. He is Co-Chair of
the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate
Taxation and was lead author of the 1995 IPCC Climate Assessment. He is the
author, most recently, of The Road to Freedom: Economics and the Good
Society (W. W. Norton & Company
<https://wwnorton.com/books/9781324074373/about-the-book/product-details>,
Allen
Lane
<https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/461399/the-road-to-freedom-by-stiglitz-joseph-e/9780241687888>,
2024).*

*Access every new Project Syndicate commentary, our entire On Point suite
of subscriber-exclusive content – including Longer Reads, Insider
Interviews, Big Picture/Big Question, and Say More – and the full PS
archive. Subscribe now.
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/order/subscription?route=commentary&url=2024-elections-grappling-with-authoritarian-populism-and-other-legacies-of-neoliberalism-by-joseph-e-stiglitz-2024-04&trigger=&redirect=%2Fcommentary%2F2024-elections-grappling-with-authoritarian-populism-and-other-legacies-of-neoliberalism-by-joseph-e-stiglitz-2024-04&a_la=english&a_d=5e8f24d78d093603f451bb97&a_m=&a_a=click&a_s=&a_p=%2Fcommentary%2F2024-elections-grappling-with-authoritarian-populism-and-other-legacies-of-neoliberalism-by-joseph-e-stiglitz-2024-04&a_li=promotion-subscription-commentary-footer&a_pa=article-top&a_ps=promotion-generic&a_ms=&a_r=>*

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