I was not familiar with Wolfgang Streeck.  BUT I BET MEMBERS OF THIS LIST
ARE

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/28/opinion/wolfgang-streeck-populism.html

This Maverick Thinker Is the Karl Marx of Our TimeNY Times
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/28/opinion/wolfgang-streeck-populism.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare>
·
by Christopher Caldwell · November 28, 2024

Guest Essay
Nov. 28, 2024
Credit...Illustration by Maria Midttun.
<https://www.nytimes.com/by/christopher-caldwell>

By Christopher Caldwell

Mr. Caldwell is a contributing Opinion writer who reports frequently on
European politics, culture and society.

Who could have seen Donald Trump’s resounding victory coming? Ask the
question of an American intellectual these days and you may meet with
embittered silence. Ask a European intellectual and you will likely hear
the name of Wolfgang Streeck, a German sociologist and theorist of
capitalism.

In recent decades, Mr. Streeck has described the complaints of populist
movements with unequaled power. That is because he has a convincing theory
of what has gone wrong in the complex gearworks of American-driven
globalization, and he has been able to lay it out with clarity. Mr. Streeck
may be best known for his essays in New Left Review
<https://newleftreview.org/>, including a dazzling series on the cascade of
financial crises that followed the crash of 2008. He resembles Karl Marx in
his conviction that capitalism has certain internal contradictions that
make it unsustainable — the more so in its present “neoliberal” form. His
latest book, “Taking Back Control? States and State Systems After
Globalism,” published this month, asks whether the global economy as it is
now set up is compatible with democracy. He has his doubts.

Understand Mr. Streeck and you will understand a lot about the left-wing
movements that share his worldview — Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain and
the new Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance in Germany. But you will also understand
Viktor Orban, Brexit and Mr. Trump.

Mr. Streeck (whose name rhymes with “cake”) argues that today’s
contradictions of capitalism have been building for half a century. Between
the end of World War II and the 1970s, he reminds us, working classes in
Western countries won robust incomes and extensive protections. Profit
margins suffered, of course, but that was in the nature of what Mr. Streeck
calls the “postwar settlement.” What economies lost in dynamism, they
gained in social stability.

But starting in the 1970s, things began to change. Sometime after the Arab
oil embargo of 1973, investors got nervous. The economy began to stall.
This placed politicians in a bind. Workers had the votes to demand more
services. But that required making demands on business, and business was
having none of it. States finessed the matter by permitting the money
supply to expand. For a brief while, this maneuver allowed them to offer
more to workers without demanding more of bosses. Essentially, governments
had begun borrowing from the next generation.

That was the Rubicon, Mr. Streeck believes: “the first time after the
postwar growth period that states took to introducing not-yet-existing
future resources into the conflict between labor and capital.” They never
broke the habit.

Very quickly their policies sparked inflation. Investors balked again. It
took a painful tightening of money to stabilize prices. Ronald Reagan’s
supply-side regime eased the pain a bit, but only by running record
government deficits. Bill Clinton was able to eliminate these, but only by
deregulating private banking and borrowing, Mr. Streeck shows. In other
words, the dangerous debt exposure was shifted out of the Treasury and into
the bank accounts of middle-class and working-class households. This led,
eventually, to the financial crisis of 2008.

As Mr. Streeck sees it, a series of (mostly American) attempts to calm the
economy after the ’70s produced the system we now call neoliberalism.
“Neoliberalism,” he argues, “was, above all, a political-economic project
to end the inflation state and free capital from its imprisonment in the
postwar settlement.” This project has never really been reconsidered, even
as one administration’s fix turns into the next generation’s crisis.

At each stage of neoliberalism’s evolution, Mr. Streeck stresses, key
decisions have been made by technocrats, experts and other actors
relatively insulated from democratic accountability. When the crash came in
2008, central bankers stepped in to take over the economy, devising
quantitative easing and other novel methods of generating liquidity. During
the Covid emergency of 2020 and 2021, Western countries turned into
full-blown expertocracies, bypassing democracy outright. A minuscule class
of administrators issued mandates on every aspect of national life — masks,
vaccinations, travel, education, church openings — and incurred debt at
levels that even the most profligate Reaganite would have considered
surreal.

Mr. Streeck has a clear vision of something paradoxical about the
neoliberal project: For the global economy to be “free,” it must be
constrained. What the proponents of neoliberalism mean by a free market is
a deregulated market. But getting to deregulation is trickier than it looks
because in free societies, regulations are the result of people’s sovereign
right to make their own rules. The more democratic the world’s societies
are, the more idiosyncratic they will be, and the more their economic rules
will diverge. But that is exactly what businesses cannot tolerate — at
least not under globalization. Money and goods must be able to move
frictionlessly and efficiently across borders. This requires a uniform set
of laws. Somehow, democracy is going to have to give way.

A uniform set of laws also requires a single international norm. Which
norm? That’s another problem, as Mr. Streeck sees it: The global regime we
have is a reliable copy of the American one. This brings order and
efficiency but also tilts the playing field in favor of American
corporations, banks and investors.

Perhaps that is what blighted the West’s relations with Russia, where the
transition to global capitalism “was tightly controlled by American
government agencies, foundations and N.G.O.s,” Mr. Streeck says, and the
oligarchs who emerged to run the government in the 1990s were “received
with open arms by American corporations and, not least, the London real
estate market.” To an Indian or a Chinese person, “free markets”
established on these terms might carry the threat of imperial
highhandedness and lost self-determination.

This insight gives us a context for understanding the persistent grievances
of movements like Mr. Trump’s, and their equally persistent popularity.
What happens on the imperial level also happens at the local level, within
the United States and the Western European societies that make the rules of
globalization. Non-technocrats, whether they are the resentful members of
the old working class or just people wisecracking about the progressive
pieties of corporate human resource managers, are not going to be permitted
to tangle up the system with their demands.

As we no longer have an economic policy that is managed democratically, it
should not be surprising that it produces unfair outcomes. Nor should it be
surprising that in the wake of the mortgage crisis, Covid, the war in
Ukraine and so-called Bidenflation, this unfairness would give rise to what
Mr. Streeck calls “tendencies toward deglobalization” — such as those that
emerged with a vengeance on Nov. 5.

The “global economy” is a place where common people have no leverage.
Parties of the left lost sight of such problems after the 1970s, Mr.
Streeck notes. They allowed their old structure, oriented around industrial
workers and primarily concerned with workers’ rights and living standards,
to be infiltrated and overthrown by intellectuals, who were primarily
concerned with promoting systems of values, such as human rights and lately
the set of principles known as wokeism.

It is in disputing the wisdom of this shift that Mr. Streeck is most likely
to antagonize American Democrats and others who think of themselves
(usually incorrectly) as belonging to the left. He, too, thinks that
democracy is in crisis, but only because it is being thwarted by the very
elites who purport to champion it. Among the people, democracy is thriving.
After decades of decline in voter turnout, there has been a steep and
steady rise in participation over the past 20 years — at least for parties
whose candidates reflect a genuine popular sentiment. As this has happened,
liberal commentators — who tend to back what Mr. Streeck calls “parties of
the standard model” — have changed their definition of democracy, he
writes: They see high electoral participation as a troubling expression of
discontent, “endangering rather than strengthening democracy.”

This new, topsy-turvy idea of democracy comes with a new political
strategy. The interests and agendas of standard-issue parties are
increasingly reinforced by the media and other grandees of globalization.
These actors have “fought against the new wave of politicization,” Mr.
Streeck writes, “with the full arsenal of instruments at their disposal —
propagandistic, cultural, legal, institutional.”

Mr. Streeck is probably referring here to the obstacles put in the way of
so-called left-wing movements in Europe — Syriza, Podemos, La France
Insoumise in France. But his observation applies just as well to so-called
right-wing parties. At present, Marine Le Pen, whose party won the most
votes in France’s national elections last summer, is standing trial for
embezzlement before a court that may ban her from politics for five years.
In Germany this month, more than a hundred members of the Bundestag
requested a constitutional ban on the country’s fast-growing right-wing
party the Alternative for Germany, ahead of national elections scheduled
for February.

There are dangers, too, in the way partisan prosecutors, in the run-up to
the U.S. presidential election, convicted Mr. Trump of 34 felonies
involving bookkeeping, on a legal theory so novel that not one American in
a thousand could explain what he had been convicted of. A majority of
Americans effectively voided the conviction at the ballot box.

Mr. Streeck’s new book is not about Mr. Trump’s triumph. But his message
(or his warning, however you choose to read it) is not unrelated: The left
must embrace populism, which is merely the name given to the struggle over
an alternative to globalism. With globalism collapsing under its own
contradictions, all serious politics is now populist in one way or another.

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Christopher Caldwell is a contributing Opinion writer for The Times and a
contributing editor at The Claremont Review of Books. He is the author of
“Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam and the West”
and “The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties.”
A version of this article appears in print on , Section SR, Page 8 of the
New York edition with the headline: Karl Marx Explained the 19th Century.
Wolfgang Streeck Explains the 21st.
NY Times
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/28/opinion/wolfgang-streeck-populism.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare>
·
by Christopher Caldwell · November 28, 2024


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