Bye bye American pie

Behind the crisis in corporate America is a combination of
pernicious Southern conservatism and unadulterated greed, argues
Will Hutton.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Sunday June 30, 2002
The Observer

The US faces a grave economic crisis. The confidence in the
balance sheets and reported profitability of American companies
has been shattered by an orgy of unprecedented corporate fraud,
plunder and malfeasance that has demanded the connivance of its
most reputable accounting firms, business leaders and banks. Only
last week news broke of the biggest ever accounting fraud in
history at WorldCom, to be followed days later of an epic
accounting swindle at Xerox.

Before them has been a string of others, with Enron the most
famous collapse of all. The integrity of the entire system for
channelling savings into investment is now in question as is that
of corporate America, just as America's debts to foreigners and
its own consumers indebtedness have reached unsustainable levels.
The country has been living beyond its means and inventing value
when none existed. No one can predict with certainty how this will
unravel, although the faltering of American consumer confidence
and the sell-off of the dollar are already pointers. The dollar is
threatening to inherit the sobriquet of 'toilet currency' once
borne by the euro.

The US can and eventually will recover, but only when it comes to
terms with the harshest of realities. That it does not possess a
uniquely enterprising economic and financial model. That the
scandals now hitting the headlines are not a case of one or two
bad apples, but reveal systemic weaknesses in its financial system
and methods of corporate governance which need root-and- branch
reform. That American business ethics are abysmally low and
require the toughest of policing . And that the US, like other
economies that have pursued unsustainable and foolhardy policies,
must go through a period of painful and difficult adjustment.

This is not just a case of companies fudging a billion here or
there, as President Bush said in his folksy statement on Friday,
and hoping nobody notices, a problem, as he characterises it, of
individual ethics rather than systemic deformation. Rather, this
is where America's business culture has led, legitimised by the
conservative ideological barrage now a generation old which has
transformed American public discourse. Everything should and must
be pro-market, pro-business and pro-shareholder, a policy platform
lubricated by colossal infusions of corporate cash into America's
money-dominated political system.

Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, for example, described the abysmally
lax 1996 Telecoms Act, deregulating the telecoms industry and the
precondition for the current scandals in the industry, lobbied for
ferociously by WorldCom in order to unleash market forces, as
'living proof of what unlimited money can do to buy influence in
the Congress of the United States'. The truth is that American
business has bought the American executive and legislature alike.

It is this that makes crafting the right reaction to the crisis so
hard. The Bush administration has become so attached to the
conservative revolution and its attendant free-market
fundamentalism that the change in thinking it must now make
threatens to be beyond them, even if its corporate paymasters
would allow it.

The need is to reregulate, to recognise business lobbying is
primarily self-interested and, above all, to insist that
successful capitalism is much more sophisticated and complex than
simply letting fat cats get fatter and diminishing all forms of
worker protection. The US will find its way back, as it has done
before, but only when its conservative hegemony and its
compromised ideas have been broken.

This will be a Herculean task, for the rise in conservatism has
deep roots. It is no accident that WorldCom, whose accounting
fraud cost $3.8 billion, was based in Mississippi and was a
generous contributor to its hard-line conservative senator, Trent
Lott, minority leader in the Senate, as Ed Vulliamy reports today.
Nor that Enron, whose profits were vastly overstated by accounting
fiddles, was based in Texas and whose relationship with George
Bush was so close.

The states of the Confederacy remain the heartland of the distinct
brand of American conservatism that combines Christian, market and
America-first fundamentalism to a unique degree, reinforced in the
South by a legacy of barely submerged racism.

The rise of American conservatism has closely followed the rise in
the economic fortunes of the Confederacy, together with its belief
in a take-no-prisoners form of capitalism. The new Right thinkers
provided the intellectual cover, providing populist slogans
calling for 'freedom', accusing all forms of government of being
'coercive' and deriding the social contract as a cause of
'dependency'. It didn't take long before Wall Street joined in,
insisting that the companies should serve the interests of their
owners first and foremost - the doctrine of maximising
'shareholder value' - and that regulation inhibited 'enterprise'.
Bit by bit, the edifice of Roosevelt's New Deal and Johnson's
Great Society programme have been dismantled to make 'America
great' again.

For most of the last decade, the result has seemed impressive,
spawning what may only be transient US leadership of the hi-tech
revolution. But now we can see the underlying weaknesses. Company
directors awarded themselves fabulous share-option schemes and cut
corners to manipulate their profits to meet investors' avaricious
expectations, so supporting the share price and their own
fortunes. The ruses were simple, ranging from booking next year's
income as this year's to the sheer fraud, as in the telecoms
sector, of falsifying sales altogether. The result was to propel
an already fevered stock market to yet more stratospheric and
unjustified levels: Wall Street is still valuing American
companies more generously that at any time since 1929.

The majority of mergers and takeovers in this stock
market-dominated economy have proved destructive: few add any
value and most lower it. Between 1993 and 2000, Wall Street had
brought 3,500 small hi-tech companies to the stock market; even
before the dotcom bubble had burst, more than half were trading
below their initial offer price or had gone bust. While dividend
distributions have doubled as a proportion of profits, investment
in the core of American business was troublingly low; the US has
less invested capital per employee than France or Germany.

Productivity is higher in both (the old East Germany excepted) and
growing at least as rapidly. The consequence is America's
intractable trade deficit. Great wealth and opportunity have been
the privilege of the few. As the scandals unfold, ordinary
Americans are left naturally concerned about the integrity of
their pensions and the viability of their insurance companies. The
structures that support ordinary peoples' lives - free health
care, quality education, guarantees of reasonable living standards
in old age, sickness or unemployment, housing for the
disadvantaged - that Europeans take for granted are conspicuous by
their absence. Mainstream America has been told that its
threadbare and neglected social contract is the price it must pay
for opportunity, liberty and wealth creation. The political
reaction could be fierce if the Democrats have the nous, courage
and leadership to express citizens' concerns.

But the outfall could go further. Britain's political, financial
and business classes have been polluted by the same conservative
virus. It is not just Lady Thatcher, but Tony Blair and Gordon
Brown who have uncritically celebrated America's enterprise
culture. Beyond them, many in Europe have wilted before the
propaganda offensive and begun to accept that Europe's economic
and social model is irredeemably weak and that it should be
Americanised.

In truth, the task, as I argue in The World We're In, is to
develop a distinctive European model of enterprise which takes a
more rounded view of what produces organisational success and
protects our conception of the social contract and public realm
which are central to European civilisation, and which all
Europeans, despite their surface differences, hold in common along
with the best in the American liberal tradition.

As real fears grow that Britain could experience similar problems,
our establishment has been quick to point out that we are better
regulated along European lines. This notion was decried just a few
months ago by many of those same voices as inhibiting our ability
to emulate American enterprise. Our 'sclerotic' European-ness may
be what saves us. We should be relieved and proud - and build on
it.


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