http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/11/AR2009031103218.html?wpisrc=newsletter

Building a Better Capitalism
By Harold Meyerson
Thursday, March 12, 2009; Page A19 
So what kind of capitalism shall we craft? Now that the market fundamentalism 
to which we've adhered for the past 30 years has -- by its own criterion of 
increasing shareholder value -- totally failed? Now that Alan Greenspan has 
proclaimed himself "shocked" that "the self-interest of lending institutions to 
protect shareholders' equity" proved to be an illusion? 

Larry Summers, President Obama's senior economic adviser, cautioned in an 
interview in Monday's Financial Times against heeding "those who, just as in 
the 1930s, tried to learn the lesson that market capitalism didn't work and 
needed to be replaced with an entirely different model." But no one is 
suggesting an entirely new system. What we need -- and what we can build -- is 
a capitalism more attuned to our national concerns. 

The Reagan-Thatcher model, which favored finance over domestic manufacturing, 
has collapsed. The decline of American manufacturing has saddled us not only 
with a seemingly permanent negative balance of trade but with a business 
community less and less concerned with America's productive capacities. When 
manufacturing companies dominated what was still a national economy in the 
1950s and '60s, they favored and profited from improvements in America's 
infrastructure and education. The interstate highway system and the G.I. Bill 
were good for General Motors and for the U.S.A. From 1875 to 1975, the level of 
schooling for the average American increased by seven years, creating a more 
educated workforce than any of our competitors' had. Since 1975, however, it 
hasn't increased at all. The mutually reinforcing rise of financialization and 
globalization broke the bond between American capitalism and America's 
interests. 

Manufacturing has become too global to permit the United States to revert to 
the level of manufacturing it had in the good old days of Keynes and Ike, but 
it would be a positive development if we had a capitalism that once again 
focused on making things rather than deals. In Germany, manufacturing still 
dominates finance, which is why Germany has been the world's leader in exports. 
German capitalism didn't succumb to the financialization that swept the United 
States and Britain in the 1980s, in part because its companies raise their 
capital, as ours used to, from retained earnings and banks rather than the 
markets. Company managers set long-term policies while market pressures for 
short-term profits are held in check. The focus on long-term performance over 
short-term gain is reinforced by Germany's stakeholder, rather than 
shareholder, model of capitalism: Worker representatives sit on boards of 
directors, unionization remains high, income distribution is more equitable, 
social benefits are generous. Nonetheless, German companies are among the 
world's most competitive in their financial viability and the quality of their 
products. Yes, Germany's export-fueled economy is imperiled by the global 
collapse in consumption, but its form of capitalism has proved more sustainable 
than Wall Street's. 

So does Germany offer a model for the United States? Yes -- up to a point. 
Certainly, U.S. ratios of production to consumption and wealth creation to debt 
creation have gotten dangerously out of whack. Certainly, the one driver and 
beneficiary of this epochal change -- our financial sector -- has to be scaled 
back and regulated (if not taken out and shot). Similarly, to create a business 
culture attuned more to investment than speculation, and with a preferential 
option for the United States, corporations should be made legally answerable 
not just to shareholders but also to stakeholders -- their employees and 
community. That would require, among other things, changing the laws governing 
the composition of corporate boards. 

In addition to bolstering industry, we should take a cue from Scandinavia's 
social capitalism, which is less manufacturing-centered than the German model. 
The Scandinavians have upgraded the skills and wages of their workers in the 
retail and service sectors -- the sectors that employ the majority of our own 
workforce. In consequence, fully employed impoverished workers, of which there 
are millions in the United States, do not exist in Scandinavia. 

Making such changes here would require laws easing unionization (such as the 
Employee Free Choice Act, which was introduced this week in Congress) and 
policies that professionalize jobs in child care, elder care and private 
security. To be sure, this form of capitalism requires a larger public sector 
than we have had in recent years. But investing in more highly trained and paid 
teachers, nurses and child-care workers is more likely to produce sustained 
prosperity than investing in the asset bubbles to which Wall Street was so 
fatally attracted. 

Would such changes reduce the dynamism of the American economy? Not 
necessarily, particularly since Wall Street often mistook dealmaking for 
dynamism. Indeed, since finance eclipsed manufacturing as our dominant sector, 
our rates of intergenerational mobility have fallen behind those in presumably 
less dynamic Europe. 

Wall Street's capitalism is dying in disgrace. It's time for a better model. 

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