Daily Beast
 
Joseph Stiglitz:  The 99 Percent Wakes Up
by  _Joseph E. Stiglitz_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/contributors/joseph-e-stiglitz.html)  May 2, 2012 
5:15 PM EDT  
 

Inequality isn’t only plaguing  America—the Arab Spring flowered because 
international capitalism is broken. In  _From Cairo to Wall Street: Voices 
from the Global Spring_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1595588272/thedaibea-20/) ,  edited by 
Anya Schiffrin and Eamon Kircher-Allen, Nobel 
laureate Joseph  Stiglitz says the world is finally rising up and demanding a 
democracy where  people, not dollars, matter—the best government that money can 
buy just isn’t  good enough.


   
 
 
 
There are times in history when people all over the  world _seem to rise 
up_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/05/01/may-day-live-blog-for-occupy-wall-street-s-general-strike.html)
 , to say that something is wrong and 
to ask for  change. This was true of the tumultuous years of 1848 and 1968. 
It was certainly  true in 2011. In many countries there was anger and 
unhappiness about  joblessness, income distribution, and inequality and a 
feeling 
that the system  is unfair and even broken.
Both 1848 and 1968 came to signify the start of a new era. The year 2011 
may  also. The modern era of globalization also played a role. It helped the 
ferment  and spread of ideas across borders. The youth uprising that began in 
Tunisia, a  little country on the coast of North Africa, _spread to nearby 
Egypt_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/01/24/one-year-of-revolution.html) 
, then to other countries of the Middle  East, to Spain and 
Greece, to the United Kingdom and to _Wall Street_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/features/2012/05/occupy-wall-street.html) , and 
to cities around the world. 
In some cases,  the spark of protest seemed, at least temporarily, quenched. 
In others, though,  small protests precipitated societal upheavals, taking 
down Egypt’s Hosni  Mubarak, Libya’s Muammar Qaddafi, and other governments 
and government  officials.
 
Something Is Wrong
 
That the young people would rise up in the dictatorships of Tunisia and 
Egypt  was understandable. They had no opportunities to call for change through 
 democratic processes. But electoral politics had also failed in Western  
democracies. There was increasing disillusionment with the political process. 
 Youth participation in the 2010 U.S. election was telling: an unacceptably 
low  voter turnout of 20 percent that was commensurate with the 
unacceptably high  unemployment rate. President Barack Obama had promised 
“change we 
can believe  in,” but he had delivered economic policies that seemed like more 
of the  same—designed and implemented by some of the same individuals who 
were the  architects of the economic calamity. In countries like Tunisia and 
Egypt, the  youth were tired of aging, sclerotic leaders who protected their 
own interests  at the expense of the rest of society.
 
And yet, there were, in these _youthful protesters of the Occupy Movement_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/04/30/as-may-day-protests-are-pla
nned-will-wall-street-be-re-occupied.html) —joined by their  parents, 
grandparents, and teachers—signs of hope. The protesters were not  
revolutionaries or anarchists. They were not trying to overthrow the system.  
They still 
had the belief that the electoral process might work,  if only there was a 
strong enough voice from the street. The protesters took to  the street in 
order to push the system to change, to remind governments that  they are 
accountable to the people.
The name chosen by the young Spanish protesters—los indignados, the  
indignant or outraged—encapsulated the feelings across the world. They had much 
 
to be indignant about. In the United States, the slogan became “the 99 
percent.”  The protesters who took this slogan echoed the title of an article I 
wrote for  the magazine Vanity Fair in early 2011 that was titled “Of the 1%, 
for  the 1%, and by the 1%.” The article cited studies that described the 
enormous  increase in inequality in the United States—to the point where 1 
percent of the  population controls some 40 percent of the wealth and garner 
for themselves some  20 percent of all the income. In other countries, the 
lack of opportunities and  jobs and the feeling that ordinary people were 
excluded from the economic and  political system caused the feeling of outrage. 
In his essay, Egyptian activist  Jawad Nabulsi discusses how the system was 
fixed in favor of the upper classes,  and he uses the word fairness 
repeatedly to describe what was lacking in  Egypt under Mubarak.
 
Something else helped give force to the protests: a sense of unfairness. In 
 Tunisia and Egypt and other parts of the Middle East, it wasn’t just that 
jobs  were hard to come by, but those jobs that were available went to the 
politically  connected. In the United States, things seemed more fair, but 
only superficially  so. People who graduated from the best schools with the 
best grades had a better  chance at the good jobs. But the system was stacked 
because wealthy parents sent  their children to the best kindergartens, 
grade schools, and high schools, and  those students had a far better chance of 
getting into the elite universities.  In many of these top schools, the 
majority of the student body is from the top  quartile, while the third and 
fourth quartiles are very poorly represented. To  get good jobs, one needed 
experience; to get experience, one needed an  internship; and to get a good 
internship, one needed both connections and the  financial wherewithal to be 
able to get along without a source of  income.
 (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1595588272/thedaibea-20/) .  
 
Around the world, the financial crisis unleashed a new sense of unfairness, 
 or more accurately, a new realization that our economic system was unfair, 
a  feeling that had been vaguely felt in the past but now could no longer 
be  ignored. The system of rewards—who received high incomes and who received 
 low—had always been questioned, and apologists for the inequality had 
provided  arguments for why such inequality was inevitable, even perhaps 
desirable. The  inequities had been growing slowly over time. It is sometimes 
said 
that watching  changes in income inequality was like watching grass grow. 
Day by day, one  couldn’t see any change. But as those who live near abandoned 
subprime houses  know all too well, within a few months, scrub and weeds 
can quickly replace the  best of manicured lawns. Over time, the change is 
unmistakable, and so too, over  time, the inequality has increased to the point 
where it cannot be ignored. And  that’s what’s been happening in the 
United States and many other countries  around the world.

 
Even in the United States, a country not given to class warfare, there is  
today a broad consensus that the top should be taxed at a higher rate or at  
least not taxed at a lower rate. While some at the top may believe that 
they  earned what they received through hard work, and it is their right to 
keep it,  the reality (which many of the richest do realize) is that no one 
succeeds on  his own. The poor often work far harder than the richest. In 
developing  countries, the poor lack the chance of education and have no access 
to funds,  and their economies are dysfunctional, but they work long hours 
carrying water,  looking for fuel, and toiling at manual labor. Even in 
developed countries, life  chances are affected by where one is born and the 
education and income of one’s  parents. Often it comes down to luck, being in 
the 
right place at the right  time.
 
It was not just the worsening inequality that outraged the protesters of  
2011. It was a sense that at least some of those incomes were not honestly  
earned. Injustice motivated the Occupy Wall Streeters just as it motivated 
the  young Tunisians of the Arab Spring. If someone earns huge incomes as a 
result of  a brilliant contribution that leads to huge increases in incomes of 
the rest of  society, it might seem fair that he receive a fraction, 
perhaps a substantial  fraction, of what he has contributed. Indeed, the 
dominant 
paradigm in economics  attempted to justify societal inequalities by saying 
(I should say,  assuming) that they were related to differences in “marginal”
  productivities: those who, at the margin, contributed more to society got 
 more.
 


 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/galleries/2011/10/23/portraits-of-the-occupy-wall-street-protesters-photos.html)
  
Now, in the aftermath of the crisis, it seemed grossly unfair that the  
bankers walked off with outsized bonuses while those who suffered from the  
crisis brought on by those bankers’ reckless and predatory lending went without 
 a job. It seemed grossly unfair that government bailed out the banks but 
seemed  reluctant to even extend unemployment insurance for those who through 
no fault  of their own could not get employment or to provide anything but 
token help to  the millions who were losing their homes. What happened 
undermined the  prevailing justification for inequality, that those who made 
greater  contributions to society receive (and should receive) larger rewards. 
Bankers  reaped large rewards even though their contribution to society—and 
even to their  firms—had been negative. In other sectors, CEOs who ran their 
firms into  the ground, causing losses for shareholders and workers alike, 
were rewarded  with gargantuan bonuses.
 
If no one is accountable, the problem must lie in the economic system. This 
 is the inevitable conclusion and the reason that the protesters are right 
to be  indignant. Every barrel has its rotten apples, but the problem, as 
MIT Professor  Susan Silbey has written, comes when the whole barrel is rotten.
 
Much of what has gone on can only be described by the words moral  
deprivation. Something wrong had happened to the moral compass of so  many of 
the 
people working in the financial sector. When the norms of a society  change in 
a way that so many have lost their moral compass—and the few  
whistle-blowers go unheeded—that says something significant about the society.  
The 
problem is not just the individuals who have lost their moral compass but  
society itself.
 
What the protests tell us is that there was outrage and that outrage gives  
hope. Americans have always had an idealistic streak, reflected both in the 
 instruction in schools and in political rhetoric. Kids read the 
Declaration of  Independence, “all men are created equal,” and they read the 
words 
literally,  all men, white and black, and they believe them. They recite the 
Pledge  of Allegiance, which promises “justice for all,” and they believe  
it.
 
Market Failures
 
The list of grievances against corporations was long, and longstanding. For 
 instance, cigarette companies stealthily made their dangerous products 
more  addictive, and even as they tried to persuade Americans that there was no 
 scientific evidence of the dangers of their products, their files were 
filled  with evidence to the contrary. Exxon had similarly used its money to 
try to  persuade Americans that the evidence on global warming was weak, even 
though the  National Academy of Sciences had joined with every other 
scientific body in  saying that the evidence was strong. Chemical companies had 
poisoned the water,  and when their plants blew up, they refused to take 
responsibility for the death  and destruction that followed. Drug companies 
used 
their monopoly power to  charge prices that were a multiple of their costs of 
production, condemning to  death those who could not afford to pay.
 
The financial crisis itself had brought out more abuses. While the poor  
suffered from predatory lending practices, almost every American suffered from 
 deceptive credit card practices. And while the economy was still reeling 
from  the misdeeds of the financial sector, the BP oil spill showed another 
aspect of  the recklessness: lack of care in drilling had endangered the 
environment and  threatened jobs of thousands of people depending on fishing 
and 
 tourism.
 
But even before the crisis, the evidence was that the _market economy was 
not delivering_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2008/12/30/markets-can-t-rule-themselves.html)
  for most Americans. GDP was going up but most 
citizens were worse off. Not even the laws of  economics long championed by the 
political right seemed to hold. Earlier, we  explained how the theory that 
is supposed to relate rewards to social  contributions had been falsified by 
the Great Recession. The theory holds  that competition is supposed to be so 
strong in a perfectly efficient market  that “excess” profits (returns in 
excess of the normal return on capital)  approach zero. Yet each year we saw 
the banks walking off with mega-profits so  large that it is inconceivable 
that markets are really competitive. Standard  courses in economics talk 
about the law of demand and supply, where prices are  determined to equate the 
two. In the theoretical model, there is no such thing  as unemployment, no 
such thing as credit rationing. But in fact, we have a world  in which there 
are both huge unmet needs (e.g., investments to bring the poor  out of 
poverty, to bring development to Africa and the other less developed  countries 
in other continents around the world, to retrofit the global economy  to face 
the challenges of global warming) and vast underutilized resources  (e.g., 
workers and machines that are idle or not producing up to their  potential). 
As of December 2011, some 25 million Americans who would like a full  time 
job can’t get one, and the _numbers in Europe are similar_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/01/23/turbulence-ahead.html) .
 
Innovation and globalization provide the most recent—and the most  important
—contexts to observe the failings of the market. Both were supposed to  
make our economy more prosperous, and yet both seem to have resulted in an  
economy in which most citizens are becoming worse off.
 
In recent research, Bruce Greenwald and I have traced the roots of the 
Great  Depression to an increase in agricultural productivity so rapid that 
fewer and  fewer people were needed to grow the world’s food. In the United 
States in 1900,  a large portion of the labor force worked on farms; today less 
than 2 percent of  the population grows more food than even an obese 
population can consume—and  there are large amounts left over for exports. Over 
time, most people working in  agriculture who were no longer needed looked for 
alternative employment. But at  times, the movement away from agriculture 
was far from smooth. Between 1929 and  1932, agricultural prices plummeted, 
and incomes fell by an amount variously  estimated at one-third or two-thirds. 
Such precipitous declines in income  resulted in corresponding declines in 
demand for manufactured goods. Rural real  estate prices plummeted and 
credit became unavailable, and so, despite their  already low income, farmers 
were trapped in the declining sector. Just when  migration out of the rural 
sector should have been increased, it came to a halt.  If people had been able 
to relocate, if new jobs had been created, the increases  in productivity 
would have been welfare-increasing, but as it was, given the  market failures, 
those in both the city and the rural sector  suffered.
 
It seems strange, in the midst of the Great Recession, when one out of six  
Americans who would like to get a full-time job is unable to get one, to 
see  stores replacing low-wage cashier clerks with machines. The innovation 
may be  impressive, profits may even be increased, but the broader economic 
and social  consequences cannot be ignored: higher unemployment, lower wages 
for unskilled  labor as the balance of demand and supply tilts more against 
workers, and  greater inequality.
 
Political Failures
 
The political system seems to be failing as much as the economic system, 
and  in some ways, the two failures are intertwined. The system failed to 
prevent the  crisis, it failed to remedy the crisis, it failed to check the 
growing  inequality, it failed to protect those at the bottom, and it failed to 
prevent  the corporate abuses. And while it was failing, the growing 
deficits suggested  that these failures were likely to continue into the future.
 
Americans, Europeans, and people in other democracies around the world take 
 great pride in their democratic institutions. But the protesters have 
called  into question whether there is a real democracy. Real democracy is more 
 
than the right to vote once every two or four years. The choices have to be 
 meaningful. The politicians have to listen to the voices of the citizens.  
However, increasingly, and especially in the United States, it seems that 
the  political system is more akin to “one dollar one vote” than to “one 
person one  vote.” Rather the correcting the market’s failures, the political 
system  is reinforcing them. [ emphasis added ]
 
Tax systems in which a _billionaire like Warren Buffett_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/galleries/2011/04/22/billionaires-millionaires-willing-to-pay-mor
e-taxes.html)  _pays less taxes_ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/conten/dailybeast/articles/2012/04/30/stephen-king-tax-me-for-f-s-sake.html)
  (as a 
percentage of his income) than those who  work for him, or in which speculators 
who helped bring down the global economy  are taxed at lower rates than are 
those who work for their income reinforce the  view that politics is unfair, 
and contribute to the growing  inequality.
 
The failures in politics and economics are related—and they reinforce  each 
other. A political system that amplifies the voice of the wealthy also  
provides opportunity for laws and regulations—and the administration of laws 
and  regulations—to be designed in ways that not only fail to protect the 
ordinary  citizens against the wealthy but enrich the wealthy at the expense of 
the rest  of society. [ emphasis  added  ]     
 
Globalization and Markets


My criticism of globalization lies not with globalization itself, but with  
the way it has been managed: it is a two-edged sword, and if it is not 
managed  well, the consequences can be disastrous. When managed well—and a few 
countries  have succeeded in managing it well, at least so far—it can bring 
enormous  benefits.
 
The same is true for the market economy: the power of markets, for good and 
 for evil, is enormous. The increase in productivity and standards of 
living in  the past two hundred years have far exceeded those of the previous 
two 
 millennia, and markets have played a central role—though so too has 
government,  a fact that free marketers typically fail to acknowledge. But 
markets 
have to be  tamed and tempered, and that has to be done repeatedly to make 
sure that they  work to the benefit of most citizens. That market control 
happened in the United  States in the progressive era, when competition laws 
were passed for the first  time. It happened during the New Deal, when social 
security, employment, and  minimum wage laws were passed. The message of 
the Occupy Wall Streeters, and  other protesters around the world, was that 
markets once again needed to be  tamed and tempered. Even in parts of the 
Middle East, where they brought  increases in growth, the benefits did not 
trickle down.
 
>From Cairo to Wall Street
 
In more than forty years of travel to developing countries, I have seen 
these  problems at close hand. And throughout 2011, I gladly accepted 
invitations to  Egypt, Spain, and Tunisia, and I met with protesters in 
Madrid’s 
Retiro Park, at  Zuccotti Park in New York, and in Cairo where I spoke with the 
young men and  women who had played a central role at Tahrir Square. As we 
talked, it was clear  to me that they understood how in many ways the system 
has failed. The  protesters have been criticized for not having an agenda, 
but such criticism  misses the point of protest movements. They are an 
expression of frustration  with the electoral process. They are an alarm.
 
At one level, these protesters are asking for so little: for a chance to 
use  their skills, for the right to decent work at decent pay, for a fairer 
economy  and society. Their requests are not revolutionary but evolutionary. 
But at  another level, they are asking for a great deal: for a democracy 
where people,  not dollars, matter; and for a market economy that delivers on 
what it is  supposed to do. The two demands are related: unfettered markets do 
not  work well, as we have seen. For markets to work the way markets are 
supposed to  work, there has to be appropriate government regulation. But for 
that to occur,  we have to have a democracy that reflects the general 
interests, not the  special interests. [emphasis added ] We may have the best  
government that money can buy, but that won’t be good enough.
 
In some ways, the protesters have already accomplished a great deal: think  
tanks, government agencies, and the media have confirmed their allegations, 
of  the high and unjustifiable level of inequality, the failures of the  
market system. The expression “we are the 99 percent” has entered into 
popular  consciousness. No one can be sure where the Arab Spring or the Occupy 
Wall  Street movements will lead. But of this we can be sure: these young 
protesters  have already altered public discourse and the consciousness of both 
ordinary  citizens and politicians. 

 
Copyright © 2012 by Joseph E. Stiglitz. This  excerpt originally appeared 
in _From Cairo to Wall Street: Voices From the Global Spring_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1595588272/thedaibea-20/)  ©  2012 by 
Anya 
Schiffrin and Eamon Kircher-Allen, published by The New Press,  reprinted here 
with 
permission.
 
Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University and the  
winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize for Economics. He served on President 
Clinton's  economic team as a member and then chairman of the U.S. Council of 
Economic  Advisors in the mid-1990s, and then joined the World Bank as chief 
economist and  senior vice president. Stiglitz has received the John Bates 
Clark 
Medal. He was  a Fulbright Scholar at Cambridge University, held the 
Drummond Professorship at  All Souls College, Oxford, and has taught at M.I.T, 
Yale, Stanford, and  Princeton.

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