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Economic Effect of Coronavirus Could Be Revolutionary


5-6 minutes

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Economic Effect of Coronavirus Could Be Revolutionary

Paul Craig Roberts

Coronavirus and globalism will teach us vital lessons.  The question is whether 
we can learn vital lessons that do not serve the ruling interest groups and 
ideologies.

Coronavirus will teach us that a country without free national health care is 
severely handicapped. Millions of Americans live paycheck to paycheck.  They 
cannot afford health care premiums, deductions, and copays.  Millions have no 
insurance.  This means millions of people infected with coronavirus who cannot 
get medical help.  The morbidity from this is intolerable in any society. 

Shutdowns associated with efforts to contain the spread of coronavirus will 
deny income to millions of Americans who live paycheck to paycheck.  What do 
they do for food, shelter, transportation?  You don’t have to think very long 
along these lines to see a very frightening scenario.

Globalism has taken down the ladders of upward mobility by exporting American 
middle class jobs to Asia.  A population once able to save now lives on debt, 
the service of which is interrupted by recession/depression and by debt service 
absorbing all net disposable income.

Globalism has also reduced the survivability of our society by making it 
dependent  on externally produced goods, the supply of which can be cut off by 
disruptions in other societies, by policy disagreements leading to sanctions, 
and by an inability to export enough to pay for imports, which is what the 
offshored production of US firms is.

The United States has an unprotected population and an economy in trouble.  For 
years corporate executives have run the companies for the benefit of their 
bonuses, which are largely dependent on rises in their company’s share price.  
Consequently, profits and borrowings have been invested in buying back the 
companies’ shares and not in new investment in the businesses.  Corporate 
indebtedness is extreme and will threaten many corporations and many jobs in a 
downturn. Boeing is a case in point.

Economist Michael Hudson has for many decades studied the use of 
debt-forgiveness to restart economies killed by debt burdens.  Debt forgiveness 
for corporations has a different implication than debt forgiveness for 
individuals.  For corporations, forgiving debts lets those who financialized 
and indebted the economy and the population off the hook.  To avoid rewarding 
them for the catastrophe they produced and to prevent widespread public outcry 
and distrust, nationalization is implied for insolvent companies and banks. 

Nationalization would be limited to insolvent companies and financial 
institutions and doesn’t mean that there would be no private companies or 
businesses.  Additional nationalization could be used to prevent strategic 
companies from substituting their interests for national interests, which they 
do when they move American jobs and factories offshore. Pharmaceuticals could 
be nationalized along with health care. Energy which often sacrifices the 
environment to its profits could be considered for nationalization.  A 
successful society has to have more driving it than private profit.

For most Americans nationalization is a dirty word, but it has many benefits.  
For example, a national health care system reduces costs tremendously by taking 
profits out of the system.  Additionally, nationalized pharmaceutical companies 
could be made more focused on research and cures than on profit avenues.  
Everyone knows how Big Pharma influences medical schools and medical practice 
in line with Big Pharma’s approach. A more open-minded approach to medicine 
would be beneficial.

Socialist is another American dirty word, one that is being used against Bernie 
Sanders.   I have not turned into a socialist overnight.  I am simply thinking 
outloud.  How can the economy recover when the population and corporations are 
smothered by debt?  Debt forgiveness is the only way out of this debt 
suffocation.  Can debts be forgiven without nationalization? Not without a huge 
giveaway to financial mangers and Wall Street.  It is the members of the “one 
percent” who have received 95% of the increase in us income and wealth since 
2008. Do we want to reward them for smothering the economy with debt by bailing 
them out without nationalizing them?

The combination of an economy covered in debt and an unprotected population is 
clearly revolutionary.  Do we have leadership capable of breaking out of 
interest group politics and ruling ideologies in order to save our society and 
put it on a more sustainable basis?

Or will the economic hardships be blamed on the virus, the catalyst that 
ignited the debt timebomb? 

 

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