By Jeffrey D. Sachs
Almost a year after Joe Biden’s narrow election victory over Donald Trump, the United States remains on a knife-edge. Many political outcomes are possible. These range from the gradual economic and political reform that Biden is seeking to the subversion of elections and constitutional rule that Trump attempted last January-and that he and the Republican Party are still intent on pursuing.
It’s not easy to diagnose exactly what ails the US at its core so deeply that it incited the Trump movement. Is it the ceaseless culture wars that divide the US by race, religion and ideology? Is it the increase in inequality of wealth and power to unprecedented levels? Is it the US’ diminishing global power, with the rise of China and the repeated disasters of US-led wars of choice, leading to national agony, frustration and confusion?
All of these factors are at play in the US’ tumultuous politics. Yet in my view, the deepest crisis is political-the failure of the US’ political institutions to “promote the general Welfare”, as the US Constitution promises. Over the past four decades, the US’ politics has become an insider’s game to favor the super-rich and corporate lobbies at the expense of the overwhelming majority of citizens.
The 1 percent above the rest of Americans
Business magnet and investor Warren Buffett homed in on the essence of the crisis in 2006. “There’s class warfare, all right,” he said, “but it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning.”
The main battlefield is in Washington. The shock troops are the corporate lobbyists who swarm the US Congress, federal departments and administrative agencies. The ammunition is the billions of dollars spent annually on federal lobbying (an estimated $3.5 billion in 2020) and campaign contributions (an estimated $14.4 billion in the 2020 federal elections)). The pro-class-war propagandists are the corporate media, led by mega-billionaire Rupert Murdoch.
Nearly 2,500 years ago, Aristotle observed that good government can turn into bad government through a flawed constitutional order. Republics, despite being governed by the rule of law, can descend into populist mob rule or oligarchic rule by a small and corrupt class, or a tyranny of personal, one-man rule. The US faces such possible disasters unless the political system can detach itself from the massive corruption of corporate lobbying and campaign financing by the rich.
US war against poor intensified in the 1970s
The US’ class war on the poor is not new but was launched in earnest in the early 1970s, and has been implemented with brutal efficiency over the past 40 years. For roughly three decades, from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s inauguration in 1933 in the midst of the Great Depression to the Robert Kennedy-Lyndon Johnson period of 1961-68, the US was generally on the same development path as postwar Western Europe, becoming somewhat a social democracy.
Income inequality was declining, and more social groups, most notably African Americans and women, were joining the mainstream of economic and political life.
Then came the revenge of the rich. In 1971, a corporate lawyer, Lewis Powell, laid out a strategy to reverse the social democratic trends toward stronger environmental regulation, worker rights and fair taxation. Big business would fight back. Then president Richard Nixon nominated Powell to the US Supreme Court in 1971, and he was sworn in early the next year, enabling him to put his plan into operation.
Court opens floodgates to corporate money
Under Powell’s prodding, the Supreme Court opened the floodgates to corporate money in politics. In Buckley vs. Valeo (1976), the court struck down federal limits on campaign spending by candidates and independent groups as violations of free speech. In First National Bank of Boston vs. Belotti (1978), Powell wrote the majority opinion declaring that corporate spending for political advocacy was free speech that could not be subjected to spending limits.
The court’s onslaught on campaign finance limits culminated in the Citizens United vs. Federal Elections Commission (2010), which essentially ended all limits on corporate spending in federal politics.
When Ronald Reagan became president in 1981, he reinforced the Supreme Court’s assault on the general welfare by cutting taxes for the rich, waging an assault on organized labor and rolling back environmental protection measures. That trajectory has still not been reversed.
As a result, the US has diverged from Europe in basic economic decency, well-being and environmental control. Whereas Europe generally continued on the path of social democracy and sustainable development, the US charged ahead on a path marked by political corruption, oligarchy, an ever-widening gap between the rich and the poor, disdain for the environment, and a refusal to limit human-induced climate change.
US’ declining welfare indexes
A few numbers make clear the differences. Governments in the European Union raise revenues averaging roughly 45 percent of GDP, while US government revenues amount to only about 31 percent of GDP. European governments thus are able to pay for universal access to healthcare, higher education, family support and job training, while the US does not ensure provision of these services.
Europe tops the World Happiness Report rankings of life satisfaction, while the US ranks only 19th. In 2019, life expectancy in the EU was 81.1 years, compared with 78.8 years in the US(which had a higher life expectancy than the EU in 1980). As of 2019, the share of the richest 1 percent of households in national income was about 11 percent in Western Europe, compared with 18.8 percent in the US. In 2019, the US emitted 16.1 tons of carbon dioxide per person compared with 8.3 tons per person in the EU.
In short, the US has become a country of the rich, by the rich and for the rich, with no political responsibility for the climate damage it is imposing on the rest of the world. The resulting social cleavages have led to an epidemic of deaths of despair (including drug overdoses and suicides), declining life expectancy (even before the COVID-19 pandemic), and rising rates of depression, especially among young people.
Politically, these derangements have led in varied directions-most ominously, to Trump, who offered faux populism and a cult of personality. Serving the rich while distracting the poor with xenophobia, culture wars and a strongman’s pose may be the oldest trick in the demagogue’s playbook, but it still plays surprisingly well.
-The Daily Mail-China Daily News Exchange Item