Friday, June 17, 2016

Capitalism 2.0? [feedly]

More like social democracy 2.0, but interesting discussion

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Capitalism 2.0?
// UnderstandingSociety


Capitalism is one particular configuration of the economic institutions that define production and consumption in a society. It involves private ownership of firms and resources, and a system of wage labor through which individuals compete for jobs within the context of a labor market. In its nature it creates positions of substantial power for owners of capital, and generally little power for owners of labor power -- workers. In theory capitalism can be joined with both democratic and authoritarian systems of government -- for example, France (democratic) and Argentina 1970 (military dictatorship). (Here is an earlier post on alternative capitalisms; link.)

As Marx himself noted, capitalism brought a number of powerful and emancipatory changes into the world. But it is plain that there are substantial deficiencies in our contemporary political economy, from the point of view of the great majority of society. For example:
Rising inequalities of income and wealthDisproportionate power of corporations in political and economic lifePersistence of racial and ethnic segregation and discrimination Slow rates of social mobilityPervasive inequalities of opportunityOverwhelming influence of money in electoral politicsInability to address the causes of climate changeInability of the state to effectively regulate products and processes to ensure health and safetyManipulation of culture and values for the sake of profitWhat kinds of institutional changes might we imagine for our current political economy that do a better job of satisfying the demands of justice and human wellbeing?

A number of philosophers, political scientists, and economists have addressed the question of how to envision a more just form of capitalism. Kathleen Thelen considers the prospects for an "egalitarian capitalism" (Varieties of Liberalization and the New Politics of Social Solidaritylink); Jon Elster had an important contribution to make on the question of alternatives to capitalism (Alternatives to Capitalism; link); and John Rawls put forward a view of a preferable alternative to capitalism, which he referred to as a property-owning democracy (O'Neill and Williamson, Property-Owning Democracy: Rawls and Beyond; link).

So what might capitalism 2.0 look like if we want a genuinely fair and progressive society in the 21st century? Several features seem clear.
Something like decentralized markets in labor and capital seem unavoidable in a large modern society. So the 21st-century economy will be a market economy.Rawls is right that extreme inequalities of property ownership lead to unacceptable inequalities of political participation and human capability fulfillment. So the 21st century will need to find effective ways of distributing wealth and income more broadly.Market mechanisms generally leave some disadvantaged sub-populations behind. A key goal of the 21st century state must be to find effective ways of improving the prerequisites of opportunity for disadvantaged groups. This means that a substantial equality of availability and access to education, nutrition, housing, and other components of quality of life need to be secured by the state.Existing market institutions do not automatically guarantee fair equality of opportunity. So the political economy of capitalism 2.0 will need to use public resources and authority to ensure equality of opportunity for all citizens.What kinds of political and economic institutions would serve to advance these social goals?

One approach that is gaining international attention is the idea of a universal basic income for all citizens. Belgian philosopher Philippe van Parijs makes a powerful case for the need for universal basic income (link) in the world economy we now face. Here is his definition in the Boston Review article:

By universal basic income I mean an income paid by a government, at a uniform level and at regular intervals, to each adult member of society. The grant is paid, and its level is fixed, irrespective of whether the person is rich or poor, lives alone or with others, is willing to work or not. In most versions–certainly in mine–it is granted not only to citizens, but to all permanent residents. 

The UBI is called "basic" because it is something on which a person can safely count, a material foundation on which a life can firmly rest. Any other income–whether in cash or in kind, from work or savings, from the market or the state–can lawfully be added to it. On the other hand, nothing in the definition of UBI, as it is here understood, connects it to some notion of "basic needs." A UBI, as defined, can fall short of or exceed what is regarded as necessary to a decent existence. (link)

Swiss voters narrowly defeated such a proposal for Switzerland this spring (link), but serious debates continue. 

Another approach results from politically effective demands for real equality of opportunity. Equality of opportunity requires high-quality public education for everyone. So capitalism 2.0 needs to embody educational institutions that are substantially better and more egalitarian than those we now have -- ranging from pre-school to K-12 to universities. Consider this fascinating county-level map of the United States combining per capita income, high school graduate rate, and college graduate rate (link):


The map makes clear the strong association between county income and educational attainment, which implies in turn that children born into the wrong zip code have substantially lower likelihood of attaining high-quality educational success. A more just society would show little variation with respect to educational attainment, even when it also shows substantial variation in per-capita incomes across counties. Achieving comparable levels of educational attainment across rich and poor counties requires a substantial public investment in schools, teachers, and educational resources.

Another determinant of equality of opportunity is universal access to quality healthcare. Poor health affects both current quality of life and future productivity; so when poor people are in circumstances in which they cannot afford or gain access to high-quality healthcare, their current and future life prospects are at risk.

All of these ideas about a more just capitalism require resources; and those resources can only come from public finance, or taxation. The wealth of a society is a joint product which the market allocates privately. Taxation is the mechanism through which the benefits of social cooperation extend more fully to all members of society. It is through taxation that a capitalist society has the potential for creating an environment with high levels of equality of opportunity for its citizens and high levels of quality of life for its population. The resulting political economy promises to be the foundation of a more equitable and productive society. (Here is a post on the moral basis for the extensive democratic state; link.)

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RE: [CCDS Members] Hillary after Orlando on ISIS

and NOW!!!   dozens of State Department officials https://www.rt.com/news/347062-state-department-dissent-syria-bombing – have demanded bomb strikes on Assad-Syria!!!!!  making for war - this war -as Hillary approaches or attains ascendancy.  Trump however appears less likely to do this.    N.

 

From: Members [mailto:members-bounces+normaha=pacbell.net@lists.cc-ds.org] On Behalf Of Norma J F Harrison
Sent: Friday, June 17, 2016 12:03 PM To: 'Socialist Economics' <socialist-economics@googlegroups.com>; 'CCDS-Members' <members@lists.cc-ds.org>; jcase4218.lightanddark@blogger.com Subject: Re: [CCDS Members] Hillary after Orlando on ISIS

 

and let the Jews-Israel's and America's continue to murder the people it evicted from their homes and now seeks to annihilate entirely – or at least to inflict tortures resembling Germany's and other 'great' nations'.  

...as well as torment the rest of us by institutionalized violence --   Support Hillary! 

How did YOU 'feel' at 9-11?  Did you feel the way the U.S. commanded you to (see below "...let me remind us all, I remember, I remember how it felt, on the day after 9/11,...")  – via broadcasts reminiscent of dictatorial expressions in such as Germany?  Or did you respond, oh look what the U.S. has done – to people in this the U.S., now, as it does to people these past 200/500 years?, caused by U.S. brutality, a strike here in the U.S....

The revised anti-communism – that made us hate and fear identifying with the only struggle that is ours:  "But as ISIS loses actual ground in Iraq and Syria, it will seek to stage more attacks and gain stronger footholds wherever it can, from Afghanistan, to Libya, to Europe.

The threat is metastasizing."

I suppose posting this speech is only meant to be informative, certainly not laudatory in agreement.

Norma

 

From: Members [mailto:members-bounces+normaha=pacbell.net@lists.cc-ds.org]  On Behalf Of John Case Sent: Friday, June 17, 2016 4:33 AM To: Socialist Economics socialist-economics@googlegroups.com ; CCDS-Members members@lists.cc-ds.org ; jcase4218.lightanddark@blogger.com Subject: [CCDS Members] Hillary after Orlando on ISIS

 

'Americans need to stand together': Hillary Clinton's remarks following the Orlando shooting

Clinton delivered an address pledging that as president she would take on "lone wolves" who might out terrorist attacks in the United States and calling for unity in light of the massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando on Sunday. The compete transcript of her remarks in Cleveland are posted below.

 

SPEAKER: FORMER SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON, DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE

CLINTON: Thank you. (APPLAUSE)

Thank you all very much.

(APPLAUSE)...

How Do We Make Sure the Panama Papers Lead to Lasting Reforms on Tax Evasion? [feedly]

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How Do We Make Sure the Panama Papers Lead to Lasting Reforms on Tax Evasion?
// Global Policy Journal

Duncan Green explains what can be done to ensure that the paper scandal is followed by far-reaching policy reforms.Scandals like the Panama Papers are a massive potential driver of policy change. In n...Read more
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Paul Krugman: Fear, Loathing and Brexit [feedly]

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Paul Krugman: Fear, Loathing and Brexit
// Economist's View

Should Britain stay in the European Union?:

Fear, Loathing and Brexit, by Paul Krugman, NY Times: There are still four and a half months to go before the presidential election. But there's a vote next week that could matter as much for the world's future...: Britain's referendum on whether to stay in the European Union.

Unfortunately, this vote is a choice between bad and worse — and the question is which is which. ...

The straight economics is clear: Brexit would make Britain poorer. ... Britain would end up about two percent poorer than it would otherwise be, essentially forever. That's a big hit. ...

True, some Brexit advocates claim that leaving the E.U. would free Britain ... to deregulate and unleash the magic of markets, leading to explosive growth. Sorry, but that's ... the same free-market fantasy that has always and everywhere proved delusional.

No, the economic case is as solid as such cases ever get. Why, then, my downbeat tone about Remain? ...

The so-called European project began more than 60 years ago, and for many years it was a tremendous force for good. It didn't only promote trade and help economic growth; it was also a bulwark of peace and democracy in a continent with a terrible history.

But today's E.U. is the land of the euro, a major mistake... Britain had the good sense to keep its pound, but it's not insulated from other problems of European overreach, notably the establishment of free migration without a shared government. ...

But ... the most frustrating thing about the E.U.: Nobody ever seems to acknowledge or learn from mistakes. ... I feel some sympathy with Britons who just don't want to be tied to a system that offers so little accountability, even if leaving is economically costly.

The question, however, is whether a British vote to leave would make anything better. ... I fear that it would actually make things worse. The E.U.'s failures have produced a frightening rise in reactionary, racist nationalism — but Brexit would, all too probably, empower those forces even more...

Obviously I could be wrong about these political consequences. But ... Britain will still have the option to leave the E.U. someday if it votes Remain now, but Leave will be effectively irreversible. You have to be really, really sure that Europe is unfixable to support Brexit.

So I'd vote Remain. There would be no joy in that vote. But a choice must be made, and that's where I'd come down.

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The trade surplus in services

http://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-us-trade-surplus-in-services.html?m=1

Streak of underwhelming economic news continues with JOLTS [feedly]

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Streak of underwhelming economic news continues with JOLTS
// Economic Policy Institute Blog

Not surprisingly, given the rash of ho-hum economic reports we've seen recently, the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) for April 2016 was underwhelming. On the plus side, job openings ticked up slightly as layoffs fell. On the downside, the hires rate has fallen precipitously two months in a row, while the quits rate ticked down slightly. The figure below shows the dynamics of the key top-line numbers.

The positive news on layoffs is clear. The layoffs rate—the number of layoffs as a share of total employment—is now down to 1.1, better than the rate over the last entire business cycle, 2000-2007, when its trough was 1.2. That's great news. Unfortunately, hires and quits remain below full employment levels—hires peaked at 4.0 in 2006 and 4.4 in 2001, while quits peaked at 2.2 in 2006 and 2.6 in 2001. It is particularly troubling that the hires rate has fallen for two months running, from 3.8 in February down to 3.5 in April, but it's not surprising given the weak Employment Report for April. Unfortunately, the even weaker Employment Report for May suggests that hires may fall even further when the JOLTS report comes out in July. While increasing job openings is a good thing, it needs to translate into hires for workers to see the effects of that increase.

The quits rate fell slightly in April from 2.1 to 2.0. In a stronger economy, workers would feel more confidence to quit their job in search of a better one. For many years now, workers have continually stayed in their job rather than finding what might be a better match.

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Implications of globalization and secular stagnation for monetary policy [feedly]

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Implications of globalization and secular stagnation for monetary policy
// Economic Policy Institute Blog

The following is a lightly edited transcription of a talk given by Josh Bivens at an AFL-CIO conference on the Implications of Globalization & Secular Stagnation for Monetary Policy.

The central question this presentation is "what are the implications of globalization and secular stagnation for monetary policy?" Let me tell you my final answer first and then I'll work my way there.

My final answer is that globalization and secular stagnation make a sustained, coordinated fiscal expansion necessary for restoring growth to the global economy. Current politics in both the Unites States and Europe make this impossible in the short run. This means it's likely to be a long time before we have a decent global economy, and that's a real problem.

Let's start out with some definitions. Secular stagnation is a chronic shortfall of aggregate demand that cannot be solved just by lowering short-term interest rates. It is obviously closely related to the problems of the zero lower bound (ZLB) on interest rates—it essentially says that this ZLB problem is not something that needs a one-time burst of policy activism to defeat, but that long-run forces (the rise of inequality, among other things) have lowered the long-term natural rate of interest that is consistent with full employment.

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