America In Decline

BY Noam Chomsky

The comic opera in Washington this summer, which disgusts the country and bewilders the world, may have no analogue in the annals of parliamentary democracy.

“It is a common theme” that the United States, which “only a few years ago was hailed to stride the world as a colossus with unparalleled power and unmatched appeal is in decline, ominously facing the prospect of its final decay,” Giacomo Chiozza writes in the current Political Science Quarterly.

The theme is indeed widely believed. And with some reason, though a number of qualifications are in order. To start with, the decline has proceeded since the high point of U.S. power after World War II, and the remarkable triumphalism of the post-Gulf War ’90s was mostly self-delusion.

Another common theme, at least among those who are not willfully blind, is that American decline is in no small measure self-inflicted. The comic opera in Washington this summer, which disgusts the country and bewilders the world, may have no analogue in the annals of parliamentary democracy.

The spectacle is even coming to frighten the sponsors of the charade. Corporate power is now concerned that the extremists they helped put in office may in fact bring down the edifice on which their own wealth and privilege relies, the powerful nanny state that caters to their interests.

Corporate power’s ascendancy over politics and society—by now mostly financial—has reached the point that both political organizations, which at this stage barely resemble traditional parties, are far to the right of the population on the major issues under debate.

For the public, the primary domestic concern is unemployment. Under current circumstances, that crisis can be overcome only by a significant government stimulus, well beyond the recent one, which barely matched decline in state and local spending—though even that limited initiative probably saved millions of jobs.

For financial institutions the primary concern is the deficit. Therefore, only the deficit is under discussion. A large majority of the population favor addressing the deficit by taxing the very rich (72 percent, 27 percent opposed), reports a Washington Post-ABC News poll. Cutting health programs is opposed by overwhelming majorities (69 percent Medicaid, 78 percent Medicare). The likely outcome is therefore the opposite.

The Program on International Policy Attitudes surveyed how the public would eliminate the deficit. PIPA director Steven Kull writes, “Clearly both the administration and the Republican-led House (of Representatives) are out of step with the public’s values and priorities in regard to the budget.”

The survey illustrates the deep divide: “The biggest difference in spending is that the public favored deep cuts in defense spending, while the administration and the House propose modest increases. The public also favored more spending on job training, education and pollution control than did either the administration or the House.”

The final “compromise”—more accurately, capitulation to the far right—is the opposite throughout, and is almost certain to lead to slower growth and long-term harm to all but the rich and the corporations, which are enjoying record profits.

Not even discussed is that the deficit would be eliminated if, as economist Dean Baker has shown, the dysfunctional privatized health care system in the U.S. were replaced by one similar to other industrial societies’, which have half the per capita costs and health outcomes that are comparable or better.

The financial institutions and Big Pharma are far too powerful for such options even to be considered, though the thought seems hardly Utopian. Off the agenda for similar reasons are other economically sensible options, such as a small financial transactions tax.

Meanwhile new gifts are regularly lavished on Wall Street. The House Appropriations Committee cut the budget request for the Securities and Exchange Commission, the prime barrier against financial fraud. The Consumer Protection Agency is unlikely to survive intact.

Congress wields other weapons in its battle against future generations. Faced with Republican opposition to environmental protection, American Electric Power, a major utility, shelved “the nation’s most prominent effort to capture carbon dioxide from an existing coal-burning power plant, dealing a severe blow to efforts to rein in emissions responsible for global warming,” The New York Times reported.

The self-inflicted blows, while increasingly powerful, are not a recent innovation. They trace back to the 1970s, when the national political economy underwent major transformations, ending what is commonly called “the Golden Age” of (state) capitalism.

Two major elements were financialization (the shift of investor preference from industrial production to so-called FIRE: finance, insurance, real estate) and the offshoring of production. The ideological triumph of “free market doctrines,” highly selective as always, administered further blows, as they were translated into deregulation, rules of corporate governance linking huge CEO rewards to short-term profit, and other such policy decisions.

The resulting concentration of wealth yielded greater political power, accelerating a vicious cycle that has led to extraordinary wealth for a fraction of 1 percent of the population, mainly CEOs of major corporations, hedge fund managers and the like, while for the large majority real incomes have virtually stagnated.

In parallel, the cost of elections skyrocketed, driving both parties even deeper into corporate pockets. What remains of political democracy has been undermined further as both parties have turned to auctioning congressional leadership positions, as political economist Thomas Ferguson outlines in the Financial Times.

“The major political parties borrowed a practice from big box retailers like Walmart, Best Buy or Target,” Ferguson writes. “Uniquely among legislatures in the developed world, U.S. congressional parties now post prices for key slots in the lawmaking process.” The legislators who contribute the most funds to the party get the posts.

The result, according to Ferguson, is that debates “rely heavily on the endless repetition of a handful of slogans that have been battle-tested for their appeal to national investor blocs and interest groups that the leadership relies on for resources.” The country be damned.

Before the 2007 crash for which they were largely responsible, the new post-Golden Age financial institutions had gained startling economic power, more than tripling their share of corporate profits. After the crash, a number of economists began to inquire into their function in purely economic terms. Nobel laureate Robert Solow concludes that their general impact may be negative: “The successes probably add little or nothing to the efficiency of the real economy, while the disasters transfer wealth from taxpayers to financiers.”

By shredding the remnants of political democracy, the financial institutions lay the basis for carrying the lethal process forward—as long as their victims are willing to suffer in silence.

Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor & Professor of Linguistics (Emeritus) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the author of dozens of books on U.S. foreign policy. He writes a monthly column for The New York Times News Service/Syndicate.

More information about Noam Chomsky

  • Reader Comments

    This is an excellent essay by a man who knows what he’s talking about from experience and observation. I’d agree with most everything written.

    One exception would be the suggestion on how to kick-start jobs creation - I wouldn’t place faith in the government we’ve allowed to overcome our interests to do help, any more than I’d trust a financial corporation which sells derivatives to handle it.

    I do know that any country spending at least a third of its budget on military matters will most certainly be martial. As this is being written many young men are playing especially violent video games which train them into fear and retaliation. And I know that any country which cobbles together an illness-profit labyrinth like that in place doesn’t really care about its citizen’s health or well-being.

    Government and corporate corruption’s now endemic and our citizens know it. It has become the accepted norm for those fields. Oftentimes I wonder if our government is substantially different than that of Mexico’s or Greece. A wolf pack has been left in charge of the ranch in D.C., and clever methods to clear the wolves off the ranch are needed. And I like wolves.

    Posted by Michael D. Austin on Aug 7, 2011 at 12:09 PM

    “The self-inflicted blows, while increasingly powerful, are not a recent innovation. They trace back to the 1970s, when the national political economy underwent major transformations.”

    They trace back precisely to August 15, 1971, when Nixon sprang the dollar from the discipline of gold. Those “transformations” could only occur because the currency had become untethered.

    There is a populist misconception that gold is bad. The rich own it, and would crucify the rest of us upon it. The truth is that without gold as a monetary anchor, the banks have free rein to suck all of the wealth out of the economy that they can. As for the masses: they become debt slaves, and even those who have managed to save end up (due to rising prices and near-zero interest rates) with far less than they work for, or (in retirement) have worked for.

    Bread and circuses prevail these days, and fiscal policy debate is just one more circus act. As long as the monetary system escapes serious and widespread attention, bankers will be happy, and the country will accelerate its spiral into hell. Anyone care to pursue a discussion of how best to constrain, dismantle, and ultimately eliminate the Federal Reserve System?

    Posted by stewart kalowitz on Aug 10, 2011 at 1:13 PM

    We don’t have an debt crisis, we have an income crisis. The current crisis has been driven by a very powerful myth, the myth of supply side or trickle down economics.  The idea that corporations create wealth and prosperity for sovereign nations and that taxes and regulations impede the ability of corporations to create wealth has created a gross distortion in the price structure of both labour and capital and this gross price distortion is gutting the wealth of sovereign nations.
    Regulations are not an impediment to wealth, they are a mechanism that insures that all costs are reflected in the price of goods sold. Deregulation in the financial markets has led to the mispricing of financial risk and undermined the stability of the financial system. Taxes insure that the infrastructure need for wealth creation is in place. It makes sense that corporations should pay a share of this cost.
    We need to start challenging the economic ideology that has driven the economic debate for the past few decades and ask some fundamental economic questions, such as Is inflation bad for everyone? Is all debt the same?
    How do you make moral statements about debt when 15 trillion dollars have been printed by the federal reserve and handed out to banks and corporations at 0% interest rate and no expectation of return.
    How do you rationalize raising interest rates to counter inflation from labour pressure and willfully debase your currency to prop up business entities that have no sovereign allegiance.
    Can democracy or equal opportunity exist when the rules are not the same for everybody?

    Posted by Patricia Flanagan on Aug 11, 2011 at 10:04 AM

    Patricia:

    You are indeed so right on the income crisis.  What is even more daunting is that we are taught almost as soon as we are old enough to walk that we need to pull our weight in this world.  But now there are so many obstacles put in our way that those of us who are not among the best and the brightest and the most socially adept are being blocked from pulling our weight.  Unions have become considerably weaker and they were, for better or worse, one institution that tried to make things better for those who were not real well-connected.  Without them or similar protection, it your employer disagrees with, for example, a political bumper sticker on your car, you can be fired and there ain’t a damn thing you can do about it legally.  Every state except Montana is at-will, and that’s what this means.  Proponents argue that it works the other way too, and that is true.  But there usually is a vast difference between geting fired from a job and leaving one on your own.  The likelihood of a cheerful and pleasant atmosphere society wide rises only when there is hope that things will get better—and I don’t see that happening now.

    Posted by beechnut79 on Aug 18, 2011 at 4:29 PM

    Capitalism has put the proletariat in an airtight economic stranglehold that serves the interests of the Business Class in every conceivable fashion. Unemployment is at shocking levels and projected to increase, further increasing the deficit, and giving the Republicrats more political impetus to gut social programs. Private sector unions have been shelled and bureaucratized, further eliminating a long-time source of solidarity and protection for workers, and all the positive consequences that follow from a powerful union presence. Workers have been steadily indoctrinated by neoliberal leaders, turning their class hatreds into animosity towards one another, and fueling sectarian violence between proletarian populations. All this is positively euphoric if you are in the upper 1%.

    For the rest of us, we have to suck it up and put our noses to the grindstone. I fear that a revolution is only possible if a transitional period of utter hell transpires first. I can’t imagine what it will be like.

    Posted by Sergey Yazovsky on Aug 27, 2011 at 12:18 PM
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