By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: July 19, 2012
[…]
It’s no secret that, at this point, many of America’s
richest men — including some former Obama supporters — hate, just hate,
President Obama. Why? Well, according to them, it’s because he “demonizes”
business — or as Mitt Romney put it earlier this week, he “attacks success.”
Listening to them, you’d think that the president was the second coming of Huey
Long, preaching class hatred and the need to soak the rich.
Needless to say, this is crazy. In fact, Mr. Obama always
bends over backward to declare his support for free enterprise and his belief
that getting rich is perfectly fine. All that he has done is to suggest that
sometimes businesses behave badly, and that this is one reason we need things
like financial regulation. No matter: even this hint that sometimes the rich
aren’t completely praiseworthy has been enough to drive plutocrats wild. For
two years or more, Wall Street in particular has been crying: “Ma! He’s looking
at me funny!”
Wait, there’s more. Not only do many of the superrich feel
deeply aggrieved at the notion that anyone in their class might face criticism,
they also insist that their perception that Mr. Obama doesn’t like them is at
the root of our economic problems. Businesses aren’t investing, they say,
because business leaders don’t feel valued.
Mr. Romney repeated this line, too,
arguing that because the president attacks success “we have less success.”
This, too, is crazy (and it’s disturbing that Mr. Romney
appears to share this delusional view about what ails our economy). There’s no
mystery about the reasons the economic recovery has been so weak. Housing is
still depressed in the aftermath of a huge bubble, and consumer demand is being
held back by the high levels of household debt that are the legacy of that
bubble. Business investment has actually held up fairly well given this
weakness in demand. Why should businesses invest more when they don’t have
enough customers to make full use of the capacity they already have?
But never mind. Because the rich are different from you and
me, many of them are incredibly self-centered.
They don’t even see how funny it
is — how ridiculous they look — when they attribute the weakness of a $15
trillion economy to their own hurt feelings. After all, who’s going to tell
them? They’re safely ensconced in a bubble of deference and flattery.
Unless, that is, they run for public office.
Like everyone else following the news, I’ve been awe-struck
by the way questions about Mr. Romney’s career at Bain Capital, the
private-equity firm he founded, and his refusal to release tax returns have so
obviously caught the Romney campaign off guard. Shouldn’t a very wealthy man
running for president — and running specifically on the premise that his
business success makes him qualified for office — have expected the nature of
that success to become an issue? Shouldn’t it have been obvious that refusing
to release tax returns from before 2010 would raise all kinds of suspicions?
By the way, while we don’t know what Mr. Romney is hiding in
earlier returns, the fact that he is still stonewalling despite calls by
Republicans as well as Democrats to come clean suggests that it could be
something seriously damaging.
Anyway, what’s now apparent is that the campaign was
completely unprepared for the obvious questions, and it has reacted to the
Obama campaign’s decision to ask those questions with a hysteria that surely
must be coming from the top. Clearly, Mr. Romney believed that he could run for
president while remaining safe inside the plutocratic bubble and is both
shocked and angry at the discovery that the rules that apply to others also
apply to people like him. Fitzgerald again, about the very rich: “They think,
deep down, that they are better than we are.”
O.K., let’s take a deep breath. The truth is that many, and
probably most, of the very rich don’t fit Fitzgerald’s description. There are
plenty of very rich Americans who have a sense of perspective, who take pride
in their achievements without believing that their success entitles them to
live by different rules.
But Mitt Romney, it seems, isn’t one of those people. And that discovery may be an even bigger issue than whatever is hidden in those tax returns he won’t release.
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