Democratic Primary Makes
Clear: A Populist Revolution is Coming
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2016/02/16/democratic-primary-makes-clear-populist-revolution-coming
Regardless of Sanders win,
Thomas Piketty predicts 'the end of the politico-ideological cycle' brought on
by Ronald Reagan at the behest of financial elites
The influential economist
Thomas Piketty is the most recent trans-Atlantic observer to note that the
"incredible success of the 'socialist' Bernie Sanders" is indicative
of a deeper, populist movement that's brewing across the United States.
In a column published in the
French newspaper Le Monde on Monday and translated
on his website, Piketty argues that regardless of whether Sanders wins the
Democratic nomination, "we are witnessing the end of the politico-ideological
cycle opened by the victory of Ronald Reagan at the November 1980
elections."
Putting Sanders' rise within
historical context, Piketty revisits the period between 1930 and 1980 when the
U.S. "pursued an ambitious policy of reduction in social
inequalities," with economic policies that included progressive income and
estate taxes, as well as the implementation of a federal minimum wage (which
reached above 10 dollars per hour, in 2016 dollars, by the end of the 1960s).
"Half a century of steady
fiscal progressivity" came to an abrupt end in 1980, when Ronald Reagan
"surfed" into the presidency "on a program designed to reinstate
a mythical capitalism said to have existed in the past," propelled largely
by the frustrations of "the financial elites."
Piketty said this culminated
with the 1986 fiscal reform, which lowered the top tax rates to 28 percent
(compared to an average rate of 82 percent for the richest Americans during the
previous era), as well as the freezing of the federal minimum wage.
Neither effort, he notes, was
"genuinely challenged by the Democrats of the Clinton years and the Obama
era" leading to an "explosion of inequalities and huge salaries...and
stagnation of the incomes of the majority." Indeed, the French
economist rose
to global prominence in 2014 when he argued in his book Capital in the
Twenty-First Century that the world had entered another Gilded Age.
Piketty concedes, "Faced
with the Clinton electoral machine and the conservatism of the major media,
Bernie will perhaps not win the primary." But he adds, "it has been
demonstrated that another Sanders, possibly younger and less white, could one
day soon win the American presidential elections and change the face of the
country."
"Today, Sanders’ success
demonstrates that a substantial proportion of America is tired of the rise in
inequality and these pseudo-alternatives and intends to return to a progressive
agenda and the American tradition of egalitarianism," he concludes.
Bernie Sanders' elder brother,
Larry, who lives in the United Kingdom and is a local leader in the Green
Party, made a similar argument last week. Larry Sanders attributed his
brother's popularity to his focus on economic inequality, telling
BBC: "The distribution of money from the bulk of the population to the
very rich is true and when somebody says it they resonate to that."
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