By Yanis Varoufakis
The faith in trickle-down economics, in the wisdom of
unfunded tax cuts, in the capacity of Wall Street to regulate itself, and in Silicon Valley to
look after America's innovations -- all of these illusions now look completely
exhausted.
Americans have good cause to
be disillusioned. Median incomes have hardly grown since the mid-1970s.
McKinsey recently reported that, between 2005 and 2014, 81%
of American families, despite working longer hours, have seen their incomes
stagnate, or indeed fall. Whereas in 1980, 99% of Americans were enjoying 90%
of US income, today their share has fallen precipitously to 78%.
The establishment may be
celebrating the ultra low 4.9% unemployment rate, but says nothing about the
fact that between 2000 and 2015, 3% of 25 to 54-year-olds have fallen
out of the labor market and into the wilderness of destitution. And
many of those who remain employed would like to work more hours and in jobs
that offer greater dignity.
What explains this decline?
The answer is simple: investment in the real US economy has been woefully low.
And what can be done about it? Simple again: boost investment -- significantly.
But here's the question:
shouldn't the business sector be doing this? It would be swell if business were
willing to do so, but the simple fact is that it is not. More than $2 trillion
are slushing around in America's financial sector, without being invested in
something productive.
American economic prosperity
always packed a delicious irony: while it depended heavily on government
intervention, the dominant narrative was that every success was due to heroic
individualists and each failure was caused by the state. In reality, America
got prosperous because the waves of infrastructural investments that
transformed the nation were subsidized by the government.
In the 19th century, it was
the Erie Canal that linked the Midwest with the Atlantic
and the railway projects that were underwritten by the public sector, usually
after the privateers filed for bankruptcy.
In the 20th century, it was
(besides the two world wars that did wonders for growth and innovation) the
construction of the highways at first and later the great government-funded
research projects that spawned, among other things, the computer and the
Internet.
Today, it is clear, at least
to outsiders, that the US needs another such infrastructural revolution.
So is Silicon Valley doing it?
What about the shale-oil industry?
While Silicon Valley is
producing astonishing innovations, with corporations on the verge of global
informational domination and Elon Musk ready to invade Mars, it has no capacity to
provide the high-quality jobs that may re-balance American society.
And as for the shale-oil
industry, it's demonstrated how adept the private sector is at unearthing
well-hidden fossil fuels, but not its capacity to stop humans from treating the
planet we inhabit like a stupid virus killing its host.
When the world faced
Armageddon in the 1940s, in the form of Hitler's atom bomb program, Washington
responded with the Manhattan Project. In effect, they gathered the best
scientists, gave them as much money as they needed in fully-appointed
facilities, and said to them: "You have two years to deliver the
bomb."
Today, we face similar threats
to the planet: climate change, rising seas, water shortages, etc. Our cities
are less sustainable than ever. Commuters waste more and more of their lives in
stationary cars.
America needs a new Manhattan
Project, one located on hundreds of campuses around the United States, that helps
put to work the idle trillions of dollars, our scientists, and the next
generation of youngsters (who must be educated with government subsidies to end
the student debt scandal). The joint effort would produce technologies that
could lead to a cost-effective green transition.
Who will pay for it? Just as
the government-funded Internet spurred massive private sector growth -- and
taxes -- so would the technologies that could spring out of a new Manhattan
Project.
But first the initial
investment must come from government. To do this, the United States needs to
collect more taxes. It is scandalous, for instance, that the IRS does not
exercise its right to tax the earnings of corporations like Apple, Google and
Gilead for intellectual property rights developed on American soil, letting
them park billions upon billions of dollars in tax havens, including Ireland.
Overall, US federal taxes must rise from the present ultra-low 17% of GDP to at
least 25%, with all of the increase coming from the top 1%. This is what logic
and justice demands.
What stops America from doing
this service to itself? It is the 30-year-old bipartisan class war waged
against America's working class and shrinking middle class. Republicans
automatically gravitated to tax cuts for the rich.Democrats served Wall Street and exhausted their talents at
finding ways to curtail welfare. Both burdened the young with unbearable
student debt. The US has reached a point where sensible policies, that the
nation needs, are off the table.
Bernie Sanders' campaign is the silver lining of this year's
Presidential campaign. One does not need to agree with everything he
proposed to come to this conclusion. What matters is that he raised all the
important issues that had hitherto been taboo (e.g. student debt, re-regulating
Wall Street, higher taxes for corporations). And he demonstrated that a new
progressive internationalism can breathe life into politics.
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