MARKETS GOOD, PUBLIC BAD—THE FALSE PROMISES OF MARKET POPULISM
By Ingo Schmidt
Ruling elites stand naked. No more hoping for a rising tide to lift all boats. No more waiting for the trickle down. Fears of drowning in the maelstroms of global finance abound. Feelings of powerlessness among the have-a-little-bits and have-nots fuel the hate of the even more downtrodden and the yearning for the good old welfare state. Bereft of their market-populist cover, ruling elites publicly bemoan the rise of xenophobic populism on the right but are really concerned about flares of left populism that might develop into a challenge to the unbridled power of capital.
Yet the anti-populism from above is helpless in several ways. First, it is blind to the role its own brand—market populism—played in rolling back the countervailing powers of labor and other social movements. Secondly, it doesn’t realize that telling the people that they shall not be populist confirms the populist charge of arrogant elites disconnected from the anxieties and aspirations of Main Street. Thirdly, professed anti-populism doesn’t correspond to a change in direction. Occasional avowals of understanding ordinary people’s concerns, coupled with promises of change, always end up in the profit-enhancing policies which did so much to produce the economic crises, social inequalities and insecurities that undermined the legitimacy of market rule in the first place. In so many variations, the ‘market über alles’ theme remains the same.
Private investment is better than public spending: three variations on one theme
Since the late 1970s, when market populism replaced widespread trust in the social-engineering capacities of the Keynesian welfare state, the supposed superiority of private investment over public spending has presented itself in three variations: first, ‘public spending is crowding out private investment’; then, ‘selling off public enterprises and infrastructure gives private investors the room they need to propel economy-wide growth’ (in chapter one, Jim Stanford shows how this did not occur after the global financial crisis); finally, ‘bailing out banks is the only way to prevent the entire economy from collapse’. Admittedly, this last incarnation is very much at odds with the claim that private investments are superior to public spending.
Strangely enough, the bailouts weren’t the last breath of failed ‘market über alles' policies but the first step in another round of privatizations and public-spending cuts. Since then, private investment, at least in the west, has largely been confined to stock markets where new bubbles are blowing up and new crises are pre-programmed. As with previous crises, the bust next time will lead to a further loss of legitimacy but also more austerity. The bubble-bust-austerity cycle won’t be broken until a big new economic idea rallies the discontented and exerts enough countervailing power to roll back or even overcome capital rule. The onus is upon us to develop suitable alternatives for this.
From crowding out to selling off
Pro-market economists have always been convinced that private investments are the key to the wellbeing of everyone and that economic policies should focus on creating conditions conducive to such investments. This means securing private property, removing barriers to market access, and keeping regulations and taxes to a minimum. Next to a complete takeover by the state, welfare-state expansion was the second-worst thing pro-market economists could think of. As long as this expansion went hand in hand with high growth and profit rates, however, capitalists weren’t too concerned with market principles. But when prosperity turned into stagnation, inflation accelerated and public deficits grew, they happily used pro-market ideas to rally workers and women, ethnic minorities and student youth who felt that the welfare state didn’t deliver on its promises around an anti-welfare state program.
Part of these rallying efforts was to explain stagnation as the result of wasteful public spending which crowded out private investment. Much public spending, pro-market economists declared, invited workers to collect welfare cheques instead of going to work. The small part of public spending used for investment purposes diminished private opportunities. Taxes were presented as a disincentive for private investment and the deficit-financed part of public spending as a cause of inflation and financial instability. The truth, of course, is that a lot of private investment and production relies on public investments in education, infrastructure and research and development. Private auto companies would not have been lead industries of the postwar boom if states hadn’t built major highway and road networks. The same is true for today’s showcase tech giants, who would never have gotten out of the garages of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs if publicly funded research hadn’t created the required hardware.
The upshot of explaining 1970s stagflation by an over-extension of taxes, public deficits and welfare-state spending was that the best economic policy could do was to roll back the welfare state and open new markets by selling off state-owned firms and infrastructure. While the privatization of airlines and railways, housing and hospitals, telecoms and utilities in the west created some investment opportunities, the big bang for private investors came with the collapse of communism in the east. So excited were capitalists that profit expectations soon outpaced actually-existing profit opportunities. The clash between expectations and reality led to the bursting of the dot-com bubble in 2001 and, on a much larger scale, the world financial and economic crises of 2008-09. Investor confidence was shaken to the bone—it was public bailout money that got investors back on their feet.
From bailing out to economic alternatives
A little bit of fiscal stimulus topped with a lot of bailout money stopped stock markets and economies from free-falling. Adding cheap central-bank money, this sort of crisis management also paved the way for new bubbles and crises. The socialization of private losses led to public deficits way beyond those caused by the clash of economic stagnation and expanded welfare states. Moreover, the asset-price inflation which was one of the causes of the 2001 and 2008-09 crises was much higher and had more severe effects on financial stability than the price-wage-spirals which pro-market economists blamed, along with allegedly excessive public spending and red tape, for the 1970s stagnation.
Asset-price inflation is different from what we usually term inflation, when we think of rising prices for consumer goods such as food, gas or apparel. It refers to such commodities as stocks, real-estate or gold. Even though profits increased massively under neoliberal aegis, asset prices grew even faster. Once the ensuing stock-market bubbles popped, governments came to the rescue. The socialization of private losses pushed public households deep into the red. Propagandistically capitalists bemoaned these public deficits; practically they happily used them as levers to push for more privatizations and public-spending cuts. Austerity raises elite boats at the expense of everybody else—the bubble-bust-austerity cycle is their business model.
If the public sector cannot invest because of the high level of accumulated debt, due to a lack of income as a result of international tax competition (Alex Cobham debunks this myth in chapter three) or due to debt-brake mechanisms and other constitutional limitations, the claims of supply-side economists—according to whom nationalized banks need to be quickly privatized because the state is not great at doing business—are not just plainly ideological but also perversely true. The private sector is certainly not good at doing business but it can still be bailed out by taxpayer money.
Right-wing populists who complain about arrogant elites but who really invite the discontented to escape into the dream-worlds of national and racial purity won’t change the economic reality that produces ever more discontent. Left-wing populism might be successful in advancing real-world alternatives if it recognizes that welfare states in the 1970s were sandwiched between popular discontent, bemoaning injustices built into those welfare states, and capitalists fearing the detrimental effect of further welfare-state expansion on their profits. Alternatives need to be thought out beyond the welfare state and advanced in a way which captures the imagination of the fearful and hopeless discontented of today.