Laissez-faire economics in the US is slowly being replaced by a more intensive policy focus from start to finis
Over 40 years ago, the Reagan-Thatcher revolution was born. Taxes were slashed. Unions were squashed. Markets were deregulated and global capital unleashed. But economic pendulums swing. And over the last couple of weeks, it’s become quite clear that anything remotely related to trickle-down theory is now political Kryptonite.
The most obvious example is, of course, the backlash against UK prime minister Liz Truss’s bizarre plan to lower taxes on the rich after announcing major spending on energy subsidies. Trussonomics is now off the table, and the prime minister’s own leadership is in jeopardy.
But it’s not only the UK that is facing the downhill slope of neoliberalism. I recently met a senior Biden administration official who told me that many chief executives are now coming to Washington and asking for “a signal from government — where should we invest? Should we be in Vietnam or Mexico? Which sectors do you want us in?”
While the government isn’t yet in the business of picking winners and losers, the White House has already made the shift to a post-neoliberal era — and many in the business community are preparing for it as well. CEOs may not like the idea of a deglobalising world with more regulation, greater state control and growing labour power. But they can usually find a way to make money as long as they understand the rules of the market.
So what are the new rules? The Biden administration recently put out a clear blueprint of the economy it wants, which included five key elements. One is empowering workers, which it has endeavoured to do by using federal budgets to support unionised labour. Another is leveraging as much fiscal policy as is possible in a polarised Congress to bolster working families in areas such as healthcare and childcare, which are increasingly unaffordable for many Americans.
But as commerce secretary Gina Raimondo put it to me a few months ago, government should be about more than just cutting taxes and redistributing wealth. This administration wants to play a bigger role in directing the supply side of the private sector. In particular, it wants to encourage the making of things, not just via the push to “Buy American”, but through a more fundamental shift in policy focus from distribution to production.
That means industrial policy. And while there isn’t yet a fully articulated strategy in Washington, there are clear signs that laissez-faire economics is over.
One of these is the fact that many companies will soon have to choose between the US and China. Formal decoupling between the two countries is gaining steam — there are a record number of American jobs being reshored from China, and calls for stricter rules on technology transfers.
Another is that resilience and redundancy in crucial supply chains is becoming ever more important. Just a few days ago, Micron became the second big business (after Intel) to announce a major semiconductor investment in the US, putting $100bn into a new foundry in upstate New York.
Federal investment in electric vehicles is also bringing new jobs to beleaguered parts of the South and Midwest. While the strong dollar may become a headwind to the administration’s hopes of growing a larger manufacturing and export economy, the lower cost of energy inputs in the US relative to Europe at the moment is a tailwind.
Support for economic “patriotism” is now the operating principle on both sides of the political divide in Washington. Robert Lighthizer, former US trade representative under Donald Trump, was famously a fan of getting rid of America’s trade deficit. But recently, Democratic California congressman Ro Khanna — a rising figure in progressive circles — called for the same thing, advocating that the US achieve a trade surplus with the rest of the world by 2035.
As Khanna put it, “Trade deficits some years are fine, when balanced by trade surpluses in other years. But the country has been in constant trade deficit since 1975”. He believes that the government should help rectify this by offering zero-interest loans for factories, and increased use of federal purchasing to underwrite markets.
I heard Khanna speak last week at the launch of “Reimagining the Economy”, a Harvard Kennedy School initiative led by economists Dani Rodrik and Gordon Hanson. It aims to replace neoliberal policy paradigms with something new and is one of several such programmes at major universities around the US. Many of these institutions are vying to become the epicentre of fresh economic thinking, just as the University of Chicago was the epicentre of neoliberalism.
Khanna summed up the challenge of the moment: “If we can’t get the economy right, we won’t have a multiracial democracy.” That phrasing itself represents something new — in the past, the conversations between racial equity and class inequality in the US have been separated. But Democrats are increasingly trying to link the two together, as they work to find the contours of a post-neoliberal economics.
That was the topic of another big shindig last week, sponsored by the Roosevelt Institute, in which progressive politicos (many from within the administration) gathered to discuss the details of America’s industrial policy. While these aren’t completely clear yet, one thing is — all of this is the opposite of trickle-down.
Politics turned Parody from within a Conservative Bastion inside the People's Republic of Maryland
Monday, October 10, 2022
Signs of Britches WAY Too Big?
Rana Faroohar, "The new rules for business in a post-neoliberal world"
It's been the German post-WWII economic model, adopted by China. I remember reading decades ago that this would become the model for all advanced nations, including the US and I thought they were crazy, but who's crazy now?
ReplyDeleteThis is like an arms race. What nation isn't going "arm up" rather than leave "their" businesses, industries and corporations unprotected out in the cold, cruel world?
The Radiohead vides is an excellent connection btw
Norm of profit is the best protection.
ReplyDeleteAnd that is not something one can fake.
This is exactly the kind of economic system (mercantilist) that the British were imposing and that the American revolution revolted against.
ReplyDeleteCall me a juche American.
ReplyDeleteBack to the good ol' pre-globalist days of famines and energy shortages.
ReplyDeleteThose day were pre-nuclear.
ReplyDeleteOnce nuclear came on line the words "energy shortage" became an oxymoron.
ReplyDeleteSo, why we still burn oil than?
ReplyDelete"Fossil fuels" are the necessary components of the three major agricultural fertilizers. The US will be fine. Those that rely on international trade... probably going to starve to death. We'll be adopting Euro-skinnies.
ReplyDelete"For the price of a cup a coffee you can feed a Belgian for a day..."
We still burn oil because it's "convenient", lots of energy in a relatively small package that makes a great consumer product that people can be easily "charged" for.
ReplyDeleteYap. You said it yourself. ;-)
ReplyDelete\\But they can usually find a way to make money as long as they understand the rules of the market.
ReplyDeleteYeah... if they'll be provided with a means to have their own cosy and neat monopoly.
But well, that is nothing new. That is how it always was.
Do people not learn about Economical cycles anymore? Is that regarded as cryptic knowledge? Forbiden knowledge? :-)))) Toom marxist? :-P
\\And while there isn’t yet a fully articulated strategy in Washington, there are clear signs that laissez-faire economics is over.
Yeah... "air is ending!!!" alarming screams. :-)))))
\\But Democrats are increasingly trying to link the two together...
What a nasty marxists :-))) isn't it?
Do people not learn about Economical cycles anymore? Something our "Federal Reserve" tried to eliminate... unsuccessfully. It is what has made our economy today too "fragile" and "too big to fail".
ReplyDeleteI want a "return to laissez faire", not the end. A few laws limitting size. Meden agan.
Doesn't laissez faire, free trade across borders without or at least with a minimum of government intrusion lead to globalism?
ReplyDeleteI'm afraid the "meden agan" flags went up too early and now we get to get to do the "at we can feed ourselves" flex until people want to do business again.
The laissez faire zone is "inside" the national market. There can certainly be "borders that set the edges of those markets and still be considered "laissez faire". Call it "liberty faire" if you prefer, for even liberty is not "freedom" as it requires rules... like a Constitution... to separate it from an omnes contra omne "aka-free" society that constitutes globalized "laissez-faire" trade.
ReplyDeleteGlobalized "laissez-faire" has led to an absolute totalitarian governmental control within the nation-state.
ReplyDeleteAnd your version of LF will lead to a local totalitarism. Are you happy with it?
ReplyDeleteSome local tsug-recketeer will be playing "roof" for all that local businesses with a personal NC mills.
Or, some more distant "king" will contol it, through control of flow of indispensable parts.
Or, some ideological fraternity... which can unleash Holy Trial on that who not submit, and not pay.
Which of that Old Good modes do you like more? ;-P
\\I want a "return to laissez faire", not the end.
What you want -- doesn't matter.
Matters only what your stakes are. What you capable and ready to do.
Means. Are you political player? Or you are politicly played?
Globalized "laissez-faire" has led to an absolute totalitarian governmental control within the nation-state.
ReplyDeleteOligarchical Collectivism?
In America we used to have 48 oligarchy's and a "referee". Our referee has since become an oligarch himself as he seeks to "capture" the foreign markets of the original 50. as the "game" has moved "up" a level since the 50 sought "labour price advantages" from abroad and two foreign wars encourages the ref to look the other way while they did so.
ReplyDeleteBut those two wars (WWI/II) are OVER now. I know the oligarch's clamour for a WWIII, but that's not going to happen if I have any say in it.
...and no I may not be a political "player", but that doesn't mean I have to a "chump."
This seems to make two orthogonal assumptions of American power and American responsibility.... when to speak softly and when to beat the shit out of someone. Theodore Roosevelt set the tone for the world that Edith Wilson created while Woody was stroked out and drooling on himself.
ReplyDeleteThen Franklin D. came out and Big-Sticked Adolph. Whatever happened to W. Franklin's Articles of Confederation? ...or the Iroquois Confederacy, for that matter.
ReplyDeleteWe stopped speaking softly and got a bigger stick.
ReplyDeleteatrocity
ReplyDelete\\But those two wars (WWI/II) are OVER now.
ReplyDeleteAre you sure?
\\...and no I may not be a political "player", but that doesn't mean I have to a "chump."
If you not adding up to your bet when stakes on the table rasing -- you are chump.
See, even I, foreigner know rules of that your national game. ;-)
\\when to speak softly and when to beat the shit out of someone.
Easy as pie.
Be soft with mighty.
Be cruel with weak.
Isn't that what China and RFia, and all of the World WANT of you?
Just be an ordinary bloody beast.
Thrug off that pretence of being benevolent and rightful.
What's so hard to groke? ;-P
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ReplyDelete:)
ReplyDelete