Neoliberalism as economic theory was always an absurdity. It had as much validity as past ruling ideologies such as the divine right of kingsĀ and fascismās belief in the Ćbermensch. None of its vaunted promises were even remotely possible. Concentrating wealth in the hands of a global oligarchic eliteāeight families now hold as much wealth as 50 percent of the worldās populationāwhile demolishing government controls and regulations always creates massive income inequality and monopoly power, fuels political extremism and destroys democracy. You do not need to slog through the 577 pages of Thomas Pikettyās āCapital in the Twenty-First Centuryā to figure this out. But economic rationality was never the point. The point was the restoration of class power.
As a ruling ideology, neoliberalism was a brilliant success. Starting in the 1970s, its Keynesian mainstream critics were pushed out of academia, state institutions and financial organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank and shut out of the media. Compliant courtiers and intellectual poseurs such as Milton Friedman were groomed in places such as the University of Chicago and given prominent platforms and lavish corporate funding. They disseminated the official mantra of fringe, discredited economic theories popularized by Friedrich HayekĀ and the third-rate writer Ayn Rand. Once we knelt before the dictates of the marketplace and lifted government regulations, slashed taxes for the rich, permitted the flow of money across borders, destroyed unions and signed trade deals that sent jobs to sweatshops in China, the world would be a happier, freer and wealthier place. It was a con. But it worked.
āItās important to recognize the class origins of this project, which occurred in the 1970s when the capitalist class was in a great deal of difficulty, workers were well organized and were beginning to push back,ā said David Harvey, the author of āA Brief History of Neoliberalism,ā when we spoke in New York. āLike any ruling class, they needed ruling ideas. So, the ruling ideas were that freedom of the market, privatization, entrepreneurialism of the self, individual liberty and all the rest of it should be the ruling ideas of a new social order, and that was the order that got implemented in the 1980s and 1990s.ā
āAs a political project, it was very savvy,ā he said. āIt got a great deal of popular consent because it was talking about individual liberty and freedom, freedom of choice. When they talked about freedom, it was freedom of the market. The neoliberal project said to the ā68 generation, āOK, you want liberty and freedom? Thatās what the student movement was about. Weāre going to give it to you, but itās going to be freedom of the market. The other thing youāre after is social justiceāforget it. So, weāll give you individual liberty, but you forget the social justice. Donāt organize.ā The attempt was to dismantle those institutions, which were those collective institutions of the working class, particularly the unions and bit by bit those political parties that stood for some sort of concern for the well-being of the masses.ā
āThe great thing about freedom of the market is it appears to be egalitarian, but there is nothing more unequal than the equal treatment of unequals,ā Harvey went on. āIt promises equality of treatment, but if youāre extremely rich, it means you can get richer. If youāre very poor, youāre more likely to get poorer. What Marx showed brilliantly in volume one of āCapitalā is that freedom of the market produces greater and greater levels of social inequality.ā
The dissemination of the ideology of neoliberalism was highly organized by a unified capitalist class. The capitalist elites funded organizations such as the Business Roundtable and the Chamber of Commerce and think tanks such as The Heritage Foundation to sell the ideology to the public. They lavished universities with donations, as long as the universities paid fealty to the ruling ideology. They used their influence and wealth, as well as their ownership of media platforms, to transform the press into their mouthpiece. And they silenced any heretics or made it hard for them to find employment. Soaring stock values rather than production became the new measure of the economy. Everything and everyone were financialized and commodified.
āValue is fixed by whatever price is realized in the market,ā Harvey said. āSo, Hillary Clinton is very valuable because she gave a lecture to Goldman Sachs for $250,000. If I give a lecture to a small group downtown and I get $50 for it, then obviously she is worth much more than me. The valuation of a person, of their content, is valued by how much they can get in the market.ā
āThat is the philosophy that lies behind neoliberalism,ā he continued. āWe have to put a price on things. Even though theyāre not really things that should be treated as commodities. For instance, health care becomes a commodity. Housing for everybody becomes a commodity. Education becomes a commodity. So, students have to borrow in order to get the education which will get them a job in the future. Thatās the scam of the thing. It basically says if youāre an entrepreneur, if you go out there and train yourself, etc., you will get your just rewards. If you donāt get your just rewards, itās because you didnāt train yourself right. You took the wrong kind of courses. You took courses in philosophy or classics instead of taking it in management skills of how to exploit labor.ā
The con of neoliberalism is now widely understood across the political spectrum. It is harder and harder to hide its predatory nature, including its demands for huge public subsidies (Amazon, for example, recently sought and received multibillion-dollar tax breaks from New York and Virginia to set up distribution centers in those states). This has forced the ruling elites to make alliances with right-wing demagogues who use the crude tactics of racism, Islamophobia, homophobia, bigotry and misogyny to channel the publicās growing rage and frustration away from the elites and toward the vulnerable. These demagogues accelerate the pillage by the global elites while at the same time promising to protect working men and women. Donald Trumpās administration, for example, has abolished numerous regulations, from greenhouse gas emissions to net neutrality, and slashed taxes for the wealthiest individuals and corporations, wiping out an estimated $1.5 trillion in government revenue over the next decade, while embracing authoritarian language and forms of control.
Neoliberalism generates little wealth. Rather, it redistributes it upward into the hands of the ruling elites. Harvey calls this āaccumulation by dispossession.ā
āThe main argument of accumulation by dispossession rests on the idea that when people run out of the capacity to make things or provide services, they set up a system that extracts wealth from other people,ā Harvey said. āThat extraction then becomes the center of their activities. One of the ways in which that extraction can occur is by creating new commodity markets where there were none before. For instance, when I was younger, higher education in Europe was essentially a public good. Increasingly [this and other services] have become a private activity. Health service. Many of these areas which you would consider not to be commodities in the ordinary sense become commodities. Housing for the lower-income population was often seen as a social obligation. Now everything has to go through the market. You impose a market logic on areas that shouldnāt be open to market.ā
āWhen I was a kid, water in Britain was provided as a public good,ā Harvey said. āThen, of course, it gets privatized. You start to pay water charges. Theyāve privatized transportation [in Britain]. The bus system is chaotic. Thereās all these private companies running here, there, everywhere. Thereās no system which you really need. The same thing happens on the railways. One of the things right now, in Britain, is interestingāthe Labour Party says, āWeāre going to take all of that back into public ownership because privatization is totally insane and it has insane consequences and itās not working well at all.ā The majority of the population now agrees with that.ā
Under neoliberalism, the process of āaccumulation by dispossessionā is accompanied by financialization.
āDeregulation allowed the financial system to become one of the main centers of redistributive activity through speculation, predation, fraud, and thievery,ā Harvey writes in his book, perhaps the best and most concise account of the history of neoliberalism. āStock promotions, ponzi schemes, structured asset destruction through inflation, asset stripping through mergers and acquisitions, the promotion of levels of debt incumbency that reduce whole populations even in the advanced capitalist countries to debt peonage. To say nothing of corporate fraud, dispossession of assets, the raiding of pension funds, their decimation by stock, and corporate collapses by credit and stock manipulations, all of these became central features of the capitalist financial system.ā
Neoliberalism, wielding tremendous financial power, is able to manufacture economic crises to depress the value of assets and then seize them.
āOne of the ways in which you can engineer a crisis is to cut off the flow of credit,ā he said. āThis was done in Eastern, Southeast Asia in 1997 and 1998. Suddenly, liquidity dried up. Major institutions would not lend money. There had been a big flow of foreign capital into Indonesia. They turned off the tap. Foreign capital flowed out. They turned it off in part because once all the firms went bankrupt, they could be bought up and put back to work again. We saw the same thing during the housing crisis here [in the United States]. The foreclosures of the housing left lots of housing out there, which could be picked up very cheaply. Blackstone comes in, buys up all of the housing, and is now the biggest landlord in all of the United States. It has 200,000 properties or something like that. Itās waiting for the market to turn. When the market turns, which it did do briefly, then you can sell off or rent out and make a killing out of it. Blackstone has made a killing off of the foreclosure crisis where everyone lost. It was a massive transfer of wealth.ā
Harvey warns that individual freedom and social justice are not necessarily compatible. Social justice, he writes, requires social solidarity and āa willingness to submerge individual wants, needs, and desires in the cause of some more general struggle for, say, social equality and environmental justice.ā Neoliberal rhetoric, with its emphasis on individual freedoms, can effectively āsplit off libertarianism, identity politics, multiculturalism, and eventually narcissistic consumerism from the social forces ranged in pursuit of social justice through the conquest of state power.ā
The economist Karl Polanyi understood that there are two kinds of freedoms. There are the bad freedoms to exploit those around us and extract huge profits without regard to the common good, including what is done to the ecosystem and democratic institutions. These bad freedoms see corporations monopolize technologies and scientific advances to make huge profits, even when, as with the pharmaceutical industry, a monopoly means lives of those who cannot pay exorbitant prices are put in jeopardy. The good freedomsāfreedom of conscience, freedom of speech, freedom of meeting, freedom of association, freedom to choose oneās jobāare eventually snuffed out by the primacy of the bad freedoms.
āPlanning and control are being attacked as a denial for freedom,ā Polanyi wrote. āFree enterprise and private ownership are declared to be essentials to freedom. No society built on other foundations is said to deserve to be called free. The freedom that regulation creates is denounced as unfreedom; the justice, liberty and welfare it offers are decried as a camouflage of slavery.ā
āThe idea of freedom āthus degenerates into a mere advocacy of free enterprise,ā which means āthe fullness of freedom for those whose income, leisure and security need no enhancing, and a mere pittance of liberty for people, who may in vain attempt to make use of their democratic rights to gain shelter from the power of the owners of property,āĀ ā Harvey writes, quoting Polanyi. āBut if, as is always the case, āno society is possible in which power and compulsion are absent, nor a world in which force has no function,ā then the only way this liberal utopian vision could be sustained is by force, violence, and authoritarianism. Liberal or neoliberal utopianism is doomed, in Polanyiās view, to be frustrated by authoritarianism, or even outright fascism. The good freedoms are lost, the bad ones take over.ā
Neoliberalism transforms freedom for the many into freedom for the few. Its logical result is neofascism. Neofascism abolishes civil liberties in the name of national security and brands whole groups as traitors and enemies of the people. It is the militarized instrument used by the ruling elites to maintain control, divide and tear apart the society and further accelerate pillage and social inequality. The ruling ideology, no longer credible, is replaced with the jackboot.
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