Fairness isn?t inconsistent with growth; it?s essential to it. The only way the economy can grow and create more jobs is if prosperity is more widely shared.
EnlargeThe Cory Booker imbroglio has ignited a silly but potentially pernicious debate in the Democratic Party between so-called ?pro-growth centrists? who want the President to focus on how well he?s done getting the economy back on its feet after the Bush administration almost knocked it out, and ?pro-fairness populists? who want him to focus on the nation?s widening inequality and Wall Street?s (and Romney?s) continuing role in generating profits for a few at the expense of almost everyone else.
Skip to next paragraph Robert ReichRobert is chancellor?s professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Clinton. Time Magazine?named him one of the 10 most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written 13 books, including ?The Work of Nations,? his latest best-seller ?Aftershock: The Next Economy and America?s Future," and a new?e-book, ?Beyond Outrage.??He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.
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According to the National Journal?s Josh Kraushaar, for example:
Conversations with liberal activists and labor officials reveal an unmistakable hostility toward the pro-business, free-trade, free-market philosophy that was in vogue during the second half of the Clinton administration?.. Moderate Democratic groups and officials, meanwhile, privately fret about the party?s leftward drift and the Obama campaign?s embrace of an aggressively populist message? [T]hey wish the administration?s focus was on growth over fairness.
This is pure bunk ? or should be.
Fairness isn?t inconsistent with growth; it?s essential to it. The only way the economy can grow and create more jobs is if prosperity is more widely shared.
The key reason why the recovery is so anemic is so much income and wealth are now concentrated at the top is America?s the vast middle class no longer has the purchasing power necessary to boost the economy.
The richest 1 percent of Americans save about half their incomes, while most of the rest of us save between 6 and 10 percent. That shouldn?t be surprising. Being rich means you already have most of what you want and need. That second yacht isn?t nearly as exciting as was the first.
It follows that when, as now, the top 1 percent rakes in more than 20 percent of total income ? at least twice the share it had 30 years ago ? there?s insufficient demand for all the goods and services the economy is capable of producing at or near full employment. And without demand, the economy doesn?t grow or generate nearly enough jobs.
Wall Street is part of the problem because it?s responsible for so much of the concentration of income and wealth at the very top ? and for much of the distress still felt in the rest of the economy after the Street nearly melted down in 2008.
The Street has turned a significant part of the economy into a giant casino involving mammoth bets with other peoples? money. When the bets go well, the rich owners of the casino (Wall Street executives, traders, hedge-fund managers, private-equity managers) become even richer. When the bets go sour, the rest of us bear the costs.
The casino also requires continuous transfers of wealth from ordinary taxpayers. Some are built into the tax code. One is the preference of debt over equity (interest on debt is tax deductible), which awards Wall Street banks like JPMorgan for risky lending and awards private-equity firms like Bain Capital for piling debt on the firms it buys.
Another is the ?carried interest? rule that, absurdly, allows private-equity managers (like Mitt Romney) to treat their income as capital gains even when they haven?t risked any of their money.
The biggest of all is the invisible guarantee that if the biggest banks get into trouble, taxpayers will bail them out. This subsidy reduces the big banks? cost of capital relative to other banks and fuels even more risky lending.
None of this is fair. It?s also bad for economic growth and jobs ? as we?ve so painfully witnessed.
Translated into presidential politics, all this means the President should be talking about fairness and growth and jobs, and explaining why we can?t have the latter without the former.
It also means he should be attacking Mitt Romney because Romney is part of?the system of casino capitalism that has harmed America and held back growth ? and Romney wants even less regulation of Wall Street (he?s vowed to repeal Dodd-Frank).
And because the budget Romney has put forth would gut public services vital to the middle class and poor, while cutting taxes on the rich and on corporations even more than they?ve already been cut.
In other words, Romney epitomizes the unfairness of the American economy in this new Gilded Age. For that same reason, Romney is the quintessence of an economic approach shown to be anti-growth and anti-jobs.
The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. This post originally ran on www.robertreich.org.
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