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The Robber that Takes All that is
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The demonstrators at both of the Republocrat political conventions this
year, like those at the WTO meetings last year in Seattle, have been
portrayed by unsympathetic commentators as lacking focus, rabble-rousers
protesting any- and every-thing. And while that may be true to some
extent -- certainly there were a wide variety of banners being waved --
there was unanimity on one area: people are fed up with corporations.
They want to re- take control of the public debate, the media, health,
safety and environmental regulation, international trade, and all the
other areas they see as having been taken over by the multinationals.
Corporate power has overtaken the political process, has corrupted the
media and enslaved the workers. This is not exactly the freshest of
news. In 1979, Agnes George de Mille wrote this, in her introduction to
the centenary edition of her grandfather's Progress and Poverty:
The great sinister fact, the one that we must live with, is
that we are yielding up sovereignty. The nation is no longer comprised
of the [fifty] states... but of the real powers: the cartels, the
corporations. Owning the bulk of our productive resources, they are
the issue of that concentration of ownership that George saw evolving,
and warned against. These multinationals are not American any more.
Transcending nations, they serve not their country's interests, but
their own. They manipulate our tax policies to help themselves. They
determine our statecraft. They are autonomous. They do not need to
coin money or raise armies. They use ours.
Yes, corporations are big. The annual revenue of General Motors, for
example, exceeds the GDP of Denmark; the annual revenue of Wal-Mart
exceeds the GDP of South Africa. Their bigness allows them to spend
quite a lot to get the media saturation and the political leverage to
remain big. The point that Agnes de Mille made 21 years ago has (at
last) made it into the public dialogue. Many people are talking about
how sovereignty is being usurped by the Big Corporations. How they have
assumed nearly limitless power to pillage and despoil. Yet if those
things are true -- and on many levels they certainly seem to be -- it's
hard to imagine the rulers of today's commercial empires being anything
but amused at the current round of protests.
For what, specifically, is being protested? And at whom are the screams
of outrage being directed?
At the corporations themselves? Should they start acting like
responsible citizens and clean up their behavior? Their stockholders
might have some things to say about that. To be fair, though, some
corporations have had success at making their operations friendlier to
workers and to the planet. There is a niche market today for investors
seeking to buy shares of "socially responsible" firms. There
are even mutual funds that invest solely in such companies. But they
are, of course, not the majority. The very fact that a market for
socially responsible investments exists at all shows that the vast
majority of companies are asocial at best. Most companies, indeed, are
as socially responsible as they can possibly be -- under existing
conditions, and without harming profits.
It has generally been a truism in market economies that it is not the
entrepreneur's job to secure the rights of citizens. The entrepreneur's
job is to make a profit. We want people to be decent and ethical
individuals, yes, but such judgements are relative. My neighbor is free
to engage in Satanic incantations, hedonistic excesses, all manner of
naughtiness, as long as it doesn't infringe my rights. We generally
consider it the job of the government -- and particularly the judicial
system -- to secure the people's rights.
If we cannot expect corporations, by and large, to reform themselves,
then who shall we scream at? The government? This is where we heard the
laughter coming from before. The government has simply been doing, if
not exactly what we told it to do, then certainly what we have failed
(repeatedly) to prohibit. No matter how powerful they are, corporations
are still subject to the laws of nations.
In the United States, our last three Presidents have been elected by
fewer than half of the eligible voters, and in midterm elections the
turnout is even lower. Congress has routinely failed to enact reforms
that a majority of US citizens want. More people know who's getting
kicked off of gilligan's island this week than who their Congressional
representatives are, or what they have voted for. Corporations, on the
other hand, make prudent and effective use of the political process. Are
they to be blamed for doing that?
Perhaps in the US we have only ourselves to blame, but what about those
little, developing countries who have no choice but to kneel to the
corporate lash, lest they lose all job growth? That is how the state of
affairs is portrayed, on both sides of the debate, but it is mostly a
fantasy. Legislative and Executive decisions in most developing nations
today (certainly in those with the largest and worst-performing external
debts) are made by ruling elites. Policies friendly to multinationals,
and to their real estate-owning cronies, are in their interest.
Now, I don't mean to say that Agnes de Mille was wrong. Indeed,
multinational corporations are becoming more "sovereign", more
unanswerable, all the time. My point is merely that "they"
haven't done it to us. In fact, let's look again at Ms. de Mille's
words. She said, "We are yielding up sovereignty." We are. If
we repeatedly, openly and habitually invite them to plunder our wealth,
how can we blame them for stepping in and taking it?
But perhaps there shouldn't be corporations at all. Perhaps
shareholders should be held liable for a corporation's misdeeds. That
would be the end of the corporation as we know it, of course. Why would
I invest in a company if its employees could perpetrate illegal actions,
without my knowledge, for which I could be held liable? The corporation
itself can be held liable - - if an honest court can be found to hear
the case. An offshore subsidiary with no hard assets is the nominal
owner of the nefarious acts? Such practices can be made illegal (where
they aren't already). It's very easy to miss seeing what we don't want
to look at.
No, in fact a corporation is simply a particular type of business firm,
suitable mainly for industries in which a large concentration of capital
is efficient. Do they abuse the system? Indeed they do. Baseball bats
are also used to assault people -- should we ban them?
If we were to (somehow) stamp out all preferential treatment afforded
to corporations -- get rid of the tax preferences, the subsidies, the
squirming-free of accountability, the give-aways buried in trade
agreements -- who would benefit? Would the working people in rich or
poor nations benefit?
Consideration of the most basic facts about wages shows that, indeed,
they would not. Employers do not set wage levels because of what they
think workers deserve, or how much they like their workers; employers
don't set wage levels at all. It is the market for labor that sets wage
levels -- and the supply side of that market is determined by the
laborers' alternatives. If no better alternatives exist, wages won't go
up.
So who will benefit, if the special favors bestowed upon corporations
are taken away? Well, the elimination of subsidies and managerial fat
will make large companies -- and hence the whole economy -- more
efficient. (If some operations cannot survive without their pork supply,
so much the better for the general welfare!) Productivity will go up --
and the owners of land and natural resources, which are fixed in supply
and needed for all production, will ultimately reap the benefits. The
private land-holder, who makes no contribution to production, but
collects a reward for making production possible, is "the robber
that takes all that is left", in Henry George's words*.
So, to make a long story short: if we eliminate all forms of "corporate
welfare", subsidy, graft & pork -- but leave our land- tenure
and tax systems as they are -- the landowners will be the ones who
benefit.
Now it is worth mentioning that in the United States, at least,
landowners are not solely latifundistas or multinationals. Tens
of millions of individual families own (or have equity in, at least)
some land. A rise in overall production that raises land values is
surely in their interest; real estate appreciation represents, for many
Americans, the hope of a secure retirement and something to leave to the
children. So what we are left with is the fact that eliminating "corporate
welfare" will benefit one class of landowners (small ones) at the
expense of another class of landowners (corporations losing their other
privileges and subsidies). And those corporations, who are often the
largest landholders themselves, will also reap the rewards of higher
productivity in higher land values!
Corporate abuses of the environment, the rights of workers, and the
public trust are severe. Nations -- at the democratic will of their
citizens -- must use their rightful weapons to combat them. But let us
not forget what the largest, most severe and most pervasive "welfare
privilege" is: land monopoly. Until we reform that basic injustice,
other reforms -- however genuine and just -- can only forestall the
inevitable.
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