Were we to become
serious about restructuring our errant economic system and equalizing wealth,
we could go about it in two very different ways. The first would be to
redistribute significant amounts of income through taxation and entitlement
programs. We are all familiar with this method and its inherent weaknesses,
which include breeding a spirit of dependence among the recipients of
redistribution, generating resentment among those being taxed, and creating a
cumbersome and flawed tax code that will always be subject to manipulation by
the wealthy. Because of a half-century of tax cuts, U.S. citizens, particularly
the wealthy, have come to expect low tax rates. Indeed, most Americans today
would be shocked to learn that the top marginal tax rate in 1953 under
Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower was 92 percent (on any income over
$400,000); it then dropped to 91 percent for the rest of his presidency. At the
same time the estate tax rate was 77 percent on any inheritance over $10
million. It is not hard to see how these rates helped rein in rampant wealth
accumulation and encourage greater equality. The top marginal income tax rate
did not change until 1964 when Democratic President Lyndon Johnson signed into
law a 20 percent tax cut proposed by President Kennedy a few months before his
assassination. The top rate hovered near 70 percent (with an income threshold
of $200,000) until Reagan’s initiatives dropped it to 50 percent in 1982 (also
lowering the corresponding income threshold to $85,600). Reagan again cut the
top marginal tax rate in 1988, this time to 28 percent, and lowered the income
threshold to $29,750.1
The high marginal
tax rates following World War II helped pay off war debts, rebuild Europe,
establish a strong American middle class, and create greater economic equality,
but as mentioned, taxation and redistribution produce imperfect results and
cause a variety of societal problems. So, if redistributing income, which is
only the fruit of productive
endeavor, is a flawed approach, what other option do we have?
A Very American Heresy
The alternative
is to redistribute ownership, the source
of productive endeavor. This is economic heresy in today’s corporate capitalist
economy, but it is not so un-American as we might assume. Historian Paul
Johnson points out that the Declaration of Independence “laid down what no
other political document in the whole of history had yet claimed, that men were
‘endowed by their Creator’ with the right not only to ‘Life’ and ‘Liberty’ but the pursuit of Happiness. By this last,
what the Founding Fathers had in mind was the acquisition of property, which
they saw as the precondition of human felicity. Without widely dispersed
property, true individual independence, and so a sound Republic, was
impossible.”2 Limited, widespread ownership is not a new idea. As I
mentioned in a previous post, Thomas Paine declared, perhaps naively, that
“commerce is capable of taking care of itself,”3 but he also
condemned “all accumulation . . . of property, beyond what a man’s own hands
produce.”4 This idea of limited, universal ownership persisted well
into the nineteenth century. A mid-century labor leader named Robert MacFarlane
declared that “small but universal ownership” was the “true foundation of a
stable and firm republic.”5 During this era, it was generally agreed
that freedom could not thrive in a nation of hirelings.
But a nation of
hirelings is exactly what we have become. We have become owned rather than owners, property
rather than proprietors. William
Greider identifies one fundamental element of freedom that the free market does
not disperse very broadly: capital. “The problem,” says Greider, “is not that
capital is privately owned, as Marx supposed. The problem is that most people
don’t own any.”6 One might wonder how we can even call a system capitalism when only a small minority of
the population can be considered capitalists.7 The cause of this
disparity in ownership is inseparably connected with certain developments that
accompanied the Industrial Revolution, primarily the rise of the modern corporation.
A Corporate Aristocracy
The Revolutionary
War liberated the colonists not just from the British monarchy but also from
the oppression of British corporations. Consequently, citizens of the new
United States and their elected leaders were justifiably suspicious of
corporations. In 1816, Thomas Jefferson expressed this distrust: “I hope we
shall . . . crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations,
which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid
defiance to the laws of our country.”8
For many years,
government chartered these businesses cautiously and kept them on a very short
leash, dissolving them if they violated the restrictions specified in their
charters. Unfortunately, this sense of caution did not last. According to Kalle
Lasn, the Civil War was a great turning point in American economic history. “Corporations made huge profits from
procurement contracts and took advantage of the disorder and corruption of the
times to buy legislatures, judges and even presidents. Corporations became the
masters and keepers of business.”9
“Corporations
continued to gain power and influence,” Lasn explains. “They had the laws
governing their creation amended. State charters could no longer be revoked.
Corporate profits could no longer be limited. Corporate economic activity could
be restrained only by the courts, and in hundreds of cases judges granted
corporations minor legal victories, conceding rights and privileges they did
not have before.”10
A watershed year
for corporate rights was 1886, when the Supreme Court decision in Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad (a simple property tax dispute) established a rather amazing legal
fact: corporations are actually “persons” and are therefore protected under the
Fourteenth Amendment. The difference, of course, between corporate “persons”
and human persons is that human persons generally don’t have the financial
means to exert the same social, economic, political, and even moral influence
that corporations do. We now live in a very different sort of society than prevailed
in 1886.
Although nothing in the law requires a
corporation to adopt a particular model of ownership, in most instances the
corporate form of business takes on an authoritarian structure with distinct
boundaries separating the owners and managers of capital from the workers who
create the products but who are also regarded as a cost to minimize.
Huge
corporations, says historian and social critic Christopher Lasch, as well as
the wage system and a more and more intricate subdivision of labor made it
pointless to restore the independence of individual proprietorship. Instead of
giving the wage earner a piece of the action (meaning capital), “enlightened
social policy” aimed instead to make his job secure, his working conditions
tolerable, and his wages equitable. “Hardly anyone asked any more whether
freedom was consistent with hired labor. People groped instead, in effect, for
a moral and social equivalent of the widespread property ownership once
considered indispensable to the success of democracy.” But redistributing
income, guaranteeing job security, and turning the working classes into
consumers are nothing more than pale substitutes for ownership of capital; for
none of these strategies produce “the kind of active, enterprising citizenry
envisioned by nineteenth-century democrats.”11
A Philosophical Incongruity
This idea of
widespread, limited ownership was also at the heart of the many utopian and communitarian
experiments of the nineteenth century, including the failed attempts Joseph
Smith and Brigham Young orchestrated among the Mormons. Indeed, our
communitarian past makes the current dedication of Latter-day Saints to
conservative economics that much more mystifying. What is so ironic about this
is that during the same period when the Saints were busy building a theocracy
and ignoring the principles outlined in the U.S. Constitution, they were also
sporadically trying to succeed at a rather democratic form of communitarian
economics—a mismatch, to say the least. But between 1890 and 1920, we
flip-flopped, joining the rest of the country in its persistent reverse
mismatch. We now support a democratic form of republican government but embrace
an authoritarian system of business ownership. We can’t seem to get our ducks
in a row with our politics and our economics.
We do live in a
democratic republic, which, while imperfect, is better than any other political
system humankind has yet devised. Within this democratic republic, we enjoy a
wide variety of freedoms as well as having a voice in electing our government representatives.
This is a right our forebears and many other oppressed peoples around the globe
have been willing to fight for. Does it not seem odd then that we so willingly
embrace economic authoritarianism?
A fundamental
philosophical incongruity separates our nation’s founding principles from the
economic tenets that govern corporate capitalism. This disparity would be of
little consequence were its impact limited to the esoteric arguments of
scholars. Unfortunately, this is not the case. The incompatibility between our
political ideals and our economic realities affects each of us at a very
personal level. Indeed, the authoritarian nature of our economic institutions
effectively prevents most U.S. citizens from achieving their innate potential
as they seek a fulfilling life, an
equal share of liberty within the
shelter of democracy, and a true and independent sense of happiness. A sobering corollary to this reality is that these
authoritarian economic institutions are also permitted to exert so much
political influence that for most individual citizens the constitutional ideal
of equal participation in the democratic republic is a pipe dream at best.
Free Intraprise and the Competition Myth
Some may choose
to discount this argument, insisting that most workers prefer to be employed
from eight to five each workday by someone else and are fully satisfied with
their work. This argument, however, runs counter to both common sense about
human nature and recurring research. A worker survey published in 2010 by the Conference
Board, for instance, found that only “only 45 percent of those surveyed say
they are satisfied with their jobs, down from 61.1 percent in 1987.” Even
though 10 percent of American workers were unemployed at the time of the
survey, “their working compatriots of all ages and incomes continue to grow
increasingly unhappy,” said Lynn Franco, director of the Consumer Research
Center of the Conference Board. “Through both economic boom and bust during the
past two decades, our job satisfaction numbers have shown a consistent downward
trend.” The survey reveals that the drop in job satisfaction between 1987 and
2009 covered all categories measured.12 Apparently, spending forty
hours or more each week performing tasks someone else requires of us is not so
enjoyable to most of us—especially when we are paid as little as possible while
those who own our time and productive output live in increasing relative
opulence.
A popular
argument in favor of our current form of capitalism is that it works in tandem
with the “free market,” in contrast to the command economies of communism. But
the free-market system is misnamed, as is free enterprise. In the free market,
freedom exists only between
businesses, not within them. And free
enterprise is not the same as what Gifford and Elizabeth Pinchot have called
“free intraprise.” Of course, even between businesses, the free market itself
is a misnomer, because in a world of mammoth corporations, the exchange of
goods and services in the marketplace is anything but free. Not only do individual consumers have very
little bargaining power in their relationship with corporations, but a careful
examination of corporate behavior shows that these large institutions do not
actually favor unfettered competition in a free market. As David Barash
explains, they prefer the current corporate welfare system, with its bailouts,
special benefits, tax breaks, and behind-closed-doors deal-making for government
contracts. The only competition corporations really desire is competition among
the wage earners, because this sort of competition results in lower wages and a
more submissive workforce.13
Unlimited
ownership of capital is based on flawed reasoning anyway. The rule most
capitalist businesses have always followed is that the entire harvest of profit
should go exclusively to those who supplied the seed. But what about those who
planted, weeded, watered, cultivated, nurtured, harvested, packaged, and
delivered the produce? In reality, pragmatic concerns may soon make the legal
and ethical questions irrelevant. If we continue down the corporate path of
increasing inequality, we will find ourselves in a land of shrinking employment
opportunities and declining real wages for an increasing number of workers, as
well as deteriorating public services for everyone. If we truly wish to solve
our economic problems, we must reshape the system so that it creates greater
economic equality, and the most sensible method of doing this is to share
ownership of capital with those who through their efforts actually help create
it.
A Third Alternative
Hugh Nibley
exposed a fallacy in the two-dimensional thinking most people employ—which is also one of Lucifer’s most common ploys. Said
Nibley:
When I find myself called upon to
stand up and be counted, to declare myself on one side or the other, which do I
prefer—gin or rum, cigarettes or cigars, tea or coffee, heroin or LSD, the Red
Rose or the White, Shiz or Coriantumr, wicked Nephites or wicked Lamanites,
Whigs or Tories, Catholic or Protestant, Republican or Democrat, black power or
white power, land pirates or sea pirates, commissars or corporations,
capitalism or communism? The devilish neatness and simplicity of the thing is
the easy illusion that I am choosing between good and evil, when in reality two
or more evils by their rivalry distract my attention from the real issue.14
The problem with
the easy economic choice most people see—between corporate capitalism and
communism—is that it does indeed distract us from a third alternative that is
more consistent with scripture and with our American social and political
ideals than either of these two corrupt systems, both of which are
authoritarian in their economic practices and both of which concentrate capital
in the hands of people who do not do the productive work or create the product.
Plainly stated, the only way people can experience freedom and representative
democracy in all facets of their lives is by possessing a share of ownership in
their places of work and having a voice in the decision making, including the
opportunity to choose their organizational leaders.
Ownership of
capital is the central factor that defines and differentiates economic systems.
Under communism, ownership supposedly resides in the hands of the people as a
whole, but in practice the Party elite control capital. Corporate capitalism
also concentrates ownership in the hands of a small but elite group. The law of
consecration, however, offers a very different ownership model. Granted, we
cannot resurrect the United Order without divine direction, and we certainly
cannot expect the entire U.S. population to embrace the law of consecration,
but perhaps we can find viable principles in the Lord’s revelations to guide us
in reforming our economic system.
A thorough
analysis of the law of consecration as applied under Joseph Smith and Brigham
Young is beyond the scope of this series of posts, but such an examination can
be found in Working toward Zion:
Principles of the United Order for the Modern World, by James Lucas and
Warner Woodworth. Some of their analysis needs to be updated based on new
information coming from the Joseph Smith Papers and other historical studies,
but they do offer some fascinating possibilities. After outlining the history
of the United Order, Woodworth and Lucas suggest ways in which we might apply
principles of the Lord’s preferred economy in our modern organizational world.
They conclude that worker-owned businesses or cooperatives are the form of
enterprise most consistent with the principles the Lord has revealed.
In short, if
workers own their time, efforts, and produce, they will not pay themselves as
little as possible. They will pay themselves as much as possible with a sense
of equity absent from typical corporate pay structures. They will not fire
themselves or move production to a low-wage country or eliminate their own
health insurance or pension plans or other benefits. If more people receive a
direct share of the profits instead of a marginal wage, they will have more
disposable income to spend on the products generated in the marketplace.
Conversely, if fewer people are reaping exorbitant profits from the labors of
others (what Gandhi would label “wealth without work”), then there will be less
excess capital to invest in unneeded productive capacity or speculative
financial instruments. Overcapacity will correct itself, as will the
exaggerated economic growth multinationals require to reap the unrealistic
rates of return demanded by out-of-touch financial markets.
Interestingly,
even though there are only about 350 worker-owned cooperatives with a total of 5,000
worker owners in the United States,15 a variety of religious and
secular perspectives have promoted this
very economic form for many reasons. From a historical and social
angle, Christopher Lasch argues that worker ownership is consistent with capitalism as Adam Smith and
other early economic thinkers conceived it. In his economic treatise Adam Smith’s Mistake: How a Moral
Philosopher Invented Economics and Ended Morality, Kenneth Lux arrives at a
similar conclusion. So does William Greider in his examination of the global
economy, One World, Ready or Not: The
Manic Logic of Global Capitalism, when he attempts to prescribe a cure for
what he sees as the inevitable shortcomings of globalism. In his tour de force When Corporations Rule the World and his
more recent Agenda for a New Economy,
David Korten argues persuasively for worker-owned businesses. Although farmer
cooperatives are not an exact parallel to worker-owned enterprises, there are
overlaps, and Ezra Taft Benson, as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, promoted
farmer cooperatives as an alternative to the government subsidies, price
supports, acreage allotments, and overproduction that prevailed in the United
States during his years in Washington.16
Ultimately, there
are many forms worker-owned businesses might take. In the next couple of posts,
I’ll explore a few options, including the famous Mondragon Cooperatives of
Spain and a model devised by Indian philosopher Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar for
restructuring an entire economy based on worker ownership.
_______________________
1. Top U.S. Marginal Income Tax Rates, 1913–2003,
http://www.truthandpolitics.org/top-rates.php#fn-2. Although it is true that
U.S. presidents do not have the ability to reduce tax rates—this power resides
with the House of Representatives—they are generally given credit for them,
since Congress usually acts on a president’s economic initiatives. Hence, we
speak of Reagan’s or Bush’s tax cuts.
2. Paul Johnson, “An Awakened Conscience,” Forbes, September 14, 1992, 183.
3. Thomas Paine, The
Political Writings of Thomas Paine (Granville, Middletown, N.J.: George H.
Evans, 1839), 398; http://books.google.com/books?id=42AaAAAAYAAJ&printsec=toc#PPA398,M1.
4. Moncure Daniel Conway, ed., The Writings of Thomas Paine (New York and London: G. P. Putnam’s
Sons, 1895), 3:340, http://books.google.com/books?id=1ToPAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage.
5. Christopher Lasch, The True and Only Heaven: Progress and Its Critics (New York:
Norton, 1991), 205.
6. Greider, One World, 416.
7. The fact that I may own a little stock through a
pension plan or mutual fund does not make me a capitalist. Being a capitalist
has more to do with the control of capital.
8. Thomas
Jefferson to George Logan, 1816, http://etext.virginia.edu/jefferson/quotations/jeff5.htm.
9. William Kalle Lasn, “The Uncooling of America:
The History of Corporations in the United States,”
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Corporations/Hx_Corporations_US.html;
excerpted from Kalle Lasn, Culture Jam:
The Uncooling of America (New York: William Morrow, 1999).
10. Lasn, “Uncooling.”
11. Lasch, The
True and Only Heaven, 207–8, 224–25.
12. “U.S. Job Satisfaction at Lowest Level in Two
Decades,” The Conference Board, January
5, 2010, http://www.conference-board.org/utilities/pressDetail.cfm?press_ID=3820.
13. David P.
Barash, The L Word: An Unapologetic,
Thoroughly Biased, Long-Overdue Explication and Defense of Liberalism (New
York: Morrow, 1992), 176.
14. Hugh W. Nibley, Approaching Zion (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, Utah:
Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1989), 163.
15. See “About
Worker Cooperatives,” US Federation of Worker Cooperatives, http://www.usworker.coop/aboutworkercoops.
16. Gary James Bergera, “‘Rising above Principle’:
Ezra Taft Benson as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, 1953–61, Part 1,” Dialogue 41, no. 3 (Fall 2008): 85–95.
QUOTE: The Federal Reserve Conspiracy and Rockefeller (1952)
ReplyDeleteBy Emanuel Josephson
“Since commerce and money are the livelihoods of nations and their peoples, the control of money is the obvious key to the control of nations and the world. …Rome’s successor the Holy Roman Empire dissimulated its interest in money and its power. This was in accord with its professed tenets of Nazarene, theistic Communism.
“Under ecclesiastic Canon Law, even profits in business transactions were decreed to be the cardinal sin and capital offense of ‘usury’ As late as the sixteenth century, one hundred businessmen were burned at the stake in Geneva, as a penalty under Church law, for making profits in their business transactions. Title to all wealth , as well as to the person and lives of all the earth, are claimed by the Church, on the ground that their ownership is divinely vested in the Pope as the Vicar of Jesus Christ on earth.
“Thus theistic, Nazarene Communism, and the ‘modern’ religion that goes by the name of Communism and is supposedly atheist, both are basically supercapitalist and both mask their grab for money and wealth.
“Title to all wealth was vested in the Church and in its champion ‘knights,’ who at the same time assumed the role of so-called ‘protectors,’ much like the present day labor leaders of their vassals whom they mercilessly enslaved and looted.
Sometimes too much emphasis is placed on money. The real issue is concentration of wealth. Sometime down the road I'll post something about the difference between money and wealth. They are not the same.
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