The Davos Oligarchs are
Right to Fear the World They’ve Made
Escalating inequality is the work of a
global elite that will resist every
challenge to its vested interests
By Seumas Milne
January
23, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian"
- -
The
billionaires and corporate oligarchs
meeting in Davos this week are getting
worried about inequality. It might be hard
to stomach that the overlords of a system
that has delivered the widest global
economic gulf in human history should be
handwringing about the consequences of their
own actions.But
even the architects of the crisis-ridden
international economic order are starting to
see the dangers. It’s not just the maverick
hedge-funder George Soros, who likes to
describe himself as a class traitor. Paul
Polman, Unilever chief executive, frets
about the “capitalist
threat to capitalism”. Christine Lagarde,
the IMF managing director, fears capitalism
might indeed carry Marx’s
“seeds of its own destruction” and warns
that something needs to be done.
The scale of the crisis
has been laid out for them
by the charity Oxfam. Just 80
individuals now have the same net wealth as
3.5 billion people – half the entire global
population. Last year, the best-off 1% owned
48% of the world’s wealth, up from 44% five
years ago. On current trends, the richest 1%
will have pocketed more than the other 99%
put together next year. The 0.1% have been
doing even better, quadrupling their share
of US income since the 1980s.
This is a wealth grab on a
grotesque scale. For 30 years, under the
rule of what Mark Carney, the Bank of
England governor, calls “market
fundamentalism”,
inequality in income and wealth has
ballooned, both between and within the
large majority of countries. In Africa, the
absolute number living on less than $2 a day
has doubled since 1981 as the rollcall
of billionaires has swelled.
In most of the world,
labour’s share of national income has fallen
continuously and wages have stagnated under
this regime of privatisation, deregulation
and low taxes on the rich. At the same time
finance has sucked wealth from the public
realm into the hands of a small minority,
even as it has laid waste the rest of the
economy. Now the evidence has piled up that
not only is such appropriation of wealth a
moral and social outrage, but it is fuelling
social and climate conflict, wars, mass
migration and political corruption, stunting
health and life chances, increasing poverty,
and widening gender and ethnic divides.
Escalating inequality has
also been a crucial factor in the economic
crisis of the past seven years, squeezing
demand and fuelling the credit boom. We
don’t just know that from the research of
the French economist
Thomas Piketty or the British authors of
the social study
The Spirit Level. After years of
promoting Washington orthodoxy, even the
western-dominated OECD and IMF argue that
the widening income and wealth gap has been
key to the slow growth of the past two
neoliberal decades. The
British economy would have been almost 10%
larger if inequality hadn’t mushroomed.
Now the richest are using austerity to help
themselves to an even larger share of the
cake.
The big exception to the
tide of inequality in recent years has been
Latin America. Progressive governments
across the region turned their back on a
disastrous economic model, took back
resources from corporate control and
slashed inequality. The numbers living
on less than $2 a day have
fallen from 108 million to 53 million in
little over a decade. China, which also
rejected much of the neoliberal catechism,
has seen sharply rising inequality at home
but also lifted more people out of poverty
than the rest of the world combined,
offsetting the growing global income gap.
These two cases underline
that increasing inequality and poverty are
very far from inevitable. They’re the result
of political and economic decisions. The
thinking person’s
Davos oligarch realises that allowing
things to carry on as they are is dangerous.
So some want a more “inclusive capitalism” –
including more progressive taxes – to save
the system from itself.
But it certainly won’t
come about as a result of Swiss mountain
musings or anxious Guildhall lunches.
Whatever the feelings of some corporate
barons, vested corporate and elite interests
– including the organisations they run and
the political structures they have colonised
– have shown they will fight even modest
reforms tooth and nail. To get the idea, you
only have to listen to the squeals of
protest, including from some in his own
party, at
Ed Miliband’s plans to tax homes worth over
£2m to fund the health service, or the
demand from the one-time reformist Fabian
Society that the Labour leader
be more pro-business (for which read
pro-corporate), or the wall of congressional
resistance to Barack Obama’s mild
redistributive taxation proposals.
Perhaps a section of the
worried elite might be prepared to pay a bit
more tax. What they won’t accept is any
change in the balance of social power –
which is why, in one country after another,
they resist any attempt to strengthen trade
unions, even though weaker unions have been
a crucial factor in the rise of inequality
in the industrialised world.
It’s only through a
challenge to the entrenched interests that
have dined off a dysfunctional economic
order that the tide of inequality will be
reversed. The anti-austerity
Syriza party, favourite to win the Greek
elections this weekend, is attempting to
do just that – as the Latin American left
has succeeded in doing over the past decade
and a half. Even to get to that point
demands stronger social and political
movements to break down or bypass the
blockage in a colonised political
mainstream. Crocodile tears about inequality
are a symptom of a fearful elite. But change
will only come from unrelenting social
pressure and political challenge.