Building a
Progressive International
By Yanis Varoufakis
July 31, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- ATHENS – Politics in the advanced economies of the
West is in the throes of a political shakeup unseen
since the 1930s. The Great Deflation now gripping
both sides of the Atlantic is reviving political
forces that had lain dormant since the end of World
War II. Passion is returning to politics, but not in
the manner many of us had hoped it would.
The right has
become animated by an anti-establishment fervor that
was, until recently, the preserve of the left. In
the United States, Donald Trump, the Republican
presidential nominee, is taking Hillary Clinton, his
Democratic opponent, to task – quite credibly – for
her close ties to Wall Street, eagerness to invade
foreign lands, and readiness to embrace free-trade
agreements that have undermined millions of workers’
living standards. In the United Kingdom, Brexit has
cast ardent Thatcherites in the role of enthusiastic
defenders of the National Health Service.
This shift is
not unprecedented. The populist right has
traditionally adopted quasi-leftist rhetoric in
times of deflation. Anyone who can stomach
revisiting the speeches of leading fascists and
Nazis of the 1920s and 1930s will find appeals –
Benito Mussolini’s paeans to social security or
Joseph Goebbels’ stinging criticism of the financial
sector – that seem, at first glance,
indistinguishable from progressive goals.
What we are
experiencing today is the natural repercussion of
the implosion of centrist politics, owing to a
crisis of global capitalism in which a financial
crash led to a Great Recession and then to today’s
Great Deflation. The right is simply repeating its
old trick of drawing upon the righteous anger and
frustrated aspirations of the victims to advance its
own repugnant agenda.
It all began
with the death of the international monetary system
established at Bretton Woods in 1944, which had
forged a post-war political consensus based on a
“mixed” economy, limits on inequality, and strong
financial regulation. That “golden era” ended with
the so-called Nixon shock in 1971, when America lost
the surpluses that, recycled internationally, kept
global capitalism stable.
Remarkably,
America’s hegemony grew in this second post-war
phase, in parallel with its trade and budget
deficits. But to keep financing these deficits,
bankers had to be unleashed from their New Deal and
Bretton Woods restraints. Only then would they
encourage and manage the inward capital flows needed
to finance America’s twin fiscal and current-account
deficits.
Financialization of the economy was the goal,
neoliberalism was its ideological cloak, the Paul
Volcker-era Federal Reserve’s interest-rate hikes
were its trigger, and President Bill Clinton was the
ultimate closer of the Faustian bargain. And the
timing couldn’t have been more congenial: the Soviet
empire’s collapse and China’s opening generated a
surge of labor supply for global capitalism – a
billion additional workers – that boosted profits
and stifled wage growth throughout the West.
The result of
extreme financialization was enormous inequality and
profound vulnerability. But at least the West’s
working class had access to cheap loans and inflated
house prices to offset the impact of stagnant wages
and declining fiscal transfers.
Then came the
crash of 2008, which in the US and Europe produced a
massive excess supply of both money and people.
While many lost jobs, homes, and hopes, trillions of
dollars in savings have been sloshing around the
world’s financial centers ever since, on top of more
trillions pumped out by desperate central banks
eager to replace the financiers’ toxic money. With
companies and institutional players too frightened
to invest in the real economy, share prices have
boomed, the top 0.1% can’t believe their luck, and
the rest are helplessly watching as the grapes of
wrath are “…filling and growing heavy, growing heavy
for the vintage.”
And so it was
that large chunks of humanity in America and Europe
became too indebted and too expensive to be anything
other than discarded – and ready to be lured by
Trump’s fear-mongering, French National Front leader
Marine Le Pen’s xenophobia, or the Brexiteers’
shimmering vision of a Britannia ruling the waves
again. As their number grows, traditional political
parties are fading into irrelevance, supplanted by
the emergence of two new political blocs.
One bloc
represents the old troika of liberalization,
globalization, and financialization. It may still be
in power, but its stock is falling fast, as David
Cameron, Europe’s social democrats, Hillary Clinton,
the European Commission, and even Greece’s
post-capitulation Syriza government can attest.
Trump, Le Pen,
Britain’s right-wing Brexiteers, Poland’s and
Hungary’s illiberal governments, and Russian
President Vladimir Putin are forming the second
bloc. Theirs is a nationalist international – a
classic creature of a deflationary period – united
by contempt for liberal democracy and the ability to
mobilize those who would crush it.
The clash
between these two blocs is both real and misleading.
Clinton vs. Trump constitutes a genuine battle, for
example, as does the European Union vs. the
Brexiteers; but the two combatants are accomplices,
not foes, in perpetuating an endless loop of mutual
reinforcement, with each side defined by – and
mobilizing its supporters on the basis of – what it
opposes.
The only way
out of this political trap is progressive
internationalism, based on solidarity among large
majorities around the world who are prepared to
rekindle democratic politics on a planetary scale.
If this sounds Utopian, it is worth emphasizing that
the raw materials are already available.
Bernie
Sanders’s “political revolution” in the US, Jeremy
Corbyn’s leadership of the UK’s Labour Party,
DiEM25 (the Democracy in Europe Movement) on the
continent: these are the harbingers of an
international progressive movement that can define
the intellectual terrain upon which democratic
politics must build. But we are at an early stage
and face a remarkable backlash from the global
troika: witness
Sanders’ treatment by the Democratic National
Committee, the
run against Corbyn by a former pharmaceutical
lobbyist, and the attempt to
have me indicted for daring to oppose the EU’s
plan for Greece.
The Great
Deflation poses a great question: can humanity
design and implement
a new, technologically advanced, “green” Bretton
Woods – a system that makes our planet
ecologically and economically sustainable – without
the mass pain and destruction preceding the original
Bretton Woods?
If we –
progressive internationalists – won’t answer that
question, who will? Neither of the two political
blocs now vying for power in the West even wants it
to be posed.
Yanis
Varoufakis, a former finance minister of Greece, is
Professor of Economics at the University of Athens.
©
1995 – 2016 Project Syndicate |