LI likes to read the econ blogs when times get all roller-coastery. One thing that the blogs share with the thumbsuckers in the papers is that Americans will generally have to get used to lowering their standard of living. This has become the truism du jour, and it goes along with the other truism, which is that Americans have been living way past their standards of living.
Of course, that is all nonsense and lies. There is one and only one cause of our present discontents, which is that Americans – by which I mean the bottom 80 percent – have been horribly underpaid for the last thirty years. It is always and everywhere good to remember that wealth comes only from the bottom. Wealth creation simply doesn’t happen at the top – licitly. Of course, we’ve watched wealth creation happen at the top for years, but a close look at it shows that it is merely the piling of one fiction on top of the other. What the top does, at the limit, is administer and manage. For this function, it has succeeded in rewarding itself with the lion share of the wealth created over the past thirty years – by the bottom 80 percent. When one reads stories, such as the much commented upon story in the NYT about the Diane McCleod, the woman with two jobs, earning 45, 000 per year, who had accumulated debts of around $280,000, including her home, an asset that is probably worth around $160,000 in today’s market, the first thing I thought is that she should probably be making 80 to 90 thousand a year working those jobs. She would be, if wages had risen as they rose in the seventies. But here’s what happened: to arrest the falling profit margins, the political and business establishment decided to smash that rise in the wage rate. They did so under the cover of a story that is universally repeated, and so now, simply assumed. That story is that wealth comes from the top. It is a fairy tale for babies, but it has nicely succeeded in blunting the progressive tendency in taxation as well as arousing the general public’s support for programs designed to cut the general public’s throat. Of course, the guilt machine turns on automatically to make the whole thing go down like sugar. Turns out McCleod liked purses, and purchased many expensive purses on her credit cards. Is that shameful or what? She actually wanted something she considered beautiful in her life. How disgusting.
Or... no. This is what is shameful:
“GE Money Bank, which levied a 27 percent rate on Ms. McLeod’s debt and is part of the GE Capital Corporation, generated profits of $4.3 billion in 2007, more than double the $2.1 billion it earned in 2003.”
In 1979, a 27 percent rate would be illegal.
The U.S. is experimenting with a unique blend of robber baron capitalism and consumerism. The barons depend on the consumer, while at the same time, they chisel down the amount the consumer takes home until, of course, relative to the robber baron the consumer’s income sinks below the horizon. To make up for the logical gap here, the robber baron extends credit at 27 percent to the consumer. To make it, the consumer takes two jobs, thus robbing the day of any moment in which to be simply human. The consumer responds in the classically mammalian way when the lab environment turns hostile, by rushing to the bowl for sweets. In the labs, the rats die and they jack out the kidneys to examine the stress effects. In the suburbs and traffic jams, the consumer’s humanity turns to a peculiar mixture of glucose and methane, while the wallets are jacked out for other charges as they may apply. Outside the window, the world is upside down and the Whore of Babylon has lofted a bright, shiny sword.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
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You might be interested in my recent comments on related matters at the Mises blog.
AO-115 GARBAGE IS NOT PILING UP AROUND US.
AO 368 = 3.1415926535 8979323846 2643383279 5028841971 6939937510 5820974944 5923078164 0628620899 86280348 = A WINDING QUIET ROAD, CARPETED BY THE FALLING LEAVES, LEADS THROUGH AN OLD FASHIONED WOODS RICH IN AUTUMN COLOR (AO-41 SCORPIO 18°) = AN X-RAY MACHINE IS IN OPERATION; BY MEANS OF IT A BIT OF FINE DIAGNOSIS IS MADE POSSIBLE, AND A LIFE IS PRESERVED (AO-43 SCORPIO 25°) = AQUARIUS 12° A MAGNIFICENT PAINTING PRESENTS LIFE AS A BROAD STAIRWAY WITH THE LANDINGS (AS) VARIOUS GRADES OF LIFE = ECCLESIASTES 10:18 BY SLOTHFULNESS THE ROOF SINKETH IN; AND THROUGH IDLENESS OF THE HANDS THE HOUSE LEAKETH = HYPE ACTS CONCRETELY AS AN 'ELEMENT OF EFFECTIVE CULTURE THAT MAKES ITSELF REAL', WHERE REALITY IS PRECISELY MEASURED IN $ = OUR SERVANTS, ON WHOM WE HAD BESTOWED MERCY FROM OURSELVES AND WHOM WE HAD TAUGHT KNOWLEDGE FROM OUR OWN PRESENCE = RADICAL OPPOSITION TO THE STATE IS DIRECTLY PROPORTIONAL TO ITS FAITH IN THE BENEVOLENCE OF HUMAN NATURE = THE MIDNIGHT SCENE OF THE MONK OF ST. MARY'S AND WILLIAM OF DELORAINE IN SCOTT'S LAW OF THE LAST MINSTREL, CANTO II = WHO ARE THE SCRIBES AND PHARISEES? SIMPLY THE BEST CITIZENS; THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY; ALL RIGHT-THINKING MEN.
Mr. Lawrence, quite a thread.
By the way, do you have a blog? I'd put it up in my links if you did.
P.M.Lawrence - you totally rock in that thread.
Thanks, everybody.
No, no blog; others have suggested I should have one, too. Unfortunately I am slowly recovering from reactive depression that leaves me too drained for direct blogging unless psyched up enough. For instance, I could only wake at 9.30 a.m. today, and only now at 11.15 a.m. have I found the energy to get going enough to make the coffee to get me going fully; it's a catch-22 that before coffee it's hard to make it, though self medicating with cigarettes helps. And much of my day has to go to looking for the right kind of work, at this stafe of my recovery...
However, I do frequent Kevin Carson's mutualist blog, where there is a recent post based on my contributions and where I owe a long outstanding guest post, and Art of the Possible where Kevin Carson also contributes. I can also recommend Mencius Moldbug's Jacobite-leaning blog, where I have just started lurking. And, of course, I have a fairly static publications page, dating back to earlier, stronger days.
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