John
Kenneth Galbraith died on April 29, 2006 at the age
of 97, having led a life filled with honor and accomplishment.
Unfortunately, his ideas are largely ignored by today's
economics profession. His death marks an occasion
for spotlighting the continuing relevance of those
ideas and the ideological narrowness of a profession
that makes no space for them.
The period 1890 - 1940 includes the Progressive (1900
- 1916) and New Deal (1932 - 1940) eras. During this
fifty-year period America came to grips with the problems
that arose with its transformation into a mechanized,
industrialized, urbanized society. Whereas the Progressive
era highlighted the human excesses of raw capitalism
and took the first tentative steps toward taming them,
the New Deal era confronted the instability of capitalism
and enacted reforms that saved the system from itself.
Today's era of globalization is showing signs of problems
similar to those seen earlier. In labor markets there
has been a decline in workers' bargaining power, while
the global economic system has shown proclivities
toward financial instability and deflation. These
parallels suggest that there are lessons to be learned
from reflecting upon the reforms of the Progressive
and New Deal eras. Such reflection inevitably leads
to John Kenneth Galbraith's analysis of that period,
published in 1952 under the title of American Capitalism:
The Concept of Countervailing Power.
The core problems of the Progressive and New Deal
eras were the callousness of the economic system and
its inability to maintain sufficient purchasing power
for full employment. Behind this lay the problems
of monopoly and deflation. By charging high prices,
monopoly erodes purchasing power. So too does deflation
because it increases the value of debts. The New Deal
tackled these problems through a combination of regulation
and the creation of modern fiscal policy.
Regulation served the twin purposes of controlling
monopoly and putting a floor under prices. Not only
did it extend to key industrial sectors, it also included
labor markets through legislation establishing the
minimum wage, the forty-hour week, and the right to
join unions. This established a wage floor that, in
one swoop, tackled both the Progressive era problem
of callousness and the Depression era problem of inadequate
purchasing power. Side-by-side, modern fiscal policy
was built upon an expanded government sector whose
purchasing power was more stable, and which could
also be mobilized in downturns to offset declines
in private sector spending.
These policy interventions reinforced stabilizing
features within the system. This is where Galbraith's
concept of countervailing power enters. The problem
of monopoly arose with the emergence of large powerful
corporations. However, the system partially addressed
this problem itself through the development of large
corporations on both sides of the market. Consequently,
big buyers confronted big sellers, thereby generating
countervailing power between buyers and sellers that
helped keep prices down and stable.
In labor markets, it was the development of trade
unions that created countervailing power. This ensured
that workers were also represented by big sellers
that could go head-to-head with big buyers. In this
regard, New Deal labor legislation was critical since
it promoted unions. Prior to the legislation, employer
opposition had stalled union coverage at about fifteen
percent of employment. Afterward, it rose to almost
thirty-five percent.
A Galbraithian lens suggests that the countervailing
power equilibrium that prevailed after World War II
has been dislodged. In labor markets, the process
started with the inability of unions to organize the
expanding service sector. At the same time that the
service economy was growing away from unions, manufacturing
started going mobile through the development of multinational
production methods.
Additionally, a retail revolution was taking place
through big box discount stores exemplified by Wal-Mart.
These discounters have adopted a global sourcing model
that scours the world for the lowest price - the so-called
"China price" - and then requires American
manufacturers and workers to meet it or lose the business.
This model now extends to every retail segment, and
it creates a race to the bottom by putting the entire
consumer goods manufacturing sector in global competition.
To stay competitive, American manufacturers must either
slash pay at home or move production offshore. Moreover,
this global sourcing model is now being applied in
capital goods manufacturing, with assemblers like
Ford, General Motors and Boeing adopting it.
A Galbraithian analysis points to the need to rebuild
countervailing power. That requires organizing workers
in the service sector and in firms such as Wal-Mart.
American businesses also have an interest in the re-building
of countervailing power as global sourcing has undermined
the position of sellers. Enabling domestic suppliers
to compete in a globalized economy calls for new institutional
arrangements limiting unfair international competition
based on labor exploitation, environmental neglect,
and under-valued exchange rates. The bottom line is
that Galbraith's economic analysis remains as trenchant
and relevant as it was fifty years ago, and the logic
of countervailing power provides vital insights into
today's problematic of globalization.
May 9, 2006.
Source : http://www.thomaspalley.com/
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