e shtunë, 16 qershor 2007

THE CONSERVATIVE NANNY STATE: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer

The Conservative Nanny State, by Dean Baker

(this goes out to all those people who blame the "free market" for the ills of globalization. what we have here is state-sponsored corporatism, not free market capitalism. and until you learn the difference, you will not get to the root of the problem)

Introduction

  1. Doctors and Dishwashers: How the Nanny State Creates Good Jobs for Those at the Top

  2. The Workers are Gettting Uppity: Call In the Fed!

  3. The Secret of High CEO Pay and Other Mysteries of the Corporation

  4. Bill Gates – Welfare Mom: How Government Patent and Copyright Monopolies Enrich the Rich and Distort the Economy

  5. Mommy, Joey Owes Me Money: How Bankruptcy Laws Are Bailing Out the Rich

  6. The Rigged Legal Deck: Torts and Takings (The Nanny State Only Gives)

  7. Small Business Babies

  8. Taxes: It’s Not Your Money

  9. Don't Make Big Business Compete Against Government Bureaucrats

Conclusion

Preface

This book is written in frustration and hope. People in the United States who consider themselves progressive must be frustrated over the extent to which conservative political ideologies have managed to dominate public debate about economic policy in the last quarter century. Even when progressives have won important political battles, such as the defeat of efforts to privatize Social Security, they have done so largely without a coherent ideology; rather, this success rested on the public’s recognition that it stood to lose its retirement security with this “reform.” It also helped that the public was suspicious of the motives of the proponents of Social Security privatization. However, success in the goal-line defense of the country’s most important social program is not the same thing as a forward looking agenda.

The key flaw in the stance that most progressives have taken on economic issues is that they have accepted a framing whereby conservatives are assumed to support market outcomes, while progressives want to rely on the government. This framing leads progressives to futilely lash out against markets, rather than examining the factors that lead to undesirable market outcomes. The market is just a tool, and in fact a very useful one. It makes no more sense to lash out against markets than to lash out against the wheel.

The reality is that conservatives have been quite actively using the power of the government to shape market outcomes in ways that redistribute income upward. However, conservatives have been clever enough to not own up to their role in this process, pretending all along that everything is just the natural working of the market. And, progressives have been foolish enough to go along with this view.

The frustration with this futile debate, where conservatives like markets and progressives like government, is the driving force behind this book, along with the hope that new thinking is possible. We shall see.

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