Log In  |  Register Now  
 Home | Syndication Services | Media Features | Research Center | Archive | Contributors | About Us

To receive emails containing headlines and highlights from The Globalist,
sign up here.



Topic

Companies

Culture

Development

Diplomacy

Economy

Environment

Finance

Health

History

Markets

Media

Music

Politics

Religion

Security

Sports

Technology

Women

Youth


Region

Africa

Asia-Pacific

Europe

Latin America

Middle East

North America


Globalist Bookshelf

Best Books of 2012

Best Books of 2011


Editorial Staff

Contributors

Jobs & Internships


Subscribers to The Globalist's premium services can log in here:

Username:

Password:

Forgot your password?



 

Photo credit: FeSeven/Shutterstock.com

Globalist Bookshelf > Global Finance
Rethinking American Capitalism
 

By Richard Duncan | Friday, October 12, 2012
 

The U.S. economic system is no longer one in which the accumulation and investment of capital drives the production process. Instead, it is one in which the creation and expenditure of credit drives things. To support a larger and more prosperous economy, argues Richard Duncan, a turnaround is needed — not toward austerity, but smart public investing.


apitalism, it is worth recalling, is an economic system in which the private sector drives the economic process through saving, capital accumulation and investment. The government's role is very limited.

The economic process itself is no longer driven by saving and investment. Instead, it is driven by credit creation and consumption.
However, contrary to all the rhetoric, the United States has not had that kind of economic system for decades.

Today, the U.S. federal government spends $24 out of every $100 spent in the economy. The U.S. central bank creates the money and manipulates its value. Almost all major U.S. industries are subsidized in one way or another by the government and almost half of all households receive some kind of government assistance.

The economic process itself is no longer driven by saving and investment. Instead, it is driven by credit creation and consumption.

This is not an economic regime that can be called capitalism. Market forces no longer drive the economy. The current system is government-directed, but not planned.

Government policy is determined through a process of compromise between the demands of competing power blocks: big business, the banking industry, the military, the elderly and the general public (which, until recently, had grown to expect an ever-improving standard of living).

Deficit spending and fiat money (i.e., money created by the government) allowed the government to satisfy all those competing demands for more than a generation. During that time, a key component of government policy has been to channel ever-greater quantities of credit to the household sector.

As total credit expanded 50 times in less than 50 years, it created wealth and kept the American Dream alive. That extraordinary expansion of credit changed the nature of the economic system itself, however.




Outstanding U.S. Credit Market Debt in 2007



Source: U.S. Federal Reserve Flow of Funds



Capitalism has become Creditism, for lack of a better word. This new credit-based economic system, which requires further credit growth to survive, is now in crisis because the household sector cannot bear any additional debt. The gap between its debt and its income has simply become too great to bear.

Market forces no longer drive the economy. The current system is government-directed, but not planned.
The first step toward finding a lasting solution to this crisis is to form a realistic understanding of the nature of this economic system — not as it used to be and not as any particular group thinks it should be, but as it really is. Only then will it be possible to devise a strategy that could correct its faults.

The key question is not whether we are going to abandon capitalism and replace it with a different kind of economic system. We did that long ago. The question is are we going to allow the economic system now in place to collapse.

Investing, not consuming

Thus, this economic crisis marks a crossroad for our civilization. Our options are to grasp and fearlessly exploit the immense possibilities inherent in our new credit-based economic system, or else fail to grasp them and collapse into what could prove to be decades of misery.

To avert economic breakdown, the United States will need to make use of the new policy tools that its new economic system makes possible. Since the private sector cannot bear any more debt, the government sector will have to.

Since the financial crisis began in 2008, U.S. government debt has increased by $5 trillion. It was this increase in government debt that kept the United States — and the world — from collapsing into a new Great Depression.

The world economy is now on government life support and that life support is going to continue. The only question is whether the money will be wasted or spent wisely.

The sustainability of the entire economic superstructure depends on how this debt-financed government spending is used over the years ahead. If it is used for consumption, then it will generate no return and the superstructure will collapse.

For more than a generation, a key component of government policy has been to channel ever-greater quantities of credit to the household sector.
The U.S. government must therefore begin spending by investing in large-scale projects that can generate a return. The United States can currently borrow money for ten years at an interest rate of less than 2%. If it borrows at these low rates, invests and earns 3%, the global economic crisis will lessen.

But if it borrows at these low rates and invests aggressively in transformative mega-projects — such as the development of solar energy, genetic engineering, biotechnology and nanotechnology — it might generate such massive returns that the crisis will be overcome and prosperity for the next generation will be assured.

The economic system that has grown out of the adoption of fiat money is new. It is different from what came before. It is not capitalism.

We have not yet learned how it works, and its weaknesses have become glaringly apparent. Yet we are ignoring the possibilities it presents.

What a tragic mistake it would be to impose austerity and see our world implode, when so much credit is available at ultra-low costs. All that is required for us, as a society, is to invest that credit imaginatively in cutting-edge, 21st-century technologies.

If we do that, we can achieve global economic prosperity beyond the dreams of all earlier generations.




Join the discussion of this article on our Facebook page.

Follow The Globalist on Twitter.




Copyright © 2000-2013 by The Globalist. Reproduction of content on this site without The Globalist's written permission is strictly prohibited. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

The Globalist claims full trademark rights to The Globalist name and logos.

1100 17th Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20036