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Big lie of trickle-down theory trickles away
by John McAllion
“The
broad mass of a nation... will more easily fall victim to
a big lie than to a small one.” - Adolf Hitler
THE
big lie at the heart of modern capitalism is that the dynamism
of free markets and free trade will in the long run guarantee
rising wealth and social justice for all.
In
the 1960s, John F Kennedy argued that the rising tide
of capitalist prosperity would float all the boats in the global
harbour, benefiting rich and poor countries alike. By the 1980s,
Thatcher and Reagan had refined the metaphor to their
trickle-down theory of economics, but kept the same message
- let the rich get richer and everyone wins as the benefits trickle
down to the less well-off.
Clinton
and Blair’s ‘
Following
the collapse of the old Soviet bloc countries, this big
lie was re-sold around the world as the end of history and the
final and historic triumph of capitalism and democracy over communism.
Yet
now, as ‘end of history’ capitalism is hit by a series of global
crises from the credit crunch to the ‘silent tsunami’ in the
South of rocketing food and energy prices, the big lie stands exposed
for all to see.
Nowhere
is this clearer than in
Today,
in this the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, unemployment
and poverty wages are rampant and 80 per cent of Haitians
remain impoverished.
The
vast majority live in cardboard and tin homes with no
running water or sanitation and with little or no electricity.
According
to the World Bank, more than half of the population
survive on just 44 cents a day.
As
global food prices have soared, children have been reduced
to just one meal a day that for most of them now consists of
non-food mud cookies made from dried yellow dirt, salt
and vegetable shortening, sold locally at 5 cents a time.
When
thousands of poor Haitians took to the streets in protest
and stormed the Presidential Palace in the capital
In
other words, they argue that these are temporary dislocations that
the global market will adjust to in time. In the long run,
globalisation will work for the poor. We just need to be patient.
Their
weasel words fool noone. In the
course of one recent week, two New Labour ministers announced
their response to the concurrent crises of the credit
crunch in financial markets and food shortages threatening millions
with starvation.
On
the Monday, Alastair Darling promised
between £50- 100billion in Treasury Bills to bail out
greedy, incompetent and over stretched British bankers.
On
the Tuesday, Douglas Alexander promised £30million to
the UN World Food Programme as
Deregulated
and free markets are designed to work for the few and
not for the many. They may generate ever more productive forces
but only in the service of an elite who feast on the famine of the many.
Now,
as Marx predicted, that elite have become like the sorcerer who
has summoned up powers that no longer can be controlled.
The
famine threatening the global South is caused by the greed
that drives neo-liberalism.
The
objective condition for the relief of that global famine is
to root out what causes it in the first place - an economic system
based on the exploitation of the poor by the rich. Greedy
neo-liberals and their mouthpieces in the New Labour
government are discovering that they can no longer hide
that reality from public view.