Saturday, March 20, 2021

The United States Rewards Failure…

The United States Rewards Failure… 

 

We’ll never know what would have happened without the bailouts. The airlines say the government grants were crucial: As American Airlines put it, they “saved thousands of airline jobs, preserved the livelihoods of our hard-working team members and helped position the industry to play a central role in the nation’s recovery.”

 

-      The High Costs of the Airline Bailouts – NY Times 

 

By JM Hamilton (3-20-2021)

 

The United States has many problems, after suffering under four decades of failed neoliberalism, but its monopoly dominated economy and epic business failures – and subsequent bailouts – really standout. 

 

By now, we’ve all seen the playbook, repeatedly.  Industries, throughout the US economy, concentrate, becoming Too Big to Fail (TBTF) institutions.  Greedy boardrooms and C-suites – in the interests of meeting shareholder demands – loot the company’s credit lines, paying themselves unearned dividends and pumping up stocks with financed buybacks & cheap central bank cash… and then, when the inevitable crisis comes along, Congress bails out rogue management teams with no strings attached welfare. This is often done in the interest/political cover of preserving jobs… the same jobs that no one in power blinks an eye at losing, when job cuts are used to pay for the aforementioned financed buybacks & financed dividends or in order to sustain mountains of corporate debt.  Our stock trading Congress benefits too, in that they can front run an industry bailout by loading up on the stock that is about to become the recipient of billions in taxpayer funded welfare. 

 

We saw this scenario play out with Wall Street in 2008 and again, in a pre-emptive bailout for Wall Street, last March, with the passage of the CARES Act.  To the tune of 4.4 trillion dollars. 

 

And as reported in the NY Times, this week, we’ve seen it with the American airlines industry. The airlines grossly impaired their balance sheets with dividends and stock buybacks, and then when trouble came calling, in the name of a formidable & entirely foreseeable virus, these failed management teams went crying to Congress for free money; and Congress – rather than do their job – was only too happy to oblige with $50 billion in welfare and counting. The NY Times, in the aforementioned article, asked the rhetorical question or posed the following statement: “We’ll never know what would have happened without the bailouts.”

 

But we do know what would have happened, because business failures, particularly in the United States, happen, apparently, at record numbers all the time. 

 

The shareholders would have likely been liquidated. The management team sacked. The bondholders would have become the new owners, in exchange for debt relief.

 

And via the magic of bankruptcy courts a less encumbered airline – with possibly, a new management team & ownership – would have come out on the other side.   The airlines still need their employees to keep those planes aloft, and once the pandemic is over, employees would be put back to work.  

 

Congress, too, might have been forced to do their jobs, and investigate how an entire industry had been allowed to become so concentrated to such a large degree; Congress might also feel the pressure from the public to dig into why the airline management teams have been allowed to leverage up their companies, so at the first hint of change or trouble… the entire industry was crying out for taxpayer funded welfare. 

 

You see, the moral hazard surrounding chronic US business failures, and bailouts, is symbiotic.   Not only did Congress bailout the airline execs… but Congress also bailed out its own failure to provide oversight over our monopoly dominated economy, and the financial engineering that has turned one in five publicly traded companies into zombies.  

 

Nobody, in power, seemingly bats an eye at the rewarding of corporate failure, with trillions and trillions of taxpayer dollars… but the second a new administration wants to help ordinary Americans, the debt scolds, the inflationistas, and the Larry Summers of the world, as if on cue, appear to bang the gong of doom (amplified by the MSM).  The costs of bailing out commercial failure, neoliberalism, and America’s one percent, however, has very serious repercussions for the one in five (is it now, one in four?) children, who live in poverty. 

 

Amazing how that happens. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And the US news is replete with story after story of similar failures.  Sticking with the aircraft theme, the NY Times also did an editorial on Lockheed’s F-35 (the biggest waste of taxpayer cash the military industrial complex has ever attached wings to).  Another monopoly, Boeing, and its 737 MAX and the Dreamliner aircrafts have faced groundings and notable failures (in the case of the MAX with substantial loss of life).  Both these defense contractors, Boeing & Lockheed, are on the public dole and are also - surprise, surprise – TBTF. 

 

All because Congress looked the other way, while industry after industry was allowed to concentrate into collusive cartels, or the ultimate in collusion, monopolies and utilities.

 

Of course, this is easy enough to turnaround… monopolies are made to be broken up, management teams are hired to be sacked, and bankruptcy court is almost always preferable to no strings attached welfare for stockholders and management teams. 

 

As a taxpayer, I’m tired of it… and I know my fellow Americans must be sick of it, too: 

 

The rewarding of failure and the insiders that do their best to undermine a fully functioning US economy & labor market every day… the very same cadre that sells America short.  The management & ownership, who view a company as a vehicle to loot, rather than an instrument to produce a superior product or service.  

 

And we wonder why younger Americans are ready to commit to socialism, instead of all the lies surrounding rugged individualism and bootstraps capitalism.  Young Americans know neoliberalism, like trickle-down, is a fraud, and they want what Northern Europe has… a world class mixed economy, with a strong social safety net. 

 

Laissez-faire or neoliberalism, the result is the same: the US is rapidly turning into a second-rate power, with half of Americans living at the subsistence level.  It’s a disgrace and an embarrassment… all so that the Washington duopoly can continue to tilt the scales in the oligarchy’s favor. 

 

As America and its empire continue to decline, remember it’s because the United States rewards failure in the C-suites and Boardrooms.  See our national debt ticking ever higher, as the bailouts and corporate welfare grow ever larger. 

 

Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2021



Saturday, March 6, 2021

Wage Slavery & The Inflationistas…

Wage Slavery & The Inflationistas… 

 

The Biden plan is a vital step forward, but we must make sure that it is enacted in a way that neither threatens future inflation and financial stability nor our ability to build back better through public investment.

 

-       The Biden stimulus is admirably ambitious. But it brings some big risks, too – Washington Post

 

By JM Hamilton (3-6-2021)

 

It’s been a tough couple of weeks.  Watching Dems backtrack on pledges that won them two US Senate seats, in the State of Georgia.  First there was the walk back on $2,000 stimulus checks, and worse still, was the hand-wringing, second guessing, and leadership abdication over the increase of the minimum wage to $15.00 … up from the current slave wage of $7.25 an hour (in effect, since 2009).  Please forget the fact, the real hourly wage – adjusted for inflation – should be increased to $24. 

 

So what’s changed, since the last November & January elections, and why does the Democratic Party constantly negotiate against itself and sabotage itself? Particularly on items – stimulus checks & a greatly overdue minimum wage increase – that won them two senate seats in a, historically, right-wing state?

 

Other than the fact that the Dem donor class – perennially on government welfare – makes billions and billions of dollars off American wage slavery.  Taxpayers, like myself, who actually pay US taxes … end up backstopping tens of millions of Americans, who are paid slave wages with an assortment of government programs (including, but not limited to, food stamps, Medicaid, and/or subsidies for corporate welfare defined, Obamacare, etc., etc.)  

 

This, of course, is a direct subsidy to the bottom lines of these very same Dem donors – the billionaires, the multinationals, and behemoth retailers – who exploit American labor daily, and often pay no taxes.  The same cadre that could easily pay their workers a living wage w/ benefits.  So my Happy Meal goes up fifty cents– not that I eat them – but so be it; or preferably, Mickey Ds dips into its billions of profits to pay its labor force, humanely & properly.  

 

Interestingly, the other party, and Dem donor, that weighed in was Wall Street, loud & clear.  There was a tantrum in the bond markets, as the usual suspects – Wall St banks, insurance cos., hedge funds, and mutual funds – attempted to hike up interest rates, via a process known as bond vigilantism.  Wall Street - which has a monopoly on trillions in government welfare – doesn’t like the idea that Americans might actually be paid a living wage, and, more specifically, that Corporate America might actually have to pay their workers a living wage, rather than the taxpayer. That might cut into profits in the short run.

 

So out comes failed economist, Larry Summers, to trot out the inflation bogeyman. Basically, Lawrence is offering up the old standby, whenever the Congress attempts to help alleviate the excruciating, grinding poverty that has come to define the United States (for 50% of all Americans): Inflation, it’s gonna get ya!  Boo!  The economist - Summers – participated in delivering the US financial crisis and told Dems not to go large – on worker aid - during the last financial disaster (circa 2008), hence prolonging human misery and the recession immeasurably. 

 

How’s that wage & wealth stagnation for the bottom half of society – with zero social mobility – working out for you, Larry?  Mr. Summers must love it. 

 

When Summers was ignored and shut down, this time, predictably, within days, out came Wall St – which suddenly and magically all agreed not to purchase US Treasuries.  Collusion anyone?  The big lie… oft repeated by the American financial news media, echoing Mr. Summers: too much aid to US consumer/labor will, likely, set off an inflationary firestorm (i.e. whatever you do, don't spend money on America's unemployed). Never mind that 50% of consumers (aka labor) are flat on their backs: with tens of millions of unemployed, underemployed, underpaid, or worse, have giving up looking for work.  Never mind that minorities and women have been disproportionately impacted by America’s neoliberal economic malaise.

 

And there is no inflation, except that created on the supply side, by cartels, monopolies, utilities, speculators, and failed foreign supply chains.  In short, the national debt continues to grow ever more astronomic, corporate tax revenues continue to diminish, the Congress fails to do its job, and monopolies & cartels – w/ a complicit American government - continue to crush labor.  And the FED dumps trillions in taxpayer funded welfare into Wall Street… under the premise that low interest rates will create more jobs.  When in reality, trickle down monetary policy is an abject failure; and loose monetary policy has applied jet fuel to M&A, consolidation, monopoly, cartel, private equity robber barons’ lusts & desires, and monopsony… all known killers of the economy, jobs, & opportunity.

 

In short, the FED’s big Wall St welfare scam is deflationary for the US consumer/labor (see also Zombie businesses, now making up 20% of America’s public companies), as it eliminates jobs & income.  You can't get anymore deflationary than unemployment.  

 

As for the inflation bogeyman… well, he’s not been seen, seriously, since Nixon took the US off the gold standard and Paul Volcker banished the monster.  

 

 

 



So back to the question at hand:  Why does the Democratic Party constantly negotiate against itself and sabotage itself, when it comes time to help ordinary Americans?

 

The simple answer is because Dems listen to their billionaire & multinational donors, who are forever on the government dole & are forever covetous of all government aid.  

 

Instead, Dems would be well advised to listen to the American people, which support a living wage. 

 

Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2021