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Stiglitz 新自由主義的終結與曆史的重生

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新自由主義的終結與曆史的重生

https://www.socialeurope.eu/the-end-of-neoliberalism-and-the-rebirth-of-history

約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨 2019 年 11 月 26 日

40年來,富國和窮國的精英們都承諾,新自由主義政策將帶來更快的增長,其好處將滲透到每個人的生活中。

冷戰結束時,政治學家弗朗西斯·福山寫了一篇著名的文章,名為“曆史的終結?”。 他認為,共產主義的崩潰將掃清整個世界與其自由民主和市場經濟命運之間的最後障礙。 很多人都同意了。

今天,當我們麵臨著從基於規則的自由主義全球秩序的倒退,獨裁統治者和煽動者領導著擁有世界一半以上人口的國家時,福山的想法顯得古怪而天真。 但它強化了過去 40 年來盛行的新自由主義經濟學說。

如今,新自由主義相信不受約束的市場是實現共同繁榮最可靠的道路,這一信念的可信度已經得到了保證。 應該如此。 對新自由主義和民主的信心同時減弱並非巧合或僅僅是相關性。 四十年來,新自由主義一直在破壞民主。

失控
新自由主義規定的全球化形式使個人和整個社會無法控製自己命運的重要部分,正如哈佛大學的丹尼·羅德裏克(Dani Rodrik)所明確解釋的那樣,正如我在我最近的著作《全球化及其不滿重溫》和《人民》中所指出的那樣, 權力和利潤..

資本市場自由化的影響尤其令人厭惡:如果新興市場的主要總統候選人失去華爾街的青睞,銀行就會將資金撤出該國。 隨後,選民麵臨著一個嚴峻的選擇:要麽向華爾街屈服,要麽麵臨嚴重的金融危機。 華爾街似乎比該國公民擁有更多的政治權力。

即使在富裕國家,普通公民也被告知,“你不能追求你想要的政策”——無論是充分的社會保障、體麵的工資、累進稅還是監管良好的金融體係——“因為國家將失去競爭力,就業機會將減少”。 消失,你就會受苦”。

無論是在富裕國家還是貧窮國家,精英們都承諾新自由主義政策將帶來更快的經濟增長,其好處將惠及所有人,包括最貧窮的人,從而使所有人的生活變得更好。 然而,要實現這一目標,工人必須接受較低的工資,所有公民都必須接受重要政府計劃的削減。

中的數字
精英們聲稱他們的承諾是基於科學的經濟模型和“基於證據的研究”。 40 年後,數字已經顯現:增長放緩,而增長的成果絕大多數落入了極少數頂層人士手中。 隨著工資停滯和股市飆升,收入和財富不斷上升,而不是下降。

為獲得或保持競爭力而進行的工資限製和政府項目的減少如何可能提高生活水平? 普通公民感覺自己被賣了一張貨物。 他們感到被欺騙是正確的。

我們現在正在經曆這種巨大欺騙的政治後果:對精英的不信任,對新自由主義所依據的經濟“科學”的不信任,以及對使這一切成為可能的金錢腐敗的政治體係的不信任。

知識分子的正統觀念

現實情況是,盡管有新自由主義的名稱,但它遠非自由主義時代。 它強加了一種知識正統觀念,其監護人完全不能容忍異議。 持非正統觀點的經濟學家被視為異教徒,應予以回避,或者充其量被轉移到少數孤立的機構。 新自由主義與卡爾·波普爾所倡導的“開放社會”毫無相似之處。 正如喬治·索羅斯所強調的那樣,波普爾認識到我們的社會是一個複雜的、不斷發展的係統,在這個係統中,我們學得越多,我們的知識對係統行為的改變就越多。

這種不寬容在宏觀經濟學中表現得最為嚴重,當時的主流模型排除了發生 2008 年那樣的危機的可能性。當不可能的事情發生時,它被視為一場 500 年一遇的洪水——這是一種反常的現象, 沒有任何模型可以預測。

即使在今天,這些理論的倡導者仍然拒絕接受這樣的事實:他們對市場自我調節的信念以及對外部性的否定,認為外部性不存在或不重要,導致了放鬆管製,而放鬆管製是加劇危機的關鍵。 這一理論繼續存在,托勒密試圖使其符合事實,這證明了一個現實:糟糕的想法一旦成立,往往會慢慢消亡。

氣候危機

如果說 2008 年的金融危機未能讓我們認識到不受約束的市場行不通,那麽氣候危機肯定會讓我們認識到:新自由主義將真正終結我們的文明。 但同樣明顯的是,那些想讓我們背棄科學和寬容的煽動者隻會讓事情變得更糟。

前進的唯一道路,拯救我們的星球和文明的唯一道路,就是曆史的重生。 我們必須重振啟蒙運動,並重新致力於尊重其自由、尊重知識和民主的價值觀。

禁止轉載。 版權所有 Project Syndicate,2019 新自由主義的終結與曆史的重生

約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨

約瑟夫·E·斯蒂格利茨(Joseph E Stiglitz),諾貝爾經濟學獎獲得者、哥倫比亞大學教授,世界銀行前首席經濟學家、美國總統經濟顧問委員會主席、碳價格高級別委員會聯合主席。 他是國際公司稅務改革獨立委員會的成員。

The end of neoliberalism and the rebirth of history

https://www.socialeurope.eu/the-end-of-neoliberalism-and-the-rebirth-of-history

 

For 40 years, elites in rich and poor countries promised neoliberal policies would lead to faster growth and the benefits would trickle down so that everyone would be better off.

At the end of the Cold War, the political scientist Francis Fukuyama wrote a celebrated essay called ‘The end of history?’. Communism’s collapse, he argued, would clear the last obstacle separating the entire world from its destiny of liberal democracy and market economies. Many people agreed.

Today, as we face a retreat from the rules-based, liberal global order, with autocratic rulers and demagogues leading countries that contain well over half the world’s population, Fukuyama’s idea seems quaint and naive. But it reinforced the neoliberal economic doctrine that has prevailed for the last 40 years.

The credibility of neoliberalism’s faith in unfettered markets as the surest road to shared prosperity is on life-support these days. And well it should be. The simultaneous waning of confidence in neoliberalism and in democracy is no coincidence or mere correlation. Neoliberalism has undermined democracy for 40 years.

Out of control

The form of globalisation prescribed by neoliberalism left individuals and entire societies unable to control an important part of their own destiny, as Dani Rodrik of Harvard University has explained so clearly, and as I argue in my recent books Globalization and Its Discontents Revisited and People, Power, and Profits..

The effects of capital-market liberalisation were particularly odious: if a leading presidential candidate in an emerging market lost favour with Wall Street, the banks would pull their money out of the country. Voters then faced a stark choice: give in to Wall Street or face a severe financial crisis. It was as if Wall Street had more political power than the country’s citizens.

Even in rich countries, ordinary citizens were told, ‘You can’t pursue the policies you want’—whether adequate social protection, decent wages, progressive taxation or a well-regulated financial system—‘because the country will lose competitiveness, jobs will disappear, and you will suffer’.

In rich and poor countries alike, elites promised that neoliberal policies would lead to faster economic growth, and that the benefits would trickle down so that everyone, including the poorest, would be better off. To get there, though, workers would have to accept lower wages and all citizens would have to accept cutbacks in important government programmes.

Numbers in

The elites claimed that their promises were based on scientific economic models and ‘evidence-based research’. Well, after 40 years, the numbers are in: growth has slowed and the fruits of that growth went overwhelmingly to a very few at the top. As wages stagnated and the stock market soared, income and wealth flowed up, rather than trickling down.

How can wage restraint—to attain or maintain competitiveness—and reduced government programmes possibly add up to higher standards of living? Ordinary citizens felt like they had been sold a bill of goods. They were right to feel conned.

We are now experiencing the political consequences of this grand deception: distrust of the elites, of the economic ‘science’ on which neoliberalism was based and of the money-corrupted political system that made it all possible.

Intellectual orthodoxy

The reality is that, despite its name, the era of neoliberalism was far from liberal. It imposed an intellectual orthodoxy whose guardians were utterly intolerant of dissent. Economists with heterodox views were treated as heretics to be shunned or at best shunted off to a few isolated institutions. Neoliberalism bore little resemblance to the ‘open society’ that Karl Popper had advocated. As George Soros has emphasised, Popper recognised that our society is a complex, ever-evolving system, in which the more we learn, the more our knowledge changes the behaviour of the system.

Nowhere was this intolerance greater than in macroeconomics, where the prevailing models ruled out the possibility of a crisis like the one we experienced in 2008. When the impossible happened, it was treated as if it were a 500-year flood—a freak occurrence that no model could have predicted.

Even today, advocates of these theories refuse to accept that their belief in self-regulating markets and their dismissal of externalities as either non-existent or unimportant led to the deregulation that was pivotal in fuelling the crisis. The theory continues to survive, with Ptolemaic attempts to make it fit the facts, which attests to the reality that bad ideas, once established, often have a slow death.

Climate crisis

If the 2008 financial crisis failed to make us realise that unfettered markets don’t work, the climate crisis certainly should: neoliberalism will literally bring an end to our civilisation. But it is also clear that demagogues who would have us turn our back on science and tolerance will only make matters worse.

The only way forward, the only way to save our planet and our civilisation, is a rebirth of history. We must revitalise the enlightenment and recommit to honouring its values of freedom, respect for knowledge and democracy.

Republication forbidden. Copyright Project Syndicate, 2019 The end of neoliberalism and the rebirth of history

Joseph E Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics and professor at Columbia University, is a former chief economist of the World Bank, chair of the US president’s Council of Economic Advisers and co-chair of the High-Level Commission on Carbon Prices. He is a member of the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation.

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