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Neoliberalism must be pronounced dead and buried

(2023-10-22 14:37:21) 下一個

新自由主義必須宣告死亡並被埋葬。 接下來去哪裏?

Neoliberalism must be pronounced dead and buried. Where next?

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/may/30/neoliberalism-must-be-pronouced-dead-and-buried-where-next

作者:約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨 2019 年 5 月 30 日星期四 13.16 BST

幾十年來,美國和其他國家一直追求自由市場議程,但慘遭失敗。什麽樣的經濟製度最有利於人類福祉? 這個問題已經定義了當前時代,因為經過美國和其他發達經濟體 40 年的新自由主義,我們知道什麽是行不通的。

新自由主義實驗 — — 對富人減稅、放鬆勞動力和產品市場管製、金融化和全球化 — — 已經慘遭失敗。 增長率低於二戰後四分之一個世紀的水平,而且大部分增長已經積累到了收入規模的最高層。 在經曆了幾十年的收入停滯甚至下降之後,新自由主義必須被宣布死亡並被埋葬。

爭奪成功的至少有三種主要的政治選擇:極右翼民族主義、中左翼改良主義和進步左翼(中右翼代表新自由主義的失敗)。 然而,除了進步左翼之外,這些替代方案仍然受製於某種形式的已經(或應該)過期的意識形態。

例如,中左翼代表了具有人性的新自由主義。 其目標是將美國前總統比爾·克林頓和英國前首相托尼·布萊爾的政策帶入21世紀,僅對現行的金融化和全球化模式稍作修改。 與此同時,民族主義右翼否認全球化,將當今所有問題歸咎於移民和外國人。 然而,正如唐納德·特朗普(Donald Trump)的總統任期所表明的那樣,它同樣致力於為富人減稅、放鬆管製以及縮減或取消社會計劃——至少在美國版本中是如此。

相比之下,第三陣營主張我所說的進步資本主義,它基於四個優先事項規定了完全不同的經濟議程。 首先是恢複市場、國家和公民社會之間的平衡。 經濟增長緩慢、不平等加劇、金融不穩定和環境惡化是市場產生的問題,因此不能也不會由市場自身來克服。 政府有責任通過環境、健康、職業安全和其他類型的監管來限製和塑造市場。 政府還有責任去做市場不能或不會做的事情,例如積極投資於基礎研究、技術、教育和選民的健康。

第二要務是認識到“國家財富”是科學探究(了解我們周圍的世界)和社會組織的結果,它允許大批人為了共同利益而共同努力。 市場在促進社會合作方麵仍然發揮著至關重要的作用,但隻有在法治治理和民主監督的情況下才能實現這一目的。 否則,個人可以通過剝削他人、通過尋租攫取財富來致富,而不是通過真正的聰明才智創造財富。 當今的許多富人都是通過剝削途徑獲得今天的成就的。 特朗普的政策對他們很有好處,這些政策鼓勵尋租,同時破壞了創造財富的根本來源。 進步資本主義的目的恰恰相反。

沒有什麽靈丹妙藥可以扭轉數十年新自由主義造成的損害

這給我們帶來了第三個優先事項:解決日益嚴重的市場力量集中問題。 通過利用信息優勢、收購潛在競爭對手並設置進入壁壘,占主導地位的企業能夠進行大規模尋租,損害其他所有人的利益。 企業市場力量的增強,加上工人議價能力的下降,在很大程度上解釋了不平等為何如此嚴重、增長如此不溫不火。 除非政府發揮比新自由主義規定的更積極的作用,否則由於機器人化和人工智能的進步,這些問題可能會變得更加嚴重。

進步議程的第四個關鍵項目是切斷經濟實力與政治影響力之間的聯係。 經濟實力和政治影響力是相輔相成、自我延續的,尤其是在美國這樣的國家,富裕的個人和企業可以在選舉中無限製地花錢。 隨著美國越來越接近“一美元一票”的根本上不民主的製度,民主所必需的製衡製度很可能無法維持:沒有任何東西能夠限製富人的權力。 這不僅僅是一個道德和政治問題:不平等程度較低的經濟體實際上表現更好。 因此,進步資本主義改革必須從限製金錢在政治中的影響和減少財富不平等開始。

沒有什麽靈丹妙藥可以扭轉數十年新自由主義造成的損害。 但按照上述概述的全麵議程絕對可以。 這在很大程度上取決於改革者是否像私營部門製造這些問題時那樣堅決地解決市場權力過度和不平等等問題。

全麵的議程必須關注教育、研究和其他真正的財富來源。 它必須像美國的“綠色新政”和英國的“反抗滅絕”一樣警惕保護環境和應對氣候變化。 它還必須提供公共計劃,以確保任何公民都無法獲得體麵生活的基本必需品。 其中包括經濟保障、工作機會和生活工資、醫療保健和充足的住房、有保障的退休生活以及子女的優質教育。

這個議程是非常負擔得起的; 事實上,我們不能不頒布它。 民族主義者和新自由主義者提供的替代方案將導致更多的停滯、不平等、環境惡化和政治尖刻,有可能導致我們甚至不想想象的結果。

進步資本主義並不是一個矛盾的說法。 相反,它是明顯失敗的意識形態的最可行和最有活力的替代方案。 因此,它是我們擺脫當前經濟和政治困境的最佳機會。

  約瑟夫·斯蒂格利茨(Joseph E Stiglitz)是諾貝爾經濟學獎得主、哥倫比亞大學教授、羅斯福研究所首席經濟學家。

Neoliberalism must be pronounced dead and buried. Where next?

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/may/30/neoliberalism-must-be-pronouced-dead-and-buried-where-next

By    Thu 30 May 2019 13.16 BST

 

 

 

For decades the US and others have pursued a free-market agenda which has failed spectacularly
 
What kind of economic system is most conducive to human wellbeing? That question has come to define the current era, because, after 40 years of neoliberalism in the United States and other advanced economies, we know what doesn’t work.

 

 

 

The neoliberal experiment – lower taxes on the rich, deregulation of labour and product markets, financialisation, and globalisation – has been a spectacular failure. Growth is lower than it was in the quarter-century after the second world war, and most of it has accrued to the very top of the income scale. After decades of stagnant or even falling incomes for those below them, neoliberalism must be pronounced dead and buried.

Vying to succeed it are at least three major political alternatives: far-right nationalism, centre-left reformism and the progressive left (with the centre-right representing the neoliberal failure). And yet, with the exception of the progressive left, these alternatives remain beholden to some form of the ideology that has (or should have) expired.

The centre-left, for example, represents neoliberalism with a human face. Its goal is to bring the policies of former US president Bill Clinton and former British prime minister Tony Blair into the 21st century, making only slight revisions to the prevailing modes of financialisation and globalisation. Meanwhile, the nationalist right disowns globalisation, blaming migrants and foreigners for all of today’s problems. Yet as Donald Trump’s presidency has shown, it is no less committed – at least in its American variant – to tax cuts for the rich, deregulation and shrinking or eliminating social programmes.

By contrast, the third camp advocates what I call progressive capitalism, which prescribes a radically different economic agenda, based on four priorities. The first is to restore the balance between markets, the state and civil society. Slow economic growth, rising inequality, financial instability and environmental degradation are problems born of the market, and thus cannot and will not be overcome by the market on its own. Governments have a duty to limit and shape markets through environmental, health, occupational safety and other types of regulation. It is also the government’s job to do what the market cannot or will not do, such as actively investing in basic research, technology, education and the health of its constituents.

The second priority is to recognise that the “wealth of nations” is the result of scientific inquiry – learning about the world around us – and social organisation that allows large groups of people to work together for the common good. Markets still have a crucial role to play in facilitating social cooperation, but they serve this purpose only if they are governed by the rule of law and subject to democratic checks. Otherwise, individuals can get rich by exploiting others, extracting wealth through rent-seeking rather than creating wealth through genuine ingenuity. Many of today’s wealthy took the exploitation route to get where they are. They have been well served by Trump’s policies, which have encouraged rent-seeking while destroying the underlying sources of wealth creation. Progressive capitalism seeks to do precisely the opposite.

The fourth key item on the progressive agenda is to sever the link between economic power and political influence. Economic power and political influence are mutually reinforcing and self-perpetuating, especially where, as in the US, wealthy individuals and corporations may spend without limit in elections. As the US moves ever closer to a fundamentally undemocratic system of “one dollar, one vote”, the system of checks and balances so necessary for democracy likely cannot hold: nothing will be able to constrain the power of the wealthy. This is not just a moral and political problem: economies with less inequality actually perform better. Progressive-capitalist reforms thus have to begin by curtailing the influence of money in politics and reducing wealth inequality.

There is no magic bullet that can reverse the damage done by decades of neoliberalism. But a comprehensive agenda along the lines sketched above absolutely can. Much will depend on whether reformers are as resolute in combating problems like excessive market power and inequality as the private sector is in creating them.

A comprehensive agenda must focus on education, research and the other true sources of wealth. It must protect the environment and fight climate change with the same vigilance as the Green New Dealers in the US and Extinction Rebellion in the United Kingdom. And it must provide public programmes to ensure that no citizen is denied the basic requisites of a decent life. These include economic security, access to work and a living wage, health care and adequate housing, a secure retirement, and a quality education for one’s children.

This agenda is eminently affordable; in fact, we cannot afford not to enact it. The alternatives offered by nationalists and neoliberals would guarantee more stagnation, inequality, environmental degradation and political acrimony, potentially leading to outcomes we do not even want to imagine.

Progressive capitalism is not an oxymoron. Rather, it is the most viable and vibrant alternative to an ideology that has clearly failed. As such, it represents the best chance we have of escaping our current economic and political malaise.

 Joseph E Stiglitz is a Nobel laureate in economics, university professor at Columbia University and chief economist at the Roosevelt Institute.

 

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