What a kick in the face for America’s
capitalist elite! The US House of
Representatives voted to reject the Emergency Economic Stabilisation Act put
forward by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, President
Bush, Vice-President Cheney, the majority Democrat leader of the House, the
Republican minority leader of the House, both candidates in the upcoming
presidential election, Barack Obama and John McCain and all the American media.
Hank Paulson wanted to take $700bn of
taxpayers’ money, equivalent to nearly 6% of America’s annual output, and not spend
it on new hospitals, Medicare, more schools and better education. No, not on that. Paulson wanted to spend it buying up the bad
and rotten debts of the big banks and financial institutions so they could start
making profits again.
But the American electorate was not having
it. Congress members were deluged with
emails, letters and phone calls from constituents demanding that this
legislation be thrown out. It did not
matter that the ‘great and the good’ were saying this payout, equivalent to the
entire cost of the Iraq war, would have ‘safeguards for taxpayers’. They knew it was just a bailout for the rich
at the expense of the majority of working people.
The fat cats of Wall Street were led by the
Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, the former head of Goldman Sachs, the most
powerful investment bank in the world.
Paulson used to get $40-50m a year in salary and bonuses. He wanted to save his former bank and all the
others.
Paulson represents the 450 billionaires in America and 3m millionaires who between them own
25% of all America’s
wealth as just 1% of the population. The
credit crunch was losing them money big time.
He aimed to get taxpayers’ money to bail them out.
Fear and terror were proposed to the people
if this law was not passed. The world
would come to an end, he said. Well, not
enough Congressmen and women, even though many took money from finance capital,
would take the message. A majority of
Republicans, driven partly by an extreme ideology against so-called ‘government
interference’ in ‘markets’, and partly by pressure from the electorate that can
vote them out of office in just five weeks time, rebelled against their
leaders. Also, many Democrats backed the
views of their constituents against their sycophantic leaders. The vote to bail out the rich was lost.
What happens now? Well, the rich elite will make strenuous
efforts now to reverse this decision.
They will try to make Congress vote and vote again until they get their
way. Maybe they will succeed.
There are two possibilities for
capitalism. The first is that the vote
stays lost. Then more banks will fail
(three big ones failed on the same day that Congress voted); the stock market
will fall further (it was down by the biggest amount since the day of
9/11). America would be staring depression
in the face, equivalent to the 1930s.
Paulson is right: Failure to bail out his friends will mean a
strike of finance capital; another squeeze of credit and then companies will
stop producing, profits will fall (they are already falling at over 10% a year
now) and jobs will be lost, as the housing market dives further.
The second is that the vote eventually goes
through. That will mean massive
government spending to bail out the banks and huge printing of money to help
the fat cats. That will mean inflation
alongside stagnation of the economy in America,
Britain and Europe.
So the alternatives are depression
worldwide or stagflation worldwide.
Americans are beginning to see the reality of capitalism.