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Mar 20 2009, 12:53 pm
The rising tide of class conflict
What began as bitterness has burst into a full blown battle between the haves and the havenots. Whatever the level of tension was at the outset of this crisis, public sentiment has turned an entirely new shade of red. But it's not all bad. I'm sure this period in history will prove to be a petri dish for social scientists and political theorists for decades to come. So maybe we'll learn something from it. At a minimum, we can expect SSRN's servers to be put to extensive use (if they're not torched as part of the bourgeois conspiracy).
So what got this whole movement started? Aside from obvious causes like crashing asset prices and mass unemployment, I think we can find additional causes by looking to popular culture, how it shaped the public's perception of wealth, and how wealth and the wealthy took center stage, just before they all disappeared.
I'm Just Gonna Keep On Dancing
When times were good and most people had enough to get along, the public, especially in the U.S., was more than willing to envy the wealthy. This was the case whether the wealthy individual was a derivatives trader, rapper, actor, or heiress. We had gotten to the point where people were famous simply for being wealthy, whether or not they had contributed anything to the world to generate or even justify their wealth. The mere possession of wealth was fetishized, arguably beyond the level of physical beauty. A famous mantra of the era sums up the ethos nicely: "Money, power, respect - it's the key to life."
During this period, which I would define roughly as the last decade, the residents of Manhattan embraced an exaggerated, almost ridiculous adherence to this "bling culture." To live in Manhattan during this time period was to submit to wealth and celebrity being determinative of your daily experiences. And even the wealthy were peasants here. Real estate prices ballooned to unimaginable levels with 1 bedroom apartments renting at costs that exceeded the average income of U.S. citizens. Manhattan had become the epicenter of American capitalism, and Wall Street was without question its Holy See.
Although there were some economic rough patches over the last decade, in retrospect it seems like a straight shot to the top, at least when compared to the current situation. The salaries of young professionals skyrocketed to create a well educated, highly paid, stimulus addicted sub-culture. And there was nowhere else that young professionals would care to call home than a four thousand dollar a month closet in one of the many coveted neighborhoods of Manhattan's downtown area. With ready access to "bling" that the rest of the hoi polloi could experience only on television, Wall Street's traders, bankers, and lawyers were the fuel of Manhattan's economic engine. The feigning of celebrity through wealth was the apparent end. Conspicuous consumption, designer clothes, and late hours were the means. Without being famous, 6 and 7 figure-earning 20-something professionals could "party like rock stars" at the city's restaurants, bars, and clubs and burn out every ember they had left during the 12 hours a week they weren't working.
Wall Street's riches were no secret to the public. Stories of hedge fund managers receiving compensation in excess of a billion dollars a year were already old-hat by the time the housing crisis got underway. But what reports of wealth never focused on was how the money was made. The story of the rise to wealth was secondary to reports of its present expenditure. Reality TV shows featuring the wealthy, their homes, their boats, and their conquests offer little insight into how wealth is generated. And it seems the public's perception of how wealth is generated has suffered as a result. The emphasis on the present status of being wealthy has left gaps in the story, and seems to justify the presumption that the wealthy are undeserving, that the money just appeared. But this should not come as a surprise to anyone. After all, entertainment is a product, subject to competition, and only the most fit products will survive. So ask yourself, what's more entertaining: a piece on a 28 year-old banker strung out on uppers at 4AM grinding through a power point presentation on the cash flows of some pharmaceutical company; or that same 28 year-old banker drunk out of his mind spending thousands of dollars on bottle service and a raw bar at some trendy club with techno music blasting and scantily clad women dancing on tables? I think we'd all agree that the latter would be an easier sale to the networks.
And Then The Music Stopped
And then it all came crashing down on top of us. What began with the collapse of markets in obscure corners of high finance escalated to a global liquidity crisis, and then a global recession. And now, jobless, and angry, the public remembers that piece about the 28 year-old slurring his speech with a piece of crab hanging off his chin. They think to themselves, "This is who did this to me. This brat making more money than I can count and eating food I can't pronounce." What they don't think is, here's the kid who is the pride of his family, who's worked hard his entire life to get into top schools and get a job at a top bank, working 80 hours a week at a cubicle strung out on uppers to push him through to the next day. And yes, on Saturdays at 3 AM he can be found somewhere on the Lower East Side with a piece of crab attached to his face.
The danger we face is not a lack of understanding or sympathy for the wealthy. Wall Street is not running a charity. People who work there know what they're getting into and don't deserve sympathy for choosing demanding careers. And in any case the thanks come via direct deposit. Rather, the danger we face is shaming the accumulation of wealth. Those who forcefully pursue their own selfish goals within the bounds of the law generate wealth for those around them. This is a tried and tested fact. By succumbing to anger and an easy answer for what went wrong, in the short term we run the risk of being distracted from the more pressing issues before us. And in the long term, we run the risk of discouraging the entrepreneurship and progress that has lifted humanity out of poverty.
So what got this whole movement started? Aside from obvious causes like crashing asset prices and mass unemployment, I think we can find additional causes by looking to popular culture, how it shaped the public's perception of wealth, and how wealth and the wealthy took center stage, just before they all disappeared.
I'm Just Gonna Keep On Dancing
When times were good and most people had enough to get along, the public, especially in the U.S., was more than willing to envy the wealthy. This was the case whether the wealthy individual was a derivatives trader, rapper, actor, or heiress. We had gotten to the point where people were famous simply for being wealthy, whether or not they had contributed anything to the world to generate or even justify their wealth. The mere possession of wealth was fetishized, arguably beyond the level of physical beauty. A famous mantra of the era sums up the ethos nicely: "Money, power, respect - it's the key to life."
During this period, which I would define roughly as the last decade, the residents of Manhattan embraced an exaggerated, almost ridiculous adherence to this "bling culture." To live in Manhattan during this time period was to submit to wealth and celebrity being determinative of your daily experiences. And even the wealthy were peasants here. Real estate prices ballooned to unimaginable levels with 1 bedroom apartments renting at costs that exceeded the average income of U.S. citizens. Manhattan had become the epicenter of American capitalism, and Wall Street was without question its Holy See.
Although there were some economic rough patches over the last decade, in retrospect it seems like a straight shot to the top, at least when compared to the current situation. The salaries of young professionals skyrocketed to create a well educated, highly paid, stimulus addicted sub-culture. And there was nowhere else that young professionals would care to call home than a four thousand dollar a month closet in one of the many coveted neighborhoods of Manhattan's downtown area. With ready access to "bling" that the rest of the hoi polloi could experience only on television, Wall Street's traders, bankers, and lawyers were the fuel of Manhattan's economic engine. The feigning of celebrity through wealth was the apparent end. Conspicuous consumption, designer clothes, and late hours were the means. Without being famous, 6 and 7 figure-earning 20-something professionals could "party like rock stars" at the city's restaurants, bars, and clubs and burn out every ember they had left during the 12 hours a week they weren't working.
Wall Street's riches were no secret to the public. Stories of hedge fund managers receiving compensation in excess of a billion dollars a year were already old-hat by the time the housing crisis got underway. But what reports of wealth never focused on was how the money was made. The story of the rise to wealth was secondary to reports of its present expenditure. Reality TV shows featuring the wealthy, their homes, their boats, and their conquests offer little insight into how wealth is generated. And it seems the public's perception of how wealth is generated has suffered as a result. The emphasis on the present status of being wealthy has left gaps in the story, and seems to justify the presumption that the wealthy are undeserving, that the money just appeared. But this should not come as a surprise to anyone. After all, entertainment is a product, subject to competition, and only the most fit products will survive. So ask yourself, what's more entertaining: a piece on a 28 year-old banker strung out on uppers at 4AM grinding through a power point presentation on the cash flows of some pharmaceutical company; or that same 28 year-old banker drunk out of his mind spending thousands of dollars on bottle service and a raw bar at some trendy club with techno music blasting and scantily clad women dancing on tables? I think we'd all agree that the latter would be an easier sale to the networks.
And Then The Music Stopped
And then it all came crashing down on top of us. What began with the collapse of markets in obscure corners of high finance escalated to a global liquidity crisis, and then a global recession. And now, jobless, and angry, the public remembers that piece about the 28 year-old slurring his speech with a piece of crab hanging off his chin. They think to themselves, "This is who did this to me. This brat making more money than I can count and eating food I can't pronounce." What they don't think is, here's the kid who is the pride of his family, who's worked hard his entire life to get into top schools and get a job at a top bank, working 80 hours a week at a cubicle strung out on uppers to push him through to the next day. And yes, on Saturdays at 3 AM he can be found somewhere on the Lower East Side with a piece of crab attached to his face.
The danger we face is not a lack of understanding or sympathy for the wealthy. Wall Street is not running a charity. People who work there know what they're getting into and don't deserve sympathy for choosing demanding careers. And in any case the thanks come via direct deposit. Rather, the danger we face is shaming the accumulation of wealth. Those who forcefully pursue their own selfish goals within the bounds of the law generate wealth for those around them. This is a tried and tested fact. By succumbing to anger and an easy answer for what went wrong, in the short term we run the risk of being distracted from the more pressing issues before us. And in the long term, we run the risk of discouraging the entrepreneurship and progress that has lifted humanity out of poverty.











This is the most expertly written, thoroughly original article I have ever read. Charles Davi, whoever that is, is a genius.
Classical economics from 18th century Adam Smith. It has explained the working of ruthless, predatory capitalism for centuries. And this is what we have here:
"The danger we face is not a lack of understanding or sympathy for the wealthy. Wall Street is not running a charity. People who work there know what they're getting into and don't deserve sympathy for choosing demanding careers. And in any case the thanks come via direct deposit. Rather, the danger we face is shaming the accumulation of wealth. Those who forcefully peruse their own selfish goals within the bounds of the law generate wealth for those around them. This is a tried and tested fact."
Also embedded here is the fabled trickle down economics of the 20th century Robber Barons from J.P. Morgan to the current Republican elite. There is no daring an exploratory of the obvious question that government of the people and for the people must answer: what does a society accumulate wealth for? What are our policies to serve the people, the workers who actually create machines and products; who writes the laws that serve those so happily operating by the "test fact" principles of selfish goals? Is this how the 21st century is to unfold? More elitist opulence for the few...more plundering of the resources of the earth where air is commodified with a monetary number of worth...where the distribution of income is further and further warped and those who have not because they do not control the means of production are condemned to misery and death?
If you smug answer is yes indeed, then liberty or death and forward to sharp class warfare between classes that are defact enemies.
tobalito49,
Do you honestly believe there is little to no opportunity for upward mobility in this country? As for myself, I honestly do not believe that is the case. And, "misery and death?" Seems a bit over the top no?
Now there is a great concept that is always held out by traditional classical economists: "upward mobility"? I surely do think it worth time critically evaluating where societies are wanting to be upwardly mobile to. Brazilian peasants burning the Amazon surely believe that are grabbing all the capitalist gusto heh? Not a problem? And absolutely, GM has the right to suck an entire monster company down the tubes in large part because the owners believed in producing "Muscle Cars"! And Japan and China, South Korea producing economical and innovative vehicles poured into America as outsourcing ideology shipped jobs and industry out of the US and did not invest in either new education for 21st technology, nor dare retool for competition with their enemies.
Not over the top when you ask millions of Americans now out of jobs, no med insurance, not able to afford education or re-education. No, not at all over the top. And that is why America is part of the ecocidal plundering of the planet instead of leading with proposals to end this moronic, self-annhilating form of capitalist "upward mobility" defined by a sickening inept and dishonest batch of Robber Barons...some in Congress, many in banking, investment and insurance...and many absolutely deserving a small 10 x 12 jail cell.
I would like to see Mr. Davi's 10 point list for "the more pressing issues before us". If it is driven by the same ethos and institutions controlled by the opulent power elite that infests most every State government in America and the entire financial system...then it will be doomed by it primodial top principle: there is no alternative to growth...expansion is the imperative. That is the 20th century Principia Maxima. And it is the most deadly to mankind now.
While your statements are rather conclusory, one issue that is certainly more pressing than shaming the wealthy is preserving the wealth of the nation and the world as a whole.
As to growth, it is not the imperative, at least to me. Although growth does have greater marginal benefits for the world's poor than the world's elite.
Productivity, and social and intellectual progress are in my mind the most important issues to the developed world. To facilitate an environment in which individuals are as free as possible to pursue their own interests, while still preserving certain fundamental rights to all. Although I've never really thought about it, I suppose I'd put myself in the John Locke camp.
You certainly have a least a respectible camp [i.e., the John Locke camp.
].
But notice the century John worked in and what he essentially is premised on: liberty, justice, representation of the voice of the people via a Constitution. He was of course not radical now or at that time for his thoughts on property. He is a good capitalist and well spelled out how it might most peacefully harness the energy and selfishness of man.
But Mr. Locke does not get us into the 21st Century politically or economically. And for capitalism, growth and the consolidation of profits/wealth in the hands or fewer and fewer powers is the foundation on which its history of plunder, pillage and injustice has flourish in the most awesome manner. If former so-called Third World states [remember India and China] replicate the path of the 20th century of capitalist growth which is the current path...then the concept of property itself will be worthless economically. Why? Because the ecosphere will not sustain that rapacious form of destruction and expansion. The ecosphere is also not awaiting for the Western governments to "get it". It does not give a tinkers damn about our votes or philosophical arguments. It is collapsing before our very eyes were they open to see and hear and document it.
Water, food to eat...basics. The elementals of mankind are is great jeopardy. Only emergency and bold measures from nations willing to combine together to control population growth, to stop deadly pollution, to end the wasteful production of military weaponry and to collectively and rapidly formulate fundamental policies to stop urban expansion and rebuild natural ecosystems will be worthy of our 21st century order. Otherwise as James Madison would say, deadly faction will bring enough chaos to make wise government a dream.
tobalito49, way to speak truth to power! I cordially invite you to be the Vice-President of my anarcho-syndicalist improv troupe - Stage Against the Machine.
Charles, of course you're right that the average person's problem with bankers' salaries isn't really a problem. Someone working their ass off for minimum wage at a factory in Idaho must have a hard time believing that bankers are doing any "real" work, particularly in light of the media's portrayal of banker bling. But that does not mean that the banker doesn't deserve his salary.
On the other hand, the real argument in favor of bankers' current salaries is that the market has determined that these guys were actually producing enough wealth to justify six, seven, and eight figure salaries. The current recession caused by the bursting of the real estate bubble proves that many of them weren't actually creating any real wealth at all. Market-based arguments are a tough sell when the markets are this dysfunctional.
And quoting Lil Kim? Really?
"anarcho-syndicalist improv troupe - Stage Against the Machine" - now that is good...almost crazy enough to get one not only into fun trouble but closer to social truth and surely might ignite more political voice! These are challenging times and that could be a creative troupe indeed! Venceremos! Like so many bloks here in the US of A, I am personally an progressive without portfolio and a ton of disrespect and animosity against the power elite of Western governments. I really do have alot of personal rage that goes no where fast and is grounded in a pessimism I try not to inflict on too many. I would support a radical revolution against oppressive government alright and yet I realize that, in an realist way, it would most likely be quite destructive. But shucks....existentially speaking, thumping the elite can be such a bloody fun play! Turn it over!
sarchasm
Just as well though indeed, America could use a laugh or two. Yet is it too bad, quite a shame that most of America is so passive in the face of such insitutionalize rape as we see from the bank/investment houses and insurance corporados. Much legal reform is needed to write new accountability laws, nationalize several banks and auto corporations and if Obama had the guts, to call for America to Bust the Trusts just like Keith Oberman of MSNBC suggests. Regulate them and investigate them and bring them to justice.
Productivity does not trickle down through the fingers of the rich. Great innovation does not jump off the desks of the Citi-Bank multinational corporation. It comes by common people creatively and pushing against the tide. I hope that the cooperative politics of Obama succeeds for surely, the class warfare is not so very far behind if it fails. And that is not sarchasm...just a hope.
Charles, I think that you fail to give the average American little credit for being able to distinguish the deserving from the undeserving rich. No one is picketing outside the homes of Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos or Warren Buffett. The raw rage we are now seeing is rightfully directed at an overcompensated class of clever financial manipulators who rarely if ever created any real wealth, but rather made themselves obscenely rich with other people's money and cratered the world economy in the process. All this is compounded by the sense - reinforced by the CITI, Merrill and AIG bonus obscenities - that these people genuinely believe themselves to be entitled to continue to line their pockets with our tax dollars while ordinary Americans are being thrown out of work and told to make do with less.
Django48,
I'm not so sure people are distinguishing properly. At least one article suggests that the public is lashing out at the wrong group.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/18/AR2009031804104.html?sid=ST2009031801503
Well, yes and no. It's unfortunate if those hired after the carnage at AIG are tarred with the same broad brush as the Joe Cassanos of the world. But it remains that many of those paid "retention" bonuses had already left the company, undercutting any notion that they had to be paid so extravagantly in the first place because their services were needed to unravel the mess. And in any event, the company is effectively insolvent and being kept afloat only through massive injections of capital from the federal government - most which is going right out the door to the likes of Goldman, not to mention foreign banks. AIG's workers now are effectively employees of the federal government. It's sort of hard to swallow the idea of employees of a federally-subsidized operation getting paid multiples of the salary we pay the President out of the public treasury, especially with so many other needs going unfulfilled.