By Robert
Reich
What’s at stake this election year? Let me put as directly as I can.
America
has succumbed to a vicious cycle in which great wealth translates into
political power, which generates even more wealth, and even more power.
This
spiral is most apparent is declining tax rates on corporations and on top
personal incomes (much in the form of wider tax loopholes), along with a
profusion of government bailouts and subsidies (to Wall Street bankers,
hedge-fund partners, oil companies, casino tycoons, and giant agribusiness
owners, among others).
The
vicious cycle of wealth and power is less apparent, but even more significant,
in economic rules that now favor the wealthy.
Billionaires
like Donald Trump can use bankruptcy to escape debts but average people can’t
get relief from burdensome mortgage or student debt payments.
Giant
corporations can amass market power without facing antitrust lawsuits (think
Internet cable companies, Monsanto, Big Pharma, consolidations of health
insurers and of health care corporations, Dow and DuPont, and the growing
dominance of Amazon, Apple, and Google, for example).
It’s
now easier for Wall Street insiders to profit from confidential information
unavailable to small investors.
It’s
also easier for giant firms to extend the length of patents and copyrights,
thereby pushing up prices on everything from pharmaceuticals to Walt Disney
merchandise.
And
easier for big corporations to wangle trade treaties that protect their foreign
assets but not the jobs or incomes of American workers.
It’s
easier for giant military contractors to secure huge appropriations for
unnecessary weapons, and to keep the war machine going.
The
result of this vicious cycle is a disenfranchisement of most Americans, and a
giant upward distribution of income from the middle class and poor to the
wealthy and powerful.
Another
consequence is growing anger and frustration felt by people who are working
harder than ever but getting nowhere, accompanied by deepening cynicism about
our democracy.
The
way to end this vicious cycle is to reduce the huge accumulations of wealth
that fuel it, and get big money out of politics.
But
it’s chicken-and-egg problem. How can this be accomplished when wealth and
power are compounding at the top?
Only
through a political movement such as America had a century ago when
progressives reclaimed our economy and democracy from the robber barons of the
first Gilded Age.
That
was when Wisconsin’s “fighting Bob” La Follette instituted the nation’s first
minimum wage law; presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan attacked the
big railroads, giant banks, and insurance companies; and President Teddy Roosevelt
busted up the giant trusts.
When
suffragettes like Susan B. Anthony secured women the right to vote, reformers
like Jane Addams got laws protecting children and the public’s health, and
organizers like Mary Harris “Mother” Jones spearheaded labor unions.
America
enacted a progressive income tax, limited corporate campaign contributions,
ensured the safety and purity of food and drugs, and even invented the public
high school.
The
progressive era welled up in the last decade of the nineteenth century because
millions of Americans saw that wealth and power at the top were undermining
American democracy and stacking the economic deck. Millions of Americans
overcame their cynicism and began to mobilize.
We
may have reached that tipping point again.
Both
the Occupy Movement and the Tea Party grew out of revulsion at the Wall Street
bailout. Consider, more recently, the fight for a higher minimum wage (“Fight
for 15”).
Bernie
Sander’s presidential campaign is part of this mobilization. (Donald Trump
bastardized version draws on the same anger and frustration but has descended
into bigotry and xenophobia.)
Surely
2016 is a critical year. But, as the reformers of the Progressive Era
understood more than a century ago, no single president or any other politician
can accomplish what’s needed because a system caught in the spiral of wealth
and power cannot be reformed from within. It can be changed only by a mass
movement of citizens pushing from the outside.
So
regardless of who wins the presidency in November and which party dominates the
next Congress, it is up to the rest of us to continue to organize and mobilize.
Real reform will require many years of hard work from millions of us.
As
we learned in the last progressive era, this is the only way the vicious cycle
of wealth and power can be reversed.
ROBERT B. REICH is Chancellor’s Professor of Public Policy at
the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center
for Developing Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration,
for which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet
secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including
the best sellers “Aftershock, “The Work of Nations," and "Beyond
Outrage," and, his most recent, "Saving Capitalism." He is also
a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause,
a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the
award-winning documentary, INEQUALITY FOR ALL.