By Robert
Reich
President-elect Donald Trump triumphantly celebrated Carrier’s
decision to reverse its plan to close a furnace plant and move jobs to Mexico.
Some 800 jobs will remain in Indianapolis.
“Corporate America is going to have to understand that we have
to take care of our workers,” Trump told The New York Times. “The free market
has been sorting it out and America’s been losing,”
Vice President-elect
Michael Pence added, as Trump interjected, “Every time, every time.”
The “free market” is really a collection of rules about how the
economic game is played. Trump says he wants to renegotiate trade treaties that
he believes causes America to “lose.”
But Trump has shown no interest in changing the rules that for
over three decades have imposed unrelenting pressure on American companies to
cut their payrolls by shipping jobs abroad or replacing them with automated
machinery.
“Every penny counts, but if we step back and I’m looking at
earnings of $6.60 per share this year, 2 cents is an easy concession if the
president-elect listens to some of the company’s bigger concerns,” said Howard Rubel, a senior equity analyst with
Jefferies, an investment banking firm in New York.
Those bigger concerns include United Technology’s military
contracts, which last year generated $6.8 billion of its $57 billion in revenue – creating a
yuge Trump card that made $65 million look like peanuts. The President-elect
could harm the corporation’s bottom line, or, if he comes through with the big
military buildup he’s promising, generate a bonanza.
Another bigger concern is taxes. United Technologies has more
than $6 billion parked abroad where tax rates are low. It will make a bundle if
Trump follows through with a plan to allow global corporations to bring that money
home and pay a rock-bottom tax rate.
This is how Trump aims get corporate America to take care of
“our workers” – bribe firms with big tax cuts, government contracts, and relief
from regulations.
It’s “trickle-down” economics dressed in populist garb.
But as long Wall Street pushes corporations to maximize
shareholder returns, American workers will continue to lose good-paying jobs to
foreign workers or to homegrown robots. Payrolls are the biggest single cost on
most companies’ balance sheets, so squeezing them is the easiest way to boost
profits and share prices.
It doesn’t have to be this way. For more than three decades –
from the end of World War II through the early 1980s – large corporations were
responsible to their workers and communities as well as to their shareholders.
They treated workers as assets to be developed – retraining them with higher
skills as the companies moved to higher value-added production, or for new jobs
as the companies expanded, and resorting to layoffs only as a last resort.
This was partly due to strong trade unions, and also a
government that had become a central player in the economy during the preceding
years of depression and war. These two national emergencies required CEOs be
“industrial statesmen” rather than relentless profit-seekers.
But a radically different vision of the corporation erupted in
the 1980s when corporate raiders mounted hostile takeovers – using high-yield
junk bonds, leveraged buyouts, and proxy fights against the industrial
statesmen, who, in their view, were depriving shareholders of the wealth that
properly belonged to them.
During the whole of the 1970s there had been only 13 hostile takeovers of large companies. During
the 1980s, there were 150. Raiders mounted more than 2,000 leveraged buyouts.
Now, workers were costs to be cut. Since American manufacturing
employment peaked in 1979 at nearly 20 million jobs, about 8 million of those
jobs have been lost to cheaper foreign labor or to automation. According
to MIT researchers, those losses accelerated after the 2001
recession, when competition from China surged.
If Donald Trump is serious about reviving good jobs in America,
he’d give workers more bargaining power by strengthening trade unions, upgrading
lifelong education and training, and simultaneously making it harder for Wall
Street investors to take over “underperforming” companies.
But Trump won’t do any of this, as is evident by his cabinet
choices for key economic posts. Steven Mnuckin, his Treasury pick, is a former
Goldman Sachs partner who made billions over the past decades buying up
companies and slashing payrolls. Wilbur L. Ross Jr., Trump’s pick for Commerce
Secretary, made his billions using bankruptcy to protect wealthy owners while leaving
workers and communities holding the bag. (Example in point: the collapse of
Trump’s casino empire.)
These men exemplify the financialization of the American economy
that’s focused only on high profits and rising share prices. But as we’ve
painfully learned over three decades, these don’t lead to good jobs.
Trickle-down economics dressed in populist garb is still
trickle-down economics.
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.