JAN 05, 2012 The
Joke is on the Rest of Us
Have the Super-Rich Seceded from the United States? by MIKE LOFGREN http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/01/05/have-the-super-rich-seceded-from-the-united-states/
It was in 1993, during congressional deliberation over the
North American Free Trade Agreement. I was having lunch with a staffer for one
of the rare Republican members of Congress who opposed the policy of so-called
free trade. I distinctly remember something my colleague said: ÒThe rich elites
of this country have far more in common with their counterparts in London,
Paris, and Tokyo than with their own fellow American citizens.Ó
That was just the beginning of the period when the realities
of outsourced manufacturing, financialization of the economy, and growing
income disparity started to seep into the public consciousness, so at the time
it seemed like a striking and novel statement.
At the end of the cold war many writers predicted the
decline of the traditional nation state. Some looked at the demise of the
Soviet Union and foresaw the territorial state breaking up into statelets of
different ethnic, religious, or economic compositions. This happened in the
Balkans, former Czechoslovakia, and Sudan. Others, like Chuck Spinney,
predicted a weakening of the state due to the rise of Fourth Generation
Warfare, and the inability of national armies to adapt to it. The quagmires of
Iraq and Afghanistan lend credence to that theory. There have been hundreds of
books about globalization and how it would break down borders. But I am unaware
of a well-developed theory from that time about how the super-rich and the
corporations they run would secede from the nation state.
I do not mean secession in terms of physical withdrawal from
the territory of the state, although that happens occasionally. It means a
withdrawal into enclaves, a sort of internal immigration, whereby the rich
disconnect themselves from the civic life of the nation and from any concern
about its well-being except as a place to extract loot. Our plutocracy now
lives like the British in colonial India: in the place and ruling it, but not
of it. If one can afford private security, public safety is of no concern; if
one owns a Gulfstream jet, crumbling bridges cause less apprehension –
and viable public transportation doesnÕt even show up on the radar screen. With
private doctors on call, who cares about Medicare?
To some degree the rich have always secluded themselves from
the gaze of the common herd; for example, their habit for centuries has been to
send their offspring to private schools. But now this habit is exacerbated by
the plutocracyÕs palpable animosity towards public education and public
educators, as Michael Bloomberg has demonstrated. To the extent public
education ÒreformÓ is popular among billionaires and their tax-exempt
foundations, one suspects it is as a lever to divert the more than one-half
trillion dollars in federal, state, and local education dollars into private
hands, meaning themselves and their friends. A century ago, at least we got
some attractive public libraries out of Andrew Carnegie. Noblesse oblige like
CarnegieÕs is presently lacking among our seceding plutocracy.
In both world wars, even a Harvard man or a New York
socialite might know the weight of an army pack. Now the military is for
suckers from the laboring classes whose subprime mortgages you just sliced into
CDOs and sold to gullible investors in order to buy your second Bentley or
rustle up the cash to employ Rod Stewart to perform at your birthday party.
Courtesy of Matt Taibbi, we learn that the sentiment among the super-rich
towards the rest of America is often one of contempt rather than noblesse;
Bernard Marcus, co-founder of Home Depot, says about the views of the 99
percent: ÒWho gives a crap about some imbecile?Ó
Steven Schwarzman, the hedge fund billionaire CEO of the
Blackstone Group who hired Rod Stewart for his $5-million birthday party,
believes it is the rabble who are socially irresponsible. Speaking about
low-income citizens who pay no income tax, he says: ÒYou have to have skin in
the game. IÕm not saying how much people should do. But we should all be part
of the system.Ó But millions of Americans who do not pay federal income taxes
pay federal payroll taxes. These taxes are regressive, and the dirty little
secret is that over the last several decades they have made up a greater and
greater share of federal revenues. In 1950, payroll and other federal
retirement contributions constituted 10.9 percent of all federal revenues; by
2007, the last ÒnormalÓ economic year before federal revenues began falling,
they made up 33.9 percent. By contrast, corporate income taxes were 26.4
percent of federal revenues in 1950; by 2007 they had fallen to 14.4 percent.
Who has skin in the game now?
As is well known by now, Schwarzman benefits from the
ÒBuffett Rule:Ó financial sharks typically take their compensation in the form
of capital gains rather than salaries, thus knocking down their income tax rate
from 35 percent to 15 percent. But thatÕs not the only way Mr. Skin-in-the-Game
benefits: the 6.2-percent Social Security tax and the 1.45-percent Medicare tax
apply only to wages and salaries, not capital gains distributions. Accordingly,
Schwarzman is stiffing the system in two ways: not only is his income tax rate
less than half the top marginal rate, he is shorting the Social Security system
that others of his billionaire colleagues like Pete Peterson say is
unsustainable and needs to be cut.
This lack of skin in the game may explain why Willard Mitt
Romney is so coy about releasing his income tax returns. It would also make
sense for someone with $264 million in net worth to joke that he is
Òunemployed,Ó as if he were some jobless sheet metal worker in Youngstown, when
he is really saying in code that his income stream is not a salary subject to
payroll deduction. The chances are good that his effective rate for both
federal income and payroll taxes is lower than that of many a wage slave.
The real joke is on the rest of us. After the biggest
financial meltdown in 80 years – a meltdown caused by the type of rogue
financial manipulation that Romney embodies – and a consequent long,
steep drop in the American standard of living, who is the putative front-runner
for one of the only two parties allowed to be competitive in American politics?
None other than Mitt Romney, the man who says corporations are people. Opposing
him, or someone like him, will be the incumbent president, Barack Obama, who
will raise up to a billion dollars to compete in the campaign. Much of that
loot will come from the same corporations, hedge fund managers, merger and
acquisition specialists, and leveraged buyout artists the president will
denounce in pro forma fashion during the campaign.
The super-rich have seceded from America even as their grip
on its control mechanisms has tightened.
MIKE LOFGREN retired in June 2011 after 28 years as a Congressional staffer. He served 16 years as a professional staff member on the Republican staff of the House and Senate Budget Committees.