The age of neoliberalism is ending in America.
What will replace it?
Gary
Gerstle
Biden has a shot at giving the US a progressive
political order. But the odds are against him – for now
‘Biden has had two big policy successes – the vaccines
rollout and the nearly two trillion dollar American Rescue Plan. He needs two
more’
Mon 28 Jun
2021 11.19 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jun/28/age-of-neoliberalism-biden-trump
The
neoliberal order that dominated American politics for 40 years is coming apart.
This order prized the free movement of capital, goods, and people. It
celebrated deregulation as an economic good that resulted when governments were
no longer allowed to manage markets. It valorized cosmopolitanism as a cultural
achievement, the product of open borders and the consequent voluntary mixing of
large numbers of diverse peoples. It hailed globalization as a win-win position:
the west would be enriched but so would the rest – Latin American countries and
Asian nations, large and small. There would be no losers in this global project
– not among the working classes of the west nor among the peoples of the global
south. Globalization and free markets would lift all boats. In America, the
neoliberal order transcended party lines, compelling all those who wanted
political power to subscribe to its core beliefs. Ronald Reagan was its most
prominent architect, Bill Clinton its key facilitator, converting the
Democratic party to its core precepts.
The promise of neoliberalism could not survive the economic wreckage of 2008-09. Millions lost jobs and homes. The economic inequality long characterizing the neoliberal world now widened further, as governments did more to bail out the investing classes than those who lived by wages alone. Many among the latter began to lose faith in neoliberalism and then in democratic government, the latter now accused of exploiting “the people,” either through gross economic mismanagement or through complicity in maintaining a system ostensibly committed to popular rule but in reality rigged to favor the “best” over the rest.
The
fracturing of neoliberal hegemony opened politics to new voices. Donald Trump
shocked the political establishment both with his crude style and with rhetoric
that struck at the heart of neoliberal orthodoxy: free trade was a chimera that
had done nothing for America’s working man; America’s borders had to be
established, walls built, immigrants expelled, and globalization reversed.
Bernie Sanders’s rise on the left was equally astonishing, his influence on
American politics greater than that any other American socialist save for
Eugene Victor Debs himself.
The real
estate huckster from Queens and the socialist shouter from Brooklyn were worlds
apart on many political issues. But both attacked globalizing economic agendas,
the privileging of free trade over the needs of America’s working men and
women, the evisceration of American manufacturing, and the corruption of
America’s political system by elites. Both men generated intense levels of
support that convulsed the parties with which they were allied. Partisanship
hardened during their rise, making politics both more exciting and more
volatile, patterns that the Covid pandemic only intensified.
What lies
ahead? If Trump gets his way, America may devolve into an authoritarian state
in which the country’s democratic institutions are made subservient either to
the decrees of ‘the great leader’ or to an oligarchic Republican party able to
manipulate electoral processes to keep itself in power even when a majority of
Americans vote to oppose its rule. Such a regime would seek both to fire up
America’s shrinking (and thus vulnerable) white majority with ethnonationalist
appeals and enrich regime members by striking lucrative and mutually beneficial
deals with capitalist elites. We know something about how these regimes
operate: they were common in Latin America and Africa across the second half of
the twentieth century – and were endlessly castigated by US observers then for
betraying democratic principles.
Roosevelt broke with free market dogmas, insisting the
government had to manage capitalism in the public interest
The Sanders
road runs through Joe Biden who, ironically, long kept a healthy distance
between himself and progressive causes. But now the new president, grasping the
magnitude of the moment and understanding that this is likely to be his last
tour of public duty, has decided to channel the spirit of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, America’s most successful Democratic president.
Roosevelt
himself broke with free market dogmas, insisting that the federal government
had to manage capitalism in the public interest. He undertook major projects of
infrastructural improvement, understanding their importance both for economic
growth and for demonstrating in visually dramatic ways the Democratic party’s
ability to transform for the better the everyday world in which Americans lived
and worked. He opened his Democratic party to the left, believing that such an
alliance would enhance, rather than imperil, the chances of reform. He understood
the need to reinvigorate democracy in the US at a time when it was on the
defensive in most of the rest of world.
Biden hopes
to make each of these Rooseveltian projects his own. But he lacks FDR’s
congressional clout. Roosevelt possessed a congressional base in 1932 larger
than Biden currently enjoys, and he increased it in 1934 and 1936. To rival
Roosevelt’s success, Biden will have to do the same in 2022 and 2024.
Republicans understand the stakes of 2022 and 2024 all too well, which is why
their state legislators are working day and night to jigger electoral
procedures and districts in ways that advantage their party.
Can Biden
nevertheless pull off a New Deal for the 21st century, appropriately festooned
in 50 shades of climate-friendly green? The odds are against him. But Vegas
oddsmakers (and their pollster soulmates) have shown themselves to be shaky
guides to political behavior during this tumultuous era. Biden has had two big
policy successes – the vaccines rollout and the nearly $2tn dollar American
Rescue Plan. He needs two more, likely to be a conventional infrastructure plan
passed with bipartisan support, and then a second, unconventional
infrastructure plan that is both green and focused on “social” rather than
physical infrastructure, passed through reconciliation. If, as a result, the
economy begins to hum; if the American landscape begins to bloom with new roads,
bridges, rail lines, and recharging stations; if hope in an American future
thus rebounds; and if the Democrats can find 50 (or even 20) versions of Stacey
Abrams, each able to make the Democratic party the force it became in Georgia
in 2020: then Biden will have a shot at beating the oddsmakers, and at giving
America a political order that many would be proud to call progressive.
Gary
Gerstle teaches at the University of Cambridge. He is writing The Rise and Fall
of America’s Neoliberal Order (2022)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário