Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
Noam
Chomsky: We Are Suffering the Major Downside of Corporate Globalization
June 24, 2016
The
following is an interview with Noam Chomsky, conducted by James Resnick:
How has the
way you understand the world changed over time and what (or who) has prompted
the most significant shifts in your thinking?
For better
or worse, I’ve pretty much stayed the same throughout my life. When I was a
child in elementary school I was writing articles for the school newspaper on
the rise of fascism in Europe and the threats to the world as I saw them from a
10-year-old point of view, and on from there. By the time I was a young
teenager, I was very involved in radical politics of all kinds; hanging around
anarchist bookstores and offices. A lot concerned what was happening during the
Second World War: the British attack on Greece and the atomic bomb I thought
was shattering.
The things
I consider inspiring is seeing people struggling: poor suffering people, with
limited resources, struggling to really achieve anything. Some of them are very
inspiring. For example, a remote very poor village in southern Colombia
organising to try to prevent a Canadian gold-mining operation from destroying
their water supply and the environment; meanwhile, fending off para-military
and military violence and so on. That kind of thing which you see all over the
world is very inspiring.
In your new
documentary Requiem for the American Dream, you note that the driving down of
tax rates and the outsourcing of lower-skilled jobs has exacerbated inequality
in recent years. Both of these phenomena are arguably due to the pressures of
globalisation, and so, is this period of rapid globalisation generally bad for
workers?
They could
be described as globalisation but it would be a mistake to do so. Globalisation
can take all kinds of forms. For example, if there were anybody that believed
in free markets they might take Adam Smith seriously. Adam Smith pointed out
that the fundamental element of free markets is the free circulation of labour.
We don’t have that. We have sharp restrictions on the movement of labour, and
so, it not only means that working people can’t come to the United States to
work, it means that privileged professionals, such as lawyers or CEOs, can set
up protectionist barriers to prevent competition from abroad. Plenty of lawyers
and doctors from abroad who are highly skilled could easily meet U.S.
professional standards but of course they aren’t allowed in because
professionals can protect themselves.
Globalisation
could be designed so that it’s beneficial to the general population or it could
be designed so that it functions along the lines of the international trade
agreements, including the Uruguay Round, the WTO Agreement, NAFTA, the current
Atlantic and Pacific agreements, which are all specifically designed as
investor rights agreements, not even trade agreements. Very high protection for
major corporations, for big pharmaceuticals, media conglomerates, and so on,
and very high barriers through intellectual property rights. Devices that allow
corporations, but of course not people, to sue governments action that might
potentially harm their profits. That is a particular form of globalisation
designed in the interest of the designers. The designers are concentrations of
private power, linked closely to state power, so in that system they are
consequences of globalisation.
You refer
to the impact of the GI Bill of Rights and how in 1950, higher education was
largely free and was seen much more as a public good. The period during the
1980s threatened the foundations of these integral institutions that had been
established through the New Deal. How and why did these institutions come under
attack?
The
1950-1960s had very high growth rates, no financial crises because of New Deal
regulations that were still in place, and relatively egalitarian growth so
every quintile grew roughly at the same level. That is what is called the
golden age. It ended with the collapse of the post-War Bretton Woods system
when the United States under Nixon blocked the convertibility of the dollar to
gold which collapsed the international financial system which had all kinds of
consequences. One was a rapid increase in the flow of capital and a rapid
increase in speculation rather than serious investment leading to the
financialisation of the economy which has been a major phenomenon in recent
years. A lot of this had to do with the reduction of the rate of profit for
manufacturing which convinced the owners of capital that it would be more
profitable to shift towards financial manipulation than to actual production.
Along with
this comes the options that were the extensions of a long process that goes way
back to try to move production to places where wages are much lower, where you
don’t need to worry about environmental standards. It’s not that business began
to try to reverse the policies. They also wanted to reverse the policies as it
goes back to the late 1930s. By the late 1930s, the business community was
appalled at the gains that were being made by working people and the general
population. You read the Business Press in the late ‘30s and it talks about the
threat of what they call the rising political power of the masses which is
going to threaten the needs of American enterprise.
Businesses
are always involved in a class war; sometimes they can do better and sometimes
they can do worse but right after the Second World War, the major attack on
labour and New Deal measures begun and took awhile to take off but with the
breakdown of the international financial system in the early ‘70s,
opportunities arose and class warfare increased. You can see that already in
the late Carter years and it took off very strongly during the Reagan/Thatcher
period where neoliberal policies were instituted and which had a devastating
effect on the weaker societies, including the third world. In the richer
societies, the United States and Europe, it has the effect of imposing relative
stagnation on the large majority of the population while for a tiny sector a
huge increase in wealth, but these are just all aspects of a constant class war
that is being carried out. If there’s no reaction to it on the part of public
organisations, then the class war succeeds.
Popular
public organisations have been under attack and atomised, and the labour
movement has been under severe attack. One aspect of the concentration of
private wealth is that it sets off a vicious cycle; private wealth concentrates
and it carries with it political power. That political power is used to
introduce legislation which increase private wealth and so the cycle goes on.
It’s not a law of nature, or a law of economics; these are matters of relative
power of various classes of people and the ongoing conflicts over the social
and political nature of the system. It right now happens to be a period of
regression from the general viewpoint of the population. It’s happened before
and it’s been overcome. You see it happening in many ways. One aspect is the
decline of democracy which is very visible both in the United States and in
Europe and has led to the significant decline of the more-or-less centrist
parties. In the United States, the Democrats and the Republicans are both under
severe attack from popular-based forces, such as Trump and Sanders. People that
have very much the same interests and concerns and if they could get together
on those issues it would be a major popular force and in Europe you see the
same thing. Recently, in the Austrian elections, the two traditional parties
that ran the country were out of the elections. The choice was between a
neo-fascist party and a green party.
You
reference Martin Gilens’ study that finds that around 70% cannot affect
government policy in any form. How has this alienation among the powerless
translated in the discourse seen during the 2016 election primaries?
Very
directly. That’s part of the basis of the support for Trump and Sanders. In
some respects, they’re pretty similar reactions. There’s a close correlation
between effective disenfranchisement and simply abstention which has been
studied for years. Walter Dean Burnham years ago did a study of the
socio-economic character of non-voters in the United States and what he found
is that they’re pretty similar to the people in Europe who voted for Social
Democratic and Labour-based parties. Since they don’t exist in the United
States, they just didn’t vote. It’s been around for a long time, but it’s just
getting exacerbated as large sectors of the population are just cast by the
wayside in the course of neoliberal programs. Either they would organise, be
effective and do something about it, such as the 1930s with the militant labour
movement or just get angry or frustrated, xenophobic, racist, destructive and
so on.
Inequality
in all its forms continues to threaten democracy in the United States. Do you
see evidence that positive change to reverse these trends will arise, and is
there a case for optimism?
We can be
very optimistic. Things like this have happened before and they’ve been
overcome. The 1920s were a period kind of like this in many ways, but the 1930s
were a significant revival, things changed and there are forces you can easily
identify. A lot of the support for Sanders is promising and could have a lot of
promise but it depends how it is developed; the same with Corbyn in England and
Podemos in Spain. There are reactions to problems that are not easy to overcome,
but I think there are plenty of possibilities.
Noam
Chomsky is institute professor emeritus in the Department of Linguistics and
Philosophy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His newest book is Who Rules the World? [3] (Metropolitan
Books, 2016). His website is www.chomsky.info [4].
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"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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