It seems only fair to engage in a bit of appropriate blogwhoring by linking to Alperovitz's site, America Beyond Capitalism and a bibliography page at The Kelso Institute. Louis Kelso is a progressive economist/lawyer who invented the concept of ESOPs, which I will cover in greater detail in Part II of Alperovitz's book, The Democratization of Wealth.
Alperovitz also has written a synopsis of his book, America Beyond Capitalism: What a "Pluralist Commonwealth" Would Look Like that should be helpful to those who have not read his book. The magazine that carried his book review Dollars and Sense: The Magazine of Economic Justice is itself an intriguing source of economic information.
Alert readers will notice that I have shortened the title of my diary to An Opportunity Society. George Bush was never any more serious about forming an opportunity society than he was about compassionate conservatism. A couple of helpful sites are a Tom Dispatch site that carried Kennedy's speech Creating a Genuine Opportunity Society and a blog by Jim Gilliam, co-producer of Outfoxed, that briefly explains why the Opportunity Society is already our idea anyway.
You may want to read the rest of my diary and come back to browse some of the links above. I think I'm ready to get started in the extended diary
. . .
Few observers have as yet grasped the extent - or further possibilities - of wealth-related strategies that benefit the public directly. It is obvious, however, that a great deal of hands-on experience now offers practical backing for ideas at the heart of the Pluralist Commonwealth vision - including (among others) worker ownership, cooperatives, municipal ownership, neighborhood ownership, nonprofit ownership, individual development accounts, and a wide range of major public investment strategies. There is also evidence that such efforts can be efficient, especially if adequate attention is paid to developing and refining management, training, and other strategies over time.
I haphazardly covered the ideas of equality, liberty and democracy in my first diary in this series A Progressive Opportunity Society and added some useful and informative links.
Equality:Beyond Tax-and-Spend
The basic idea of this chapter is that traditional approaches to generating more equality of wealth, primarity progressive taxation, no longer work. The two primary factors inhibiting traditional approaches are the decline of labor unions and globalization. Labor unions have been the "most important countervailing force (partly) offsetting conservative political power throughout much of the twentieth century." Globalization has put additional downward pressure on wages by forcing government to reduce business tax rates, "shifting more of the burden to low and moderate-income earners."
Corporate taxes have fallen from 35.4% of federal receipts in 1945 to 7.4% in 2003. "More than three-fifths of U.S. corporations paid no federal taxes at all in each of the years between 1996 and 2000! If we continue on our current path "real inequality will continue to worsen, no matter what."
The federal government "already provides very large indirect tax subsidies to encourage asset ownership by middle and upper-income Americans. . . . [I]ncentives also should be used to develop asset holding among the poor." Michael Sherraden, an expert from Washington University proposed Individual Development Accounts and other vehicles to change the focus of welfare away from income and consumption to "allowing low-income individuals to benefit from the ownership of capital. I've already linked to The Kelso Institute who Alperovitz credits with the idea of ESOPs, which are covered in some detail in upcoming chapters.
Alperovitz also credit John Roemer, who wrote a recent book, A Future for Socialism which, believe it or not, received a somewhat hostile reception from book reviewers. With Alperovitz's help we can change the conventional wisdom that government welfare should be the exclusive perogative of corporations and the privileged wealthy elite.
Liberty: Money, Time, and Real Freedom of Choice
. . .
That "big government" is anathema to individual liberty is the fundamental structural argument of traditional theory.
Another leading conservative, Friedrich A. Hayek, years ago urged that "if we continue on the path we have been treading [toward what he termed the `monopolistic organization of industry' closely allied with government], it will lead us to totalitarianism."
First, liberty requires institutional and structural support for individual economic security to replace that which at least in theory was once provided by entrepreneurial property. Second, it requires support for the community-wide conditions needed to nurture the intermediate associations and civil society organizations that are essential to sustaining a culture supportive of liberty. Third, it requires greater amounts of equitably distributed free time (without which the capacities needed to exercise real freedom must inevitably be limited.
That third idea will be covered in fuller detail in an upcoming chapter The Twenty-five Hour Workweek?
Democracy: From the Ground Up
The place to look for democratic renewal is at the local level.
John Stuart Mill similarly held that direct experience with local governance was essential to "the peculiar training of a citizen, the practical part of the political education of a free people." . . . [I]t is only by practicing popular government on a limited scale, that the people will ever learn how to exercise it on a larger."
I'll close this chapter with a link to an article Alperovitz mentions that the Greens carried by Michael Shudman, Going Local: Creating Self-Reliant Communities in a Global Age
Democracy: Is a Continent Too Large?
The two traditional responses to the argument that democracy is impossible in a country the size of America have been decentralization to the states and regionalism. Regionalism proposes regional solutions, like the TVA, Tennessee Valley Authority, to regional problems. The regionalist movement "was cut short by a combination of anti-New Deal politics and the advent of World War II and the era of the Cold War.
Thomas H. Naylor, Downsizing the USA
Joel Garreau, The Nine Nations of North America
Robert Goodman, The Last Entrepreneurs: America's Regional Wars for Jobs and Dollars
Tomorrow I'll cover Part II: The Democratization of Wealth where Alperovitz gets into the nuts and bolts of progressive economic development programs and projects that are already working to equalize wealth in America/
|
|
|
Permalink :: 6 Comments :: Post a Comment
|
In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.
If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.