I just
finished a spellbinding book: "The Day the Bubble Burst: A
Social History of the Wall Street Crash of 1929." Could it happen
again? Never in the same way, since legislation in the 30s established
regulations outlawing the specific excesses that led to "Black Tuesday,"
including the disturbing practice of buying stocks with up to 90% borrowed
money. Still, no one knows the future...
Media
pundits today tell us that the economy is "robust," and on "stable ground."
It isn't. The illusion of economic health is completely dependent
on the rapacious depletion both of Natural Capital--groundwater, topsoil,
petroleum, fisheries, forests, and a stable climate--and of Human Capital,
as people are used up and thrown away in third world factories, while here
at home constantly increasing "productivity" demands push us ever closer
to the breaking point.
Pundits
also said things were rock solid in early 1929.
There
are other similaries between then and now: through the 20s, the rich
got lots richer and the poor poorer, "investment" was largely for pure
speculation rather than for a stake in some productive enterprise, and
there was massive personal debt.
We are
living on borrowed money and squandered resources. Eventually, accounts
will be tallied and bills presented.
Wholistic
entrepeneur Paul Hawken (whose recent book "Natural Capitalism" I look
forward to reading) is optimistic--not that the current system will survive,
but that we will successfully adapt. We'll have to, he says--not
just because it's right, but also because it makes economic sense:
"it's cheaper to take care of something--a roof, a car, a planet--than
to let it decay and try to fix it later."
Our
current yardsticks mask diminishing Natural Capital while creating an illusion
of economic health. The economy (Gross Domestic Product, GDP) "grows"
whenever we spend money--even if it's to clean up oil spills, build new
prisons, litigate more lawsuits, or provide more medical treatment for
tobacco, alcohol, and diet related health catastrophes. If we hope
to measure quality of life, these expenditures are surely minuses, not
plusses. Board feet from a clearcut forest are counted as plusses,
but the loss of that forest is not counted as a minus. An organization
called "Redefining Progress" (www.rprogress.org) has developed the Genuine
Progress Indicator (GPI), which shows an overall steady decline in quality
of life since the mid 1970s. The GPI has been mostly ignored by major
media, while Jennings, Rather, and Brokaw continue cheerleading for rising
production and a booming stock market.
Along
with Paul Hawken, another great writer on these matters is David Korten,
whose impressive credentials include 5 years teaching at Harvard Graduate
School of Business and 8 years with the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Korten says that:
"The
real nature of money is obscured by the vocabulary of finance, which is
doublespeak. We use the term "investors" for speculators, whose gambling
destabilizes global financial markets. We use the terms "money,"
"capital," "assets," and "wealth" interchangeably--leaving no simple means
to differentiate money from real wealth. Money is a number.
Real wealth is in food, fertile land, buildings, or other things that sustain
us. Lacking language to see this difference, we accept the speculators'
claim to "create wealth," when they expropriate it."
Computers
and globalization of exchange enable an astronomical two trillion
dollars to change hands each day in world financial markets. Korten
says the vast majority is "purely speculative money looking for quick returns
when the boom is on and safe havens when the bubbles are bursting."
In a
1998 speech, Korten outlines how speculation created bubbles, then bursts
in '97 in Thailand and '98 in Russia, with speculators playing "take the
money and run" and/or calling for government bailouts. The typical
scenario: removal of trade barriers can encourage a large influx
of foreign money into a country, in the form of loans and stock investments.
Prices are driven up, and those invested in local productive enterprises
see that returns will be higher with
stock and real-estate speculation--so true enterprise
is "decapitalized" and local money siphoned into a speculative frenzy while
domestic production falls. Dependence on imports for basic needs
increases; further loans are sought. Export income declines, and
with it the possibility of paying off the now skyrocketing foreign debt.
Seeing their money at increasing risk, the foreign interests start cashing
out, local banks can no longer afford local loans, and the meltdown phase
begins...
A.P.
Giannini--who from San Francisco founded the Bank of America--was an admirable
character in the 1929 drama. Banks had previously catered to only
the rich, but Giannini created a network of branch banks to serve "the
little fella." Furious and frustrated when Wall Street speculation
destabilized financial markets, Giannini was horrified when regular people
borrowed massively to buy stocks "on the margin" in hopes of instant wealth.
Even well before Black Tuesday, many were ruined when their gambles failed.
Financial
maneuvers can look like a complex game, and powerful Wall Street figures
are sometimes called "players." Such games, however, can seriously
impact all of us--1920s speculation triggered a crash that doomed thousands
of banks and led to the bread lines of the Great Depression. The
crash also facilitated Hitler's rise in Germany, which had been dependent
on loans from American financiers. When this money evaporated, Germany
faced bankruptcy and further humiliation, while Hitler offered the nation
a way to feel "strong" again.
The
riveting movie "Wall Street" dramatizes how big-time players can impact
real people, as the ruthless speculator played by Michael Douglas ruins
a previously stable airline company, swindling lots of regular folks out
of their livelihoods and pensions. Our local nightmare with Pacific
Lumber could easily have been featured in the same movie: corporate
raider Charles Hurwitz completed a "hostile takeover" of PL in 1985.
It was a "leveraged buyout," "leverage" meaning borrowed money. Through
junk bond king Michael Milken, Hurwitz sold hundreds of millions worth
of "high yield" bonds, using the proceeds to aggressively buy PL stock
until his Maxxam corporation owned the company. Now saddled with
massive bond debt and needing to make huge payments on those bonds, Hurwitz
began voraciously chopping the previously carefully managed forests, with
little regard for the future health of those forests or the Humboldt economy.
Eventually, he was richly rewarded by the taxpayers in the Headwaters deal.
Through manipulations of corporate titles, this money would remain under
Hurwitz control and would not go to the bond holders even if Maxxam-controlled
PL goes belly-up and defaults on the bonds. "Some rob you with a
six gun, some with a fountain pen."
The
Pacific Lumber saga is one of many covered in the powerful, shocking, and
grippingly readable book "Den of Thieves," which documents the shady, greedy,
workaholic exploits of Milken, Ivan Boesky, and others, culminating in
the interwoven junk bond, insider trading, and Savings & Loan scandals
of the 1980s. Milken was ultimately sentenced to 10 years in jail.
He served 22 months under minimum security, and walked away with approximately
a billion dollars. (In 1993, Milken was diagnosed with advanced prostate
cancer; he became health-conscious and is now an outspoken advocate of
vegetarianism, having hired a personal chef with whom he has coauthored
two cookbooks.)
A refreshing
alternative in finance is personified by billionaire Warren Buffett, who
maintains a modest lifestyle in his hometown of Omaha Nebraska. Uninterested
in the "quick killing," Buffett researches companies thoroughly.
If the "business fundamentals" are sound and he respects the management
and likes the price, he may buy a company's stock. If so, he considers
himself "married" to that company and will probably hold the stock for
many years--investing in the business rather than seeking profit from short
term fluctuation of stock prices. I hope the kings and queens of
finance join Buffett in taking a longer view of things, and reject the
current obsession with maximal immediate gain.
Still,
the world would be better off if some of Buffett's companies simply didn't
exist. Buffett loves Coca-Cola, but while in Guatemala in 1995, I
was saddened to see poor people with rotten teeth swilling Cokes, which
weren't cheap by local standards. Our business geniuses should have
better things to do than push such garbage around the world. As Buffett
himself says, "something not worth doing is not worth doing well."
We treasure
freedom and fear the "central planning" of Soviet-style communism, but
often overlook the fact that corporate capitalism is itself an extreme
example of central planning--increasingly so as mergers and acquisitions
concentrate power within progressively fewer companies. David Korten
points out that "...the power of a corporate head to dictate policy and
action within the corporation's internal economy would have made any Soviet
planner green with
envy." It's sobering to note that of the world's
100 largest economies, over 50 are not nations, but corporations.
Instead
of dictatorial central planning, I join Korten and Hawken in advocating
more democracy and a market economy. Korten says that "in
a healthy market economy, enterprises are human-scale and predominantly
locally owned." Despite Guatemala's many problems, I saw a thriving
market economy characterized by unique small shops and a bustling open
air market in every town. All it took to join the local economy was
something to sell. Here, it's illegal in most places to set up a
chair on the sidewalk and sell onions. Consequently, we who wish
to buy onions usually turn to large supermarket corporations. Our
rules favor the big boys.
While
I plead guilty to sometimes villainizing rich guys or stock market scoundrels,
it's crucial to remember that the problem is not mainly with people, but
with a system which feeds on and perpetuates itself. In Korten's
words, it's "an institutional system of autonomous rule by money and for
money that functions on autopilot beyond the control of any human actor
and is unresponsive to any human sensibility."
Wow,
those are frightening words. It's time now for some of us Davids
to take aim at this Goliath, and for others of us to fashion new ways to
live so we'll be ready when this monster takes its inevitable fall.
Some of David
Korten's writings can be found at the website for the People-Centered
Development Forum.
Here's the
site for "Redefining Progress."
Some other
relevant links can be found at the end of my earlier article, Taking
Responsibility.