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6 Things You Must Do Immediately When Capitalism Hits the Fan

By Jed Diamond, Ph.D.

Contact Information: Jed@MenAlive.com

Web: www.MenAlive.com

More and more of us have the feeling that something is “hitting


the fan” and it may just be our entire economic system. We listen
to the President and hope for change, but are concerned that we
may need a major overhaul, not just a fine-tuning of the system.

What’s going on in the world? University of Massachusetts


Economics Professor Richard Wolff, author of the soon to be
released book, When Capitalism Hits the Fan, breaks down the
root causes of today's economic crisis, showing how it was decades
in the making and in fact reflects seismic failures within the
structures of American-style capitalism itself.

Wages and Productivity

"We need to see this crisis historically to get a sense of how


serious this is,” says Wolff, “In every decade from 1820 to 1970,
workers in the United States enjoyed a rising level of wages. Even
during the Great Depression this was true. But since the 1970s, that
history of the U.S. stopped. Real wages stopped rising in the 1970s
and they have never resumed.

"Meanwhile, there has been a huge increase in productivity


across the last hundred years. Most of it in the last 30 years -- the
very period when wage increases stopped. What the workers get in
those years stays flat. What they produce for their employers
grows. This led to spectacular profits for U.S. corporations. After
the 1970s, unprecedented corporate profits fueled an
unprecedented stock market boom. The results were a fast-growing
inequality of wealth and income dividing Americans, a bubble that
burst first in the stock market and then in the real-estate market,
and now the worst downturn since the Great Depression.

A Few Get Rich

"What did the corporations do with that money? They paid


salaries to executives no one had ever heard of before. They went
on a binge of buying up other companies -- mergers and
acquisitions -- bringing huge profits also to the financial sector that
handled all the proliferating profits, bonds connected to mergers,
initial stock offerings of new companies, and so on.

"And most importantly, banks and large companies discovered a


very profitable way to use their new, huge profits: They would lend
the money to the employees. The way the employees could raise
their consumption when their wages didn't go up anymore was to
borrow back from their employers a portion of the extra profits that
their frozen wages made possible. Personal debt has zoomed up.
So you have an economy built on a house of credit cards.

We Go Into Debt to Stay Afloat

"To understand the American economy in the last 30 years


amounts to this: Employers no longer raised the wages of their
workers. Instead, they lent them the money. 'Instead of raising the
wages of my workers, I lend them the money, which they have to
pay me back -- with interest! Isn't that better than paying them
more wages?' In this way, the rich got much richer while the
majority fell ever further behind, building toward today's economic
crash.

"What the Obama administration as well as most of the


Democrats and Republicans in Congress fear to admit is that this
isn't just a crisis of Wall Street. We've run out of ways to keep this
going, the wages are not going up and the credit is now tapped out.
It's not a 'financial crisis' -- finance is just the symptom -- it's a
crisis of the fundamental structure of the economy."

In his talk to Wall Street today, President Obama said “hear my


words: We will not go back to the days of reckless behavior and
unchecked excess at the heart of this crisis, where too many were
motivated only by the appetite for quick kills and bloated
bonuses.”

But there are many, like Wolff, who believe that the system
needs a total overhaul, not quick fix. In his book, Agenda for a
New Economy, David C. Korten tells us “Why Wall Street Can’t
Be Fixed and How to Replace It.”

Here’s what you can do:

1. Stop confusing money with wealth.

Wall Street is all about making more and more money. Since
the primary way to make more money is to create more debt, we
create a system based on false needs. “Spending trillions of dollars
trying to fix Wall Street,” says Korten, “is a fools errand.”

2. Understand that real wealth is about meeting our human


needs.

Main Street is where real needs are met. Satisfaction of real


needs involve such things as having healthy, happy children,
loving families, caring communities, and healthy, beautiful, natural
environments.
3. Bring human consumption into balance with Earth’s
natural systems.

We can no longer continue to use up Earth’s resources—


clean air, water, fish, soil, etc—and pretend that there are no limits.
Continued consumption and growth on a finite planet is a cancer,
not life.

4. Share our limited resources more equitably.

No society can sustain itself where there are great


discrepancies between “haves” and have-nots.” Having a health-
care system where the wealthy live, but poor people die is not
sustainable. Having a world where rich countries take more than
their share of the Earth’s resources while the poor countries get
more than their share of pollution and waste is not sustainable.

5. Recognize that the free market offers false freedom.

The term free market is really a code word for a system


that allows a few people rich people the freedom to consume and
monopolize resources for personal gain free from accountability
for the broader social and environmental consequences.
6. Join together in creating a new story for a new future.

We need to create a new story where we recognize that we


are all partners on the planet and must live in balance with natures
laws, not the artificial dictates of Wall Street. For more
information:

www.capitalismhitsthefan.com
www.greatturning.org
www.menalive.com

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