The Bogus “Crisis”

“Money On My Mind” is a monthly column by Jay Mandle. The views expressed here are those of the author, (not necessarily those of Democracy Matters or Common Cause), and are meant to stimulate discussion.

September, 2011
By Jay Mandle

Vote buying does exist. Campaign contributors do insist that members of Congress vote as their donors wish. But even more important than vote-buying is money’s capacity to shape the political agenda. This is the power that our system of privately financed political campaigns accords to wealthy political funders. Would-be office seekers whose views do not coincide with potential patrons have no chance of success. Neither therefore do their views. What gets considered and voted on then are only those ideas that are tolerated by the funder class, ideas that are only a small sub-set of the policies that should be debated. The overall shape of policy is as determined by exclusion as it is by roll-call votes.

The debate over the budget deficit illustrates this point with exceptional clarity. As a crisis, the event was entirely bogus. The United States government has experienced absolutely no difficulty in borrowing the money needed to cover its short-fall in revenue relative to expenditures. The interest rate it pays on the loans it requires has been at rock-bottom levels. And if and when it is forced to pay higher rates, it possesses ample scope to raise taxes. In 2009 this country’s tax receipts as a percentage of our gross domestic product (GDP) placed it 26th out of the 28 countries belonging to the Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation for which data were available. Only Mexico and Chile ranked lower than we did. United States tax revenues were only 24.0 percent of GDP while the average for all of the countries was 34.1 percent. Sweden topped the list at 46.4 percent. 1

The deficit debate was manufactured in the service of the political goal of reducing the size of the government and the services it provides to the population. And in that it was hugely successful. The acrimonious Congressional dust-up was not only a distraction from profound problems facing the country. The resulting commitment to a reduced government ensured that we would be incapable of resolving those issues. Mitigating the consequences of global climate change would necessitate a dramatic ramping up of government support for renewable energy. That now is precluded. The same is true concerning the damage caused by our malfunctioning economy. In July of this year, 16.1 percent of the labor force, about 39 million people, were counted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as un-or under-employed. 2 These people will continue to need government-supplied assistance, but only cutbacks are in the offing. To compare the budget “crisis” to either global climate change or the catastrophe of long-term unemployment (in July almost half of the unemployed has been without work for more than 27 weeks) is just laughable. Yet in our broken political system these real crises were ignored in favor of the fake one.

It is the weakness of the Democrats’ push-back to all of this that reveals the real source of our country’s political dysfunction. It would be one thing if advocating a minimal role for government were a partisan affair, promoted by small-government ideologues in the Republican Party. But the fact is that the response by Democrats to the conservative’s small-government offensive has been tepid at best. By no means have Democrats mounted a robust defense of the public sector as an essential tool in offsetting the multitude of problems created by market failures.

What lies behind this reticence is the fact that the campaign funders of Democrats are, like the funders of Republicans, disproportionately wealthy. And if there is anything that wealthy people in this country agree upon it is that they and their wealth should be left alone. Socially liberal members of the banking community may provide support for some Democrats, but would-be candidates who would reimpose stringent regulations on Wall Street cannot hope to raise enough financial support to mount competitive races. Because this is so, proponents of an activist government are rarely heard. Marginalized in this way, the argument that government needs to offset the excesses of the private sector has been excluded from the country’s political agenda.

What we need is a voluntary system of public funding for candidates in order to overcome the conventional wisdom about the desirability of limited government. That consensus hamstrings us in addressing our country’s needs. Providing a public financing option would allow a more diverse set of candidates to present themselves to the electorate, some of whom would argue the case for policies that at the moment are not even being considered. It would reduce the power of funders to use their wealth to shape the content of the political dialogue, an outcome that precisely is the reason that campaign public funding is rarely advocated by either conventional Democrats or Republicans.

But global climate change, unemployment and the need for financial sector regulation will not go away. As the negative consequences associated with their neglect become ever more damaging, the dysfunction of a political system that accords disproportionate power to wealth is likely to become increasingly obvious. That will be the moment when an alternative political financing system may gain the support of the American people.

1. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, OECD.StatsExtract, “Revenue Statistics – Comparative Tables: Tax Revenue as Percentage of GDP,” http://statsw.oecd.org.
2. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “The Employment Situation – July 2011,” Table A-15, “Alternative Measures of Labor Underutilization.”