Barack
Obama's victory speech inspired confidence and raised expectations.
His victory was historic not just because it had brought a coloured
man to the White House for the first time in US history. It also signaled
that the more than three-decade old neo-conservative turn in economic
policy making in the US is discredited and challenged. In more ways
than one, Obama’s later campaign made clear that a change from that
policy was required, raising expectations that the President-elect will
seek to redirect capitalism in new directions. The question on everyone’s
mind, at home and abroad, is: Will Obama ensure that the Golden Age
of 20th century capitalism, the high growth, welfare-statist years of
the 1950s and 1960s is not the exception that it seems to be, by launching
a new era of creditable growth, higher employment and lower inequality?
That question is based on an obvious interpretation of Obama’s comfortable
mandate. As has been repeatedly noted, the political tide turned decisively
in his favour because of the financial crisis and the popular anger
against a private sector that engineered the crisis and an administration
that supported and rewarded these private sector entities and individuals.
The victims of that anger directed against the Bush administration were
the Republicans and McCain. Obama did not fail to use the evidence that
the Bush administration had helped precipitate this crisis through partisan
policies, which favoured Wall Street vis-à-vis Main Street, the
rich as opposed to the poor and middle classes and the banks and financial
firms rather than homeowners facing foreclosure. Not surprisingly, economic
circumstances and that campaign have increased expectations that he
would turn the economy around rather quickly. It is his ability to address
the crisis and trigger a recovery that would ensure that he can protect
the high popularity ratings he now commands.
The contours of the crisis are now well known. It has questioned the
solvency of many financial institutions including some banks, necessitating
a $700 billion-plus bail-out, which includes a bank recapitalization
financed with tax payer’s money. The restructuring of the financial
sector is expected to result in a loss of a further 70,000 jobs in the
US alone, on top of the 150,000 jobs estimated to have been lost in
the financial sector worldwide. This is already triggering a massive
slow down in the retail market, the services sector and real estate
in the financial centres of the world. The financial crisis has also
led to a contraction of credit, not because of a lack of liquidity which
the Federal Reserve has injected in sufficient quantities, but because
of uncertainties surrounding the ability of counterparties to meet future
commitments on any credit provided. A consequence was the curtailment
of debt-financed consumption and investment, which were already affected
adversely by the wealth-erosion ensured by the collapse of house and
stock prices. The resulting recession, has taken the unemployment rate
to 6.5 per cent with job losses in September and October alone exceeding
half a million. This in turn, is expected to intensify the recession
even further, and the resulting downward spiral is seen as threatening
a depression comparable with the 1930s.
The implication of all this is obvious. Support for the private sector
through lower interest rates, financial bail outs and the like are unlikely
to stop the downward spiral, because of insolvency and the collapse
of business confidence. Nor would tax cuts spur demand, because they
may be used to bolster savings and compensate for the erosion of paper
wealth and home equity. It is necessary for the government to also intervene
with expenditures in forms varying from an unemployment dole and prevention
of housing foreclosures to large scale infrastructural investments.
It is another matter that Obama can seek to combine his commitment to
combat climate change and promote sustainable technologies with the
need to expand demand through a fiscal stimulus.
These circumstances have encouraged comparison with the situation when
Franklin Roosevelt took office in 1932 in the middle of the Great Depression.
Roosevelt with his New Deal and much else showed that he was not going
to be cowed down by the prevailing conservatism. He declared his commitment
to intensified bank regulation, insurance of smaller bank deposits,
public works programmes and Social Security. This meant that he sought
to stall the downturn, by substantially increasing regulation of the
financial sector and providing a fiscal stimulus to the economy. However,
capitalism in crisis is not easily saved. Whether, it was, as some argue,
the fact that Roosevelt did not go far enough in terms of the money
he committed to the fiscal stimulus, or because when the damage is severe
even state intervention cannot easily repair a system driven by private
initiative, FDR’s initiatives did not deliver the expected expansionary
results and unemployment was high even at the end of his first term.
By all accounts it was the Second World War that delivered the recovery
from the Depression.
This has lessons for Obama, defined by circumstances. The so-called
lame-duck, Bush administration has already chosen to drain the Federal
Reserve and the Treasury to save an economy it has helped damage. The
programme to restructure troubled assets, which is slated to absorb
$700 billion of tax payers’ money, is only a part of the rescue commitment.
And this occurs after the Bush team had widened the fiscal deficit to
finance its misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan and to cover its tax
concessions for the wealthy. According one estimate, when the financial
rescue is added on, the US budget deficit could more than double next
year to almost $1 trillion. This would not only make it difficult for
Obama to deliver on his promises to allocate sums between $60 billion
and $110 billion for universalising health insurance and $150 billion
to alternative energy, but also to find the much larger sums needed
for a fiscal stimulus that may prevent a recurrence of the FDR rupture
between rhetoric and reality. He will have to fight much opposition
to even try this option, to find out whether it works or not. Unfortunately
for him, he cannot easily conjure up a war. He has as his legacy not
just an economic crisis but a United States that is weary of war, even
if in isolated theatres across the world. And his call for change had
more than a hint that he would substitute diplomacy for war.
Yet comparisons with the Roosevelt era are rife. To quote Clive Crook
of the Financial Times (November 7, 2008): "Is Mr Obama an FDR
for the new century? A president has many ways of ruining his reputation,
and this is a different world, yet the idea looks plausible. Like Roosevelt,
Mr Obama inherits a crisis not of his making. Like Roosevelt, he is
brimming with energy to get things done. Like Roosevelt – happy days
are here again – he has given the country a jolt of optimism just by
turning up. FDR understood that his greatest strength was not being
Hoover; he emphasised (and exaggerated) the differences. Mr Obama gets
it and does not have to try so hard. Could he be more different from
George W. Bush?"
Thus, the historic election of the first black President in the US in
the middle of a crisis that is acknowledged to be the closest to Great
Depression, is indeed seen as one more Roosevelt moment. The question
is: will and can Obama rise to the occasion, not just by emulating FDR,
but by going beyond him. Obama made clear his intentions in his very
first press conference after his election as President. "We are
facing the greatest economic challenge of our lifetime, and we’re going
to have to act swiftly to resolve it,” he reportedly said. “I’m going
to confront this economic crisis head-on by taking all necessary steps
to ease the credit crisis, help hard-working families and restore growth
and prosperity."
If Rahm Emanuel, appointed the next chief of staff by Obama is to be
believed, the President-elect is serious. His team would put in place
a comprehensive programme of social and economic reform, treating the
"“financial meltdown as an historic opportunity to deliver the
large-scale investments that Democrats had promised for years."
Even before he takes office Obama is expected to push for immediate
assistance to an automobile industry that is near bankrupt.
Thus, there is a hint that the Obama team would use the FDR moment to
make a break. But there are indications to the contrary as well. To
start with, his choice of advisers. If still-speculative reports are
to be believed, the likes of Lawrence Summers, Robert Rubin and Paul
Volcker are to be leading members of his economic team. As Mark Ames
notes in The Nation (November 10, 2008), Summers, the most-favoured
candidate for Treasury Secretary, was brought to Washington in 1982
by his then dissertation advisor Martin Feldstein, "to serve on
Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisors. Those first years in the
Reagan administration were crucial in the right-wing war against New
Deal regulation of the banking system and financial markets-a war that
Reagan's team won, and that we're all paying for today." As for
Volcker, we cannot forget that as Chair of the Federal Reserve he sought
at the end of the 1970s to deal with inflation by raising interest rates
sharply – the "Volcker shock" – resulting in the devastation
of a number of developing countries exposed to external debt.
Candidates like these do not inspire the confidence that they will be
willing to try what needs to be tried. While circumstances may force
them to wear borrowed Keynesian hats, they would balk at spending that
is not financed out of additional taxes. But they would oppose taxes
on the rich on the grounds that it would erode confidence. Obama may
use the fact that world governments are looking to the US for new leadership
to combat a global crisis that originated in the US. He can also use
the fact that some like China have chosen to put a huge $586 billion
into the global kitty aimed at financing a fiscal stimulus. Moreover,
financial commitments by governments in the United Kingdom and Europe
to prop up their financial sectors makes clear that they too see the
need for pro-active state policy. These factors make it possible for
the incoming Presidency to lead a globally coordinated Keynesian-type
stimulus that has more chance of working than many other plans that
are on offer.
However, global Keynesianism without a global economy and global government
presumes the existence of national economic policy space, so that trade
diversion, capital flows and currency movements do not undermine the
effort. With uneven development being an abiding and visible feature
of capitalism, not all regions can successfully reflate while being
fully integrated with more developed centres. Differences in inflation
rates would have implications for exports and imports that would affect
capital flows, currency values and interest rates, leading to very different
growth and distribution effects. A reversal of globalization may therefore
be a requirement for successfully combating the current crisis. That
reversal can come in a "competitive" environment that revives
memories of global war or it can come in a cooperative environment in
which all countries realize that "coordinated" protectionism,
however limited, is the best option. This, however, does involve a degree
of painful restructuring of capacities and structures created during
the globalization phase.
There are bound to be vested interests opposing such restructuring.
The fear is they may be part of the Obama team. But the situation calls
for global leadership of a kind that the US is currently least well
placed to deliver. That makes Obama’s mission even more difficult. But
then, till quite recently few suspected he would be in the seat where
he can face such difficulties. Being in that seat he has the power to
overcome them. And the enthusiasm and the tide that brought him to power
may take him further. The message is, "Yes he still can."