In the broadest and deepest sense, understanding how the US political system functions, the decisions of war and peace are taken, who gets what, how and why, requires that we address the question of ‘Who rules America?’ In tackling the question of ‘ruling’ one needs to clarify a great deal of misunderstandings, particularly the confusion between those who make governmental decisions and the socio-economic institutional parameters which define the interests to be served. ‘Ruling’ is exacting: it defines the ‘rules’ to be followed by the political and administrative decision-makers in formulating budgetary expenditures, taxes, labor and social legislation, trade policy, military and strategic questions of war and peace. The ‘rules’ are established, modified and adjusted according to the specific composition of the leading sectors of a ruling class (RC). Rules change with shifts in power within the ruling class. Shifts in power can reflect the
dynamics of an economy or the changing position of economic sectors in the world economy, particularly the rise and decline of economic competitors.
The ‘rules’ imposed by one economic sector of the RC at a time of favorable conditions in the world economy, will be altered as new dominant economic sectors emerge and unfavorable external conditions weaken the former dominant economic sectors. As we shall describe below the relative and absolute decline of the US manufacturing sector is directly related to the rise of a multidimensional ‘financial sector’ and to the greater competitiveness of other manufacturing countries. The result is an accelerating process of liberalization of the economy favored by the ascending financial sectors. Liberalization in pursuit of unregulated flows of investments, buyouts, acquisitions and trade increases the financial sector’s profits, commissions, incomes and bonuses. Liberalization facilitates the financial sector’s acquisition of assets. The declining competitiveness of the older ruling class manufacturing sector dependent on statist protectionism and subsidies leads to ‘rear-guard’ policies, attempting to fashion an unwieldy policy of liberalization abroad and protectionism at home.
depends on specifying the historical moment and place on the world economy. The answer is complicated by the fact that shifts among ‘sectors’ of the ruling class involves a prolonged ‘transitional period’. During this period declining and ascending sectors may intermingle and the class members of declining sectors ‘convert’ to the rising sector. Hence while power between
may not lose out or decline. They merely shift their investments and adapt to the new and more lucrative opportunities created by the ascending sector.
For example, while US manufacturing sector has declined
relative to ‘finance capital’, many of the major investment
institutions have shifted to the new financial ‘growth sectors.’
Concomitantly, the converted sectors of the ruling class will shift
their policies toward greater liberalization and deregulation, thus
severely weakening the rear-guard demands of the uncompetitive
manufacturing sector. Equally important within the declining economic
sectors of the RC, drastic structural changes may ensue, to regain
profitable returns and retain influence and power. Foremost of these
changes is
relocation of production overseas to low wage, low tax, non-union locations, the
introduction of IT technology designed to reduce labor costs and increase productivity, and
diversification of economic activity to incorporate lucrative financial ‘services’.
For example General Electric has moved from manufacturing toward
financial services, relocated labor intensive activity off-shore and
computerized operations. Through these moves the distinction between
‘manufacturing’ and financial capital has been made obsolete in
describing the ‘ruling class’.
To the degree that older manufacturing capitalists retain any economic
and political weight in the RC, they have done so via sub-contracting
overseas to Asia and Mexico (General Motors/Ford), invested in overseas
plants to capture foreign markets, or have been converted in large part
into
commercial and importing operations (shoes, textiles, toys, electronics and computer chips).
Locally based manufacturers which remain in the RC are largely found
among military contractors living off the largesse of state spending
and depending on the political support of congressional and trade union
officials, eager to secure employment for a shrinking manufacturing
labor force.
During this transitional period of rapid and all-encompassing changes
in the ruling class, enormous financial opportunities have opened up
throughout the world. As a result of political tensions within the
‘governing class’, key policymakers are drawn directly from the most
representative institutions of Wall Street. Key economic policies,
especially those which are most relevant to the RC, tend to be
overwhelmingly in the hands of tried and experienced top leaders from
Wall Street.
Despite (or because of) the ascendancy of various sectors of financial
capital in the RC, and their agreements on a host of ‘liberalizing’
economic policies, they are not homogeneous in all of their political
outlooks, party affiliations, or their foreign policy outlook. Most of
these political differences are questions of small matter – except on
one issue where there is a major and growing rift, namely in the Middle
East. A sector of the RC strongly aligned with the state of Israel
supports a bellicose policy toward the Jewish state’s adversaries
(Iran, Syria, Hezbollah and Palestine) as opposed to another sector of
the RC favoring a diplomatic approach, directed toward securing closer
ties with Arab and Persian elites. Given the highly militarized turn in
US foreign policy (largely due to the ascendancy of neo-conservative
ideologues, the strong influence of the Zionist Lobby, and the
instability and failures of their policies in the Middle East and
China) the RC has pressed for and secured direct control over foreign
economic policy.
The tensions and conflicts within the RC – especially between the
Zioncons
and the ‘free marketeers’ – have been papered over by the enormous
economic benefits accruing to all sectors. All RC financial sectors
have been enriched by White House and Congressional policies. All have
benefited from the ascendancy of ‘liberalizing regimes’ throughout the
world. They have reaped the gains of the expansionary phase of the
international economy. While the entire ruling financial, real estate
and trading sectors have been the main beneficiaries, it has been the
financial groups, particularly the investment banks that have led the
way and provide the political leadership.
Ascendancy of Financial Capital
‘Finance capital’ has many faces and cannot be understood without
reference to specific sectors. Investment banks, pension funds, hedge
funds, savings and loan banks, investment funds are only a few of the
operative managers of a multi-trillion dollar economy. Moreover each of
these sectors have specialized departments engaged in particular types
of speculative-financial activity including commodity and currency,
trading, consulting and managing acquisition and mergers. Despite a few
exposés, court cases, fines and an occasional jailing, the financial
sector writes its rules, controls its regulators and has secured
license to speculate on everything, everywhere and all the time. They
have created the framework or universe in which all other economic
activities (manufacturing, retail sales and real estate) take place.
‘Finance capital’ is not an isolated sector and cannot be counterposed
to the ‘productive economy’ except in the most marginal ‘local
activity’. In large part finance capital interacts with and is the
essential driving force in real estate speculation, agro-business,
commodity production and manufacturing activity. To a large degree
‘market prices’ are as influenced by speculative intervention as they
are by ‘supply and demand’. Equally important, the entire architecture
of the ‘paper empire’ (the entire complex of inter-related financial
investments) is ultimately dependent on the production of goods and
services.
The structure of power and wealth takes the form of an
inverted triangle in which a vast army of workers, peasants and salary
employees produce value which becomes the basis for near and remote,
simple and exotic, lucrative and speculative financial instruments. The
transfer of value from the productive activities of labor up through
the ladder and branches of financial instruments is carried out through
various vehicles: direct financial ownership of enterprises, credit,
debt leveraging, buyouts and mergers. The tendency of ‘productive
capitalists’ is to start-up an enterprise, innovate, exploit labor,
capture markets and then ‘sell-out’ or go ‘public’ (stock offerings).
The financial sector acts as combined intermediary, manager,
proxy-purchaser and consultant, capturing substantial fees and
expanding their economic empires and… preparing the way to higher
levels of acquisitions and mergers… ‘Finance capital’ is the midwife of
the concentration and centralization of wealth and capital as well as
the direct owner of the means of production and distribution. From
exacting a larger and larger ‘tribute’ or ‘rent’ (commission or fee) on
each large-scale capital transaction, ‘finance capital’ has moved
toward penetrating and controlling an enormous array of economic
activities, transferring capital across national and sectoral
boundaries, extracting profits and dumping shares according to the
business, product and profit cycle.
Within the ruling class, the financial elite is the most parasitical
component and exceeds the corporate bosses (CEOs) and most
entrepreneurs in wealth and annual payments. It falls short of the
annual income and assets of the super-rich entrepreneurs like William
Gates and Michael Dell.
The financial ruling class is internally stratified into three
sub-groups: at the top are big private equity bankers and hedge-fund
managers, followed by the Wall Street chief executives, who in turn are
above the next rung of senior associate or vice-presidents of a big
private equity funds who is followed by their counterparts at Wall
Street’s public equity funds. Top hedge fund managers and executive
have made $1 billion dollars or more a year – several times what the
CEO’s make at publicly traded investment houses. For example in 2006
Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs, was paid $53.4 million, while
Dan Ochs, executive of the hedge fund Och-Ziff Capital paid himself
$220 million dollars. That same year the Morgan Stanley CEO received
$40 million dollars, while the chief executive of the hedge fund
Citadel was paid over $300 million dollars.
While the ‘hedge fund’ speculators receive the highest
annual
salaries, the private equity executives can equal their hundreds of
millions payments through deal fees and special dividend payments from
portfolio companies. This was especially true in 2006 when buyouts
reached a record $710 billion dollars. The big bucks for the private
equity bosses comes from the accumulating stake executives have in
portfolio companies. They typically skim 20% of profits, which are
realized when a group sells or lists a portfolio company. At that time,
the payday runs into the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The
subset of the financial ruling class is the ‘junior bankers’ of private
equity firms who take about $500,000 a year. At the bottom rung are the
‘junior bankers’ of publicly traded investment houses (‘Wall Street’)
who average $350,000 a year. The financial ruling class is made up of
these multi-billionaire elites from the hedge funds, private and public
equity bankers and their associates in big prestigious corporate legal
and accounting firms. They in turn are linked to the judicial and
regulatory authorities, through political appointments and
contributions, and by their central position in the national economy.
Within the financial ruling class,
political leadership
does not usually come from the richest hedge fund speculators, even
less among the ‘junior bankers’. Political leaders come from the public
and private equity banks, namely Wall Street - especially Goldman
Sachs, Blackstone, the Carlyle Group and others. They organize and fund
both major parties and their electoral campaigns. They pressure,
negotiate and draw up the most comprehensive and favorable legislation
on global strategies (liberalization and deregulation) and sectoral
policies (reductions in taxes, government pressure on countries like
China to ‘open’ their financial services to foreign penetration and so
on). They pressure the government to ‘bailout’ bankrupt and failed
speculative firms and to balance the budget by lowering social
expenditures instead of raising taxes on speculative ‘windfall’ profits.
The Dance of the Billions: Finance Capital Reaps the Profits from their Power
Speculators of the world had a spectacular year in 2006 as global
equities hit double digit gains in the US, European and Asian markets.
China, Brazil, Russia and India were centers of speculative
profiteering as the China FTSE index rose 94%, Russia’s stock market
rose 60%, Brazil’s Bovespa was up 32.9% and India’s Sensex climbed
46.7%. In large part the stock markets rose because of cheap credit (to
speculate), strong liquidity (huge financial, petrol and commodity
profits and rents) and so-called ‘reforms’ which gave foreign investors
greater access to markets in China, India and Brazil. The biggest
profits in stock market speculation occurred under putative
‘center-left’ regimes (Brazil and India) and ‘Communist’ China, which
have realigned themselves with the most retrograde and ‘leading’
sectors of their financial ruling class.
Russia’s booming stock market reflects a different process involving
the re-nationalization of gas and petroleum sectors, at the expense of
the gangster-oligarchs of the Yeltsin era and the ‘give-away’ contracts
to European/US oil and gas companies (Shell, Texaco). As a result huge
windfall profits have been re-cycled internally among the new Putin era
millionaires who have been engaged in conspicuous consumption,
speculation and investment in joint ventures with foreign manufacturers
in transport and energy related industries.
The shift toward foreign-controlled speculative capital emerging in
China, India and Brazil as opposed to ‘national and state’ funded
investment in Russia accounts for the irrational and vitriolic
hostility exhibited by the western financial press to President Putin.
One of the major sources of profit-making is in the area of ‘mergers
and acquisitions’ (M&A) – the buying and selling of multinational
conglomerates, with $3,900 billion in deals for 2006. Investment banks
took $18.8 billion dollars in ‘fees’ leading to multi-million dollar
bonuses for ‘M&A’ bankers. M&A, hostile or benign, are largely
speculative activity fueled by cheap debt and leading to the greater
concentration of ownership and profits. Today it is said 2% of the
households own 80% of the world’s assets. Within this small elite, a
fraction embedded in financial capital owns and controls the bulk of
the world’s assets and organizes and facilitates further concentration
of conglomerates. The value of speculative M&A on a world scale is
16% higher than at the height of the ‘DOTCOM’ speculative boom in 2000.
In the US alone over $400 billion dollars worth of private equity deals
were struck in 2005, three times higher than the previous year.
To understand who are the leading members of the financial ruling class
one needs only to look at the ten leading private equity banks and the
value and number of M&A deals in which they were engaged:
Private equity rankings by M&A deals (Year to Dec 20 2006)
US Value $bn Number
Blackstone 85.3 12
Texas Pacific 81.9 11
Bain Capital Partners 74.7 9
Thomas H Lee Partners 53.4 6
Goldman Sachs 51.2 5
Carlyle 50.0 14
Apollo Management 44.9 7
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts 44.5 3
Merrill Lynch 35.9 3
Cerberus Capital Management 28.6 4
Industry Total 402.6 1,157
(Financial Times 12/27/2006 p 13 - FT montage: Bob Haslett
The crucial fact is that these private equity banks are involved in
every sector of the economy, in every region of the world economy and
increasingly speculate in the conglomerates which are acquired.
In the era of the ascendancy of speculative finance capital it is not
surprising that the three leading investment banks, Goldman Sachs,
Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns reported record annual profits, based
on their expansion in Europe and Asia, and their transfer of profits
from manufacturing and services to the financial sector. For the year
2006, Goldman Sachs (GS) recorded the most profitable year ever for a
Wall Street investment bank, on the basis of big (speculative) ‘trading
gains and lucrative investment in the world’s worst sweatshops in Asia.
GS reported a 69% jump in annual earnings to $9.54 billion dollars.
Lehman Brothers (LB) and Bear Stearns (BS) equity banks also recorded
record earnings. LB earned a record $4billion for the year. SB earned a
record $2.1 billion dollars. For the year Lehman set aside about
$334,000 dollars per junior banker, while top speculators and bankers
earned a big multiple of that amount.
For the year 2006 investment banking revenue reached nearly $38 billion
dollars compared to $25 billion dollars in 2004 – an increase of 34% (
Financial Times Dec. 13, 2006 p.15).
The dominance of finance capital has been nurtured by the speculative
activity of the controllers and directors of state-owned companies.
‘State’ ownership is an ambiguous term since it raises a further more precise question:
‘Who owns the state’?
In the Middle East there are seven state-owned oil and gas companies.
In six of those companies the principal beneficiaries are a small
ruling elite. They recycle their revenues and profits through US and EU
investment banks largely into bonds, real estate and other speculative
financial instruments (
FT Dec 15, 2006 p.11). State ownership
and speculative capital, in the context of closed ‘Gulf-State’ type of
ruling classes, are complementary, not contradictory, activities. The
ruling regime in Dubai converts oil rents into building a regional
financial center. Many Jewish-American-led Wall Street investment banks
cohabitate with new Islamic-based investment houses, both reaping
speculative returns.
Much of the investment funds now in the
hands of US investment banks, hedge funds and other sectors of the
financial ruling class originated in profits extracted from workers in
the manufacturing and service sector. Two inter-related processes led
to the growth and dominance of finance capital: the transfer of capital
and profits from the ‘productive’ to the financial and speculative
sector and the transfer of finance capital overseas, in the form of
take-over of foreign assets now equivalent of around 80% of the US GDP.
The roots of finance capital are embedded in three types of intensified
exploitation: 1) of labor (via extended hours, transfer of pension and
health costs from capital to labor, frozen minimum wage, stagnant and
declining real wages and salaries); 2) of manufacturing profits
(through higher rents, inter-sectoral transfers to financial
instruments, interest payments and fees and commissions for mergers and
acquisitions); and 3) via state fiscal policies by lowering capital
gains taxes, increasing tax write-offs and tax incentives for overseas
investments and imposing regressive local, state and federal taxes.
The result is increasing inequality between, on the one hand, senior
and junior bankers, public, private equity, investment and hedge fund
directors, and their entourage of lawyers, accountants and, on the
other hand, wage and salaried workers. Income ratios range between 400
to 1 and 1,000 to 1, between the ruling class and median wage and
salary workers is the norm.
Crisis of the Working and Middle Class – (Begin to Worry the Ruling Class)
Living standards for the working and middle class and the urban poor
have declined substantially over the past thirty years (1978-2006) to a
point where one can point to a burgeoning crises. While real hourly
wages in constant 2005 dollars have stagnated, health, pension, energy
and educational costs (increasingly borne by wage and salary workers)
have skyrocketed. If extensions in work time and intensification of
work place production (increases in productivity) are included in the
equation, it is clear that living (including working) conditions have
declined sharply. Even the financial press can write articles entitled:
“Why Ordinary Americans have Missed Out on the Benefits of Growth†(FT November 2, 2006 p.11).
Financial and investment banks are in charge of advising and directing
the ‘restructuring’ of enterprises for mergers and acquisitions by
downsizing, outsourcing, give-backs and other cost-cutting measures.
This has led to downward mobility for the wage and salaried workers who
retain their jobs even as their tenure is more precarious. In other
words, the greater the salaries, bonuses, profits and rents for the
financial ruling class engaged in ‘restructuring’ for M&As, the
greater the decline in living standards for the working and middle
class.
One measure of the enormous influence of the financial ruling class in
heightening the exploitation of labor is found in the enormous
disparity between productivity and wages. Between 2000 and 2005, the US
economy grew 12%, and productivity (measured by output per hour worked
in the business sector) rose 17% while hourly wages rose only 3%. Real
family income fell during the same period (
FT
November 2, 2006 p.11). According to a poll in the fall of November
2006, three quarters of Americans say they are either worse off or no
better off than they were six years ago (
FT November 3, 2006 p.13).
The impact of the policies of the financial ruling class on both the
manufacturing and service sectors transcends their profit skimming,
credit leverage on business operations and management practices. It
embraces the entire architecture of the income, investment and class
structure. The growth of vast inequalities between the yearly payments
of the financial ruling class and the medium salary of workers has
reached unprecedented levels. The financial elite receives something in
the range of a ratio of 500 up to 1000 times that of an average worker,
depending on how narrowly or broadly we conceive of the financial
ruling class.
Members of the financial ruling class have noted these vast and growing
inequalities and express some concern over their possible social and
political repercussions. According to the
Financial Times
(December 21, 2006), billionaire Stephen Schwartzman, CEO of the
private equity group Blackstone warned:
“that the widening gap between
Wall Street’s lavish pay packages and middle America’s stagnating wages
risks causing a political and social backlash against the US’s ‘New
Rich’â€. Treasury Secretary and former CEO of Goldman Sachs, Hank
Paulson admitted that median wage stagnation was a problem and that
amidst “strong economic expansion many Americans simply are not feeling
(sic!) the benefits†(FT November 2, 2006 p. 11).
Ben
Bernanke, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank testified before the
Senate that “inequality is potentially a concern for the US economy…to
the extent that incomes and wealth are spreading apart. I think that is
not a good trend†(Ibid). In 2005 the proportion of national income to
GDP going to profits, rents and other non-wage and salary sources is at
record levels – 43%. Inequality in the distribution of national income
in the US is the worst in the entire developed capitalist world.
Moreover studies of time series data reveal that in the US inequality
increased far greater and intergenerational social mobility was far
more difficult in the US than any country in Western Europe. The growth
of monstrous and rigid class inequalities reflects the narrow social
base of an economy dominated by finance capital, its ingrown
intergenerational linkages and the exorbitant entry fees ($50,000 per
annum tuition with room and board) to elite private universities and
post-graduate business schools. Equally important, the political power
of finance capital and its ‘associated’ conglomerates wield uncontested
political power in the US in comparison to any country in Europe. As a
result the US government redistributes far less through the tax and
social security, health and educational system than other countries.
(ibid)
While some financial rulers express some anxiety about a ‘backlash’
from the deepening class divide, not a single one publicly supports any
tax or other redistributive measures. Instead they call for increases
in educational up-grading, job retraining and greater geographical
mobility, though it is precisely among the educated middle class which
is suffering salary stagnation.
Neither the Democratic Party majority in Congress, nor the
Republican-controlled Executive offer any proposals to challenge the
financial ruling class’s dominance nor are there any proposals to
reverse its most retrograde policies causing the growing inequalities,
wage stagnation and the increasing rigidity of the class structure. The
reason has been reported in the
Wall Street Journal and the
Financial Times:
An overwhelming chunk of the funds that Democrats raise nationally for
election campaigns comes either from Wall Street financiers or Silicon
Valley software entrepreneurs. (
FT November 3, 2006 p. 13). The
Democratic congressional electoral campaign was tightly controlled by
two of Wall Street’s favorite Democrats, Senator Charles ‘Israel First’
Schumer and Congressman Rahm Immanuel, who selectively funded
candidates who were pro-war, pro-Wall Street and unconditionally
pro-Israel. Democrats slated to head strategic Congressional committees
like Zion-Lib Barney Frank have already announced they have ‘good
working relations’ with Wall Street.
The Financial Ruling Class Also Governs
Ruling classes rule the economy, are at the top of the social structure
and establish the parameters and rules within which the politicians
operate. More often than not few actually engage directly in
congressional politics, preferring to build economic empires while
channeling money toward candidates prepared to do their bidding. Only
when an apparent division occurs, especially within the Executive,
between the interests of the ruling class and the policies of the
regime will elite members of the ruling class intervene directly or
take a senior executive position to ‘rectify’ policy.
Ruling Class Political Power: Paulson Takes Over Treasury
Several sharp divergences occurred during the Bush regime between
finance capital and policymakers. These policies prejudiced or
threatened to seriously damage important sectors of the financial
ruling class. Theses include: 1) the aggressive militarist and
protectionist policies pursued by senior Pentagon officials and
‘Zion-con’ Senators toward China; 2) the political veto by Congress of
the sale of US port management to a Gulf State-owned company and of a
US oil company to China; 3) the failure of the Bush regime to secure
the privatization of social security and to weaken the regulatory
measures introduced in the aftermath of the massive corporate (Enron
and World Com) and Wall Street swindles and 4. the need to put a check
on the uncontrolled growth of fiscal deficits resulting from the Middle
East wars, the ballooning trade deficits and the weakening dollar.
The headlines of the financial press (
FT December 4, 2006 p.3) spell out finance capital’s direct intervention into key White House policy making:
“Goldman Sachs Top Alumni Wield Clout in White Houseâ€
and
“Former Bank Executives Hold Unprecedented Power within a US Administrationâ€
US financial and manufacturing ruling classes have long influenced,
advised and formulated policy for US Presidents. But given the stakes,
the risks and the opportunities facing the financial ruling class, it
has moved directly into key government posts. What is especially
unprecedented is the dominant presence of members from one investment
bank – Goldman Sachs. In late November 2006, Goldman Sachs (GS) senior
executive William Dudley took over the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
markets group. Hank Paulson, ex-CEO of GS is Treasury Secretary –
explicitly anointed by President Bush as undisputed czar of all
economic policies. Reuben Jeffrey, a former GS managing partner is the
chief regulator of commodity futures and options trading, Joshua
Bolten, White House Chief of Staff (he decides who Bush sees, when and
for how long – in other words arranges Bush’s agenda) served as GS
executive director. Robert Steel, former GS vice chairman, advises
Paulson on domestic finance. Randall Fort, ex-GS director of global
security, advises Secretary of State Rice. The ex-GS officials also
dominate Bush’s working group on financial markets and financial crisis
management. The investment bankers wielding state power will control
the Bush regime’s biggest housing giants (Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac),
tax policy, energy markets – all issues that directly affect the
investment banks. In other words, the financial banks will be
‘regulated’ by their own executives. The degree of finance capital’s
stranglehold on political power is evidenced by the total lack of
criticism by either party. As one financial newspaper noted:
“Neither
Mr. Bush nor Goldman have been criticized by Democrats for holding too
many powerful jobs in part because the investment bank (GS) also has
deep ties to Democrats. Goldman represented the biggest single donor
base to the Democrats ahead of this (2006) year’s mid-term electionâ€. (FT December 4, 2006)
Among Paulson’s first moves was to organize a top level delegation to
China and a working group to work on forming a ‘strategic partnership’.
Its task is to accelerate the ‘opening’ of China’s financial markets to
penetration and majority takeovers by US operated investment funds.
This represents a potential multi-trillion dollar window of
opportunity. By seizing the initiative Paulson hopes to undercut the
anti-China cohort of neo-con, Pentagon and White House militarists, as
well as backwater backers of Taiwanese independence and Congressional
chauvinist demagogues like Senator Schumer who threaten to undermine
lucrative US-Chinese economic relations.
To lower the fiscal deficit, Paulson proposes to ‘reform’ entitlements
- reduce spending on Medicare and Medicaid and to work out a deal with
the Democrats to privatize Social Security piecemeal.
Where finance capital has not been able to fashion a coherent economic
strategy is with regard to Washington’s Middle East wars. Because of
the pull of the Zionist Lobby on many of leading lights of Wall Street
– including its unofficial mouthpieces – the
Wall Street Journal and the
NY Times
– Paulson has failed to formulate a strategy. He sis not even pay lip
service to the Baker Iraq Study Group report’s proposal to gradually
draw down troops for fear of alienating some key senior executives of
Goldman Sachs, Stern, Lehman Brothers et al who follow the ‘Israel
First’ line. As a result, Paulson has to work around the Lobby by
focusing on dealing with the Gulf city-state monarchies and Saudi
Arabia in order to avoid another disastrous repetition of the Dubai
Port management sale. Paulson above all wants to avoid Zionist
political interference with the two way flow of finance capital between
the petrol-financial-banking complexes in the Gulf States and Wall
Street.
He wants to facilitate US finance capital’s access to the large
dollar surpluses in the region. It is not surprising that the Israeli
regime has accommodated their wealthy and influential financial backers
on Wall Street by drawing a distinction between ‘moderate’ (Gulf
States) with whom they claim common interests and ‘Islamic extremists’.
Israeli Prime Minister Olmert has directed his zealots in the US-Jewish
Lobby to take heed of the refinements in the Party Line in dealing with
US-Arab relations.
Nevertheless with all its concentrated
political power and its enormous wealth and economic leverage over the
economy, Wall Street cannot control or avoid serious economic
vulnerabilities or possible catastrophic military-political events.
The Future of the Financial Ruling Class
What is abundantly clear is that one of the main threats to world
markets – and the health of the financial ruling class – is an Israeli
military attack on Iran. This will extend warfare throughout Asia and
the Islamic world, drive energy prices beyond levels heretofore known,
cause a major recession and likely a crash in financial markets. But as
in the case of the relationships between Israel and the US, the Zionist
Lobby calls the shots and its Wall Street acolytes acquiesce. As
matters now stand, the Jewish Lobby supports the escalation of the Iraq
war and the savaging of Palestine, Somalia and Afghanistan. It has
neutralized the biggest and most concerted effort by big name centrist
political figures to alter White House policy. Baker, Carter, former
military commanders of US forces in Iraq have been savaged by the
Zionist ideologues. Under their influence the White House is putting
into practice the war strategy presented by the ‘American’ Enterprise
Institute (a Zioncon thinktank). As a result parallel to Bush’s
appointment of Paulson and Wall Streeters to run imperial economic
policy, he has appointed an entire new pro-war civilian
military-security apparatus to escalate and extend the Middle East wars
to Africa (Somalia) and Latin America (Venezuela).
Sooner or later a break between Wall Street and the militarists will
occur. The additional costs of an escalating wars, the continual
ballooning debt payments, huge imbalances in the balance of payments
and decreasing inflows of capital as multi-national repatriate profits
and overseas central banks diversify their currency reserves will force
the issue. The enormous and growing inequalities, the massive
concentration of wealth and capital at a time of declining living
standards and stagnant income for the vast majority, gives the
financial ruling class little political capital or credibility if and
when an economic and financial crisis breaks.
With foreign investors owning 47% of all marketable US Treasury bonds
in 2006 compared to 33% in 2001 and foreign holdings of US corporate
debt up to 30% today, from 23% just 5 years ago, a rapid sell-off would
totally destabilize US financial markets and the economic system as
well as the world economy. A rapid sell-off of dollars with
catastrophic consequences cannot be ruled out if US-Zionist militarism
continues to run amuck, creating conditions of extended and prolonged
warfare.
The paradox is that some of the most wealthy and powerful beneficiaries
of the ascendancy of finance capital are precisely the same class of
people who are financing their own self-destruction. While cheap
finance fueling multi-billion dollar mergers, acquisitions, commissions
and executive payoffs, heightened militarism operates on a budget
plagued by tax reductions, exemptions and evasions for the financial
ruling class and ever greater squeezing of the overburdened wage and
salary classes. Something has to break the cohabitation between ruling
class financiers and political militarists. They are running in
opposite directions. One is investing capital abroad and the other
spending borrowed funds at home. For the moment there are no signs of
any serious clashes at the top, and in the middle and working classes
there are no signs of any political break with the two Wall Street
parties or any challenge to the militarist-Zionist stranglehold on
Congress. Likely it will take a catastrophe, like a White House-back
Israeli nuclear attack on Iran to detonate the kind of crisis which
will provoke a deep and widespread popular backlash of all things
military, financial and made in Israel.