| There are two main ways to destroy a country. Either conquer it 
            from outside, steal all the assets, and prevent the people of the 
            country from rebuilding; or conquer it from the inside, steal all 
            the assets, and prevent the people of the country from rebuilding. 
            Call the first strategy external imperialism and the second strategy 
            internal imperialism. . . By diverting human capital and other 
            resources, the military is creating a situation in which the U.S. 
            will have great trouble rebuilding. All Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld 
            have to do is let the powers that be continue to siphon off the 
            assets of the United States, and they will have done their job, as 
            far as the power elite are concerned.  There are two main ways to destroy a country: either conquer it 
            from outside, steal all the assets, and prevent the people of the 
            country from rebuilding; or conquer it from the inside, steal all 
            the assets, and prevent the people of the country from 
            rebuilding.   Call the first strategy external imperialism 
            and the second strategy internal imperialism.  The British used 
            the first type of imperialism to subdue India and other countries; 
            George W. Bush, and the elites he represents, are in a position to 
            achieve the second one in the United States.  Indeed, they are 
            very far along in their efforts, but conquering from within is 
            generally much easier than conquering from without.  The most 
            important job of a would-be set of internal imperialists is to 
            destroy the capability of the state to counter and overturn the 
            actions of those same parasitic elites.  Once the state is 
            powerless to stop those who already have from becoming those who 
            have even more, the going gets pretty easy.  Your 
            run-of-the-mill “deciders” can kick back at a phony ranch in 
            Crawford, get drunk and hunt for quail, or hatch plots to conquer 
            vulnerable oil states; Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld need only take 
            advantage of the power that they already control The sweet smell of success  A popularly-based state is essential because societies are 
            like ecosystems that are in constant danger of 
            self-destructing.  The positive feedback loops of power that 
            exist within all societies have the capacity to rip the system 
            apart.  Positive feedback occurs when the increase in 
            something – power, temperature, disease, machinery – increases the 
            probability that there will be a further increase in that 
            thing.  The most familiar physical example is an 
            explosion.  A chemical process, or a nuclear process in the 
            case of a nuclear bomb, sets off a chain reaction which explodes the 
            pertinent material at a faster and faster rate, until everything is 
            used up.  Positive feedback may also mean that a system becomes 
            “stuck”, or “locked in” at either a maximum or a minimum.  For 
            instance, the phenomenon of the “vicious cycle of poverty” was 
            explored by the first recipient of the Nobel Prize for Economics 
            (and one of the few who deserved it), Gunnar Myrdal . [1] 
              This process “locks in” poor people because education and 
            other assets are needed to escape poverty, but poverty leads to a 
            lack of these assets, and so it becomes difficult to “unlock” from a 
            position on the economic “floor”.
 Global warming, as we are 
            seeing, contains many positive feedback processes.  For 
            instance, when the polar ice caps lose snow, the underlying oceans 
            and earth absorb more heat, which increases warming, which melts 
            more snow, and so on .
 Empires are created by positive 
            feedback.  A country conquers a smaller neighbor, steals its 
            assets, and thus has more resources with which to conquer other 
            countries.  Left to operate unimpeded, many countries 
            throughout history should have been able to create a planetary 
            empire.  However, as explained by international relations 
            theorists, a balance of power forms, which counters a would-be 
            global empire .  World War II was a good example.  The 
            U.S. and the Soviet Union, at each others’ throats both before and 
            after, became close allies in their bid to thwart the global 
            ambitions of Hitler.
 The balance of power is an example of 
            a negative feedback process.  Social scientists, and in 
            particular economists, have made a fetish of stability and negative 
            feedback processes, and by so doing, have ignored the positive 
            feedback yin that complements the negative feedback yang.  
            Without understanding both processes, it becomes very difficult to 
            correctly analyze complex global social systems.
 The decline of 
            Great Powers such as the U.S. occur because of the positive feedback 
            processes at work within a wealthy country.  The production of 
            goods and services, particularly within the manufacturing sector, 
            gives rise to great wealth.  Those who are better at 
            controlling things than producing things take advantage of this 
            cornucopia to control large concentrations of wealth.  In 
            particular, financial sectors and governments tend to deplete the 
            manufacturing sector for their own internal and external imperial 
            reasons, and eventually kill the goose that lays the golden 
            eggs.
 In a dictatorship, this process is well-nigh 
            impossible to stop, because there is no countervailing power.  
            Revolutions occur when the process of decline has advanced so far 
            that the state itself is crumbling.  In a democracy, the 
            possibility (but certainly not the inevitability) of reversal 
            exists, in so far as the population can rouse itself to challenge 
            the power elite.
 Several authors have noted these 
            internal processes of power.  In the 1960s the economist John 
            Kenneth Galbraith proposed that the government can be a 
            “countervailing” power to the rising power of corporations.  C. 
            Wright Mills coined the idea of a “power elite”, composed of 
            corporate, governmental, and military elites, although he did not 
            discuss how they might be challenged.  Seymour Melman detailed 
            how the state joins with corporations to form a “state capitalism” 
            that centers on the production of military equipment, the operation 
            of the state sucking dry the production system.  Recently, 
            Kevin Phillips has written of the destructive effects of a rapidly 
            rising financial sector.
 Perhaps the broadest effort to 
            discuss positive feedback, over the long-term, was undertaken by 
            Karl Polanyi in his book, “The Great Transformation”.  Writing 
            in 1945, the lessons of the previous century were clear: left 
            unregulated, global capitalism would destroy itself.   In 
            a similar vein, Keynes’ identified the phenomenon of the “liquidity 
            trap”, another form of positive feedback “lock in”, in which the 
            lack of investment leads to a low level of economic activity which 
            leads to a lack of investment, and so on .
 The phenomenon 
            described by the phrase, “the rich get richer and the poor get 
            poorer”, is really two “lock ins”, one at the top of the economic 
            system and the other at the bottom.  As Linda Minor has so ably 
            demonstrated in her articles on this website, the rich are able to 
            maintain their power, and even to enhance it, because they are rich 
            and powerful.  As David Cay Johnston explains, the rich are 
            becoming richer partly because of changes in the tax code, and the 
            richer they are the easier it is to become even richer, partly 
            because they increase their ability to avoid taxes .
 Like an 
            external empire, families and friends in the elite can continuously 
            gobble up smaller centers of power within a country, until they 
            eventually control most of the country’s wealth.  Power leads 
            to more power.  Manufacturing firms are ensnared in this net 
            and are sucked dry, left to rot with everything else in the 
            ecosystem known as the national economy.  Instead of putting 
            surpluses back into the manufacturing system from whence the 
            surpluses came, those resources are used as weapons to control 
            economic (and political) entities, world-wide.
 The unions used to 
            serve as a “countervailing” power to the corporations, but the 
            destruction of the unions has been a long-term goal of the power 
            elite of the United States.  Outsourcing manufacturing had two 
            goals: first, increase profits by decreasing labor costs, but 
            second, decrease the power of unions and the middle and working 
            classes in general.  As David Kay Johnston argues, “We are the 
            only country in the world that is in the pursuit of lowering wages” 
            .  Lower labor costs alone would not in themselves serve as a 
            reason to outsource; the larger goal is to take power away from the 
            middle and working classes.  Even in the service industries, 
            which are poorly organized, keeping uppity computer programmers 
            scared by outsourcing to India even when the gains are dubious can 
            make sense to power-hungry CEOs who want to keep the “business 
            climate” in the U.S. “attractive”.  Such short-sighted agendas 
            prevent the people of the U.S. from rebuilding, because eventually 
            they will have neither the power nor the skills to do so.
 Keeping prying eyes off of the prize
 The 
            state, as militarized, corrupt, and greedy as it is, is the only 
            force strong enough to keep this system from exploding.  To do 
            so would require a population that is sophisticated enough to know 
            how the political economy really works and therefore how it should 
            be managed.  The current mainstream economic ideology -- 
            neoclassical economics -- serves to prevent people from 
            understanding what is going on in two critical ways.  First, 
            neoclassical economics, at its core, teaches that the government can 
            only be a negative force in the economy because it defiles the 
            perfection of the market; and second, the profession teaches that 
            the most transcendent expression of market perfection is the theory 
            of comparative advantage.
 The main problem with all neoclassical 
            economic theories is that they cease to apply in the long-run; 
            Keynes famous remark that “in the long run we are all dead” really 
            means that “in the long run neoclassical economics is dead”.  
            The state, ideally, exists as a social contract, and thus must be 
            concerned with the long-term survival of its inhabitants, stretching 
            into the distant future.  The main problem to be investigated 
            here is the following: in the short-term, markets can reward those 
            who destroy assets, which are necessary for the well-being or even 
            survival of the economy in the long run.  Without the state, 
            the market will destroy itself, for a number of 
            reasons.
 First, there are certain classes of essential 
            assets that would not be created without the intervention of the 
            state, and are happily destroyed if the state is made 
            impotent.  As I explained in “Say 
            Dubai to the American Economy” , a market cannot function 
            without a sophisticated infrastructure.  Similarly, the human 
            capital created by an educational and training system have almost 
            always been provided by the state, as well as crucial research and 
            development activities.
 Second, the ecosystem that 
            underlies all production is a critical asset that is merrily 
            destroyed for short-term gain.  As we are now seeing in the 
            case of global warming, there can be no market if the market is 
            under water.  There can be no market if the climate is so 
            erratic that production becomes impossible.  There can be no 
            market for fish if all of the fish are taken out of the oceans , and 
            there can be no market for wood if all the forests are gone.  
            There can be no agriculture, or not much else for that matter, if 
            there is no fresh water .
 In general, the market can not make 
            rational decisions about using up nonrenewable resources, whether 
            those resources exist underground or as an entire ecosystem.  
            The actions of the individual parts in a market are supposed to 
            maximize the wealth of the market as a whole.  But if some 
            actors in the system increase their wealth in the short-run, while 
            at the same time decreasing the wealth-generating capacity of the 
            planet in the long-run, then the market will be making the wrong 
            decisions.  The effect is similar to “milking” a company for 
            profit before it collapses.  Profits rise, but assets 
            fall.
 Third, there can be no market if there is no 
            manufacturing.  Just as a market cannot exist if there is 
            no infrastructure to bring the products to it, there can be no 
            market if there is nothing to sell.   If, as in the United 
            States, “market forces” are creating a manufacturing-free zone, then 
            it is the market that is wrong, not the concept of the necessity of 
            manufacturing .
 As in the case of environmental 
            destruction, a set of actors – multinational corporations – are 
            profiting in the short run by transferring manufacturing capacity 
            out of the U.S., while the economic system of the whole – the U.S. 
            economy – is losing its wealth-generating capacity.  Long-term 
            assets are destroyed for short-term profits.  This is part of 
            the process of internal imperialism, not economic 
            growth.
 Fourth, there would be no market if the market was 
            left to its own devices, because markets will always be 
            monopolized if left alone long enough.  If there is one group 
            of people who hate the market, it is the people who run 
            companies.  They may lie, steal, and cheat– they will even make 
            weapons for the military – if by doing so they can destroy a free 
            market and control it instead.  The state determines the 
            structure of the market insofar as the state prevents such 
            monopolization.  Only massive public uproar could have led to 
            the break-up of the trusts of the late nineteenth century, and 
            whatever is emerging at the beginning of the 21st will only be 
            brought to heel as the result of another round of public 
            intervention.
 We are told that 21st century competition 
            requires corporations large enough to compete with other countries’ 
            behemoths.   We must destroy competition in this country 
            in order to save it.  In order for these corporations to 
            compete abroad, we must establish a free-trade regime world-wide, 
            for if we keep out other countries’ tyrannosaurus rexxons then ours 
            will only grow to velociraptor size.  The train of logic runs 
            out at this point, because if we were protecting our economy from 
            such large beasts in the first place, we wouldn’t need big ones 
            ourselves.  Out trots trade theory, and in particular, the 
            theory that Robert Samuelson called “the most beautiful theory” of 
            economics, the theory of comparative advantage.
 The comparative advantage of power The theory of comparative advantage does not hold that countries 
            should concentrate on what they are best at, in an absolute 
            sense.  The theory is more insidious than that.  The 
            theory posits that even if a country is better than its neighbors in 
            everything, the top country should remove resources from everything 
            but what it is best at, relative to its neighbors.  In fact, 
            every country should concentrate on just one industry, and eliminate 
            – destroy might be a better term – all of its other 
            industries.   The theory is in reality a justification for 
            internal imperialism, the destruction of a country’s assets and 
            capability to regenerate itself.In the medium-term, where 
            technological change is not important, Ricardo correctly showed that 
            all countries would maximize their income by pursuing this 
            strategy.  The problem is that in the long run this policy 
            would be a complete and total disaster.
 If the economy is like an 
            ecosystem that needs all of its various parts in order to function 
            properly, then destroying vast sections of the economy would lead to 
            collapse in the long-term, not growth.  The different sectors 
            need each other, and in particular, the industries that produce 
            final goods and services need the industries that provide them with 
            machinery.  In turn, the industries that make the production 
            machinery need the industries that produce what I termed 
            “Reproduction machinery”, that is, the core industrial technologies 
            such as machine tools, steel-making equipment, 
            electricity-generating steam turbines, and semiconductor-making 
            equipment.  These technologies collectively reproduce 
            themselves and are used to make production machinery.  In order 
            for this industrial ensemble to work together and produce 
            technological progress, they need to be in some close proximity so 
            that the engineers, scientists, and skilled production workers that 
            make up the human capital of this system can interact with each 
            other and the machines .
 As I argued in “The rise and 
            decline of the great American corporation” , the American automobile 
            companies are a prime example of the problems of 
            specialization.  They will not survive if they are the only 
            extant components of the manufacturing economy.
 Ricardo used his 
            theory to make a prediction.  Let’s see how he did, looking 
            back almost 200 years later:
 Under a system of perfectly free 
            commerce, each country naturally devotes its capital and labour to 
            such employments as are most beneficial to each. This pursuit of 
            individual advantage is admirably connected with the universal good 
            of the whole. By stimulating industry, by regarding ingenuity, and 
            by using most efficaciously the peculiar powers bestowed by nature, 
            it distributes labour most effectively and most economically: while, 
            by increasing the general mass of productions, it diffuses general 
            benefit, and binds together by one common tie of interest and 
            intercourse, the universal society of nations throughout the 
            civilized world. It is this principle which determines that wine 
            shall be made in France and Portugal, that corn shall be grown in 
            America and Poland, and that hardware and other goods shall be 
            manufactured in England.
 Oops.
 It all sounded so good until he got to the part about England 
            being the master of the global economy forever and ever.  One 
            might excuse Ricardo for ignoring the idea of technological 
            progress, except that he was a witness to the Industrial 
            Revolution.  How the economics profession has managed to ignore 
            technology deserves an separate essay. Following in their footsteps Poor countries are the only ones, up until now, who have been 
            unfortunate enough to actually follow the theory of comparative 
            advantage.  Their elite specialize in the theft of their 
            resources for the comfort of themselves and other countries’ 
            elites.  Of course, this sort of behavior warms the cockles of 
            the hearts of the IMF and the World Bank, who try to impose an 
            economic theory on their unfortunate charges that no rich country 
            would even think of implementing – until now.  When a country 
            is exporting coffee or petroleum or precious metals or timber, and 
            preventing its people from doing anything else, it is being 
            destroyed by both its own elites and by international elites.  
            The government has all but disappeared as a conscious planning 
            agency whose function is to keep the market from destroying the 
            country.  The global market in these countries long ago 
            destroyed them. And now, it is the United States that is 
            entering down the road traveled by the poor countries.  In the 
            U.S., the centers of economic power have a willing partner in the 
            theft of the country’s assets, the military. The military helps tie 
            together the internal and external imperialism of the United States 
            via the military-industrial complex and a worldwide network of bases 
            and military proconsuls.  A global elite, not anchored to any 
            particular country , is being created, and the U.S. military is 
            doing its part.
 By diverting human capital and 
            other resources, the military is creating a situation in which the 
            U.S. will have great trouble rebuilding.  All Bush, Cheney, and 
            Rumsfeld have to do is let the powers that be continue to siphon off 
            the assets of the United States, and they will have done their job, 
            as far as the power elite are concerned.  Only the people of 
            the United States can stop them.
 The next installment of “Taking the Long View” will explore the 
            role of the U.S. military in the destruction of the U.S. 
            economy.
 You can contact Jon Rynn directly on his jonrynn.blogspot.com . 
            You can also find old blog entries and longer articles at 
            economicreconstruction.com. Please feel free to reach him at 
            
            
            
            
            This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need 
            Javascript enabled to view it
            
             . *********
 [1] Gunnar Myrdal, The American 
            Dilemma, 1944“The Tipping Point”, Time Magazine, April 3, 
            2006
 For example, Kenneth Waltz, A Theory of International 
            Relations, 1979
 See John Kenneth Galbraith, The New 
            Industrial State, 1967; C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite, 1959; 
            Seymour Melman, After Capitalism,2001; Kevin Phillips, American 
            Theocracy, 2006; Karl Polanyi, The Great Transformation, 
            1945
 http://www.buzzflash.com/interviews/04/03/int04017.html
 http://www.buzzflash.com/interviews/04/03/int04016.html
 Say 
            Dubay to American Economy
 Julia Whitty, March/April Mother Jones, 
            “The 
            Fate of the Ocean ”,
 Lester R. Brown, “Plan B 2.0”, 
            2006
 See “Before 
            the economy hits the fan ”; see also “Why manufacturing and 
            infrastructure are central to the economy”, at http://www.economicreconstruction.com/JonRynn/JonRynnIndex.htm
 Ibid.
 The 
            Rise and Decline of the Great American Corporation
 David Ricardo, On the principles of Political Economy and taxation, 
            Chapter 7, “On Free Trade”
 I would like to thank Chris 
            Sanders for this insight
 |