In Miami-Dade County, low public esteem of the state attorney's office and the county commission on ethics is pervasive. It is a repeated topic in the comments of readers of Eye On Miami.
How to account for the timidity of these entities that nominally protect the public but appear, instead, to reinforce the status quo by virtue of anemic, toothless response to corruption?
Normally, I don't seek help from conservatives but in this case, the American Spectator recently published an opinion editorial by Samuel Gregg that resonated: "Inequality in a Crony Capitalist World".
Gregg writes, "Crony capitalist arrangements create distinct groups of insiders and outsiders that have nothing to do with classic criteria of justice such as need, merit, and willingness to take on risk and responsibility. All that matters in a crony capitalist world is closeness to state power." Well there you have it. A perfect description of how business "gets done" in Miami-Dade County government.
Where I disagree with my conservative friends, though, is on the matter of how insider-dealing became so prevalent. I attribute it to the claims of "trickle down economics". According to this theory of economic growth -- embraced by conservatives since Ronald Reagan -- the best way to grow opportunities for the middle class is to unleash the power of innovation and creativity at the top of the economic ladder. Reduce taxes. Eliminate regulations that inhibit growth and innovation.
Along this line, societal problems are not created through the industrious activities of the top one percent. Blame "Moral Relativism" that infects the other 99 percent. If there weren't so many moral relativists among the general population, then ethics and a more moral, just relationship between elected officials and the governed would materialize.
What we find, however, is that far from benefiting the greater good, the main success of "trickle down economics" has been to pull up the ladder so that insiders can meet at their pre-arranged destinations. That is how you get close to state power. If you want to eat at the banquet table, you pay your dues. (See the campaign report data by G.O.D. below, for just one example.)
Gregg doesn't take on this point. His reflexive attack of the corrupting influence of unions ("it's all the unions fault!"), and temerity to include regulatory capture and the revolving door between government officials and private industry as reasons that GOP beacons like Wisconsin governor Scott Walker have come under such relentless attack by liberals falls short of convincing.
But these are minor quibbles compared to the acknowledgment that unites conservatives and the rest of us: there is something rotten in the heart of Denmark, as Shakespeare's Hamlet noted four hundred or so years ago.
So on this point, Gregg is correct: "Crony capitalism is not criminal activity or outright corruption — though it verges on, and often enters, these spheres. Crony capitalism is about hollowing-out market economies and replacing them with what may be described as political markets."
It is time for Republicans and Democrats to both agree to shut down those political markets. It doesn't matter who started them. The effort has to start at the very top: from the county mayor's office in particular. It means changing the entire culture of county government and separating the lobbyists from the political arrangements that are so engrained in our version of crony capitalism that the state attorney's office and commission on ethics appear to be no more than deer caught in the headlights, paralyzed with indecision how to get out of the way.
Read HERE: American Spectator
"Inequality in a Crony Capitalist World"
Samuel Gregg
If popes and presidents have anything to do with it, 2014 looks set to be the “Year of Inequality.” Already the rehashing of old, old arguments has begun in earnest. Economists, for instance, are re-disputing the inequality statistics. Others are re-debating perennial philosophical questions such as what we mean by inequality and (depending on the meaning) whether it’s always a bad thing.
You don’t, however, have to join most of the contemporary academy in worshiping at the altar of the prophet of modern liberal egalitarianism, the late John Rawls, to recognize that some seriously unjustifiable inequities do characterize virtually all modern societies. And one such injustice, though rarely spoken about in these terms by many politicians (for reasons that will become obvious), is the rise and rise of crony capitalism.
Crony capitalism is an expression that’s used a great deal these days, so let’s be clear what it means. Crony capitalism is not criminal activity or outright corruption — though it verges on, and often enters, these spheres. Crony capitalism is about hollowing-out market economies and replacing them with what may be described as political markets.
In political markets, the focus is no longer upon prospering through creating, refining, and offering products and services at competitive prices. Instead economic success depends upon people’s ability to harness government power to stack the economic deck in their favor. While the market’s outward form is maintained, its essential workings are supplanted by the struggle to ensure that governments, legislators, and regulators favor you at other people’s expense. In that sense, crony capitalism certainly constitutes a form of redistribution: away from taxpayers, consumers and businesses focused on creating wealth, and towards the organized, powerful, and politically-connected.
So who are the crony capitalists? Obviously it includes businesses who lobby governments and legislators for exemptions, monopolies, subsidies, access to “no-bid” contracts, price-controls, bailouts, tariff-protection, preferential tax-treatment, and access to government-provided credit at below-market interest-rates.
Invariably such privileges are premised on the claim that a particular business or industry somehow merits special treatment. The former Treasury Secretary, the late William Simon, once recalled watching “with incredulity as businessmen ran to the government in every crisis..… Always, such gentlemen proclaimed their devotion to free enterprise.… [But] their own case… was always unique and… justified [the favor].”
Though they aren’t often placed in this category, many union officials are adept at playing the crony capitalist game. That’s how many of them have been able to secure legislation that allows them to pressure employees to join their ranks, thereby violating the very principle upon which unions are founded: the principle of free association. The payback to legislators comes in the form of campaign donations and other forms of assistance at election-time.
Speaking of those who dispense the favors — legislators and other public officials — they obviously want something in return. The astonishing number of government employees who secure jobs in the industry they once regulated is well documented. Apart from campaign donations, another unspoken want of many elected officials is jobs for friends or even themselves once they exit public life.
Then there are those politicians (not to mention their family members) who join the ranks of lobbyists. In his book, This Town, Mark Leibovich estimates that 42 percent of House members and 50 percent of senators who retire from Congress now stay in Washington D.C. to become lobbyists. Clearly the incentives to become part of the grease that makes crony capitalism tick over must be considerable. Back in 2012, the Italian economist Luigi Zingales pointed out that “Seven out of the 10 richest counties in the U.S. are in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., which produces little except rules and regulations.”
What, you may ask, has this got to do with inequality? In a word: everything. Crony capitalist arrangements create distinct groups of insiders and outsiders that have nothing to do with classic criteria of justice such as need, merit, and willingness to take on risk and responsibility. All that matters in a crony capitalist world is closeness to state power.
If you are, for instance, a young entrepreneur with a new idea, product, or service but lack political connections, you are automatically disadvantaged in such a world. Equality of opportunity is thus undermined. Many a principled but frustrated entrepreneur who refuses to play the crony capitalist game is reduced to seeking out areas of the economy that crony capitalists have not yet get their hooks into.
If you want to see what crony capitalism looks like, historical and contemporary examples abound. In many ways, the mercantilist system that dominated Europe between the 16th and late 18th centuries and which relied heavily on government patronage is a forerunner. Today, Putin’s Russia personifies crony capitalism at its most violent and underscores how it can radically undermine the equality that is expressed by rule of law. Softer versions of crony capitalism prevail in much of Western Europe and Latin America. Closer to home, there are cities like Chicago in which the endless scramble for favors-in-return-for-votes is a way of life for many people.
There is a price to be paid for all this collusion. By injecting extra-regulatory costs into the economy, undermining the workings of free prices, and shifting economic incentives towards cultivating politicians and regulators, the process of wealth-creation is severely compromised. The result is the type of slow-motion decline that characterizes countries like Italy, Greece, Portugal, and France.
That’s bad news for everyone, but especially the poor. The wealthy and the powerful — especially those who rotate between the political, lobbying, and business worlds — can always take care of themselves in a crony capitalist economy. They are crony capitalism’s nomenklatura. But those without power and money are at a distinct disadvantage.
The good news is that there are ways to tame the crony capitalist beast and truly equalize the playing field. Some useful incremental steps would include, among others, prohibiting bailouts for “too-big-to-fail” businesses and requiring full disclosure of all public and private loans to government officials, elected or otherwise.
Such measures, however, are likely to have peripheral effects without two major changes. The first is to systematically shift economic incentives away from politics, and back towards the process of economic entrepreneurship and free competition. To that end, freezing and/or actually reducing (God forbid!) in real-terms the size of government, its share of GDP, and the number of government employees is a sine qua non.
A second change is to cease indulging the Keynesian fantasy that governments can somehow manage multi-trillion dollar economies made of billions of people who make untold number of economic transactions every single day. The effect, once again, would be to reduce the excessive regulation, intervention, and bureaucratization that create opportunities for crony capitalist behavior.
The bad news is that crony capitalism’s beneficiaries will fight tooth-and-nail against even incremental reforms, as figures such as Wisconsin’s Governor Scott Walker have discovered. They will also lend their considerable resources to anyone who, with a wink and a nod, promises to maintain the status quo. Alas, there’s no shortage of such people — and not just on the left.
In the long-term, crony capitalist arrangements, like mercantilism, are unsustainable. After all, they assume there will always be some people actually creating the wealth for others to loot. Once the predators outnumber the creators, however, it’s hard to avoid a steady drift toward economic debacles such as Cristina Kirchner’s Argentina. But until they disintegrate — and, like mercantilism, that could take a very, very long time — crony capitalist arrangements will continue to foster some of today’s least-justifiable forms of inequality.
How to account for the timidity of these entities that nominally protect the public but appear, instead, to reinforce the status quo by virtue of anemic, toothless response to corruption?
Normally, I don't seek help from conservatives but in this case, the American Spectator recently published an opinion editorial by Samuel Gregg that resonated: "Inequality in a Crony Capitalist World".
Gregg writes, "Crony capitalist arrangements create distinct groups of insiders and outsiders that have nothing to do with classic criteria of justice such as need, merit, and willingness to take on risk and responsibility. All that matters in a crony capitalist world is closeness to state power." Well there you have it. A perfect description of how business "gets done" in Miami-Dade County government.
Where I disagree with my conservative friends, though, is on the matter of how insider-dealing became so prevalent. I attribute it to the claims of "trickle down economics". According to this theory of economic growth -- embraced by conservatives since Ronald Reagan -- the best way to grow opportunities for the middle class is to unleash the power of innovation and creativity at the top of the economic ladder. Reduce taxes. Eliminate regulations that inhibit growth and innovation.
Along this line, societal problems are not created through the industrious activities of the top one percent. Blame "Moral Relativism" that infects the other 99 percent. If there weren't so many moral relativists among the general population, then ethics and a more moral, just relationship between elected officials and the governed would materialize.
What we find, however, is that far from benefiting the greater good, the main success of "trickle down economics" has been to pull up the ladder so that insiders can meet at their pre-arranged destinations. That is how you get close to state power. If you want to eat at the banquet table, you pay your dues. (See the campaign report data by G.O.D. below, for just one example.)
Gregg doesn't take on this point. His reflexive attack of the corrupting influence of unions ("it's all the unions fault!"), and temerity to include regulatory capture and the revolving door between government officials and private industry as reasons that GOP beacons like Wisconsin governor Scott Walker have come under such relentless attack by liberals falls short of convincing.
But these are minor quibbles compared to the acknowledgment that unites conservatives and the rest of us: there is something rotten in the heart of Denmark, as Shakespeare's Hamlet noted four hundred or so years ago.
So on this point, Gregg is correct: "Crony capitalism is not criminal activity or outright corruption — though it verges on, and often enters, these spheres. Crony capitalism is about hollowing-out market economies and replacing them with what may be described as political markets."
It is time for Republicans and Democrats to both agree to shut down those political markets. It doesn't matter who started them. The effort has to start at the very top: from the county mayor's office in particular. It means changing the entire culture of county government and separating the lobbyists from the political arrangements that are so engrained in our version of crony capitalism that the state attorney's office and commission on ethics appear to be no more than deer caught in the headlights, paralyzed with indecision how to get out of the way.
Read HERE: American Spectator
"Inequality in a Crony Capitalist World"
Samuel Gregg
If popes and presidents have anything to do with it, 2014 looks set to be the “Year of Inequality.” Already the rehashing of old, old arguments has begun in earnest. Economists, for instance, are re-disputing the inequality statistics. Others are re-debating perennial philosophical questions such as what we mean by inequality and (depending on the meaning) whether it’s always a bad thing.
You don’t, however, have to join most of the contemporary academy in worshiping at the altar of the prophet of modern liberal egalitarianism, the late John Rawls, to recognize that some seriously unjustifiable inequities do characterize virtually all modern societies. And one such injustice, though rarely spoken about in these terms by many politicians (for reasons that will become obvious), is the rise and rise of crony capitalism.
Crony capitalism is an expression that’s used a great deal these days, so let’s be clear what it means. Crony capitalism is not criminal activity or outright corruption — though it verges on, and often enters, these spheres. Crony capitalism is about hollowing-out market economies and replacing them with what may be described as political markets.
In political markets, the focus is no longer upon prospering through creating, refining, and offering products and services at competitive prices. Instead economic success depends upon people’s ability to harness government power to stack the economic deck in their favor. While the market’s outward form is maintained, its essential workings are supplanted by the struggle to ensure that governments, legislators, and regulators favor you at other people’s expense. In that sense, crony capitalism certainly constitutes a form of redistribution: away from taxpayers, consumers and businesses focused on creating wealth, and towards the organized, powerful, and politically-connected.
So who are the crony capitalists? Obviously it includes businesses who lobby governments and legislators for exemptions, monopolies, subsidies, access to “no-bid” contracts, price-controls, bailouts, tariff-protection, preferential tax-treatment, and access to government-provided credit at below-market interest-rates.
Invariably such privileges are premised on the claim that a particular business or industry somehow merits special treatment. The former Treasury Secretary, the late William Simon, once recalled watching “with incredulity as businessmen ran to the government in every crisis..… Always, such gentlemen proclaimed their devotion to free enterprise.… [But] their own case… was always unique and… justified [the favor].”
Though they aren’t often placed in this category, many union officials are adept at playing the crony capitalist game. That’s how many of them have been able to secure legislation that allows them to pressure employees to join their ranks, thereby violating the very principle upon which unions are founded: the principle of free association. The payback to legislators comes in the form of campaign donations and other forms of assistance at election-time.
Speaking of those who dispense the favors — legislators and other public officials — they obviously want something in return. The astonishing number of government employees who secure jobs in the industry they once regulated is well documented. Apart from campaign donations, another unspoken want of many elected officials is jobs for friends or even themselves once they exit public life.
Then there are those politicians (not to mention their family members) who join the ranks of lobbyists. In his book, This Town, Mark Leibovich estimates that 42 percent of House members and 50 percent of senators who retire from Congress now stay in Washington D.C. to become lobbyists. Clearly the incentives to become part of the grease that makes crony capitalism tick over must be considerable. Back in 2012, the Italian economist Luigi Zingales pointed out that “Seven out of the 10 richest counties in the U.S. are in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., which produces little except rules and regulations.”
What, you may ask, has this got to do with inequality? In a word: everything. Crony capitalist arrangements create distinct groups of insiders and outsiders that have nothing to do with classic criteria of justice such as need, merit, and willingness to take on risk and responsibility. All that matters in a crony capitalist world is closeness to state power.
If you are, for instance, a young entrepreneur with a new idea, product, or service but lack political connections, you are automatically disadvantaged in such a world. Equality of opportunity is thus undermined. Many a principled but frustrated entrepreneur who refuses to play the crony capitalist game is reduced to seeking out areas of the economy that crony capitalists have not yet get their hooks into.
If you want to see what crony capitalism looks like, historical and contemporary examples abound. In many ways, the mercantilist system that dominated Europe between the 16th and late 18th centuries and which relied heavily on government patronage is a forerunner. Today, Putin’s Russia personifies crony capitalism at its most violent and underscores how it can radically undermine the equality that is expressed by rule of law. Softer versions of crony capitalism prevail in much of Western Europe and Latin America. Closer to home, there are cities like Chicago in which the endless scramble for favors-in-return-for-votes is a way of life for many people.
There is a price to be paid for all this collusion. By injecting extra-regulatory costs into the economy, undermining the workings of free prices, and shifting economic incentives towards cultivating politicians and regulators, the process of wealth-creation is severely compromised. The result is the type of slow-motion decline that characterizes countries like Italy, Greece, Portugal, and France.
That’s bad news for everyone, but especially the poor. The wealthy and the powerful — especially those who rotate between the political, lobbying, and business worlds — can always take care of themselves in a crony capitalist economy. They are crony capitalism’s nomenklatura. But those without power and money are at a distinct disadvantage.
The good news is that there are ways to tame the crony capitalist beast and truly equalize the playing field. Some useful incremental steps would include, among others, prohibiting bailouts for “too-big-to-fail” businesses and requiring full disclosure of all public and private loans to government officials, elected or otherwise.
Such measures, however, are likely to have peripheral effects without two major changes. The first is to systematically shift economic incentives away from politics, and back towards the process of economic entrepreneurship and free competition. To that end, freezing and/or actually reducing (God forbid!) in real-terms the size of government, its share of GDP, and the number of government employees is a sine qua non.
A second change is to cease indulging the Keynesian fantasy that governments can somehow manage multi-trillion dollar economies made of billions of people who make untold number of economic transactions every single day. The effect, once again, would be to reduce the excessive regulation, intervention, and bureaucratization that create opportunities for crony capitalist behavior.
The bad news is that crony capitalism’s beneficiaries will fight tooth-and-nail against even incremental reforms, as figures such as Wisconsin’s Governor Scott Walker have discovered. They will also lend their considerable resources to anyone who, with a wink and a nod, promises to maintain the status quo. Alas, there’s no shortage of such people — and not just on the left.
In the long-term, crony capitalist arrangements, like mercantilism, are unsustainable. After all, they assume there will always be some people actually creating the wealth for others to loot. Once the predators outnumber the creators, however, it’s hard to avoid a steady drift toward economic debacles such as Cristina Kirchner’s Argentina. But until they disintegrate — and, like mercantilism, that could take a very, very long time — crony capitalist arrangements will continue to foster some of today’s least-justifiable forms of inequality.
2 comments:
"So on this point, Gregg is correct: "Crony capitalism is not criminal activity or outright corruption — though it verges on, and often enters, these spheres. Crony capitalism is about hollowing-out market economies and replacing them with what may be described as political markets."
If one imagined left and right politics as a circle and not a straight line, socialism and fascism would sit side-by-side on that sphere, bathed in insider corruption. Now imagine that there is a pole running through that. At the point where socialism and fascism touch is corruption and at the other pole is the lack of it. This other pole is where the moral majority of outsiders must converge and figure how the hell we can get voters to come out and vote their conscience.
I disagree with poster # 1
You can not reform a crony capitalist system from within, ie elections. Reason being the Corporate "People" will always win that fight with their free "speech" read MONEY.
When this insight has trickled down to the loneliest voter only then may be hope and it will be a hard row to how to get change.
We have seen how the last hope and change voted in in 2008 turned out. More of the same only more articulate.
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