Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – November 28, 2021
by Tony Wikrent
Strategic Political Economy
Destroying Democracy Is Central to the Privatization of Public Goods
[Jacobin, via Naked Capitalism 11-22-2021]
How Delaware Became the World’s Biggest Offshore Haven
[Foreign Policy, via Naked Capitalism 11-21-2021]
The American Ruling Class Has Never Let Us Build Back Better
[Jacobin, via The Daily Poster, November 21, 2021]
The defeat of Reconstruction was the nation’s first failure to build back better, and it set the stage for the failures that followed. American austerity politics found their first full expression during this period, pivoting on an ideological turn to classical liberalism within the Republican Party. The events of the 1870s created a pattern of missed opportunities and reactionary blowback that has since been repeated time and again.”
Fighting the Inflation Profiteers
David Dayen, November 24, 2021 [The American Prospect]
Companies are raising prices well above increases in their costs. The only antidote is to finally take action against corporate power….
“Executives are seizing a once in a generation opportunity to raise prices,” reads a Wall Street Journal storyexplaining that around two-thirds of the largest publicly traded companies are showing profit margins higher today than they did in 2019, before the pandemic. Over 100 companies show profit margins of 50 percent or more above those 2019 levels…. Corporate executives are not hiding their handiwork; instead, they’re boasting about it in financial disclosures and earnings calls. “We have not seen any material reaction from consumers,” said the chief financial officer of Procter & Gamble, the world’s largest consumer goods company, which has hiked prices three times in the past year. “What we are very good at is pricing,” said Colgate-Palmolive’s CEO. “We find that taking several small price increases is more effective than one large price jump,” added the CFO of Unilever. Dollar Tree, a discount store which has the word “dollar” in its name, has decided to permanently set its price point at $1.25, stating specifically that the move is “not a reaction to short-term or transitory market conditions.”