Time to End Deregulation
By Norman Markowitz History News Service
In the heyday of the Robber Barons in the 1870s Cornelius
Vanderbilt bluntly asked, "What do I care about the law?
Ain't I got the power?" Although they now consult public
relations advisers and attorneys before issuing
statements, the CEOs of transnational firms such as Enron,
WorldCom and Global Crossings in our "deregulated"
economy have long practiced what Vanderbilt preached more
than a century ago.
Yet the high flyers of corporate America have had their
wings clipped before with effective regulation. Perhaps
now is the time for more of the kind of radical changes
the New Deal instituted when it established the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) in 1934. The Securities
Exchange Act compelled publicly traded firms to provide
listings of their assets and liabilities. It also
outlawed various practices used to manipulate stock prices
for speculative purposes.
The legislation of the 1930s, including the Banking Act
of 1933, which established the Federal Deposit Insurance
Commission, and subsequent banking legislation that
divorced investment and commercial banking, protected the
savings of millions of small depositors and barred the sort
of stock market speculation by banks that caused
thousands to collapse in the early 1930s. Those measures
passed only after tens of millions of people voted for
political leadership committed to changing an economic
system that had led to mass unemployment and a huge
decline in living standards.
As a result, FDR's denunciation of the leaders of
industry and finance who resisted regulation and reform
as "economic royalists," rallied the people. His New Deal
supported the growth of trade unions to balance
employers' power and established old age pensions,
unemployment insurance, and other social protections.
Those regulatory reforms were successful, even though the
new regulatory agencies were often staffed with appointees
who were much more sympathetic to business interests than
were the original New Dealers.
The present crisis stems from the successful weakening of
those reforms in recent decades. In an attempt to save
capitalism from itself, Roosevelt demonized corporate
arrogance and business greed. Fifty years later,
President Reagan directed the deregulation of energy, public
utilities, banking and finance while demonizing welfare
recipients. He sharply reduced federal funding for a wide
variety of social welfare and education programs.
Reagan revived the "trickle down theory" associated with
Andrew Mellon, financier and secretary of the treasury in
the conservative Republican administrations of the 1920s.
According to these ideas, policies of deregulation,
detaxation and privatization would free investment and
stimulate economic growth, since private enterprise was
inherently good and the public sector was inherently
wasteful.
In effect, Reagan transformed generations of criticism
against the abuses of "big business," which had produced
regulatory reforms, into a generation of criticism
against "big government." His administration's
deregulation policies led to the savings and loan disasters
of the late 1980s. The administration of George H. W.
Bush continued these policies, even though runaway
deficits compelled it to raise taxes. The Clinton
administration did little to reregulate business and
joined with Republicans to eliminate much of the New
Deal's federal welfare program, Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC), in 1996. Before the present
embarrassment from corporate corruption and bankruptcies,
the current Bush administration was intent on returning
to hard-line Reaganism.
The scandals of today, the billions extorted from
California for electricity and the Enron and WorldCom
stock and accounting swindles, are the result of
deregulation. They are evidence that deregulation is part of
the problem, not part of the solution, in maintaining a
healthy and stable economy.
A national energy policy, based on regional versions of
the New Deal's Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), which
produced public power for its region in cooperation with
local communities, would have prevented the energy
speculation that produced such a disaster for California.
FDR and the National Resources Planning Board, a New Deal
agency, saw such a policy as a long-range goal in the
1930s.
Strengthening the Federal Trade Commission and the SEC to
outlaw the shady mergers and self-serving accounting
practices that have turned the stock market into a great
engine of speculation would force CEOs to implement
policies fostering productive long-term growth to provide
dividends for shareholders rather than raising short-term
stock prices at all costs.
If we are really at war, or an open-ended "war against
terrorism," as the Bush administration regularly reminds
us, reviving FDR's World War II proposal for an income
cap on executives, brokers and bankers would deter
business leaders from acting like Robber Barons and creating
more Enrons, just as team salary caps in professional
sports have tried to keep greedy owners from destroying
competition and inflating costs to everyone.
The United States has never fought a war with tax cuts
for the rich and corporations and a call for weak,
decentralized national government. Turning a blind eye to
corporate profiteers is destabilizing the economy. In the
present situation, serious change means radical change in
government's relationship to business.
Norman Markowitz is an associate professor of history at
the New Brunswick campus of Rutgers University and a writer
for the History News Service.
[Norman Markowitz, Department of History, Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, NJ 07719. Telephone: (908)
681-3419, (908) 932-6719; fax: (908) 932-6773; e-mail: markowi@rci.rutgers.edu.]
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This article was posted on July 24, 2002.
Pictured at top (left to right): The Norman
Invasion of England, Magellan, Rene Descartes, The siege of
Atlanta, Jackie Robinson.
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