Monday, November 8, 2010

We All Want To Live The American Dream

Just when I thought I had read up enough to understand what caused of the financial crisis that led to the actual or near collapse of some the major financial institutions, the Foreclosure Flap reared its ugly head, telling me that the underlying problems could be deeper than we’d realized.  We may have put out the fire caused by all the mortgage backed securities (a.k.a. toxic assets) but hot ambers are still smoldering and could break out anytime and burn us again.

What has been most shocking is that the problems are occurring in the United States of America which pride itself as being a nation of laws.  A look at the train wreck of the mortgage mess reveals a chain of dishonesty and a disregard of the laws that send shivers up and down the spine. The image of reliability, trustworthiness and enforceability of deals and investments in the US has been severely damaged as a result. 

Having laws but not the desire or the means to enforce them renders the laws simply useless.  As the former Chairman of the Fed has discovered, expecting the financial industry to self-regulate was a mistake.  It is akin to asking a drug addict to take charge of a warehouse filled with drugs.  Sadly, the people elected to positions of power AND responsibility took the first and forgot the latter.  They eliminated regulations that were designed to protect the average man on the street and they denied funding to those agencies that were set up to ensure adherence to the laws and regulations.  By demonizing “government” they chipped away at the rules that had been been carefully crafted to protect the innocent.  Corporate profits became their sole obsession and expanding that their only mantra.  In essence, they sold out the very people that had elected them into positions of power and opted for corporate welfare instead of helping the average American get closer to achieving their American dream. 

For most Americans, the “Pursuit of Happiness” entrenched in the Declaration of Independence translates to ‘living the American Dream’.  In the majority of instances, it simply means a decent job, a house, a spouse, two kids (and maybe a dog) and a car.  That simple dream is now more remote than ever before.  The so called ‘middle class’ is fast shrinking as decent paying jobs and industries have migrated overseas.  Graduates with higher degrees (and big student loans to go with them) often find themselves fighting for jobs that barely pay their living costs.  Their employers have higher productivity expectations and the longer hours at work often translates into less quality time with family and friends.  The wealth gap in America is rapidly increasing and the pendulum must start swinging the other way or something will break very soon. 

To turn the tide, our elected and appointed officials cannot continue doling out cash (remember the bailouts?), concessions and tax breaks to the big corporations and banks unconditionally.  Yes, we want them here and we want to help them succeed but we want them to be good citizens as well, providing decent jobs and paying their fair share of taxes.  Their focus cannot be on the short term profits alone – the longer term well being of the US consumers must be part of their priority too.  The US consumers cannot consume unless they have the ability to do so and fundamentally that means a steady job with a decent pay.  Flipping burgers and temporary jobs don’t make the cut.

We need to figure out what the appropriate criteria of a good Corporate Citizen should be and start enacting rules to bring that about.  Corporations that do not meet those expectations should be taxed at a higher rate or not be allowed access to the same incentives that Corporations that do. 

As a start, Companies that do not pass an American Content test (US employment and product component percentages) should be made to pay a penalty in the form of a surtax.  All companies closely monitor their employment numbers and their product content makeup so introducing a requirement that they disclose those numbers in their quarterly and annual reports should not result in any additional cost to the corporations.  Such a rule should not impact the small and medium sized businesses that have all or the bulk of their production and employment in the US.

Those who are in bed with the big corporations would decry this proposal as being protectionist.  We must peel away the rhetoric about protectionism and see that not all such rules are necessarily bad – lawyers, doctors and accountants from other countries can’t legally practice their profession in the US unless they have the necessary US training and certification.  Take away those protections and their jobs would quickly be outsourced to lower cost countries as well.

We’ve tried the carrot without the stick approach and we know that it does not work.  Corporations took full advantage of the system and did all they could to make their profits private and their losses public. 

However the winners or the losers of the mid-term elections choose to frame it, the exit polls point out that the real anger at Washington is about bailing out the big corporations at the expense of the American people.  We’ve saved the mega banks, the insurance companies, and the auto-manufacturers and we’ve pumped cheap cash at them but where are the jobs?  US Corporations are reporting higher sales and bigger profits but where are US based jobs?  Retirees who depend on income from their savings have seen interest rates plummet to near zero and they have had to rethink their retirement but where are the jobs for their grandchildren who are entering the workforce?

The late Ted Sorensen, who helped compose JFK’s inaugural address and the exhortation “Ask not what your country can do for you”, once wrote: “Government must give priority to the needs of ordinary citizens, workers, consumers, students, children, the elderly, and the ill, the vulnerable and the underdog, and not to the needs of those already sufficiently powerful and affluent to afford their own lobbyists.”

We all want to live the American Dream.  It should not be an impossible dream or one that is reserved for only the elite and the rich.  Take away the American Dream and you take away the hope of a nation. 

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