Chicago Sun-Times

Put public money to work for the people

- BY AMEYA PAWAR AND DANIEL BISS Ameya Pawar is a senior fellow at the Economic Security Project. Daniel Biss is a senior fellow at Americans for Financial Reform.

Remember when right-wing billionair­es and Gov. Bruce Rauner joined forces to manufactur­e a crisis and dismantle Illinois government? They kept promising they were sincerely and altruistic­ally trying to fix Illinois.

Well, right-wing forces are still at it, but now they’ve stopped trying to hide their plan to make a fortune. Recently, Illinois Policy Institute CEO John Tillman and Warlander Management, a New York-based hedge fund, filed suit against the state of Illinois to invalidate state-issued bonds used to pay social service and health care providers money they were legally owed. The duo own securities that would earn them hundreds of millions if the judge rules in their favor.

You read that right: They placed a multimilli­on-dollar bet that Illinois would default on its debt, and then sued to force that to happen. It’s as though they took out an insurance policy on someone else’s house, and then went to court asking a judge to burn that house down.

This is a particular­ly offensive example of what’s known as activist investing. Activists don’t just make investment­s based on their prediction­s; they also use their money and their influence over the government to move markets in their favor.

But guess what? Billionair­es aren’t the only significan­t source of investment capital. Government­s invest tens of trillions of dollars on behalf of the public. It is time to harness that public investment power.

Corporate America is in the grips of the principle that all that matters is maximizing shareholde­r profits. Over the last 40 years, generating the highest possible return meant avoiding taxes, offshoring jobs, busting unions and ending private pensions.

Not surprising­ly, over the same time period, CEO pay grew by an obscene 940% while worker pay grew only 12%. This is shameful. As a result, 66% of Americans don’t have $1,000 saved in case of emergency.

What’s more, only 54% of Americans have any investment in the stock market. Most shareholde­rs today are institutio­nal investors and foreign wealth funds — and it is not a stretch to say the demands of these funds are driving public policy decisions in our communitie­s today. We shouldn’t be surprised that the economy has left working families behind.

Those of us who oppose the devastatio­n of economic security, environmen­tal degradatio­n and racist violence are told that there’s just no alternativ­e. When we criticize economic choices made by companies and government­s, we get told that these aren’t choices at all — they’re just how things have to work.

But this is nonsense perpetuate­d by people who benefit from the system. They know they can’t credibly defend it and instead try to bully the rest of us. An economy can’t work without government writing and enforcing the rules. (The next time a free marketeer tells you that government should leave their business alone, try asking them whether they’re willing to stop using corporate law to protect themselves from liability.)

So let’s re-envision what our economy should look like. And while we’re fighting to change the rules, let’s start deploying public capital in a way that aligns with our values. Some immediate steps could include moving public money away from private equity investment­s that bankrupt companies and hurt workers, training investment managers in-house to consider a bottom line that marries our values and need for steady returns, and using the public’s investment power to take activist positions on gun manufactur­er boards to force an industry shift on smart gun technology. There are many possibilit­ies to use our investment and activist power for good.

In a series of forthcomin­g articles, we will propose strategies to deploy public dollars to take on the pressing issues of the day: climate change, worker protection­s and wages, and reparative investment­s across our neighborho­ods.

If right-wing billionair­es can use their money to increase shareholde­r value no matter the consequenc­es, it’s time for the public to use our money to fight for our values. And let’s get to work now — the other side already has a head start.

LET’S START DEPLOYING PUBLIC CAPITAL IN A WAY THAT ALIGNS WITH OUR VALUES. ONE IMMEDIATE STEP COULD INCLUDE MOVING PUBLIC MONEY AWAY FROM PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTMENT­S THAT BANKRUPT COMPANIES AND HURT WORKERS.

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