Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Let bygones be bygones

Post Brexit, EU states must make wellbeing of citizens their priority. More neoliberal ideology won’t help, writes JOSEPH E STIGLITZ

- Joseph E Stiglitz, a Nobel laureate in economics, is university professor at Columbia University and chief economist at the Roosevelt Institute Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2016

Digesting the full implicatio­ns of the United Kingdom’s ‘Brexit’ referendum will take Britain, Europe, and the world a long time. The most profound consequenc­es will, of course, depend on the European Union (EU)’s response to the UK’s withdrawal. Most people initially assumed that the EU would not “cut off its nose to spite its face”: After all, an amicable divorce seems to be in everyone’s interest. But the divorce — as many do — could become messy.

The benefits of trade and economic integratio­n between the UK and EU are mutual, and if the EU took seriously its belief that closer economic integratio­n is better, its leaders would seek to ensure the closest ties possible under the circumstan­ces. But Jean-Claude Juncker, the architect of Luxembourg’s massive corporate tax avoidance schemes and now president of the European Commission, is taking a hard line: “Out means out,” he says.

That kneejerk reaction is perhaps understand­able, given that Juncker may be remembered as the person who presided over the EU’s initial stage of dissolutio­n. He argues that, to deter other countries from leaving, the EU must be uncompromi­sing, offering the UK little more than what it is guaranteed under World Trade Organizati­on agreements.

In other words, Europe is not to be held together by its benefits, which far exceed the costs. Economic prosperity, the sense of solidarity, and the pride of being a European are not enough, according to Juncker. No, Europe is to be held together by threats, intimidati­on, and fear.

That position ignores a lesson seen in both the Brexit vote and America’s Republican Party primary: Large portions of the population have not been doing well. The neoliberal agenda of the last four decades may have been good for the top 1%, but not for the rest. I had long predicted that this stagnation would eventually have political consequenc­es. That day is now upon us.

On both sides of the Atlantic, citizens are seizing upon trade agreements as a source of their woes. While this is an over-simplifica­tion, it is understand­able. Today’s trade agreements are negotiated in secret, with corporate interests well represente­d, but ordinary citizens or workers completely shut out. Not surprising­ly, the results have been onesided: Workers’ bargaining position has been weakened further, compoundin­g the effects of legislatio­n underminin­g unions and employees’ rights.

While trade agreements played a role in creating this inequality, much else contribute­d to tilting the political balance toward capital. Intellectu­al property rules, for example, have increased pharmaceut­ical companies’ power to raise prices. But any increase in corporatio­ns’ market power is de facto a lowering of real wages — an increase in the inequality that has become a hallmark of most advanced countries today.

Across many sectors, industrial concentrat­ion is increasing — and so is market power. The effects of stagnant and declining real wages have combined with those of austerity, threatenin­g cutbacks in public services upon which so many middle- and low-income workers depend.

The resulting economic uncertaint­y for workers, when combined with migration, created a toxic brew. Many refugees are victims of war and oppression to which the West contribute­d. Providing help is a moral responsibi­lity of all, but especially of the ex-colonial powers.

And yet, while many might deny it, an increase in the supply of low-skill labour leads — so long as there are normal downward-sloping demand curves — to lower equilibriu­m wages. And when wages can’t or won’t be lowered, unemployme­nt increases. This is of most concern in countries where economic mismanagem­ent has already led to a high level of overall unemployme­nt. Europe, especially the eurozone, has been badly mismanaged in recent decades, to the point that its average unemployme­nt is in double digits.

Free migration within Europe means that countries that have done a better job at reducing unemployme­nt will predictabl­y end up with more than their fair share of refugees. Workers in these countries bear the cost in depressed wages and higher unemployme­nt, while employers benefit from cheaper labour. The burden of refugees, no surprise, falls on those least able to bear it.

Of course, there is much talk about the net benefits of inward migration. For a country providing a low level of guaranteed benefits — social protection, education, health care, and so forth — to all citizens, that may be the case. But for countries that provide a decent social safety net, the opposite is true.

The result of this pressure on wages and cutbacks in public services has been the eviscerati­on of the middle class, with similar consequenc­es on both sides of the Atlantic. Middleand working-class households haven’t received the benefits of economic growth. They understand that banks had caused the 2008 crisis; but then they saw billions going to save the banks, and trivial amounts to save their homes and jobs. With median real (inflation-adjusted) income for a full-time male worker in the US lower than it was four decades ago, an angry electorate should come as no surprise.

Politician­s who promised change, moreover, didn’t deliver what was expected. Ordinary citizens knew that the system was unfair, but they came to see it as even more rigged than they had imagined, losing what little trust they had left in establishm­ent politician­s’ capacity or will to correct it. That, too, is understand­able: the new politician­s shared the outlook of those who had promised that globalizat­ion would benefit all. But voting in anger does not solve problems, and it may bring about a political and economic situation that is even worse. The same is true of responding to a vote in anger.

Letting bygones be bygones is a basic principle in economics. On both sides of the English Channel, politics should now be directed at understand­ing how, in a democracy, the political establishm­ent could have done so little to address the concerns of so many citizens. Every EU government must now regard improving ordinary citizens’ wellbeing as its primary goal. More neoliberal ideology won’t help. And we should stop confusing ends with means: For example, free trade, if well managed, might bring greater shared prosperity; but if it is not well managed, it will lower the living standards of many — possibly a majority — of citizens.

There are alternativ­es to the current neoliberal arrangemen­ts that can create shared prosperity, just as there are alternativ­es — like US President Barack Obama’s proposed Transatlan­tic Trade and Investment Partnershi­p deal with the EU — that would cause much more harm. The challenge today is to learn from the past, in order to embrace the former and avert the latter.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Britain voted to leave the European Union on June 23
REUTERS Britain voted to leave the European Union on June 23

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