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October 29, 2007

Below the Fold: A World without the Rich

Michael Blim

Can you imagine a world without the rich?

You might say that the rich we have had as long as we have had the poor. As the incredulous swell in an old wine commercial said to the ingénue: “How do you think I got so rich?”

Most Americans today accept the rich as they do death and taxes as another one of life’s annoying basic facts. It is unusual for Americans to realize that we as a society are responsible for their existence. We believe what they tell us. Once again, an old commercial suffices: As John Houseman, bow-tied, and quintessentially the patrician Harvard law professor he once played put it about his client: “At Smith Barney, we make money the old fashioned way – we earn it!”

(Parenthetically, who among the moneychangers would dare run this ad now?)

We need not countenance their existence forever. One need not bring back Stalin to reduce or eliminate the rich. Scandinavian countries do quite well in minimizing their presence. And there is little mystery in how to reduce or eliminate the economic power of the rich. Steeply progressive income taxes, elimination of inherited wealth through estate taxes, and income redistribution along with a robust welfare state can do it.

If Americans examined the deeper damage that the rich do to society, perhaps they might be willing to try cutting the rich down to size.

Let’s look at how the rich damage American society.

First, they burn up resources. Andrew Hacker in a recent issue of The New York Review of Books paid tribute to John Kenneth Galbraith’s The Affluent Society for its scathing critique of the lifestyles of the rich and its condemnation of how they squandered national resources on personal consumption. These resources, Galbraith argued, could be better put to solving the country’s social problems. As noted above, there are remedies that Americans thus far refuse to apply, and they are as obvious as they are ignored.

Second, the rich corrupt the major institutions of American society. It bears repeating that the rich don’t get rich or stay rich simply by making better widgets and saving the profits from their corporate endeavors. They make legislatures dysfunctional, regulatory authorities their watchdogs, and professions their poodles. They corrupt presidents. They even corrupt each other, as corporate heads are bribed with board positions and in turn protect the interests of the company that bribed them.

Consider their corruption of several essential marketplaces for goods and services. What is the recuperative value of a luxury hotel inside a major hospital, complete with chef and concierge services? That depends, I suppose, on what is being recuperated. In the hospital’s case, they recover money, they claim, and lots of it, when compared to serving those Medicaid-assisted poor and the Medicare-dependent elderly and disabled. Instead of lamenting low Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements, they are pandering to the rich. Often it is for more than just money for services rendered. There are new hospital wings and prestigious care centers and institutes to think about, and who better to hit on but the rich who have just spent a week at the local Plaza Hotel hospital?

If pampering patients makes them get well, then how can it be denied to others? But that isn’t the point of the white glove treatment, is it?

Even as doctors desert careers in internal medicine owing to perceived lower pay and longer hours, other internists open boutiques, shrink their practices to a quarter of their former sizes, and charge $3000 per person annual membership fees (See my column “Is There a Doctor in the House?”). Every time internists create boutiques, they diminish the number of doctors, already declining, that provide medical care for everyone else.

The rich even corrupt careers like hospital administration. A recent Boston Globe story disclosed that the presidents of Boston’s major teaching hospitals make near or over a million dollars each a year (NB: without bonuses added). The last time I checked, hospitals of this sort were non-profit institutions. One would think that the boards of these non-profit hospitals would blanch at paying them a million, if only for fear of bad publicity. Yet, as the boards are composed mostly of very rich people, they by practically class instinct would acknowledge that someone whom they employ with so much responsibility deserves a comparable reward. This, after all, is their divine right to ungodly compensation too, so the divine right must be defended everywhere, or it will eventually obtain nowhere.

The rich corrupt universities. Elite schools become elite schools because they service the elite. If that seems tautological, that’s because it’s causal, not casual. The rich made elite schools with their money, and the payback for their accumulated billions, according to Daniel Golden, Wall Street Journal reporter in his new book The Price of Admission, is legacy admissions for their heirs. The subtitle of his book could be “how George Bush got to Yale,” and perhaps how he managed to actually get “C” grades. (You have heard of the gentleman’s “C” haven’t you?) Golden shows how elite schools take in hefty percentages of legacy undergraduates. He also shows in the case of Duke how the university effectively solicited bribes by admitting rich students with the expectation that endowment money would follow from them and their families.

And we thought we lived in a meritocracy. Horatio Alger was right: the best way to succeed in business is to marry the boss’ doctor – or, it seems, play lacrosse at Dartmouth with his son.

But there is a third and perhaps the most insidious way whereby the rich corrupt American society. They corrupt the nature of society itself by turning their corrupting powers and dubious satisfactions into cultural standards for the rest of America. The great if largely forgotten social critic Thorstein Veblen in The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899) made this point precisely and with disarming if utterly cynical simplicity. Wealth, Veblen argued, was a source of honor, and thus having it created an invidious distinction. Others emulated the rich to achieve wealth and status. Seeing this, the rich manifest their dominance through conspicuous consumption, which also has the happy effect of controlling and corrupting American institutions, as I have suggested above in the cases of elite higher education and medical care.

Thus, for instance, philanthropy, though universally considered generous and altruistic, has a predatory component. It is, as the French sociologist Marcel Mauss would have noted, a gift that demands reciprocation – in this case power – in return. When Mike Bloomberg gives upwards of a billion dollars to the Johns Hopkins medical colossus, he receives respect in return, and probably influence in the future direction of the institution. Bill Gates, to take another case, is now one of a handful of the world’s most influential people directing global world health initiatives. Warren Buffett has decided that his friend Bill, Gates that is, should use his wealth in Gates-sponsored initiatives too. All of this is done without a whimper about the loss of democratic control of our priorities, and without a whisper of the impropriety of handing over state and in Gates’ case global sovereignty to the rich.

The rich also receive sanction for their wealth and the means by which they made it. Gates’ Microsoft may have been found by the European Community to have used monopoly power to kill off its competition, but this fact is buried on the financial pages. His philanthropy is strictly page one. And the rich actually claim their legitimacy from beyond the grave, a power for which every legacy student at Harvard rejoices. Everyone remembers that the great Andrew Carnegie, either out of soulful suffering or by virtue of his attachment to the strictures of Scottish Protestantism, gave away his total fortune. Those beautiful rural town libraries and several foundations are the result. Few remember how his steel company was responsible for the bloodiest and most lethal counterattack on a union strike in American history. With money, the rich not only predate the rest of society, but also produce a sanctifying grace that absolves their sins.

Go thou and do likewise, the rich can be heard to say. Instead of stripping the rich of their predatory and envy-making wealth, several hundred million Americans put their hopes and dreams into a chase after wealth and an orgy of conspicuous consumption. No more just social order emerges. No, instead the rich and their divine right are affirmed. After all, how can you be against wealth and predatory power if you chase it? Millions of American lives are wrecked in emulating the rich and pursuing their path. Millions more may not emulate the rich, but the rich and their wannabees economically and socially run them over anyway in the great chase for wealth and power. The poor, the working classes, hell, everyone in the bottom four fifths of American society are exploited by the rich at the same time they are upbraided for falling behind. You’d have to be a swell not to notice that the rich create a standard of living that only the rich can afford.

Ponder this and this observation of Thorstein Veblen’s:

“The fact that the usages, actions, and views of the well-to-do leisure class acquire the character of a prescriptive canon of conduct for the rest of society, gives added weight and reach to the conservative influence of that class. It makes it incumbent upon all reputable people to follow their lead. So that, by virtue of its high position as the avatar of good form, the wealthier class comes to exert a retarding influence upon social development far in excess of that which the simple numerical strength of the class would assign it. Its prescriptive example acts to greatly stiffen the resistance of all other classes against any innovation….” (Penguin Books, 1994, 200)

Feel stuck?

Posted by Michael Blim at 12:53 PM | Permalink

Comments

David,

I've read with interest the data you referred to - dashing photo of Sala-i-Martin btw! - and found a reference on his page to an article from The Economist (http://columbia.edu/~xs23/papers/worldistribution/Economist%20March%202004.htm), which, among other things, states that:

"Calculations by the World Bank, using direct surveys of households, carry the official imprimatur of the UN, which uses them in monitoring progress towards its Millennium Development Goal on poverty. And they seem to show relatively little reduction in poverty over recent decades.

A paper by Shaohua Chen and Martin Ravallion of the Bank lays out the thinking behind the Bank's estimates. The authors put the proportion of people living on less than a dollar a day at 28% in 1987—far higher than the corresponding figure according to Mr Sala-i-Martin's work. By 1998, the proportion in poverty had in fact fallen (something which you might not guess if you listened only to those who deplore the wickedness of global capitalism), but only to 24%. Compare that with Mr Sala-i-Martin's estimate of just 7%."

Hmmm... perhaps the figures are not as clean cut as they seem? Just a quick reminder (however you interpret the data), that we are talking about incomes of around 1$ a day. The vast spoils of our global capitalist society!

We could argue endlessly about world poverty statistics and their interpretation, but I feel we are missing the point.

The point is that a fraction of society have more than can ever be used to any purpose by them or their offspring in generations of conspicuous consumption, while 47 million people cannot afford decent medical care (but you are Canadian, so you're covered. Good for you).

The point is that a fraction of society wields overwhelming political, military and financial might while four fifths (!) of the population don't.

The point is that this fraction of society has succeeded in making people like you believe that this is actually a good thing.

The point being made by the author was that the public has the ability to undermine the rich classes stronghold on society, if only it would fully realize the damage done.

He sums up:

"Instead of stripping the rich of their predatory and envy-making wealth, several hundred million Americans put their hopes and dreams into a chase after wealth and an orgy of conspicuous consumption. No more just social order emerges. No, instead the rich and their divine right are affirmed. After all, how can you be against wealth and predatory power if you chase it? Millions of American lives are wrecked in emulating the rich and pursuing their path. Millions more may not emulate the rich, but the rich and their wannabees economically and socially run them over anyway in the great chase for wealth and power. The poor, the working classes, hell, everyone in the bottom four fifths of American society are exploited by the rich at the same time they are upbraided for falling behind. You’d have to be a swell not to notice that the rich create a standard of living that only the rich can afford."

Your reaction to this was to term him a "nincompoop".

I find that the style and callousness of your writing embodies (almost to the point of parody) a world view that unquestioningly embraces the ethics (I use the term reluctantly) of the rich. In a way, you are not to blame. You are constantly bombarded with propaganda designed to either deny the validity of criticism or to, incredibly, lay the blame on the have-nots. And you succumb to this propaganda, just like the several hundred millions the author alludes to.

The author does not call for a communist leveling of the playing field nor for the appointment of a Pol Pot-like "benevolent dictatorship". But surely some sort of correction is required here?

You state that accentuating the negative over the positive does not serve the debate. But turning a blind eye to the negative is much worse, and helps perpetuate gross inequality.

Posted by: dkmy | Nov 2, 2007 6:43:44 PM

David,

I alluded before to C. Wright Mills classic "The power Elite".

Here is a (rather long) excerpt from the chapter dealing with "The corporate rich":

"On the bottom level of the money system one never has enough money, which is the key link in the hand-to-mouth way of existence. One is, in a sense, below the money system -never having enough money to be firmly a part of it.

On the middle levels, the money system often seems an endless treadmill. One never gets enough; 8,000$ this year seems to place one in no better straits than did 6,000$ the last. There are suspicions among people on such levels, that were they to make 15,000$, they would still be on the treadmill, trapped in the money system.

But above a certain point in the scale of wealth, there is a qualitative break: the rich come to know that they have so much that they simply do not have to think about money at all: it is only they that have truly won the money game; they are above the struggle. It is not too much to say that in a pecuniary society, only then are men in a position to be free. Acquisition as a form of experience and all that it demands no longer need to be a chain. They can be above the money system, above the scramble on the treadmill: for them it is no longer true that the more they have, the harder it seems to make ends meet. Taht is the way we define the rich as personal consumers.

For the very poor, the ends of necessity never meet, For the middle classes there are always new ends, if not of necessity, of status. For the very rich, the ends have never been separated, and within the limits of the common human species, they are today as free as any Americans.

...To be truly rich is to possess the means of realizing in big ways one's little whims and fantasies and sicknesses. "Wealth has great priviliges", Balzac once remarked, "and the most enviable of them all is the power of carrying out thoughts and feelings to the uttermost; of quickening sensibility by fulfilling it's myraid caprices". The rich, like other men, are perhaps more simply human than otherwise. But their toys are bigger; they have more of them; they have more of them all at once.

...We simply must believe that the American rich are happy, else our confidence in the whole endeavor might be shaken.

For all the possible values of human society, one and one only is truly sovereign, truly universal, truly sound, truly and completely acceptable goal of man in America. That goal is money, and let there be no sour grapes about it from the losers."
(Oxford University press, 2000, pp.163-164)

This was written in 1956. Any of it sound familiar to you?

Posted by: dkmy | Nov 3, 2007 11:06:16 AM

Dkmy:
I’m glad that you enjoyed Sali-i-Martin’s webpage. He is quite the character (and a highly respected scholar).
As you point out, all measures of extreme poverty have generally been declining over time (even if different measures do not agree on the level). Your bias is made evident in your statement that the poverty that does exist is a result of “the vast spoils of our global capitalist society.”
If you click on the executable file on Sali-i-Martin’s webpage that shows the evolution of the distribution of income across time for several countries, you’ll see that (with the exception of sub-Saharan Africa), the rich are getting richer – and that the poor are getting richer too. This is in stark contrast to pre-capitalist societies, which were characterized predominantly by most of the population living at subsistence levels (and a much more even distribution of income; i.e., almost everyone was equally poor). Things are not perfect, of course. But people are generally benefiting from the expansion in global trade. This is corroborated by non-income measures of living standards, such as falling child-mortality rates, increased longevity rates, increased education rates, etc. I don’t know about you, but I call this progress (not perfection). It is important, I think, that current discussions are placed in this broader context.
Now let me address your specific points (relating to Blim’s original post).
“The point is that a fraction of society have more than can ever be used to any purpose by them or their offspring in generations of conspicuous consumption, while 47 million people cannot afford decent medical care (but you are Canadian, so you're covered. Good for you).”
I do not believe that this was Blim’s point (you, Blim and myself can all agree that these 47 million people should be covered). Blim’s point, as I understand it, was that these 47 million are not covered owing to a conspiracy of some vaguely defined group of “rich” people. I do not buy into his conspiracy theory.
“The point is that a fraction of society wields overwhelming political, military and financial might while four fifths (!) of the population don't.”
At the risk of being called a Mandarin again, I should like to point out that this statement applies generally to almost every society in history that I am aware of. It was certainly true in pre-capitalist societies. It is still true (but less so) in many democratic-based capitalist societies. It most certainly is true in most modern-day non-capitalist societies (like Cuba and the former Soviet Union). I’m not sure why the U.S. should be singled out in this regard.
“The point is that this fraction of society has succeeded in making people like you believe that this is actually a good thing.”
I like to think of myself as an independent thinker (although, like anyone, my thoughts have obviously been influenced by past thinkers). I am currently of the view that less attention should be placed on the fact that wealth and power are highly concentrated, and more attention should be placed on how various institutions are capable of dealing with this immutable fact for the benefit of broader society.
“The point being made by the author was that the public has the ability to undermine the rich classes stronghold on society, if only it would fully realize the damage done.”
And my point would be that this is an extremely naïve view. You can kill the rich if you want, but the facts show that they will only be replaced by a new power group (as in revolutionary Russia, China, Cuba, etc.). You may advocate more modest reforms, along the lines of Canada and Sweden, but you should recognize the new problems that arise in such systems (For example, while I have free access to medical care in Canada, the queues are so long that I must wait months and possibly longer before being serviced). Be careful what you wish for.
To step back a bit and put Blim in broader perspective, one can obviously see the influence of Marx and Veblen in his writings. Both Marx and Veblen were two of history’s most original and provocative thinkers. But keep in mind that both of these great scholars were writing at times of great social upheavals (Industrial Revolution and the age of the Robber Baron). I would venture to guess that both of them, if they were alive today, would be absolutely astounded at the progress that has been made in terms of living standards enjoyed by the general population. Being the good social scientists that I believe they were, they would likely have accepted these facts and marveled at them. And being good social scientists, they would have modified their theories accordingly and, of course, continued to offer new criticisms of the existing social order.
Blim, and many others on this forum, appear to be stuck in the past. They blind themselves of what has achieved and prefer to propagate the idea that all of our troubles can be attributed to some vaguely-defined group of “rich people” (even those that donate billions to charity). This victim mentality is, in my view, highly counterproductive. The opportunities available to us have never been greater; people should appreciate this fact. I can use, as an example, my own parents—two uneducated peasants from war-torn Italy. They had none of the many advantages we have today; and yet, they worked and saved, and raised a happy family. I never knew, as a child, that I was poor. I had no idea that I was being exploited by the rich. I just studied and worked hard. I am still not rich, but I am happy and appreciative of when and where I was born (relative to where I might have been born in time and space). The injustices I see in the world do raise my ire. But I try not to lose perspective on matters. Blim’s original post was entirely lacking in this perspective.

Posted by: David | Nov 3, 2007 1:33:51 PM

David,

I think it might be interesting for you to watch this clip - it's an excerpt from Lewis Lapham's documentary "The American Ruling Class".

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9207603350349957635&q=The+American+Ruling+Class&total=51&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0

The poor people even sing!

Posted by: dkmy | Nov 15, 2007 5:52:51 PM

Oddly enough, it turns out that the rich are getting poorer, and the poor are getting richer. And fairly dramatically in both instances, though more so for the poor. The vociferous upper middle class (who is making all the noise about income disparity), is the only group being threatened, as those above and below them target their lunches.

Link re: Treasury Report

Posted by: Carlos | Nov 15, 2007 7:08:00 PM

Someone needs to edit dkmy's link

< a href=...

Posted by: Carlos | Nov 15, 2007 7:11:39 PM

Ok, please rectify the situation. The ruling class uses force to rule so the only thing they understand in return is force. They have achieved a level of power hitherto unreached in human history, though at the same time presided over a general improvement in human existence. Still, the poor die simply because they are poor. Economics still determines life, even when it shouldn't. Force is the only solution. I recommend we riot. Please let this be a declaration of a hundred years war against the rich. We will eradicate them, because that is the only solution. Anything else is bourgeois moralism, and another bankrupt liberal solution that strengthens their position more than even the most apologetic conservative. Utopia will be reached by drawing blood. Are you ready?

Posted by: marx | Nov 21, 2007 12:16:44 AM

And when do you tax progressively, the first year someone earns more than you think they should? Your arguments as always penalize hardwork rather than reward it. Wouldn't it be better to hold individuals responsible for individual crimes rather than penalize everyone for the crimes of a few? We need to do better than remain stuck in 19th century marxist paradigms.

Posted by: bookworm | May 7, 2008 10:44:50 AM

Please don't be lazy people....read through till you understand what this is about.
http://www.thevenusproject.com/

Posted by: Richard L Loubet | Apr 12, 2009 12:36:05 PM

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