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Robert Reich writes: "I've been watching (and occasionally trying to deal with) the Chamber for years, and all I know is it has a deep, abiding belief in cutting taxes on the wealthy, eroding regulations that constrain Wall Street, cutting back on rules that promote worker health and safety, getting rid of the minimum wage, repealing the new healthcare law, fighting unions, cutting back Medicare and Social Security, reducing or eliminating corporate taxes, and, in general, taking the nation back to the days before the New Deal. So what, exactly, is the deal Obama is pitching to the Chamber?"

Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)



Obama's Bad Deal With the Chamber of Commerce

By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog

09 February 11

 

"e can, and we must, work together," the President told the US Chamber of Commerce today. "Whatever differences we may have, I know that all of us share a deep, abiding belief in this country, a belief in our people, a belief in the principles that have made America's economy the envy of the world."

Really? I've been watching (and occasionally trying to deal with) the Chamber for years, and all I know is it has a deep, abiding belief in cutting taxes on the wealthy, eroding regulations that constrain Wall Street, cutting back on rules that promote worker health and safety, getting rid of the minimum wage, repealing the new healthcare law, fighting unions, cutting back Medicare and Social Security, reducing or eliminating corporate taxes, and, in general, taking the nation back to the days before the New Deal.

So what, exactly, is the deal Obama is pitching to the Chamber?

He said his administration will "help lay the foundation for you to grow and innovate," by eliminating "barriers that make it harder for you to compete - from the tax code to the regulatory system," and by completing more trade deals.

In return, the President said he wants businesses to hire more Americans. "Many of your own economists and salespeople are now forecasting a healthy increase in demand. So I want to encourage you to get in the game," he said. "And as you hire, you know that more Americans working means more sales, greater demand and higher profits for your companies. We can create a virtuous cycle."

Virtuous cycle? American businesses are doing quite nicely as it is. Their profits are soaring. And one reason they're doing so well is they're holding down costs, especially payrolls. So why would they ever agree to add more workers now?

From the standpoint of the nation as a whole more Americans working may mean even higher profits overall. But publicly-traded companies aren't in the business of spending money to help other companies. To the contrary, they're competing with one another to show high quarterly earnings in order to boost their share prices. They'll "get in the game" and begin to hire large numbers of Americans only when it helps their own bottom lines.

And when will that be? Not long ago I debated a conservative economist who argued American workers had priced themselves out of the global labor market and would therefore have to settle for lower real wages and benefits before they'd be hired back in large numbers. By his logic, many health and safety regulations would also have to be compromised or abandoned, since they also make American workers more expensive.

If this is the tacit bargain the President is offering business, it's not a good deal for American workers.

There's no secret to creating lots of jobs by reducing the median wage, slashing benefits, compromising health and safety at the workplace, and, effectively, reducing the standard of living of millions of Americans. We've been doing it for years.

And it doesn't lead to a "virtuous cycle." It leads to the kind of economy we've had for years - including, right now, the most anemic recovery from a deep trough since the mid-1930s. Indeed, when the debt bubble popped in 2008, we discovered how many Americans no longer had the ability to buy enough to keep the economy going. In this and other ways, 2008 bore an uncomfortable resemblance to 1929.

The alternative is to create lots of jobs with high disposable incomes.

In the short term, this means expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit wage subsidy right up through the middle class, and cutting income and payroll taxes for everyone earning less than $80,000 a year - making up the lost revenues by raising the ceiling on Social Security payroll taxes and hiking marginal taxes on the rich.

In the longer term, this means investing in a world-class education for all the nation's kids, including college or high-quality technical education beyond high school. Here again, we'd have to rely on the top 1 percent (who now take home more than 20 percent of all income) to foot the bill.

Might the CEOs and top executives who comprise the US Chamber of Commerce go along with this? After all, they profess to be patriotic. As the President said, they "share a deep, abiding belief in this country, a belief in our people, a belief in the principles that have made America's economy the envy of the world."

I don't mean to sound cynical but I doubt it.


Robert Reich is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written twelve books, including "The Work of Nations," "Locked in the Cabinet," "Supercapitalism" and his latest book, "AFTERSHOCK: The Next Economy and America's Future." His 'Marketplace' commentaries can be found on publicradio.com and iTunes.

 

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+17 # BradFromSalem 2011-02-09 10:18
BINGO
 
 
-8 # LeeBlack 2011-02-09 11:36
Obama is smart, I'm sure he understands this also. Are the Capitalists so powerful that they can force the President to 'work with' them? Or is Obama going to be able to reveal their hypocrisy? I'm not ready to believe he has sold out.
 
 
+9 # Maine Independent 2011-02-09 13:50
Apparently you haven't been following how he let the banksters off the hook, and back to huge bonuses.
 
 
+3 # Jayne Milner 2011-02-09 16:07
Obama sold out a long time ago.
 
 
+7 # Leigh 2011-02-09 16:37
I think the Capitalists have already forced Obama to abandon his principles on reigning in corporate excesses. My conspiracy theory is that the Chamber had a hand in toppling John Edwards in 2008, and then strong-armed the President into backing down on banking re-regulation, cap and trade, FDA, EPA, OSHA enforcement, etc.

Robert Reich, has anyone examined exactly WHY President Obama did (or seems to have done) a 180-degree About-Face in mid-2009? Was (is) it merely good political strategy? i.e., the country has shifted so far to the right that he has no choice but to govern from the “center-right?” Was he persuaded that being tough on Wall St. and big business would have disastrous economic consequences? Or was he threatened?
 
 
+14 # Leigh 2011-02-09 16:39
I believe Tom Donohue meant every word he said to the LA Times in 2008 when he vowed to punish anyone with “anti-corporate ” leanings:

"I'm concerned about anti-corporate and populist rhetoric from candidates for the presidency, members of Congress and the media," he [Donohue] said. "It suggests to us that we have to demonstrate who it is in this society that creates jobs, wealth and benefits -- and who it is that eats them."

These are the words of a dictator who has the power to crush any and all opposition. It’s my suspicion that he (like Wall St.) sees himself as having power far beyond that of the President – and I’m inclined to agree with him.
 
 
+14 # Todd Williams 2011-02-09 11:47
Right on, Robert! My one question is: why would US coporations who sell products and services overseas care about a diminishing domestic market when China and India are clearly growing and offer more potential business?
 
 
+22 # Progresso 2011-02-09 12:23
Thank you Mr. Reich. I would add that the Chamber folks are interested only in low-paying American jobs or they will outsource jobs overseas to the lowest bidder. Sad to see the President begging the Chamber to behave responsibly and hire Americans with all that idle cash. I think Obama should have said we can minimize the "vicious" cycle of high unemployment, declining middle class and lower government services if the Chamber's members were not so greedy, paid their fair taxes, hired Americans, supported universal health care, supported quality education, and quit trying to eliminate unions. Also, support ending these trillion-dollar wars that are bankrupting the country.
 
 
+13 # fhunter 2011-02-09 12:28
This Chamber of Commerce speach might have been useful in February 2009, but make no sense now. In February 2009, President Obama had the best chance to make the US the best country in history. Tragically, he missed it due to incompetence irreversibly.
 
 
+8 # Realist 2011-02-09 12:33
To Lee Black- no, Obama has not sold out. He bought into it from the beginning, and only deluded us into thinking he was a Democrat.
 
 
+11 # sebouhian 2011-02-09 13:30
If you can't get through to the Pres., how can we who share your view? What can we/you do about a "leader" who seeks advice from the opposition--who se wants you so clearly describe as antithetical to our Rooseveltian vision of equality and opportunity? I feel a similar frustration with Mr. Krugman's columns. Lots of good "stuff" in print, but where's the beef? Who is listening to us in this so-called democracy? Are we really in an Egypt-land after all? Are we supposed to--out of civility--just stand by watching the best of what's left of this country be dismantled and turned over--graciousl y--to the top 1%? Will someone please respond?!
 
 
+7 # robhood 2011-02-09 13:31
Obama talks one thing, then walks a different way.
 
 
+4 # DPM 2011-02-09 19:33
Sebouhian-Start boycotting. Call companies that sponsor lies in the media and tell them you are boycotting. Enlist anyone that will listen. (see Build a Progressive Tea Party-Feb. 4th-RSN). Take action! Don't wait for someone to take your hand. Just do it! Forget your political representatives , someone already has their hand and it isn't you. Hit them where it hurts...in the wallet! That's "where's the beef?"
 
 
+3 # rf 2011-02-10 04:08
Either Obama is lying or a Republican. There is no incentive for any business to use American workers as long as they can bring their foreign produced goods into the country and store (and invest) their profits in Singapore and other off shore bankster havens. Obama is disingenuous and the chamber are schmucks...he is an idiot to think he can do anything to make them happy short of debtor/slave labor prisons. The 'Free Market' will only work when the american worker makes the same amount as a Chinese or Vietnamese worker...it is a myth to make the rich richer. We need to do what Egypt is doing...but I have to go to work now.
 
 
+4 # BishopAndrew 2011-02-10 07:56
I long ago realized that Obama has sold the liberal progressives down the corporate river. For him to go to the chamber of horrors as if these were people of decency is a cruel joke and dishonours American workers. So called "free market" economics means you are free to do anything to anyone with absolutely no responsibilty or accountability except to the bottom line!If I may borrow from my faith tradition, the Apostle Paul said that the Love of Money is the root of all evil and if you doubt that just consider that for the love of money people die daily in this country and around the world becuase they are considered of less value than money!
 
 
+3 # Larry Rose 2011-02-10 16:54
Since the 2010 midterm elections Obama has just make more evident his commitment to the big multinational corporations. In how many ways and times does he have to demonstrate this before the voting citizens understand this corporate tool does not represent their interests. He is clearly a complete promoter of the energy, financial, big agricultural, military, police state big corporate interests.
 
 
+3 # Tom Cordle 2011-02-11 14:51
Removing barriers? Isn't that what got us in this mess in the first place? Haven't we had enough of Voodoo Economics and Free-Marketeeri ng? Haven't we had enough of bank executives feeding at the public trough while paying themselves obscene bonuses?

Deregulation and merger mania left consumers deep in debt and out in the cold -- financially raped and pillaged. So what barriers are Obama and the Chamber talking about? The only barrier jungle-ethicist s haven't obliterated is cannibalism -- all that remains is the Soylent Green barrier.
 

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