09 June 2018

Neoliberalism and the Rise of Corporate Globalism


Excerpted below is a recent book review of Globalists: The End of Empire and the Birth of Neoliberalism, by Quinn Slobodian, Harvard University Press.

I have included a link to the entire article which I recommend reading if you wish to know more about how the rise of globalism, corporatism, and neoliberalism may go hand in hand within a reasoned construct.

I could have included much more and still not done justice to the themes and thoughts that it contains.

I found it particularly helpful because it provides a plausible rationale for the continuation of the European Union, despite its malformed integration of a currency union without internal financial integration of debts and transfer payments.  Not to mention its odd admixture of a remote central bureaucracy trumping traditional policy areas within the domain of national sovereignty.

It also helps to understand the stubborn commitment to global 'trade treaties' by corporate Democrats that tend to elevate international  bureaucracies and rules bodies,  dominated by corporate lobbyists, over the inclinations of their own national electorates. 

Obama's determined slogging for the TPP, even as his intended Democratic successor was being electorally eviscerated for her perceived corporatist elitism, was otherwise inexplicable given his sophistication in managing perceptions.

In this perspective these seemingly obtuse things can be seen as 'features' rather than well-intentioned but naively crafted arrangements containing unintentional flaws.

This review also positions neoliberalism within the context of the development of economic and political thought in the 20th century.  The two are inexorably entwined because, as is well established throughout human history, money is power.


The Boston Review
The Market Police
J. W. Mason

"Globalism in this story is not only, or even primarily, an extension of contacts between people, trade, production. Rather, it is the creation of a set of property rights that, precisely because they span multiple sovereignties, cannot be touched by one government without inviting conflict with another. In this sense it is positively desirable for property claims to cross national borders. Foreign investment, regardless of its value or otherwise for financing production, performs a political function that domestic investment cannot...

Organizing property and production across borders—whether through free trade, protections for foreign investment, currency unions or other devices—does more than limit the power of governments. It also serves, Slobodian writes, “to dissolve the small, discrete collective of mutual identification...in a larger unity.” Hayek spent much of his life searching for “a political model that would undermine the ‘solidarity of interests’ that naturally cohered” among similarly-situated people. Open borders played a critical role here, ensuring that economic interests were never “lastingly identified with the inhabitants of a particular region...

Today, the European Union offers the fullest realization of the neoliberal political vision. There is no sovereign people of Europe; the authority of European institutions rests on a body of law and treaties. The European Union is not a nation, but it is not simply an agreement among nations either. Unlike international agreements, European regulations are directly binding on individuals and not only on the government signing them. In many areas, European regulations and authorities don’t merely constrain, but actually replace, their national equivalents. (This is what makes Brexit so difficult.)

Europe’s incomplete integration—with its confusing mix of powers delegated to Brussels and powers retained by national governments—is often seen as a design flaw. But to Slobodian’s globalists, partial integration is precisely the goal—it means that neither the national nor the international body have the legitimacy and capacity to direct the economy. With no international entanglements, a government is sovereign; with complete integration, sovereignty moves to the higher level. What is wanted is a situation in which some powers but not others are delegated, leaving neither national nor super-national governments able to act outside of circumscribed role...

One might even call this the neoliberal paradox. State power is needed to enforce market relations and property rights, but when it rests on democratic politics, it can easily turn into a vehicle for a broader program of economic planning. So the site of power must be anonymized, hidden from politics—as in the opaque jurisdictional mazes of Europe...

From this point of view, the essential thing about the single European currency is not whatever dubious practical advantages come from having prices across the continent measured in the same units. Rather, it is the creation of the European Central Bank as an ostensibly technical decision-maker, more insulated from democratic politics than any national authority could be."

Read the entire book review at The Boston Review.

08 June 2018

Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - 'Poised to Default'


This from Dr. Harald Malmgren:

I am going to post the charts a bit early today. I will make any changes the next time that I post them on Monday.

Later-  I have added the additional charts including the gold and silver inventories.  Nice drawdown in Hong Kong.

It is going to be raining here on and off all weekend. The young man had a half day at work, and we are going to do finish up a little light concrete work that I had started earlier today.

Stocks were weak until after the European close. They then drifted higher to finish the day largely in the green.

Gold and silver were held in their current positions where they have been coiling for some days now.

Have a pleasant weekend.


07 June 2018

Harvard Awards Hillary the Radcliffe Medal For Her Transformative Role In the World


"The wealth of another region excites their greed; and if it is weak, their lust for power as well.  Nothing from the rising to the setting of the sun is enough for them. Among all others only they are compelled to attack the poor as well as the rich.   Robbery, rape, and slaughter they falsely call empire; and where they make a desert, they call it peace."

Tacitus, Agricola


"The disempowered want change; those in power want predictability and consistency. The more you can guarantee predictability and consistency to those in power, the more those in power will reward you."

Caitlin Johnstone


“Anyone who deprived her of something she wanted deserved what he got.”

Jim Thompson, The Grifters





And Michelle Obama apparently 'shames' women for not voting for Hillary.   Just cannot understand why the women failed, and let the Democratic leadership down, refusing to accept their qualified guidance.





Stocks and Precious Metals Charts - Wind And Whirlwind - Lord Have Mercy


Hell
"God has a way of standing before the nations with judgment, and it seems that I can hear God saying to America, 'You're too arrogant!   And if you don't change your ways, I will rise up and break the backbone of your power, and I'll place it in the hands of a nation that doesn't even know my name.   Be still and know that I'm God.'"

Martin Luther King, It's a Dark Day In Our Nation


“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who murder your prophets and stone those sent to save you. How often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing. Behold, your house is now yours, but is made desolate."

Matthew 23:37-39


"The more power a government has the more it can act arbitrarily according to the whims and desires of the elite, and the more it will make war on others and murder its foreign and domestic subjects... Power will achieve its murderous potential. It simply waits for an excuse, an event of some sort, an assassination, a massacre in a neighboring country, an attempted coup, a famine, or a natural disaster, to justify the beginning of murder en masse."

R. J. Rummel, Death by Government: A History of Mass Murder and Genocide Since 1900


“Power attracts the corruptible. Suspect any who seek it.”

Frank Herbert, Dune


"Fascism is capitalism plus murder."

Upton Sinclair

Such a worrier I seem today. for no one is being murdered yet, right?  Or at least anyone that matters.  Just the usual collateral damage of empire.

Stocks backed up a little today, led by the tech heavy NDX, which had been the lead on the latest bubble up without pause.

I don't know if this is The top, but it was sure looking toppy in short term grossly overbought conditions.

Even the markets need to exhale now and then.

Silver put a move on 17 today, but then settled back down to around 16.70. Gold was leashed all day.

The Dollar lost a little from yesterday.

Need little, want less, love more. For those that abide in love abide in God, and God in them.

Have a pleasant evening.