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Armenians Need to Lose Their Faith in the Free Market

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  • Armenians Need to Lose Their Faith in the Free Market

    Armenians Need to Lose Their Faith in the Free Market

    23:20, February 7, 2015
    By Markar Melkonian


    In a best-selling book, the late Nobel-laureate economist Milton
    Friedman wrote that, "...if inequality is measured by differences in
    levels of living between the privileged and other classes, such
    inequality may well be decidedly less in capitalist than in communist
    countries." (Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom, p. 169.)

    Friedman built his career on confident pronouncements like this.

    A quarter of a century ago, a generation of intellectuals in Yerevan
    seized on such statements, which became articles of a Free Market
    faith that seemed new and exciting at the time. They hoisted the
    banner of capitalism high above their heads and waved it around
    furiously. Since then, they have had many cold winters to reconsider
    the claim that capitalism would narrow the gap between rich and poor.

    Armenians, of course, have not been alone in their disillusionment.
    According to a recent report by the international relief organization
    Oxfam, "In 2014, the richest 1% of people in the world owned 48% of
    global wealth, leaving just 52% to be shared between the other 99% of
    the adults on the planet." Almost all of the remaining 52% of global
    wealth, the report claims, is owned by the richest 20%, leaving only
    5.5% of global wealth to the remaining 80% of the human population of
    Earth. (Deborah Hardoon, "Wealth: Having It All and Wanting More,"
    Oxfam G.B. for Oxfam International, January 2015, p. 2.) The eighty
    percent at the bottom, presumably, includes the population of the
    Republic of Armenia.

    Oxfam reports, furthermore, that the wealth of the poorest 50% of the
    human population of Earth is less in 2014 that it was in 2009, while
    the wealth of the richest eighty individuals doubled in nominal terms
    between 2009 and 2014.In fact, "The wealth of these eighty individuals
    is now the same as that owned by the bottom 50% of the global
    population, such that 3.5 billion people share between them the same
    amount of wealth as that of these extremely wealthy 80
    people."(Hardoon, pp. 2-3.)

    The Oxfam report is just the latest of a long series of reports and
    studies that point to a huge and growing gap between the super-rich
    and the rest, both in the former Soviet republics and across the
    globe.These reports come as no surprise to some of us, but they
    plainly contradict the claims of Friedman and the Free Market
    faithful, from Washington to Yerevan and beyond. The American
    journalist and former hedge-fund manager, Jim Cramer, summarized the
    lesson: "The only guy who really called this right," he said, "was
    Karl Marx." (Time magazine, "Ten Questions for Jim Cramer," May 14,
    2009.)

    There is much evidence that within the wealthiest and most powerful
    countries, too, the gap between the richest and the rest is growing.
    A quick way to fathom the dimensions of that gap is to examine the
    American Profile Poster, a graphic representation of a large amount of
    data collected from the U.S. Census Bureau. (Stephen J. Rose, Social
    Stratification in the United States: The American Profile Poster, The
    New Press, 2007.)

    The figure at the very top of the poster's main chart represents
    190,000 individuals with the highest reported incomes in the United
    States. The chart is evenly calibrated and the poster itself measures
    about one meter in height. If it were to represent the 20,000
    individuals with the highest income as a separate figure, the chart
    would have to extend twenty stories above the poster! That is the
    distance that separates the income of America's super rich from the
    rest of the country.

    (The latest edition of the poster was published in 2007, using data
    collected before the Great Recession. If anything, the recession has
    further skewed the trends registered in that edition. Every indication
    is that an updated chart will represent an even greater gap between
    the super-rich and the rest.)

    The Occupy activists of a few years back denounced "the 1%" of the
    wealthiest Americans. In fact, the super-rich in the United States
    make up less than one-one hundredth of one percent of the population
    of the country. Indeed, according to U.S. Census Bureau data, the 400
    richest Americans control more than 38% of the country's wealth, and
    10% of the population of the U.S.A. controls 70% of the wealth. No
    wonder, then, that even the current administration in Washington D.C.
    publicly expresses alarm at the growing gap.

    The United States of America enjoys huge advantages that Armenia will
    never enjoy. A vast country of 316 million people, with immense
    natural resources and thousands of miles of coastline, the United
    States dominates its own hemisphere--and most of the rest of the
    globe, too--economically, culturally, and militarily. And yet forty
    percent of the U.S. population has a net worth of zero; they have no
    assets. If it were not for social security, tens of millions of these
    Americans would be destitute.

    This is the country that the leaders of the counter-revolution in
    Yerevan twenty-five years ago looked to as a model.

    But perhaps the past quarter of a century of poverty and misery is
    just a passing phase. Perhaps, under more propitious circumstances
    and in the even-longer run, Free Enterprise might yet narrow the gap
    between the super rich and the rest, as Milton Friedman claimed it
    does. Perhaps, despite appearances to the contrary, Armenian is on
    the way to a natural equilibrium state in which the markets will work
    their magic happily ever after.

    This is a claim one hears these days, as it has become clear that
    capitalism has failed to make good on its promises. The economist
    John Maynard Keynes once noted that "in the long run" we are all dead.
    This observation becomes worse than ominous in the case of Armenia, in
    view of the long-term economic, strategic, and security consequences
    of its dramatically diminished population.

    But even setting that consideration aside, the facts of capitalism
    wipe out the "passing phase" article of faith, too. Thomas Piketty's
    much-discussed book, Capital in the Twenty-First Century, has shown
    that, over the course of the last two centuries, the rate of return on
    capital has exceeded the rate of economic growth.

    Piketty's book, a popular presentation of exhaustive research, shows
    that in the West no less than in Armenia, capitalism left to its own
    "free market" devices leads to greater and greater disparities of
    wealth. Without state intervention, the rich get richer and the poor
    get poorer, even as productivity soars. For all of his confidence,
    then, Friedman was clearly wrong: even in the long-run, capitalism
    left to its own devices leads to greater and greater inequalities.

    But this would hardly come as a shock to most residents of the
    Republic of Armenia today.

    If by now Armenia's Free Marketeers have not seen the error of their
    ways, they never will. Indeed, why should they? The leaders of
    Armenia's counter-revolutionary generation have by now safely
    squirrelled away their loot and either left the country or ensconced
    themselves in mansions, behind gates. Capitalism certainly has worked
    for them.

    But what about Armenia's wage-earners, the unemployed, the
    under-employed, those on fixed incomes, and the poor? These people,
    together with their dependents, make up the larger part of the
    population of the Republic of Armenia.

    People who care about Armenia had better hope for a generation of
    working-class Armenians who will break with the delusions of their
    parents and grandparents as thoroughly as the counter-revolutionary
    generation twenty-five years ago blotted the lives and hopes of their
    Soviet Armenian predecessors.

    We had better hope for a generation that will recognize that the guy
    who really got this right was Karl Marx.

    (Markar Melkonian is a nonfiction writer and a philosophy instructor.
    His books include Richard Rorty's Politics: Liberalism at the End of
    the American Century (Humanities Press, 1999), Marxism: A Post-Cold
    War Primer (Westview Press, 1996), and My Brother's Road (I.B. Tauris,
    2005, 2007), a memoir/biography about Monte Melkonian, co-written with
    Seta Melkonian)


    http://hetq.am/eng/news/58445/armenians-need-to-lose-their-faith-in-the-free-market.html

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