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Obama's Chicago Boys

by Dan Clore <clore@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 14, 2008 at 09:37 AM

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

[As usual Naomi Klein fails to distinguish between a truly free market 
and state-cor****ate capitalism, so one should bear in mind that whenever 
she mentions a free market, she refers to the latter. See Kevin Carson's 
review of The Shock Doctrine: http://tinyurl.com/2yuun7
.--DC]

http://tinyurl.com/6hggwt
Saturday, June 14, 2008 by The Nation
Obama’s Chicago Boys
by Naomi Klein

Barack Obama waited just three days after Hillary Clinton pulled out of 
the race to declare, on CNBC, “Look. I am a pro-growth, free-market guy. 
I love the market.”

Demonstrating that this is no mere spring fling, he has appointed 
37-year-old Jason Furman to head his economic policy team. Furman is one 
of Wal-Mart’s most prominent defenders, anointing the company a 
“progressive success story.” On the campaign trail, Obama blasted 
Clinton for sitting on the Wal-Mart board and pledged, “I won’t shop 
there.” For Furman, however, it’s Wal-Mart’s critics who are the real 
threat: the “efforts to get Wal-Mart to raise its wages and benefits” 
are creating “collateral damage” that is “way too enormous and damaging 
to working people and the economy more broadly for me to sit by idly and 
sing ‘Kum-Ba-Ya’ in the interests of progressive harmony.” Obama’s love 
of markets and his desire for “change” are not inherently incompatible. 
“The market has gotten out of balance,” he says, and it most certainly 
has. Many trace this profound imbalance back to the ideas of Milton 
Friedman, who launched a counterrevolution against the New Deal from his 
perch at the University of Chicago economics department. And here there 
are more problems, because Obama–who taught law at the University of 
Chicago for a decade–is thoroughly embedded in the mind-set known as the 
Chicago School.

He chose as his chief economic adviser Austan Goolsbee, a University of 
Chicago economist on the left side of a spectrum that stops at the 
center-right. Goolsbee, unlike his more Friedmanite colleagues, sees 
inequality as a problem. His primary solution, however, is more 
education–a line you can also get from Alan Greenspan. In their 
hometown, Goolsbee has been eager to link Obama to the Chicago School. 
“If you look at his platform, at his advisers, at his temperament, the 
guy’s got a healthy respect for markets,” he told Chicago magazine. 
“It’s in the ethos of the [University of Chicago], which is something 
different from saying he is laissez-faire.”

Another of Obama’s Chicago fans is 39-year-old billionaire Kenneth 
Griffin, CEO of the hedge fund Citadel Investment Group. Griffin, who 
gave the maximum allowable donation to Obama, is something of a poster 
boy for an unbalanced economy. He got married at Versailles and had the 
after-party at Marie Antoinette’s vacation spot (Cirque du Soleil 
performed)–and he is one of the staunchest opponents of closing the 
hedge-fund tax loophole. While Obama talks about toughening trade rules 
with China, Griffin has been bending the few barriers that do exist. 
Despite sanctions prohibiting the sale of police equipment to China, 
Citadel has been pouring money into controversial China-based security 
companies that are putting the local population under unprecedented 
levels of surveillance.

Now is the time to worry about Obama’s Chicago Boys and their commitment 
to fending off serious attempts at regulation. It was in the two and a 
half months between winning the 1992 election and being sworn into 
office that Bill Clinton did a U-turn on the economy. He had campaigned 
promising to revise NAFTA, adding labor and environmental provisions and 
to invest in social programs. But two weeks before his inauguration, he 
met with then-Goldman Sachs chief Robert Rubin, who convinced him of the 
urgency of embracing austerity and more liberalization. Rubin told PBS, 
“President Clinton actually made the decision before he stepped into the 
Oval Office, during the transition, on what was a dramatic change in 
economic policy.”

Furman, a leading disciple of Rubin, was chosen to head the Brookings 
Institution’s Hamilton Project, the think tank Rubin helped found to 
argue for reforming, rather than abandoning, the free-trade agenda. Add 
to that Goolsbee’s February meeting with Canadian consulate officials, 
who left with the distinct impression that they had been instructed not 
to take Obama’s anti-NAFTA campaigning seriously, and there is every 
reason for concern about a replay of 1993.

The irony is that there is absolutely no reason for this backsliding. 
The movement launched by Friedman, introduced by Ronald Reagan and 
entrenched under Clinton, faces a profound legitimacy crisis around the 
world. Nowhere is this more evident than at the University of Chicago 
itself. In mid-May, when university president Robert Zimmer announced 
the creation of a $200 million Milton Friedman Institute, an economic 
research center devoted to continuing and augmenting the Friedman 
legacy, a controversy erupted. More than 100 faculty members signed a 
letter of protest. “The effects of the neoliberal global order that has 
been put in place in recent decades, strongly buttressed by the Chicago 
School of Economics, have by no means been unequivocally positive,” the 
letter states. “Many would argue that they have been negative for much 
of the world’s population.”

When Friedman died in 2006, such bold critiques of his legacy were 
largely absent. The adoring memorials spoke only of grand achievement, 
with one of the more prominent appreciations appearing in the New York 
Times–written by Austan Goolsbee. Yet now, just two years later, 
Friedman’s name is seen as a liability even at his own alma mater. So 
why has Obama chosen this moment, when all illusions of a consensus have 
dropped away, to go Chicago retro?

The news is not all bad. Furman claims he will be drawing on the 
expertise of two Keynesian economists: Jared Bernstein of the Economic 
Policy Institute and James Galbraith, son of Friedman’s nemesis John 
Kenneth Galbraith. Our “current economic crisis,” Obama recently said, 
did not come from nowhere. It is “the logical conclusion of a tired and 
misguided philosophy that has dominated Wa****ngton for far too long.”

True enough. But before Obama can purge Wa****ngton of the scourge of 
Friedmanism, he has some ideological housecleaning of his own to do.

Naomi Klein is the author of many books, including her most recent, The 
Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.Visit Naomi’s website at 
http://www.naomiklein.org
, or to learn more about her new book, visit 
http://www.shockdoctrine.com
.

-- 
Dan Clore

My collected fiction: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://tinyurl.com/2gcoqt
Lord Weÿrdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

Skipper: Professor, will you tell these people who is
in charge on this island?
Professor: Why, no one.
Skipper: No one?
Thurston Howell III: No one? Good heavens, this is anarchy!
-- _Gilligan's Island_, episode #6, "President Gilligan"
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Obama's Chicago Boys
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2008-06-14 09:37:25 

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