"[T]he monopoly
which our manufacturers
have obtained against us … like an overgrown standing army, has become
formidable to the government, and upon many occasions intimidate the
legislature." —Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776
There's
lots of speculation about what may be causing today's terrible inflation to
continue to rise. Is it rebound demand from Covid? Too much "quantitative
easing" stimulus from the Fed? Chinese botched-Covid supply chain
issues? Saudi Arabia withholding oil from world markets? Russia's terrorist campaign
against Ukraine?
Obviously, all are contributing factors. But the
price of oil is now below $95 and our economy is on
the verge of recession, both major factors that should be cutting inflation.
Yet inflation continues, nonetheless, to rise here in the US (9.1% this month)
while, Bloomberg reported yesterday, the EU is down to
7.1% inflation and predicting 4% for next year.
How
is it possible that the rest of the world is recovering from the Covid/Oil/War
inflation bump, but things are getting worse here in the USA? The one variable
nobody seems to be positing—but I'm going to go there—is that it's political,
at least in part.
That is, inflation that started out as a
demand/supply-chain rebound from the end of Covid is continuing to rise in
America as part of an intentional effort to damage Democratic prospects in this
Fall's election and heading into 2024.
Lest
you think I've gone totally paranoid, please read on. Inflation always hurts
the party in power. Both Jerry Ford and Jimmy Carter were one-term presidents
largely because of inflation, and the 20% inflation after World War II nearly got Harry Truman thrown
out of the White House.
When the economy sucks, enough voters swing to
"the other guy" to change the nation's political power dynamics,
pretty much regardless of who the other guy is. As the headline in today's New
York Times reads: "Democrats Face Deepening
Peril as Republicans Seize on Inflation Fears." Not only does every
politician in America know how this political danger works, but so also does
the leader of every major corporation. And there's the rub.
So how did we get here? Prices in America used to be
regulated by something called competition. If one company raises prices above a
reasonable level, another company will offer products at a lower price and take
away their customers. As long as there are multiple companies in every market
sector, and new businesses can easily enter the marketplace to compete with
larger companies that have gotten lazy or greedy, competition regulates prices
very efficiently.
What blows this up is when companies get large
enough that they can use their size and market dominance to keep competitors
out of the marketplace. John D Rockefeller, for example, used to buy up all the
available railroad contracts for shipping oil to prevent smaller competitors
from getting their product to market. Once they were in trouble financially,
he'd give them "an offer they couldn't refuse" and buy them out,
making his large company even larger.
Andrew Carnegie did this with steel and JP Morgan
did it with banking; there were trusts and monopolies in fields as disparate as
manufacturing matches, refining and selling sugar, and building railroad cars. By
the late 19th century the situation had become so intolerable that Congress put
into place the first anti-trust laws.
Before the Reagan Revolution, those anti-trust and
anti-monopoly laws—dating all the way back to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of
1890—were largely enforced and kept big corporations in check. The Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) was created in 1915 by Democratic President Woodrow
Wilson, specifically to break up concentrated business
trusts and monopolies, using the Justice Department as its prosecutorial arm.
It came into being against a backdrop of public outrage over giant corporations
screwing consumers and owning captive politicians.
As President Teddy Roosevelt, the great trust
buster, said a decade earlier, "There can be no effective control of
corporations while their political activity remains." Indeed, it took a
decade to create the agency that Roosevelt had proposed, as I detail in The Hidden History of Monopolies: How Big Business
Destroyed the American Dream.
Probably
the FTC's most well-known effort was breaking up the telephone behemoth
AT&T, an action started during the Nixon administration that, when
completed in 1982, produced an explosion of competitive activity that dropped
phone call costs, increased availability, and spurred the creation of hundreds
of new companies in the telecom arena.
Even
the Supreme Court, back in the day, agreed that giant corporations dominating
markets was bad for the economy and our political system. In the 1962 antitrust
case of Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, for
example, the Supreme Court agreed with the FTC and blocked the merger of Brown
and G. R. Kinney, two shoe manufacturers, because the combination of the two
would have captured about 5% of the US shoe market. For comparison, Nike today has 19% of the US shoe
market.
All of that anti-trust activity came to an end in
1982 when President Reagan appointed William C. Miller III,
his former executive director of the Presidential Task Force on Regulatory
Relief, to take over the FTC. Miller was the first pro-corporate leader in the
nation's history to corrupt the agency that was supposed to regulate corporate
misbehavior.
That
year (as it had been since the 1930s) most of this nation's business activity
was centered in the cash registers of our small- and medium-sized companies.
The total value of America's largest corporations—those listed on stock exchanges—was equal to just 39.4% of the entire
nation's economic activity or GDP in 1981.
Miller,
however, declined to continue enforcing our anti-trust laws and in 1983 Reagan
instructed the DOJ to, essentially, stop prosecuting companies that
were violating those laws through mergers and acquisitions, and to only go
after the most egregious and flagrant acts of corporate collusion and
price-fixing.
As
a result, large companies became behemoths, and pretty much every industry in
America is today dominated by a small handful of companies that carefully
monitor each other to function, essentially, as cartels. When United raises
ticket prices by $50, for example, American does the same three hours later.
Which
is why today the total value of America's exchange-listed corporations is
194.9% of GDP, elbowing out most small- and medium-sized companies. As Jonathan
Tepper pointed out in The Myth of Capitalism, fully 90% of
the beer that Americans drink is controlled by two companies. Air travel is
mostly controlled by four companies, and over half of the nation's banking is
done by five banks.
In multiple states there are only one or two health
insurance companies, high-speed internet is in a near-monopoly state virtually
everywhere in America (75% of us can "choose" only one company), and
three companies control around three-quarters of the entire pesticide and seed
markets.
The
vast majority of radio and TV stations in the country are owned by a small
handful of companies, and the internet is dominated by Google and Facebook. This
has handed enormous power to the CEOs and senior managers of America's largest
companies, all of them multi-multi-millionaires and many billionaires.
These are not people who want to pay more in taxes.
Nor do they want unions or to have their industries regulated in any meaningful
way; they'd like things to stay the way they've been since the Reagan
Revolution. But President Joe Biden has been working with Senator Bernie
Sanders (Chair of the powerful Budget Committee) to create a whole plethora of
progressive legislation that would raise corporate and billionaire taxes and
increase corporate regulation. Not to mention Democrats' advocacy of those
hated unions.
And this fall, if all goes well, Democrats might
even expand their control of the House and Senate in the wake of mass shootings
and the Supreme Court's Dobbs abortion ruling, meaning even more aggressive
promotion of unions, regulation, and tax increases could be on the horizon.
Compounding
corporate fury, this morning Reuters carried this headline: "DOJ expected to file antitrust lawsuit against Google
in weeks." Is there any doubt in your mind that most of
these titans of industry don't want monopoly breakups, unions, regulation, and
higher taxes? Every president since Reagan, Democratic and Republican, has gone
along with this neoliberal deregulation, anti-union, and low-tax scheme. Big
business doesn't want the Reaganomics gravy train to stop and, so far, they've
been able to buy enough politicians to keep it that way. Until this unholy
alliance of Biden and Sanders.
So, is it really possible that our largest
corporations and their leaders are ripping us all off and jacking up inflation
on an ongoing basis just to stick it to the Democrats and hand the GOP the
reins of power in 2022 and 2024? If political power was the only thing they got
out of it, the answer is "possibly." But when you realize that they
also get massively larger profits at the same time, and billions of that will
flow down to CEO compensation, that twofer raises it to "probably."
Big business trying to overthrow progressive
Democratic leadership of this country is not a new thing. In the summer of
1933, a group of America's most powerful industrialists pulled together $300
million ($6.8 billion in today's dollars) to hire retired Marine General
Smedley Butler to lead an army of 500,000 rightwing WWI veterans to capture or
kill President Franklin Roosevelt and turn the White House over to a "good
Republican."
As Gillian Brockwell wrote last year for The
Washington Post of the "Businessman's Plot": "Its members
included J.P. Morgan Jr., Irénée du Pont and the CEOs of General Motors, Birds
Eye and General Foods, among others. Together they held near $40 billion in
assets, Denton said—about $778 billion today. "Had Butler been a different
sort of person and gone along with the plot, Denton thinks it would have been
successful. Instead, in the fall of 1934, he went to J. Edgar Hoover, head of
what would become the FBI."
The republic was saved and businessmen went back to
just doing business until the 1980s, when they found their savior in Ronald Reagan.
Which brings us to today. Simply raising prices (and profits) is a hell of a
lot less dangerous way to turn Democrats out of office than paying a retired
general to kidnap a president. And the risks are negligible, particularly when
their wholly-owned Republicans in the Senate will block any efforts to break up
their companies or impose windfall profits taxes.
And those giant corporations are raking in the
profits. As Barrons reported last month in an article
titled Exxon May Be Making 'More Than God': "Exxon Mobil (Ticker: XOM) is
expected to generate about $41 billion of net income in 2022, up from $23
billion last year."
Similarly, Tom Perkins reports for The Guardian: "The analysis of
Securities and Exchange Commission filings for 100 US corporations found net
profits up by a median of 49%, and in one case by as much as 111,000%. Those
increases came as companies saddled customers with higher prices and all but
ten executed massive stock buyback programs or bumped dividends to enrich
investors. …
"The Guardian's findings are in line with
recent US commerce department data that shows corporate profits rose 35% during
the last year and are at their highest level since
1950." The Guardian's analysis found: "Chevron's 240% profit spike
was part of 'the best two quarters the company has ever seen'… Steel Dynamics
profits increased 809% … Fertilizer giant Nutrien's profits shot up by about
$1.2bn … [and] Nike's 53% profit increase driven by higher prices was only
'partially offset' by supply chain and inflationary cost increases."
The article concludes that much of the explosion in
corporate profits is made possible by market consolidation: giant companies no
longer subject to the pressures of inflation. I'd add that there's a big
reward down the road for all those CEOs if they can help America dump the pesky
Democrats who want to tax those windfall profits and replace them with
Republicans who are again demanding more tax cuts for the morbidly rich.
Last Tuesday, Nobel Prize-winning economist and NY
Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote a particularly fascinating op-ed wondering
out loud why the economic data for the United States doesn't make sense any
more. If the economy is in trouble, so should be American companies; if the
economy is doing well, so should the American consumers.
But
the companies are doing great while consumers are getting screwed. "Let's
talk about the numbers, and how they don't add up," Krugman noted. He then laid out the numbers,
showing that while inflation is raging, wages are actually declining, among
other paradoxes. "Are you confused?" Krugman writes. "You should
be. I've been in this business a long time, and I can't remember any period
when economic numbers were telling such different stories."
Former Labor Secretary and economist Robert Reich writes at his brilliant Substack newsletter this
week, after noting the global issues also contributing to American inflation: "Big
corporations continue to jack up prices, using inflation as a cover. Big Oil is
the worst culprit. Gas prices are up about 60 percent from the year before.
They contributed almost half the rise in inflation in June, although pump
prices have dropped a bit since then. Big Oil is scoring record profits and
using them to reward investors by buying back shares of stock. Shell is
expecting profits to nearly triple, adding $1 billion to the bottom line. BP
reports its largest quarterly profit in a decade."
And nobody has ever, ever, ever accused the
management of any of the big oil companies of wanting more Democrats running
the show in Washington DC. In an earlier post, Reich notes how some of
America's largest companies are enthusiastically funding some of America's most
seditious politicians.
"To state the question in historical
terms," he summarizes,
"how different is their behavior from the wealthy European industrialists
who quietly backed the fascists in the 1920s and 1930s? These billionaire and
corporate funders are as complicit as are the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers in
threatening American democracy."
Indeed.
And if they can kick American consumers in the shins hard enough to get them to
"vote out the bums" currently running Washington DC—the
Democrats—while adding an epic pile of cash to their money bins, all the
better. Hard to believe? Immoral? Remember, these are companies that continue
to fund Republicans associated with Trump's attempt to end our democracy. And
if we still had competition in the American economic landscape, even imagining
a scenario like I've laid out would be impossible.
Time will tell if my analysis is accurate, a
paranoid fantasy, or (most likely) a bit of both. But it's certainly worth
Democrats in Congress calling a hearing to check it out.
This article was first published on The Hartmann Report.
Thom
Hartmann is a talk-show host and
the author of "The Hidden
History of Monopolies: How Big Business Destroyed the American Dream"
(2020); "The Hidden History of the Supreme Court and the Betrayal
of America" (2019); and more than 25 other books in
print.
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