All
this grift, graft, predatory pricing, price-fixing and parasitic
monopolizing costs the public and the economy dearly.
In the
great scheme of civilization, governments arose to consolidate
resources, wealth and power, and protect these scarce and valuable
assets from outsiders. Outsiders included invading hordes, competing
states and self-serving entities within the realm guided by one goal:
to maximize private gain by any means available.
In the
past, these entities included petty fiefdoms, warlords and brigands.
In the present, corporations are the entities guided by one goal: to
maximize their private gain by any means available. This
pathological drive to profiteer, exploit and pillage goes by the
polite term "increasing shareholder value." (I'm sure the
warlords and brigands would be jealous of the modern-day PR machinery
wielded by corporations.)
The powerful central state is both a
threat to warlords / corporations and a potentially unmatchable ally.
Should the warlord / corporation worm their way into the good graces
of the state via bribes, gifts and other blandishments, then the
state can legalize and enforce whatever predatory mechanisms they've
established to fleece the public of their hard-earned wages.
In
the modern iteration of warlord predation, this harnessing of the
state to maximize private gains is called regulatory capture. In
the old days, petty fiefdoms and warlords bought state protection by
funneling a share of their profits to the monarch. (Brigands
converted themselves from outlaws to respected warlords by the same
path.)
In democracies, this sluicing of predatory gains to the
state takes the form of campaign contributions to
politicians and lavish legal lobbying via absurdly bloated
speaking fees, private junkets on billionaire's boats, seats on
philanthro-capitalist foundations, and so on.
The
opportunities for grift are not a bug to those at the top of the
democracy machinery, they're a feature: how else can an opportunistic
parasite gain wealth while "serving the public"?
In
the old days, warlords exacted tolls at bridges and on pathways.
Today, parasitic corporations stripmine the public with cartels,
quasi-monopolies, price-fixing and predatory pricing mandated by
the government. Look no further than Americans paying 7 to 10 times
more for insulin than the citizenry in other developed nations for an
example of how modern-day parasites maximize profits while delivering
no additional value for the predatory 7X cost.
Theoretically,
democracies are supposed to limit the pillage, predation and
parasitic exploitation of the public by warlords--oops I mean
corporations. But democracy is in effect a wide-open auction
of favors in which corporations bid for loopholes inserted in
700-page congressional bills, regulatory tweaks that favor their
interests at the expense of competitors and innovators that might
threaten their monopoly, etc.
The revolving door between
government agencies and the corporations they regulate / fund is so
well-greased that it's been normalized: ho-hum, another Pentagon
official went to work as a lobbyist for a defense contractor, another
bureaucrat retired and is now a lobbyist for Big Pharma.
All
this grift, graft, predatory pricing, price-fixing and parasitic
monopolizing costs the public and the economy dearly. Funding
that could have been invested productively to serve the common good
is sluiced into the private accounts of politicos, fixers, lobbyists,
billionaires and other "shareholders" (i.e. the top 0.1%)
where it piles up as dead capital, unavailable for any purpose
other than the further maximization of private gain by any means
available, which of course is led not by innovation but by regulatory
capture, as innovation is risky while regulatory capture is like
shooting fish in a barrel.
There is a systemic cost to the
predation of regulatory capture: stagnation, decay and collapse.
Bleed the productive populace dry and stifle competition to maximize
private / corporate gains, and you end up hollowing out your economy
and society, with easily predictable consequences: the parasites
expire with the host.
by Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com on October 6, 2023
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.