Solidarity and organized national purpose

By Glenn Stehle

What drove that growth? Solidarity and organized national purpose. Americans worked together as a team during the war, and that solidarity continued into the postwar decades, behind an engaged and economically pro-active government.

–DAN KERVICK, “Market Myths and the Real Drivers of American Progress”

There’s nothing like an existential threat, such as the prospect of complete annihilation of one’s own group, to motivate behavior and focus one’s mind.  Kervick’s quote reminded me of this:

Many Russians greeted the Nazi invaders as friends come to free them from Stalinist oppression.  Had the Germans fostered this initial good will, they might have won Russian support against the Communist regime, but in Nazi philosophy, with its fantasy of a master race, the Russians were Untermenschen – subhumans – fit only for slave labor.  Hitler had ordered a completely ruthless campaign – and he was not disobeyed.  Russian good will turned to hate.

–C.L. SULZBERGER,  World War II

One must also wonder what effect the master race doctrine had on the war effort inside Germany.  It provoked, for instance, what is probably history’s biggest brain drain, the emigration of primarily Jewish Europeans during the era of Nazi Germany.

And according to C. Wright Mills, National Socialism was no picnic for labor either:

In contrast with the profits and the self-manned organizations of business, labor’s wages are near-stabilized, and it has no organizations of its own.  From 1932-1938 wages and salaries rose 66 per cent, whereas “other income” rose 146 per cent; at the same time production nearly doubled….  The labor market is authoritatively controlled to the limit of human recalcitrance. The working class is regimented and fragmented in order to prevent any common basis for movements, and the individual workman is isolated and terrorized. The “interference” of the party and the “State” in “economics” has again helped old dreams to come true. Not only has the prevailing class structure been accepted; in the process of the ruling elites’ consolidation, it has been riveted and clinched from the upper side.

http://www.wbenjamin.org/Behemoth.html

If we compare this to the way the United States approached the war effort, it is like night and day.  The US’s leadership class asked, and received, the full cooperation of working-class Americans.  It also asked, and received, the full cooperation of America’s racial, ethnic and religious minorities. As David Montejano explains in Anglos and Mexicans in the Making of Texas:

Social conflict and national crises provided the necessary impulse for the decline of old race arrangements.  World War II, in particular, initiated dramatic changes on the domestic front.  The need for soldiers and workers, and for positive international relations with Latin America, meant that the counterproductive and embarrassing customs of Jim Crow had to be shelved, at least for the duration of the emergency.

Montejano goes on to confirm what Kervick noted above, that the “solidarity continued into the postwar decades”:

In more lasting terms, the war created a generation of Mexican American veterans prepared to press for their rights and privileges.  The cracks in the segregated order proved to be irreparable.

The PBS documentary A Class Apart tells the same story but in a much more moving and poignant way:

A Class Apart 

But it wasn’t just the working-class and the cultural minorities who contributed mightily to the WWII war effort.  Under the guiding hand of FDR and John Maynard Keynes, the rich pitched in too, paying higher taxes and having their profits limited by price restrictions.  This is the flip side of Keynesianism which was bowdlerized from history books beginning in 1970, thus allowing Richard Nixon to proclaim “we’re all Keynesians now” and to usher in an era of supply-side tax-cut theology and monetarist faith in currency expansion and shrinkage.   Back to WWII economic planning, as John Kenneth Galbraith explains in Money:  Whence It Came, Where It Went, it

reflected strongly the new Keynesian fiscal design. What was urged as the policy against peacetime unemployment would work against wartime inflation; instead of public expenditure to increase employment there would now be higher taxes to restrict civilian demand and consumption….

[A]ggregate demand or purchasing power would be kept in rough equilibrium with the supply of goods available for purchase at current prices. This would be accomplished partly by taxation, partly by a Keynesian novelty, which was compulsory saving. A levy would be made against all wages, salaries and other incomes, which would be returnable, with interest, after the war….

The curtailment or removal of purchasing power was the basic reliance. Keynes said, “. . . the only way to escape from this [inflation] is to withdraw from the market, either by taxation or by deferment, an adequate proportion of consumers’ purchasing power, so there is no longer an irresistible force impelling prices upward.”  Only a subordinate role was assigned to direct control of prices or to rationing — “. . . some measure of rationing and price control should play a part in our general scheme and might be a valuable adjunct to our main proposal.”

[….]

By any earlier standard, taxes were increased astringently in World War II; by 1944, the revenues of the Federal government were six times the 1939 level, an impressive expansion.

[….]

A myth to the contrary, assiduously cultivated by devout friends of the market, these controls were highly effective. From 1942 through 1945, the wholesale prices of industrial commodities were virtually stable — the overall increase from 50.7 to 53.00 (1967 =100) compares with an increase of from 135.3 to 166.1 in the single year of 1974….   Given the scale of the military effort and the associated budget deficit, it is beyond doubt that, in the absence of controls, there would have been large, accelerating and, ultimately, vertical increases in prices. By the end of the war prices and wages would almost certainly have been doubling, perhaps trebling each year, maybe more. 

But over the past 45 years, as Kervick laments, the ethos of solidarity, national purpose and teamwork has slowly been replaced by the dogma of Market Fundamentalism.

Is it possible to get the mojo back, that sense of solidarity, national purpose and teamwork?  In an attempt to do so, various presidents have invoked Vietnam (Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon ), drugs (Nixon ) the “Evil Empire” (Reagan   ), the “Axis of Evil” (Bush II  ) and terror (Bush II and Obama) as existential threats to the life of the nation.  But the sense of national purpose remains elusive. 

It appears the US’s permanent war economy is in crisis.  If so, and if the affliction is terminal, is it possible for the US to switch to some other type of economy?

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