"The policeman who climbed on the hood of a car last month
in Cleveland and fired 49 shots through the windshield at an unarmed couple has
been found not guilty on two counts of voluntary manslaughter. Last week. Judge
John P O’Donnell said prosecutors failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
that the bullets fired were the cause of death of Malissa Williams and Timothy
Russell. USA Today May 20, 2015
Would this common realm of purchased judges and corrupt city government be different if it offered people a decent and fair world for their lives? Could we expect that this daily havoc, riven as it is by racial and religious resentment and growing inequality, might turn out differently if it offered people everywhere a set of different expectations? In the face of the prevailing madness a new threshold for change is beginning to open and brave hearts, young and old, mid-life adults all need to walk toward it. Below is a summary of new policies as well as the hypocrisies that challenge it.
These serious steps on a path forward grow from a global context and international perspectives. Economic policy experts including Thomas Piketty (France), Anthony Atkinson
(England), Paul Krugman and Robert Kuttner (USA)—joined by many others--are laying out major suggestions for a radically different social and economic antidote to the rising tide of violence in the U. S. and around the world.
These "peacable kingdom" stepping stones include:
- A Rising Real Wage for all
- Guaranteed Public Sector Jobs for the unemployed at a living wage
- Debt free college
- Universal Family Benefits
- A Pension for all
- Inheritance for all
- Asset Development for all, including property ownership
- Transferring stock market wealth to the citizenry
- Progressive Taxation especially on wealth
- Capital endowments for each new young adult financed from estate taxes.
Robert
Kuttner, co-editor of The American
Prospect and professor at Brandeis University’s Heller School helps launch the new agenda for a Peacable Kingdom with historical perspective.
“The postwar boom [fifty years ago] was a time of broadly
shared prosperity, when working- and middle-class people not only enjoyed
steadily increasing incomes but were also able to accumulate lifetime wealth.
The measures that made possible this wealth-broadening included expansion of
home ownership under a reliable, well-governed system of mortgage finance; the
development of a retirement system, with Social Security complemented by
private pensions; debt-free higher education; and rising real wages. Each of
these instruments interacted with the others.”
"Today, these mechanisms have all gone into reverse.
Meanwhile, the capacity of the already-rich, the parentally endowed, and the
well-situated to accumulate financial wealth has only intensified. Wealth
inequality gets less attention than income inequality, but it is every bit as
important. And the two are related. Wealth helps generate income and the
capacity to earn income. Decent income increases the capacity to save and to
amass wealth. As public systems for wealth-broadening collapse, private wealth
within families provides asset endowments to the young and positions the next
generation to become upper-income earners like their parents.
British economist, Anthony Atkinson, as cited by French economist, Thomas Piketty (New York Review of Books, June 25, 2015) calls for
"Universal family benefits financed by a
return to progressive taxation, guaranteed
public-sector jobs at a minimum wage for the unemployed, democratization
of access to property ownership via an innovative national savings system, with
guaranteed returns for the depositors.
"Atkinson, writing in the context of British policy issues
proposes establishing an “inheritance for all” program. “This would take the
form of a capital endowment assigned to each young citizen as he or she reached
adulthood, at the age of eighteen. All such endowments would be financed by
estate taxes and a more progressive tax structure. In concrete terms, Atkinson
estimates that, with current revenue from the British estate tax, it would be
possible to finance a capital endowment of slightly more than £5,000 for each
young adult. He calls for a far-reaching reform of the system of inheritance
taxation, and especially for greater progressivity with regard to the larger
estates. (He proposes an upper rate of 65 percent, as with the income tax.)
These reforms would make it possible to finance a capital endowment on the
order of £10,000 per young adult."
Much of this has application in somewhat different language or terms in the U. S.
Much of this has application in somewhat different language or terms in the U. S.
Current very negative social trends illustrate why the election season must
grow into a season of non-violent political reform; non-violent but
nevertheless, reforms that are revolutionary. From
the Federal Reserve and economist Paul Krugman we learn that:
* For the most affluent 10 percent of American families,
average incomes rose by 10 percent from 2010 to 2013. For the rest of the
population, average incomes were flat or falling.
* The least affluent families had the largest declines.
Average incomes dropped by 8 percent for the bottom 20 percent of families
* The top 3 percent of families hold 44.8 percent of wealth
in 1989, then 51.8 percent in 2007 and 54.4 percent in 2013.
* a single Hedge Fund manager makes more than all
kindergarten teachers in the U. S.
combined.
The top ten percent of wealth holders--own 75 percent of the Capital and 50 percent of all income
The top ten percent of wealth holders--own 75 percent of the Capital and 50 percent of all income
Former
Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich summarizes our current context: “The key to understanding the rise in
inequality isn’t technology or globalization. It’s the power of the moneyed
interests to shape the underlying rules of the market.” USA Today on May 20th reported that although the
Obama Administration postures in the direction of a clamp–down on market
rules, actual enforcement by the Securities and Exchange Commission casts this in doubt:
“Outlining what she
termed a "brazen display of collusion," the new U.S. Attorney
General, Loretta Lynch, charged that traders in the nearly unregulated
$5.3-trillion-a-day foreign-exchange market colluded in rigging foreign
exchange prices of U.S. dollars and euros from Dec. 2007 to Jan. 2013. Five
major banks: Citicorp(C), JPMorgan Chase(JPM),
London-based Barclays(BCS) and Royal Bank of Scotland(RBS) agreed to
plead guilty to criminal charges and pay more than $5.5 billion in collective
penalties to settle charges that their traders routinely manipulated the
world's foreign-exchange market for their own profit.”
"Yet no bank official was required
personally to admit personal guilt nor were any charged; just their companies. Banking
experts predict the settlements are not expected to have a material impact on
banking financial operations. Lynch even confessed, so to speak, that the banks are "working with their
regulators" to obtain any waivers that might be required to continue
normal operations.
This is the agenda
that must be pursued over the coming election months and should become the subject of study and
discussion among community organizations, public interest groups and faith groups. It's the path to a more peacable kingdom.
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