We must rethink globalization, or Trumpism will prevail
We must
rethink globalization, or Trumpism will prevail
By: Thomas Piketty
Taken From: The Guardian
Let it be said at
once: Trump’s victory is primarily due to the explosion in economic and
geographic inequality in the United States over several decades and the
inability of successive governments to deal with this.
Both the Clinton
and the Obama administrations frequently went along with the market
liberalization launched under Reagan and both Bush presidencies. At times they
even outdid them: the financial and commercial deregulation carried out under
Clinton is an example. What sealed the deal, though, was the suspicion that the
Democrats were too close to Wall Street – and the inability of the Democratic
media elite to learn the lessons from the Sanders vote.
Hillary won the
popular vote by a whisker (60.1 million votes as against 59.8 million for Trump,
out of a total adult population of 240 million), but the participation of the
youngest and the lowest income groups was much too low to enable key states to
be won.
The tragedy is
that Trump’s program will only strengthen the trend towards inequality. He
intends to abolish the health insurance laboriously granted to low-paid workers
under Obama and to set the country on a headlong course into fiscal dumping,
with a reduction from 35% to 15% in the rate of federal tax on corporation
profits, whereas to date the United States had resisted this trend, already
witnessed in Europe.
In addition, the
increasing role of ethnicity in American politics does not bode well for the
future if new compromises are not found. In the United States, 60% of the white
majority votes for one party while over 70% of the minorities vote for the
other. In addition to this, the majority is on the verge of losing its
numerical advantage (70% of the votes cast in 2016, as compared with 80% in
2000 and 50% forecast in 2040).
The main lesson
for Europe and the world is clear: as a matter of urgency, globalization must
be fundamentally re-oriented. The main challenges of our times are the rise in
inequality and global warming. We must therefore implement international
treaties enabling us to respond to these challenges and to promote a model for
fair and sustainable development.
Agreements of a
new type can, if necessary, include measures aimed at facilitating these
exchanges. But the question of liberalizing trade should no longer be the main
focus. Trade must once again become a means in the service of higher ends. It
never should have become anything other than that.
There should be no
more signing of international agreements that reduce customs duties and other
commercial barriers without including quantified and binding measures to combat
fiscal and climate dumping in those same treaties. For example, there could be
common minimum rates of corporation tax and targets for carbon emissions which
can be verified and sanctioned. It is no longer possible to negotiate trade
treaties for free trade with nothing in exchange.
From this point of
view, Ceta, the EU-Canada free trade deal, should be rejected. It is a treaty
which belongs to another age. This strictly commercial treaty contains
absolutely no restrictive measures concerning fiscal or climate issues. It
does, however, contain a considerable reference to the “protection of
investors”. This enables multinationals to sue states under private arbitration
courts, bypassing the public tribunals available to one and all.
The legal
supervision proposed is clearly inadequate, in particular concerning the key
question of the remuneration of the arbitrators-cum-referees and will lead to
all sorts of abuses. At the very time when American legal imperialism is
gaining in strength and imposing its rules and its dues on our companies, this
decline in public justice is an aberration. The priority, on the contrary,
should be the construction of strong public authorities, with the creation of a
prosecutor, including a European state prosecutor, capable of enforcing their
decisions.
The Paris Accords
had a purely theoretical aim of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees. This
would, for example, require the oil found in the tar sands in Alberta to be
left in the ground. But Canada has just started mining there again. So what
sense is there in signing this agreement and then, only a few months later,
signing a highly restrictive commercial treaty without a single mention of this
question?
A balanced treaty
between Canada and Europe, aimed at promoting a partnership for fair and
sustainable development, should begin by specifying the emission targets of
each signatory and the practical commitments to achieve these.
In matters of
fiscal dumping and minimum rates of taxation on corporation profits, this would
obviously mean a complete paradigm change for Europe, which was constructed as
a free trade area with no common fiscal policy. This change is essential. What
sense is there in agreeing on a common fiscal policy (which is the one area in
which Europe has achieved some progress for the moment) if each country can
then fix a near-zero rate and attract all the major company headquarters?
It is time to
change the political discourse on globalization: trade is a good thing, but
fair and sustainable development also demands public services, infrastructure,
health and education systems. In turn, these themselves demand fair taxation
systems. If we fail to deliver these, Trumpism will prevail.



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