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Sunday, June 23, 2024

 

How Capitalism really works – Grace Blakeley’s Vulture Capitalism Review

Grace Blakeley’s new book covers not only the scandals but also the structural corruption of capitalism, writes Walden Bello

Vulture Capitalism is not just a muckraking book, a collection of juicy scandals. Where a New York Times investigation ends is where Grace Blakeley really begins her work, which is to “look at how capitalism really looks.”


Vulture Capitalism is, at one level, a really good read, for the scandals that it brings together in one volume – like the Boeing 737 MAX debacle, where the pursuit of profits, lack of regulation, and corporate cost-cutting culture resulted in two crashes that killed hundreds of people, or the ways most of the $800 million allocated by Washington for the Paycheck Protection Plan (PPP) to enable workers to get through the COVID 19 pandemic actually ended up with their employers. Among the direct or indirect beneficiaries of the PPP were House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell’s wife, and Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, the notorious far-right conspiracy theorist. All owned businesses or were part-owners of enterprises that siphoned off PPP dollars meant for workers.

But don’t get fooled by the title, which was probably the bright idea of the publisher’s marketing department. Vulture Capitalism is not just a muckraking book, a collection of juicy scandals. Where a New York Times investigation ends is where Grace Blakeley really begins her work, which is to “look at how capitalism really looks.” For her, the scandals illustrate not just the doings of corrupt individuals or corporations but the larger, deeper, more encompassing structural corruption that is embedded system of capitalism itself.

Market Versus Plan

Blakeley begins her deconstruction of capitalism by taking up the market-versus-planning debate that continues to animate the economics profession. Neoliberals make out state planning as the greatest enemy of the market, the source of all the inefficiencies, distortions, and screw-ups in what would otherwise be a plain-sailing economic journey. Keynesians say the economy must be managed or “planned” to avoid market failures. Blakeley comes out straightforwardly and declares the debate to be largely a false one. Giant corporations can have a major distorting influence on the market, and their size and resources enable them to plan production not only at a corporate but at a social level. Effective control of the market by a few giants allows them to do large-scale planning even as they compete with each other.

Blakeley is refreshingly an unapologetic Marxist, and Marx could not have articulated his insights on the relationship between the market and planning for a contemporary audience better than her:

Capitalism is a system defined by a tension—a dialectic—between markets and planning, in which some actors are better able to exert control over the system than others, but in which no one actor—let alone individual—can control the dynamics of production and exchange entirely.  Capitalism is a system that teeters on the knife edge between competition and coordination; this tension is what explains both its adaptability and rigid inequalities.

So, the real conflict is not between markets and planning, but the ends of planning, with accumulating profit being the goal of planning under capitalism, and—in theory at least—the general interest being the aim of socialist planning.

Making Economics Accessible

Blakeley does not introduce a new theory about the way capitalism works. “Most of the ideas discussed in this book are not new,” she tells us right from the beginning. “My argument is constructed based on the analysis of the work of well-known economists, with which academic readers will already be familiar.” She wants to make their ideas accessible to people. Given the well-deserved reputation of orthodox economics being the contemporary equivalent of the medieval theological preoccupation with how many angels could stand on the head of a pin, this task is not to be sneered at, since the alternative that many opt for is conspiracy theory, which is the default mode of analysis in populist circles on both the Left and the Right.

But making economic theories accessible does not mean making their ideas sound simplistic. Even when it comes to economists Blakeley disagrees with, like Friedrich Hayek, Ronald Coase, and Joseph Schumpeter, she is not dismissive and accords their views the critical analysis they deserve.

In the case of Schumpeter, for instance, the notion of the process of “creative destruction” destroying monopolies may have once been a powerful reflection of the dynamics of early twentieth-century capitalism. But it is a theory that has outlived its usefulness, Blakeley contends, because today’s corporations, with their massive assets, can control the process of technological innovation, buying out or stifling the growth of innovative corporations that may threaten their stranglehold on the market.

Blakeley brings aboard not only political economists to help us understand the dynamics of contemporary capitalism. She draws on the insights of the French thinker Michel Foucault to show that neoliberalism not only seeks to shape the economy but the personalities of people as well. Foucault pointed to the creation of the entrepreneurial self or homo economicus who is engaged mainly in terms of maximizing his self-interest. This self-conceptualization has the effect of undermining the possibility of collective action, resulting in the “destruction of society itself, and its replacement with a structured competition between individual human capitals—but on a fundamentally unequal playing field.”

The State under Capitalism

According to neoliberals, the contradiction between market and planning is a manifestation of the larger conflict between the market and state as the principal organizing principle of the economy. The reality is that both the market and the state serve the interest of capital. For the most part, this is not done in a direct, instrumental fashion like extending benefits and perks to individual capitalists, though there is no lack of cases where government contracts or legislation favors particular business interests, as the cases of Boeing and the PPP debacle illustrate. More important is the fact that the state pursues the “general” and “long-run interest” of the capitalist class. Instead of conceiving the state as an instrument of the capitalist class, one must see the state as an institution or set of structured relations that “organize capitalists into a coherent group, conscious of its interests and able to enact them.”

Blakeley is expressing here the view articulated by the French philosopher Louis Althusser, the Greek-French political economist Nicos Poulantzas, and the American political sociologist James O’Connor: that the state is characterized by its “relative autonomy” from economic power relations because its primal role is to stabilize a mode of production that is marked by sharp social contradictions. Perhaps the best conceptualization of this relationship between the political and the economic was provided by O’Connor who saw the relative autonomy of the state as stemming from the tension between its two functions: that is, it has to balance the needs of capital accumulation that increases the profits of the capitalist class and the system’s need for legitimacy to maintain stability. Welfare spending by the state may cut into capital accumulation, but it is necessary to create political stability. This tension gives rise to a stratum of technocrats to manage the tradeoffs between the two primordial drives of capital accumulation and legitimation. Management of this tension, which expressed itself in, among others, the trade-off between inflation and unemployment, was erected into a “science” by the followers of John Maynard Keynes, but this drew the ire of Hayek and his followers, who regarded the Keynesians tinkering with the market as courting economic inefficiency and subverting political freedom.

But Blakeley puts things in perspective. Keynes’s technocrats may engage in social spending but the purpose is to keep the system stable and preserve the class division between those who benefit from the system because they own the means of production and those who are exploited by it despite their being the beneficiaries of some crumbs from social spending. Proponents of reform capitalism were elated by the massive government stimulus programs during the Covid 19 pandemic, but, as in the case of the PPP—where workers received one dollar for every four allocated by the program, with the rest going to business owners like the Trump fanatic Marjorie Taylor Greene—it was the corporate elite and its allied upper middle entrepreneurial and professional strata that cornered most of the benefits of the U.S. government’s fiscal spending and monetary easing policies.

Needed: Another Book

Vulture Capitalism focuses on the class division between owners and workers central to capitalism and its ramifications throughout the system. There are, however, key dimensions of capitalism that Blakely does not tackle but which are central to understanding how it operates. Among these are the social reproduction of the system, where gender inequality and patriarchal oppression play a decisive role, and the way racism stratifies and differentiates the working class, providing what the great sociologist W.E.B. Dubois called a “psychological wage” that coopts white workers into supporting the system. But there is only so much one can pack into as single volume, so it can only be hoped that Blakeley will come out with another volume that will bring to these and related issues the same clearsighted analysis and engaging style she displays in her current book.

Also deserving of further analysis is democratic planning. The final section of the book presents us with examples of exciting possibilities for progressive planning, such as the detailed plan proposed by the workers of Lucas Aerospace Corporation to turn this British arms manufacturer into a producer of socially useful commodities and the innovative “participatory budgeting” formulated by the city government of Porto Alegre that spread to over 250 other cities in Brazil.  Blakeley’s discussion of various democratic and socialist initiatives is a valuable complement to the late sociologist Erik Olin Wright’s book Envisioning Real Utopias.

It would have been useful, however, for Blakeley to draw out lessons from the failure of central planning in the Soviet Union and how democratic planning would be different, since many people associate socialist planning with the Soviet Union. Here, it would also be important to contrast Soviet central planning with Chinese planning, which allowed market forces to develop non-strategic sectors of the economy while restricting foreign investment in sectors considered strategic and prioritizing the transfer of technology from transnational corporations to key industries. True, there are some major problems with China’s technocratic development model, but an annual growth rate of 10 percent over 30 years and the radical reduction of poverty to two percent of the population (according to the World Bank) is not to be ignored, even by partisans of democratic planning, especially since, despite its technocratic bias, the “Chinese Model” is finding so many partisans in the Global South. Indeed, what else can one take away from the Biden administration’s adoption of industrial policy in its effort to catch up with China except Washington’s moving away from neoliberalism and the triumph of planning?

Again, you can only pack so many topics into one volume, but I raise these concerns related to democratic planning in the hope that, whether in articles or in books, Grace Blakeley will apply to them the same analytical acuity and clear exposition she has displayed in analyzing class conflict, the market, and the state in Vulture Capitalism.



 

Forget free markets – it’s all about global domination!

Mike Phipps reviews Vulture capitalism: Corporate Crimes, Backdoor Bailouts and the Death of Freedom, by Grace Blakeley, published by Bloomsbury.

JUNE 22, 2024

In the Introduction to this book, Grace Blakeley says her aim is to show that “capitalism is not defined by the presence of free markets, but by the rule of capital; and that socialism is not defined by the dominance of the state over all areas of life, but by true democracy.” How far does she succeed?

The first premise is amply illustrated – from the huge sums of government money thrown at the under-regulated and cost-cutting American aviation industry, to the state bailouts for the US car industry which allowed Ford and others to continue to pay huge dividends to shareholders. Embracing neoliberalism has certainly not resulted in a smaller state: what has changed under its system is who benefits.

Pandemic piƱata

The Covid pandemic underlines this. The US’s “Paycheck Protection Program” saw workers receive just $1 out of every $4 distributed through the initiative. The rest went to business and has mostly never been repaid. Many of the companies involved use tax havens to cut their tax bills. Several members of Congress benefited financially from the scheme, as did lobbyists. Meanwhile, millions of workers lost their jobs or were evicted by companies that received public money.

Likewise in the UK, “dozens of large companies that had accessed government support through the Bank of England’s Covid Corporate Financing Facility went on to lay off workers and pay out dividends to shareholders.”

Similarly, all of France’s top companies received some form of government support and paid out 34 billion euros to shareholders while cutting 60,000 jobs around the world. A recent report noted that “public assistance to the private sector now exceeds the amount paid out in social welfare.”

In Australia, a colossal A$12.5 billion of government money was given to companies that were “largely unaffected “ by the pandemic. All over the world, the same picture emerges.

The precedent for such largesse was set during the financial collapse of 2008. Although the crash is often blamed on corporate greed, in reality the investment banks would never have taken the risks they did without the implicit insurance of the central bank, and behind it the government. The crisis’s global dimension “was driven as much by crooked coordination between powerful actors as it was by unrestrained ‘free market’ capitalism. And when the crisis did hit, once again the state stepped in to shield powerful vested interests from the consequences of their own greed.” Prosecutions in its wake were almost unheard of.

Permanent subsidies and rigged rules

Big corporations expect a government bailout in a crisis, but for many industries public subsidies are a permanent state of affairs. The fossil fuel industry gets a staggering $5.9 trillion of public money worldwide.

In the world of exports, ‘free markets’ don’t really explain the dominance of the companies of the Global North over poorer countries, for all the neoliberal rhetoric about free trade. Attempts by the Global South to use industrialization to escape the cycle of dependency enshrined in their export of raw materials, have repeatedly been thwarted by richer countries, whether by direct political interference – as in the US-sponsored coup in Guatemala in the 1950s – or through Western-imposed trade rules. These prevent governments in poorer countries from protecting their fledgling industries against Western imports, themselves often state-subsidised.

Investor-state dispute settlements (ISDSs) are part of this international architecture, dreamed up  – and arguably rigged – by the West. When after a lengthy legal battle, the Ecuadorian courts ordered Chevron to pay $9.5 billion in compensation for a massive toxic waste spillage in the country’s rainforest, the company closed all its Ecuadorian operations and launched an ISDS claim, which overturned the judgment. To add insult to injury, the Ecuadorian government was then ordered to pay $800 million of the company’s legal costs.

Blakeley concludes: “ISDSs are part of a growing body of international law that, with the active support of powerful states, has helped to routinise corporate crime on a mass scale.” They can be used to get compensation for companies whenever a government passes a law to discourage smoking or protect the environment. Canada, Mexico and Germany have all been forced to abandon or dilute environmental regulations and pay compensation to corporate polluters in recent years.

And this is just one mechanism that allows Western capital to penetrate overseas markets on unequal terms. The state-assisted exploitation of less developed countries can be violent and barbarous. “One of the first things the US government did with occupied Iraq was sell off state assets en masse. In doing so, the planners of the 2003 US invasion sought to share the spoils of the invasion with US businesses and introduce the disciplining hand of American capital into Iraqi society.”

Blakeley is hardly the first economist to highlight capitalism’s monopolistic tendencies. But what’s new here is how today’s giant companies use their privileged position not just to corner the market or raise prices, but to establish for themselves as much sovereignty as possible. This applies not just internally, for example in the case of Amazon’s ruthless approach to suppressing trade union organisation, but also externally, as with corporations involved internationally in human rights abuses.

In this sense, modern corporations constitute a form of private government, hierarchically centralised and controlled, and often unconstrained by the national laws of weak governments – in poorer countries especially, but not exclusively. And in many fields, such companies are empowered to act using force – from private armies to outsourced contracts for immigration detention and removal activities.

Democratic alternatives

Blakeley’s focus on economic democracy as an expression of nascent socialism is a lot shorter. The 1976 Alternative Plan for Lucas Aerospace was a significant milestone, but it may be overstating its importance to say “it provided inspiration for workers all over the world for the next several decades.” In any case, as one reviewer pointed out, “it was swatted aside by management.”

However, the author does produce some interesting examples of human cooperation and democratic planning: the New South Wales Builders Labourers Federation which refused to allow its labour to be used for harmful purposes; the Union of Farm Workers’  occupation of land in Andalusia after the death of the fascist dictator Franco in 1975; the Brazilian Workers Party’s experiment in participatory budgeting pioneered in Porto Alegre in 1989, which spread to over 250 cities in Brazil and another 1,500 around the world; the People’s Plan in the Indian state of Kerala in 1996; the post-2008 Better Reykjavik initiative in which 40,000 people pitched ideas to improve Iceland’s capital in an online consultation; the Preston Council experiment in Community Wealth Building; and quite a few others. While the levels of genuine popular participation in these experiments vary considerably and most proved short-lived, they do demonstrate the potential of this kind of democratic planning.

For Blakeley, the 1970-3 Popular Unity government in Chile showed that “it is possible to begin building democratic institutions at scale.” However, it also underlined that full control of the state apparatus is vital, to prevent not just capital strikes and flight, but also the possibility of a violent military coup of the kind that toppled Allende.

Democratising society through activity in trade unions and community campaigns falls some way short of this critical goal. The author’s section on “Democratise the state” says nothing about dismantling its repressive apparatus.

Vulture Capitalism is certainly worth reading for its well-argued critique of contemporary capitalism and the historical alternatives it explores. However, as with many books in this vein, how we proceed from the current mess to a more enduring socialist alternative is less clear.

Mike Phipps’ book Don’t Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: The Labour Party after Jeremy Corbyn (OR Books, 2022) can be ordered here.


 UK

Workers Can’t Wait – Public Ownership Now!

“With Thames and the other water companies performing so abjectly, no wonder that – far from being a fringe demand – public ownership of water is supported by mainstream public position.”

We’re in the middle of the deepest cost-of-living crisis in generations, which has become a permanent cost-of-living emergency for millions. Yet the whole political establishment seems intent on never-ending austerity.

As a new Government approaches, we need to mobilise for policies that could address the depth of the crises we face, including the 10 Workers Can’t Wait demands. To help build this campaign initiative, we are publishing a daily blog on the importance on each of these demands. Today, Matt Willgress looks at why we need public ownership to stop the corporate rip-off.

Not a week goes by without more stories about the scandals and problems besetting Britain’s private water companies, most notably the possible collapse of Thames Water, which is in deep financial trouble, despite taking billions out of the company in loans and dividends.

Disgracefully, it was revealed at the end of last year that Thames Water had pumped at least 72 billion litres of sewage into the Thames since 2020.

As the pop star campaigner on this issue Feargal Sharkey has put it, “Every river in this country is polluted.” And it’s the profiteering private water companies who are to blame.

With Thames and the other water companies performing so abjectly, no wonder that – far from being a fringe demand – public ownership of water is supported by mainstream public position. 69% supported nationalisation of water when asked by both Survation in 2022 and YouGov is 2023, and this number is now only likely to be growing.

The case for it is crystal clear. Water is a natural monopoly, there is no market for consumers – and that is why 90% of the world runs water in public ownership, including Scotland, where Scottish Water was never privatised.

Globally, 311 cities and 36 countries brought water back into public hands between 2000 and 2019.

In the example of water – and many other examples of privatisation – we see private companies making obscene profits from what should be public services ran for the people not profit. These massive sums of money could instead be invested to improve services, to give their workers a pay increase and to lower costs for consumers. In other words, everyone would win other than the polluters and profiteers.

Water nationalisation was established Labour Party policy for a number of years. But just as the situation in the real-world in recent years has made the need for this even more obvious, the front bench has moved further away from it, citing a “constrained fiscal environment”.

And as readers will know, this is the case with other parts of the economy too, including energy, where the Party leadership has made clear its intention to ignore Party Conference policy. Again, this is not to do with popularity – 66% support public ownership of energy.

Public ownership in this area is again just common sense, with privatisation leading to higher bills and colder homes.

Over 3 million households in England are experiencing fuel poverty, with 50% of those surveyed stating that they had turned off heating when it was still cold in order to save money.

The crises caused by soaring energy bills and the scandal of raw sewage being dumped into rivers have highlighted the failures of privatisation for millions in a very real way. And they have come on top of the problems after problems caused by railway privatisation over recent years and decades.

They also give the perfect opportunity to make the case for a fresh start and put the public interest ahead of private profit.

As the ‘Workers Can’t Wait’ demand reads in full, it’s time to “Stop the corporate rip-off,” with “public ownership of energy, water, transport, broadband and mail to bring bills down, end fuel poverty and lower public transport costs.“

This should be accompanied by “higher taxes on profits and the super-rich,” and in order to really tackle the greedy profiteers, it’s tied to “open the books [and] back the workers’ commission on profiteering.”

But we should expect little from Starmer, Reeves and Co. On this score, it has been clear for some time that, whatever pledges were made when running for leader, the current leadership have consistently prioritised staying in the good books of those who have done well for themselves out of the current mess, ahead of advancing the change we need.

Indeed, the shifts of Labour’s front-bench can’t be separated from its overall project of making sure the party becomes the “first eleven” for the economic establishment.

But, after the Tories are thankfully kicked out and a Labour Government formed in July, we shouldn’t see the position of any government as something automatically fixed.

A strong labour movement rooted in our communities and taking the right initiatives can force real change. One step towards that is the building the ‘Workers Can’t Wait’ campaign, using this election and the period afterwards to raise the demands which could begin to address the scale of the crises austerity economics have created.


 

Workers can’t wait – Defend & extend our right to organise!

“There is no mention in the Labour manifesto of repealing the restrictions on civil liberties that have been introduced in recent years.”

We’re in the middle of the deepest cost-of-living crisis in generations, which has become a permanent cost-of-living emergency for millions. Yet the whole political establishment seems intent on never-ending austerity.

As a new Government approaches, we need to mobilise for policies that could address the depth of the crises we face, including the 10 Workers Can’t Wait demands. To help build this campaign initiative, we are publishing a daily blog on the importance on each of these demands, with today Fraser McGuire looking at the need to “Defend and extend our right to organise.”

Our right to collectively organise has been decimated after 14 years of a malign Tory government which has worked tirelessly to attack the rights to take industrial action, organise in trade unions, and have the freedom of assembly and protest.

Unsatisfied with the effects of Thatcher’s assault on trade unions and workers, the last ten years have seen the government introduce of some of the most draconian laws designed to restrict the ability of workers to act and organise in the workplace. The Minimum Service Levels (MSL) Act undermines the democratic right of workers to take strike action, and the clearly politicised nature of the law can be seen in which sectors the government identified for MSLs to be implemented. The law would also put trade unions at risk of major claims for damages, following in the footsteps of the Thatcher government’s attempts to strip the assets and resources of the strongest trade unions.

Alongside the assault on our rights in the workplace, there has been a significant erosion of the right to freedom of assembly and the ability to protest the myriad of unjust laws passed in the last decade. As public anger swelled against austerity, the impacts of the cost-of-living crisis, and the British government’s complicity in the ongoing genocide in Gaza, police have been handed more powers to restrict protests and search, arrest, and fine individual protestors. The government’s own figures show that more than 650 protesters were arrested in 2023 under the new Public Order Act (2023).

In the past few weeks there have been increased arrests and physical attacks on students participating in peaceful protests and calling for universities to divest from arms companies complicit in the genocidal assault on Gaza. On the 23rd  of May 16 student protestors were arrested at the University of Oxford, and on the 27th Greater Manchester Police attempted to use physical force to evict students from a university building- only being stopped by hundreds of protestors surrounding the building.

The crackdowns on our right to organise must be understood as the reaction of an increasingly politically isolated government faced with the threat of growing popular mobilisation against austerity policies, global injustice, and inequality, combined with the uptick in workers taking strike action and building the profile of the trade union movement. The Workers Can’t Wait petition is vital, and the need for mobilising workers and communities around the transformative policies we need to address the depth of the crises we face has never been greater.

We must also recognise that the fight doesn’t stop with the possibility of the Labour Party coming into government in July- already unions have raised concerns about the dilution of the ‘New Deal for Working People’ especially in regarding the clear lack of enthusiasm from shadow cabinet MPs in repealing Tory anti-union legislation. Any attempt to undermine the right to organise must be resisted. There is no mention in the Labour manifesto of repealing the wider restrictions on civil liberties that have been introduced in recent years, and Labour’s record on opposing these Government attacks has been weak.

Without the ability to collectively organise- in the streets, in our communities, and in the workplace- none of us are safe. The biggest victories for workers have never materialised out of thin air, they have been won through struggle and collective organising across every part of society.

Workers Can’t Wait – Britain needs a pay-rise now!

“We need to reverse the shift in our national income back towards people’s wages.”

We’re in the middle of the deepest cost-of-living crisis in generations, which has become a permanent cost-of-living emergency for millions. Yet the whole political establishment seems intent on never-ending austerity.

As a new Government approaches, we need to mobilise for policies that could address the depth of the crises we face, including the 10 Workers Can’t Wait demands. To help build this campaign initiative, we are publishing a daily blog on the importance on each of these demands. Today, Ben Folley looks at why “Britain needs a pay rise.”

The first demand of the Workers Can’t Wait petition is that Britain needs a pay rise with good reason.

TUC analysis has repeatedly shown more than a lost decade of pay stagnation with real wages below their pre-2008 financial crash level. Staggeringly, the average UK worker would be £10,400 a year better off now if wage growth had continued at pre-2008 levelsThe Resolution Foundation backs this up – estimating the average worker would be £14,000 a year better off.  

For fourteen years, the Tories have carried out an ideological agenda of aggressively cutting public sector pay in real terms and in the wider economy they have nurtured insecure work as part of ‘austerity’. Yet at the same time, a few at the top continue to make millions, with CEO salaries and bonuses continuing to rise far outstripping their workers’ pay deals.

This has been an unprecedented period in lost wages – but should be seen within the context of how over the past fifty years a growing share of our national income has been transferred from wages to capital – or from people’s pay to private profits over the past fifty years.

The scale of the drop off in pay has enormous consequences for people’s standard of living and our society as a whole. The numbers living in poverty have grown, and the level of poverty has deepened, with the majority in households where someone works. As well as real levels of pay being cut, the sharp climb in the use of zero hours contracts and the spread of increasingly precarious, insecure and ever more exploitative forms of work has left many workers without even a reliable or consistent level of pay to meet rent and bills.

Our sick pay is so low that during the pandemic it was directly linked to our high death toll as workers were left unable to afford to isolate, and so caught and spread the virus. Rather than learn that lesson it remains at just £116.75 a week.

Summer 2022 saw the start of a significant increase in working days lost to industrial action, over the subsequent twelve months, as many workers took action to try and turn around the long period of real pay cuts they had suffered, made more acute by surging inflation – particularly in energy and food bills.

The Tories countered the upsurge in industrial action with yet another attack on people’s collective trade union and individual employment rights with the Strikes (Minimum Service Levels) Act 2023, the purpose of which is to effectively take away people’s right to strike.

Scrapping the restrictive legislation on trade unions and strengthening people’s employment rights is urgently needed. This would help to ensure a floor of decent work, pay, terms and conditions for all of us and enable people to enforce their rights and to improve their working lives. Poverty pay and exploitative work is damaging our society. As Larry Elliott said recently, the fact that labour is so cheap discourages firms from investing and in developing the skills of their workers so that they are truly flexible rather than easily dispensable.

Properly funding better pay, and pay increases, across our public services has become not just an urgent matter of achieving decent living standards for these workers, but one of a recruitment and retention staffing crisis for services such as health, education and social services and care.  Some left MPs have called for an inflation-proofed rise and a commitment to pay restoration over the next term of government. Despite that, there has been no commitment on pay restoration – even in principle – from the Labour frontbench, as Rachel Reeves sticks to her own fiscal rules that risk entrenching Tory austerity. The past fifty years has shown us it is not enough to just achieve economic growth – what matters is who benefits from that growth. We need to reverse the shift in our national income back towards people’s wages.

The Workers Can’t Wait campaign initiative is somewhere everyone can start. Sign it. Share it with friends. Take it to your local meeting. We need to raise its demands now and build, saying no to never-ending austerity.


 

Workers Can’t Wait – a right to food now!

“Britain should be striving to eliminate the need for food banks entirely.”

We’re in the middle of the deepest cost-of-living crisis in generations, which has become a permanent cost-of-living emergency for millions. Yet the whole political establishment seems intent on never-ending austerity.

As a new Government approaches, we need to mobilise for policies that could address the depth of the crises we face, including the 10 ‘Workers Can’t Wait’ demands. To help build this campaign initiative, we are publishing a daily blog on the importance on each of these demands. Today, Ben Hayes looks at the demand “For the right to food.”

The combination of rising prices and incomes depleted by low pay and years of social security being undermined has had a disastrous impact in communities across the country. Food costs have proved a particularly devastating example of this. The Trussell Trust found that over 11 million adults in Britain had experienced food insecurity over 2022-23 (a period which saw prices reach their highest levels in four decades), with 47% of households affected also including children. This has left all too many people reliant on institutions such as food banks, held together by dedicated and often overstretched volunteers. The number of emergency food supply parcels distributed has more than tripled over the last 10 years.

Networks such as this have felt the impact of the cost-of-living crisis themselves, with many having to buy in supplies due to donations not keeping pace with rapidly increasing demand and/or extending hours so that the growing proportion of users of the service in paid employment can pick up parcels on their way to work. As the Trussell Trust itself acknowledges, Britain should be striving to eliminate the need for food banks entirely, rather than forcing their expansion as a response to a frightening rise in demand.

As well as the hard work of those seeking to help provide ways of addressing the shocking material impact of the situation in the here and now, we need a policy agenda which tackles the causes of it head on. Nobody in our society should be left worrying about whether or not they can meet one of the most basic human needs –  especially in one of the world’s richest countries.

Right to Food (RTF) was launched in 2020 and emerged from the Fans Supporting Foodbanks initiative (a coalition of Everton and Liverpool supporters collecting donations at football matches in response to growing hunger in their local community), with MP for Liverpool West Derby Ian Byrne, himself a volunteer with this group, having championed the demands of the campaign in Parliament from day one. As well as enshrining a legal right to food provision, the measures proposed by RTF include universal free school meals, for government to explicitly state the proportion of income expected to be spent on food when setting the minimum wage and social security levels, the creation of Community Kitchens, and independent bodies to hold government to account on this issue.

The level of support the campaign has received is reflective both of the scale of the crisis it was set up in response to and the resonance of its programme, with MPs from various parties, trade unions and faith groups among those offering their support. Numerous bodies in local and devolved government have also begun taking up this agenda, with Mayor of London Sadiq Khan committing to continuing the policy of providing free meals to all primary school children in the capital as part of his successful re-election campaign last month. Both the city councils and Combined Authorities in Liverpool and Manchester have voted to become ‘Right to Food cities’, joining administrations including Rotherham, Brighton and Hove, St Helens, Preston, Lancaster, Durham, Newcastle, Portsmouth, Totnes, Coventry, Sheffield, Birmingham, Haringey, Brent, Lewisham, Lambeth, Hackney, Southwark, Islington, Cumberland and Southampton.

There is also potential for an alliance with public health campaigners over ensuring access to nutritious meals (with The Food Foundation finding that anyone in the most deprived fifth of the population would need need to spend half of their disposable income on food in order to meet the cost of a government-recommended healthy diet), as well as workers in the food industry: RTF was included as one of the demands of the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union’s ‘Bakers’ Dozen’ manifesto.

It can undoubtedly be frustrating seeing how little the seriousness of this issue is being reflected in coverage around the upcoming general election. A question in the first televised leaders’ debate from audience member Paula, who discussed having started to cook multiple meals at once over fears about the costs of using her oven, provided a much-needed reminder of the reality for significant numbers of people in Britain today. Indeed, the Prime Minister acknowledged that “There’ll be millions of people watching this who feel in a similar position to you”: but regrettably, responses from both leaders were somewhat lighter on substantive plans to address situations like Paula’s than rehearsed soundbites shoehorned in.

However, a period where millions are more engaged with political debate than usual and prominent figures are subject to greater scrutiny is still an opportunity to build up pressure for change. The Labour Assembly Against Austerity has taken up the Right to Food in its ‘Workers Can’t Wait’ statement, which puts forward an agenda to tackle the cost-of living crisis- with the relevant section echoing calls to enshrine access to food as a legal right, the introduction of universal free school meals nationally and the creation of a National Food Service. The measures put forward on other areas (such as including strengthening wages, ending reactionary policies in relation to social security, implementing price controls and ensuring trade union freedom) are also important to addressing the relentless squeeze on living standards which is at the heart of hunger in Britain- with over 22,000 people now having signed up. It’s vital that we keep up the momentum and build support for this in the labour movement and beyond.


  • You can find the Worker’s Can’t Wait demands – and join over 22,000 in adding your support here.
  • We’re publishing a series of articles for each of the Workers Can’t Wait demands, you can find them as they are published here.


UK
The election debates need to interrogate politicians about the human cost of their policies

21 June, 2024 
Columnist Left Foot Forward  Opinion

Party manifestos are disconnected from the lives of the people.




An interesting feature of the debates leading to the UK general election is the almost total absence of any discussion of human consequences of the policies proposed by parties. People have been made invisible as parties focus on taxes, public debt and cuts in public services.

Party manifestos are disconnected from the lives of the people. The average real wage is lower than in 2008 and the result is misery. Due to low incomes, some 12m Britons live in poverty, including 4.3m children. People are increasingly relying upon charity. In 2023/24 there were nearly 3,000 foodbanks compared to almost none in 2007. In 2023/24 Trussell Trust, the largest chain with nearly 1,700 food banks, provided nearly 3.1m food parcels compared to just 25,809 in 2008/09. Life expectancy in Britain has flatlined in the last ten years. Yet no major party is promising to alleviate poverty by redistributing income and wealth, adoption of progressive taxation, increasing workers’ share of gross domestic product and maintaining real value of social security benefits.

To appease corporate interests, major parties promise deregulation but ignore the resulting social cost. For example, some 1.8m workers were suffering from work-related ill health, with approximately half of the cases down to stress, depression or anxiety. Deregulation of the finance industry is mooted again without any mention of the social cost. After the 2007-08 crash the state had to find £1,162bn of cash and guarantees (£133bn cash + £1,029bn of guarantees) to bail out banks, and millions suffered from the resulting austerity.

Both Conservative and Labour want to maintain the two-child benefit cap which deprives 550,000 households of at least £3,455 each year. The removal of the cap would cost £2.1bn in 2024/25, rising to 790,000 households and £3.4bn by 2029-30. Children as young as 11 are being sectioned for mental health problems. In 2023/24, 36,000 children were referred to mental health services for urgent attention. Yet child welfare is just a financial number to major parties as they remain silent on the human cost of this policy. Would more children and their families be forced to live in poverty? Would the resulting anxiety and insecurity stunt children’s and the nation’s future?

Political automatons recite the mantras of self-imposed fiscal rules to justify further cuts in public spending though none ever obstructed corporate bailouts and subsidies. Fiscal rules are seemingly there to curb aspirations of the less well-off. Spending cuts always result in loss of hard-won rights and lower real wages which reduce people’s access to good food, housing, healthcare and welfare. If people are undernourished and ill, how can that help to reinvigorate the economy? How will low wages and cuts in spending impact the supply of skilled labour? Political elites seem unwilling or unable to connect the dots and explain the human impact of their policy choices even though the last 14 years have shown that austerity, low wages and failure to invest in public services have delivered deadly consequences. Here are a few examples.

Underinvestment in the National Health Services (NHS) means that people can’t get a timely access to family doctors, dentists, ambulances and hospitals. This also makes the healthcare system less resilient. Such fears were confirmed in 2016 by an investigation codenamed Exercise Cygnus. It concluded that the NHS would not be able to cope with a flu pandemic. The government, focused on reducing public spending, responded by reducing the stock of personal protection equipment and the number of hospital beds. Some areas in England lost 40% of the hospital beds. Today England has an average of around 2.3 beds per 1,000 of population. Some have considerably less. For example, Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust has 0.9 beds per 1,000 people. Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has just 1.7 hospital beds per 1,000 people. The average for Japan is 12.6; 7.8 for Germany; 6.9 for Austria; 5.7 for France; 5.5 for Belgium; 5.2 for Latvia and average of 4.3 beds for OECD countries. The lack of investment had tragic consequences. Some 232,000 people died in the Covid pandemic, considerably more per capita than most European countries.

At the end of April 2024, there were some 7.57m unfulfilled NHS England hospital appointments, compared to 2.5m in 2010 and 4.5m in February 2020 just ahead of the pandemic. Some 2.7m working-age adults are chronically ill and unable to work. If the current obsession with low wages, austerity and reducing public services continues that number is expected to rise to 3.7m by 2040.

Between 2018 and 2022, some 1.5 million people in England died whilst waiting for a hospital appointment in England. That is a staggering 300,000 a year. The victims are mainly people suffering from delays and cancellations to hospital appointments and the less well-off. Some 14,000 people a year die whilst waiting in poorly resourced accident and emergency departments in hospitals.

Britons die sooner from cancer and heart disease than people in many other rich countries, partly because of the NHS’s lack of beds, staff and scanners. The number of people dying before the age of 75 in England from heart and circulatory diseases is at the highest level since 2008. 39,000 died prematurely of cardiovascular conditions including heart attacks, coronary heart disease and stroke. Delayed health checks for people with diabetes have caused 7,000 excess deaths a year.

A study published in a peer reviewed scholarly journal reported that between 2012 and 2019, government imposed austerity caused 335,000 excess deaths in England and Scotland i.e. nearly 48,000 a year. One-third of these deaths were among people under 65. Another study reported that each year some 93,000 people, 68,000 pensioners and 25,000 people of working age, die from poverty. Evidence shows that 28,655 older people died in 2022/23 before ever receiving the social care for which they were waiting. This is an average of 79 deaths a day, 550 a week, and 2,388 a month. 1,300 people died while homeless in UK during 2022.

In 2023, some 800,000 patients were admitted to hospital with malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies, a threefold increase on 10 years ago. Children born to undernourished parents are likely to have low birthweight and suffer from ailments throughout their life. Infant mortality rate in the UK is nearly 4 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared to 1.7 in Japan, 1.8 in Finland, Slovenia and Sweden. Children from poorest families are almost 13 times more likely to experience poor health and educational outcomes by the age of 17. They are less likely to go for higher education and have lower social mobility. In later life they are more likely to suffer from heart attacks, cancer, diabetes and other debilitating health issues which lead to greater pressures on welfare and healthcare services.

A study by the Institute of Health Equity reported that between 2011 and 2019 England experienced nearly 1.2m excess deaths due to a combination of Covid, poverty and austerity. A poor English girl could on average expect to live 7.7 years less than a rich girl; and a boy 9.5 years less. Public services are a key part of the tragedy. The Economist reported that “during the 2010s, spending per person decreased by 16% in the richest councils, but by 31% in the poorest. Benefits were also cut … places with the largest relative declines in adult social-care spending and housing services were the ones that suffered the greatest headwinds to life expectancy”. Yet major parties reel-off fiscal rules and more austerity without a word about human consequences.

This election, in common with the last few, has lots of radio and televised debates. Politicians well coached by PR experts come and read their rehearsed lines, and interviewers add their tuppence worth. However, there is little discussion of the human cost of policies. People are treated as invisible casualty of politics. It is the same in parliament too. Government bills are routinely accompanied by an ‘impact assessment’ but none ever refers to the human consequences of regressive taxation, austerity, cuts in public services or tax handouts to the rich. We need to change political debates so that the stark consequences of political choices are discussed and human life is prioritised over the interests of markets and corporations.


Prem Sikka is an Emeritus Professor of Accounting at the University of Essex and the University of Sheffield, a Labour member of the House of Lords, and Contributing Editor at Left Foot Forward.