THE SOCIALIST TRANSFER
OF WEALTH
reviewed
by
DAVID SOLWAY
______________________________
David
Solway is a Canadian poet and essayist (Random Walks)
and author of The Big Lie: On Terror, Antisemitism, and
Identity. His editorials appear regularly in FRONTPAGEMAG.COM
and Pajamas
Media. He
speaks about his latest book, Hear,
O Israel! (Mantua Books), at frontpage.com.
Many
keyboards have been worn down in the churning out of learned
commentary, pro and con, regarding the fiscal redistributionist
policies of socialist-leaning governments. Those who favour
the averaging out of national income and the sharing of global
reserves point to the presumably growing gap between rich and
poor that needs somehow to be closed. Differences need to be
equalized. This thesis is perhaps most forcefully developed
by New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, author of
The Conscience of a Liberal, who deplores class inequality,
or what he calls “the Great Divergence” between
rich and poor, especially after the administration of Ronald
Reagan.
Skeptics
disagree, arguing that competition is healthy, that the creation
of wealth must come before its redistribution (whether transacted
via entitlements or tax exemptions), and that the best way to
maximize benefits is by promoting a robust industrial and technological
base and a vigorous service sector that can be depended on to
generate mass employment. Moreover, inequality is by no means
synonymous with poverty. As Victor Davis Hanson cogently argues,
“Being unequal is not poor. And not having what the ‘rich’
have hardly means having it bad. Sorry, that’s just the
way it is.”
Others
contend that the apparent gap or ‘divergence’ is
largely a media construct transforming a relative ratio into
a structural absolute. If someone manages to turn a profit,
James Bowman astutely suggests in a recent issue of The
New Criterion, someone else is only ‘comparatively’
poorer. He is not necessarily any worse off than he was before.
The irony, however, is that redistributionist policies meant
to address a tractarian diagnosis of economic malaise tend in
the long run to produce a condition of public dependence and
inertia. At the same time, the resources needed to subsidize
these programs gradually disappear as productivity declines
and jobs grow ever scarcer.
Unfortunately,
the redistributionist or socialist ethos is currently trumping
the job-creating capitalist enterprise, in Europe as well as
the U.S. Which is to say that big government has taken precedence
over the free market and an intrusive statism has come to dominate
labour, trade, and finance. National Post columnist
George Jonas writes, “Most of our contemporaries expect
salvation from improved government, not reduced government .
. . we’ve been rubbing our lamps like Aladdin, releasing
gigantic genies, aka governments, to grant our wishes.”
These genies finish by wreaking havoc and refuse to be stuffed
back into their bottles. There is little doubt that the spirit
of ‘equalization’ has become pervasive in both the
local and international arenas, at least in the West.
It
is increasingly obvious, to take a muscular example, that the
Global Warming (or Climate Change) movement is really a design
promulgated chiefly by the United Nations for transferring wealth
from First World to Third World countries. Consider the UN’s
CDM (Clean Development Mechanism), which arranges for governments
and companies in the industrialized world to fund unverified
‘green’ projects in the developing world, in exchange
for carbon offsets. Carbon traders and the favoured class among
the developing nations are having a field day. Meanwhile studies
have shown, as per Wikileaks, that no emissions have been reduced.
This reinforces the conviction that the UN stance on climate
change is “less about the environment and more about a
wealth-transfer scheme” (National Post, October
4, 2011). Ottmar Edenhofer, former co-chair of the IPCC’s
Working Group III, admitted in an interview with Germany’s
NZZ Online on November 14, 2010, that “we redistribute
de facto the world’s wealth by climate policy.”
On
the national scene, the same attitude toward social and economic
disparities prevails. High earners are now regarded as disreputable
parasites living off the fat of others’ labour; at the
same time, the poor — or the unequal — are not considered
responsible for their comparatively disadvantaged situation
in life. It follows from this species of logic that the rich,
the so-called 1%, must do their fair share — code for
punitive taxation measures and a business-strangling regulatory
apparatus — while those on the lower rungs of the economic
ladder must be boosted upward, even if they happen to be afraid
of heights and incapable of climbing.
The
results of this invidious policy should have been predictable
long ago and are now everywhere to be seen. The U.S. is beset
by debt so astronomical only the Hubble telescope can focus
it. America’s productive business community is shrinking
by the day, entitlement programs are in runaway, and bankruptcy
looms on the fiduciary horizon. Nanny-state Europe with its
corporative approach to social issues and unsustainable expenditures
is also imploding. France and eight other nations have recently
had their credit ratings downgraded (as occurred in the U.S.),
owing to what Standard and Poor’s calls “ongoing
systemic stresses in the Eurozone;” many countries are
nearing default, and a major banking crisis appears inevitable.
This
is the crater that our political rulers and their economic advisors,
supported by decadent and flaccid populations accustomed to
unearned gratuities, have dug for us all. Admittedly, most people’s
lives are circumscribed by immediate interests and desires so
that their lack of foresight can to some extent be understood.
But one requires more from presumably credentialed and perspectival
experts, who have generally turned out to be sore disappointments.
We may wonder if Hanlon’s Razor does not apply here: “Never
attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.”
A strong case can be made that our leaders are possessed of
profoundly uneventful minds, pursuing ideas so obsolete they
resemble snails in carboniferous stone. And as usual, the nuances
and intricacies of complex social structures give way to the
political maneuvering and windy bloviations of a morally compromised
elect.
Ignorance
and self-infatuated stupidity cannot be discounted. But malice
in the form of rampant self-interest and unadulterated greed
is surely a significant factor as well. What goes generally
unremarked is that such destructive wealth transfer schemes
as we’ve been discussing, initiated by governments, NGOs,
and international organizations like the UN, have less to do
with the operation of social conscience and the amelioration
of people’s lives, which are mere peripherals, than they
do with personal aggrandizement and the amassing and ensuring
of in-group prerogatives. Nations may flounder, and more and
more among the growing sector of the jobless will find their
entitlements and welfare payments progressively devalued. But
those who have inveighed against the private accumulation of
wealth and engineered the catastrophic policies that have only
exacerbated the socioeconomic climate are themselves largely
untouched by economic hardship. Indeed, whether they are unelected
and unaccountable EU bureaucrats junketing in Brussels, UN functionaries
enjoying the perquisites of Turtle Bay, or American legislators
and government notables intent on preserving a tumescent lifestyle,
they will not suffer. Their status, property, and fiscal assets
remain secure.
For
they are the real legatees of the wealth-transfer ideology.
It makes little difference which political system they flourish
in; it is easy to smell the fitch in their repertoire of inanities.
In his major work The New Class, Milovan Djilas reveals
how a cadre of theoretically ameliorist managers, supposedly
adhering to socialist principles, acquired power, wealth, and
privilege at the expense of the people whom they ostensibly
served and for whose welfare they declared themselves ready
to make any sacrifice. The dictatorship of the proletariat was
really the dictatorship of a bureaucratic aristocracy. One is
reminded of the old joke about Leonid Brezhnev, general secretary
of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, showing off his
collection of vintage cars and priceless paintings to his visiting
mother. “But my son,” she tremulously asks, “what
if the Communists find out?”
Wealth
has certainly been transferred, but in the last analysis not
to the poor and needy, not to the jobless citizens of the West
in a redistributionist fever of inflated currency or to the
basket-case Third World nations under the aegis of global warming,
but to the managerial class itself. The ultimate beneficiaries
are the members of the oligarchic elite who make policy and
control the flow of economic exchange. Their Swiss accounts
brimmeth over and their investments are bundled together with
blue ribbons. This is effectively how that deceptive euphemism,
the ‘transfer of wealth,’ works out in practice.
And those who are implicated in the scam are the real 1%.