"Deregulation will make the economy more efficient and stimulate GDP growth," insist think tanks like the Brookings Institution and American Enterprise Institute. "Fiscal hawks," claiming to be worried about the deficit, demand austerity measures to reign in government spending. When it comes to "entitlement programs," we hear that "there are always tradeoffs."
Time and again, the media and policymakers spew the same tired recitations meant to convey the seemingly natural, immutable laws of economics. The economy, we’re told, is thriving when business owners and hedge fund managers are making record profits, yet failing when investments in social programs have gotten too big. And that's just how it is.
Terms, phrases, and sentiments like these are part of a lexicon of economic euphemisms, cliches, and other forms of business-school speak designed to blur class lines and convince us all that our current economic system - entirely a result of policy choices largely designed to further enrich the wealthy at the expense of the broader welfare - is merely a function of cold, hard science, with rules and principles no more pliable than those of physics or chemistry.
But why should we be expected to accept that a news report that “the economy” is on the upswing means the average worker is doing any better, when all evidence is to the contrary? Why should our media’s economic "experts" come from a pool of elite economics departments beholden to corporate donors and right-wing think tanks? And why must "the economy" be defined in terms of whether the Dow is up or down, rather than whether people have food, housing, healthcare, and job security?
On this episode - Part II of a two-part series - we’ll examine another five of the most popular cliches, jargon, and rhetorical thingamajigs that economists, economic reporters and pundits use to sanitize, obscure, and provide a thin gloss of Science-ism to what is little more than power flattering cruel, racist austerity ideology.
Our guest is writer Hadas Thier.
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Hadas Thier is a writer, journalist and activist based in Brooklyn, New York. A staff writer at Jacobin, she is also the author of A People's Guide to Capitalism: An Introduction to Marxist Economics.
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Trump’s “Reopening” Is a Red Herring
Sarah Lazare | May 14, 2020 | In These Times
James Ridgeway | March 28, 2008 | Mother Jones
Trump’s Deregulation Push Is Setting the Stage for Major National Disasters
September 2017 | Public Citizen
Workers’ health, safety, and pay are among the casualties of Trump’s war on regulations
Celine McNicholas, Heidi Shierholz & Marni von Wilpert | January 29, 2018 | Economic Policy Institute
How Trump Is Letting Businesses Steal Money From Workers
Sam Berger | January 31, 2018 | Fortune
Republicans fearmonger about regulation, but deregulation is what left Texas in the dark
Catherine Rampell | February 22, 2021 | The Washington Post
Owning the Consequences: Clinton and the Repeal of Glass-Steagall
Wallace C. Turbeville | September 11, 2015 | Demos
Wall Street deregulation pushed by Clinton advisers, documents reveal
Dan Roberts | April 19, 2014 | The Guardian
The Only Thing Worse Than A NIMBY Is A YIMBY
Nathan J. Robinson | January 9, 2021 | Current Affairs
The Leading Indicators: A Short History of the Numbers That Rule Our World
Zachary Karabell | 2014 | Simon & Schuster
Don't Buy It: The Trouble with Talking Nonsense about the Economy
Anat Shenker-Osorio | 2012 | PublicAffairs
Americans Are Flush With Cash and Jobs. They Also Think the Economy Is Awful.
Neil Irwin | November 6, 2021 | The New York Times
Ten Years After Occupy, We Have a Left That Matters
Hadas Thier | October 16, 2012 | Jacobin
The Invention Of 'The Economy'
Jacob Goldstein | February 28, 2014 | WNYC / NPR
A Fabulous Failure: Clinton’s 1990s and the Origins of Our Times
Nelson Lichtenstein | January 29, 2018 | The American Prospect
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For a full transcript of this episode, go here.
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Citations Needed
2021-12-09 15:31:28 +0000 UTC