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JERRY BROWN ON CORPORATIONS AND JOBS
"THAT'S THE WAY I SEE IT"
he corporation is an out-of-control Frankenstein. The 13th
Amendment abolished involuntary servitude; the 14th amendment said no person
shall be denied the due process of law in taking their life, liberty or
property; the fifteenth said the right to vote shall not to be abridged
on the basis of color. The Supreme Court applied this Bill of Rights to
the corporation, saying a corporation as a legal entity is to be treated
as a person, entitled to all those due processes. Once the corporation got
the same bill of rights and the same constitutional protections as a person,
there was a complete imbalance.
The corporation is not a person; it is a legal fiction backed up by guns
and police and jail cells and taxing authorities and the regulators called
government. Take that away and there is no corporation; it's just paper.
General Motors derives its power because it can exist forever under this
legal framework. Once it exists forever, it accumulates money and can be
liable for its debts, but the people who invest in it can never lose, can
never be held personally liable. If General Motors kills 50,000 people through
its cars, the head of General Motors is not guilty. The owner of General
Motors stock, the true owner, is not liable. It's that separation of ownership
and legal liability which is the dark genius of the corporate entity. Unless
you can strip that away and make the corporation subject to environmental
and human justice restraints, we're never going to make any progress.
Corporations not only get tax breaks and often subsidies as well, but are
dependent on billions of dollars of workers' wages in the form of pensions.
For example, the pension plan of State of California workers, the Public
Employees Retirement System (PERS), has somewhere in the neighborhood of
$45 billion. They are the biggest shareholder of Bank of America. It is
Bank of America that leads the charge for NAFTA and facilitates the transfer
of investment capital to Mexico in a way that is creating misery on both
sides of the border under the guise of progress.
Corporations are ripping us off and we need to understand the mechanism.
The mechanism is the tax dollar through bought-off politicians and wages
that are not paid today but put into a pension fund, which then buys the
stock of large corporations like Bank of America, General Electric, and
Goodyear Tire Company, and sends that capital all over the world looking
for the cheapest worker. A story in the New York Times illustrates how shipping
jobs to Mexico and other countries in Malaysia and Central America has been
affecting the Congress, the country, and the people throughout the nation.
The New York Times let the cat out of the bag in a story entitled "Out
of Crisis and Opportunity" about the fall of the peso and its effect
on one company-Goodyear. They also mentioned Allied Signal, Mattel Toys,
General Electric (owner of NBC) and Zenith. All have moved plants to Mexico
after having first laid off Americans. The New York Times is the same newspaper
that vigorously advocated for the NAFTA trade agreement.
This story gets to the heart of the matter. Fifteen miles north of Mexico
City, Goodyear has a plant. As soon as the peso started dropping last December,
the manager created in his office a war room and established "three
thousand" as the number of tires per day that he estimated would not
be bought in Mexico because of the peso's fall. So the tire plant was converted
to an exporting factory. And Goodyear is not alone. Autos and tires and
televisions and other products are being made in Mexico because labor costs
in dollars have fallen by more than a third. That means you literally double
the profit of your enterprise just by moving south. The Mexican government
is now pressing American companies in Mexico to buy local supplies and parts
from Mexican plants instead of importing them from the United States.
When NAFTA went in, the Mexican manager told the Goodyear workers, "The
tariff is now coming down and you Mexican workers must agree to cut 20%
of the workforce." So they cut 20% out of the workforce, changed the
work rules, and started modernizing the old hissing, clanking machines in
this factory that had been getting along fine supplying the Mexican market.
Because they've been able to break the union work rules and get more efficient,
they have increased their productivity. Now they've got to find a market
for the excess tires that they're producing, particularly now that Mexico
is facing millions more unemployed people because of the economic crisis.
So even more jobs will be switched from Goodyear plants in the U.S. to Goodyear
plants in Mexico.
The Goodyear tire plant story is a metaphor or emblem of the structure of
efficiency that requires the downward pressure on wages, the export of jobs
to places like Mexico and even cheaper markets. Truth now can be seen in
all its ugly detail-the utter insincerity of accepting free trade as business
well-being when there are horrific noneconomic consequences in family breakdowns,
environmental destruction, distrust of government authority, and all the
rest.
In that context, look at what's happening in the welfare debate. We were
lied to on NAFTA; we were deceived by Clinton and the Republicans and Democrats
who voted for it; and real people are suffering in America and in Mexico
because of this effort to create a tire with less time, less money and less
personnel. Is that the fundamental issue when they're talking about nine
million kids on welfare and getting those women out to work just when jobs
are being killed and wages are dragged down by the competition from Mexico?
George Will, a conservative, wrote a column in The Washington Post which
he called "Women and Children First." In it he criticizes Phil
Gramm who has said welfare recipients are people in the wagon who ought
to get out and help the rest of us pull. George Will points out that even
if you get all those free-riding, nine million children in wee harnesses,
the wagon won't move much faster. He concludes that welfare reform may give
a whole new meaning to the phrase "Women and Children first,"
which is usually what they say when a boat is going down. But in the U.S.
today in Congress, they want "women and children first" off welfare
into the unemployment lines and into the devastating abandonment of the
urban desert-all in the context of the sucking sound of jobs going to Mexico.
Will's column also reports the percentage of people who at one time or another
in a year fall under welfare in five cities: in Detroit, 67%; Philadelphia,
57%; Chicago, 46%; New York, 39%; Los Angeles, 38%. That's incredible. Welfare
is a terrible idea. The only worse idea is to take people off it and cast
them to the wolves-"women and children first."
We were lied to before NAFTA was passed, and now NAFTA is doing precisely
what the critics said it would. The logic of moving a plant south is irresistible.
And after the plant moves to Mexico, if the product can be made cheaper
in El Salvador, the logic will be irresistible to move there too. The question
is: Is the community better off? Is the environment better off? Are these
decisions being made wisely? I say no! And the profit is becoming more unequal,
more unjust, with each lurch forward in "progress" and free trade
and innovation. When people wake up and realize, "Hey, we've been really
screwed and lied to," there's going to be shooting in the streets.
Another New York Times story ties into this-"Blame History Not the
Liberals" by John Kenneth Galbraith. Galbraith says the liberals can't
claim credit for "liberal" programs like unemployment insurance,
social security, and welfare. He says that in rural America, there was no
social security; in fact, social security was irrelevant until relatively
recently. Welfare appeared a little bit in the depression and then in the
latter part of the sixties, but only became prominent in the eighties and
nineties. And unemployment didn't exist in early American farms and villages.
Unemployment insurance actually came about in response to changed conditions.
It was a response of those running the country, the leadership, the elite-Republicans,
Democrats, so-called conservatives-because they had no other choice. For
the first time there were unemployed people, widows and orphans, families
that didn't have the family ties of the rural area, so needed a safety net.
Otherwise, there would be beggars and pathetic people wandering the streets
like the dark hole of Calcutta. It was a structural response to maintain
the stability of the system. Because NAFTA facilitates turmoil and destruction
of jobs in Mexico and the United States, we need to understand and re-frame
the dynamic. NAFTA didn't create all these relationships between Mexico
and the United States in terms of increased trade, but it did create the
economic banking and investment framework and security and intimidation.
NAFTA enabled the Mexican and American manager of the plant in Mexico to
intimidate the unions and get them to accept cutbacks, givebacks. NAFTA
enabled them to retool with a cowed labor force that could expand activities
and replace the cowed labor force in the U.S. We're up against a structure
that is a combination of global banking, the integration of the computer
and communications, and the increase in capital. Corporate structures can
manage as easily over a 10,000-mile spread in 20 different countries as
over 20 blocks. You cannot unring that bell.
You can, however, demand that political leaders commit themselves to explain
the real truth and to mitigate the harshness, the impact, on children and
on cities. When Bill Clinton put on the wall of his Little Rock headquarters
the guiding motto of his campaign "It's the economy, stupid,"
he was profoundly mistaken. It is not the economy-it is something much deeper.
It is the recapturing of moral authority, of nonmarket principles like justice,
friendship, obligation, that are the base of civilization and culture and
tribal solidarity.
It's not too late to close the barn door. People are just getting warmed
up. Even some of the Republican candidates are fighting NAFTA. The only
people that don't seem to get it are the incumbent Democrats and their fellow-traveler,
watered-down, wimpy, go-along liberals. What is required now is a new basis,
a new language, a new philosophy, derived from looking at the problem as
it is. The problem is compounded by economics, economic thinking, technology
and all the rest, because there is no principle of justice. Maybe it was
justified to build atomic bombs, automobiles, buses, and space shuttles,
but now the goal must be more social justice and environmental sustainability.
The technological innovation will have to take place within the context
of spiritual and human values. You can see where we are if you look at the
way campaign financing works, if you look at the way the whole corporate
structure works, if you look at how weak the labor movement is and where
the civil rights movement isn't, and if you look at the media-concentrated,
driven by advertising, representing just a relatively small number of people
at the top.
We need to have very clear rules of trade that do not allow any employer
or purchaser or business to benefit from exploited labor. If we were really
committed to the common good, we would determine what is exploited labor
around the world and figure the difference between that and a fair wage/good
working conditions/good environmental standards. That difference could be
covered by a tariff levied on the goods as they come in; and that money
could be plowed into taking care of a lot of things now being cut back.
That's called a "social tariff." It is completely revolutionary.
That's the way world trade could produce prosperity.
A social tariff would work like this. If you make Nikes in Indonesia and
pay 20¢ an hour, you probably make them for $10-15. To create the right
kind of conditions, you'd have to add another $40 a pair and levy that as
a tariff. Then I bet someone would ask, "Why don't we make those shoes
in Seattle or Oakland or San Jose or somewhere?" It would totally change
the conditions!
If the people who work in a plant are owners of that plant, you have a totally
different situation. They have a stake in the return on investment as well
as their wages. That's the cooperative that exists in different parts of
the world. But until conditions get further deteriorated and people get
more together, more organized, more clear about what's going on, we are
not going to see that kind of organization. Not yet, but it's coming.
Economics is not what America is about. America is about liberty, about
solidarity, about people being able to create their own life in collaboration
with their neighbors and their friends and like-minded souls. America is
about issues of morality and self-help and mutual aid and how to bring about
a just, self-governing system, the noneconomic, nonmarket values that are
more akin to religion or ecology or friendship, figuring out how to blend
the machine and the computer with the highest and most elegant way of human
endeavor and activity. That's not happening when at one time or another
during the year 57% of the children in Philadelphia are on welfare, in intolerable
conditions that are utterly shameful. If we don't create another basis of
participation, income, and dignity, we're going to get a revolution.
Please call "We The People," in Oakland, 1-800-426-1112 or write
us at 200 Harrison St., Oakland, CA 94607. We'll send you some material
and ask you to join our efforts. Together we can build a new movement of
real democratic activism.
Material for this article was excerpted and edited by Doret
Kollerer from Jerry Brown's "We The People" radio broadcasts.
North Coast XPress, DECEMBER '95/JANUARY '96, 1995
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