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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 3, 2020
Chomsky: Ventilator Shortage Exposes the Cruelty of Neoliberal Capitalism
World-renowned dissident and philosopher Noam Chomsky standing in his office at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on September 9, 2016.
BY C.J. Polychroniou, TruthoutPUBLISHED-April 1, 2020
The pandemic had been predicted long
before its appearance, but actions to prepare for such a crisis were
barred by the cruel imperatives of an economic order in which “there’s
no profit in preventing a future catastrophe,” Noam Chomsky points out
in this exclusive interview for Truthout. Chomsky is emeritus professor
of linguistics at MIT and laureate professor at the University of
Arizona, author of more than 120 books and thousands of articles and
essays. In the interview that follows, he discusses how neoliberal
capitalism itself is behind the U.S.’s failed response to the pandemic.
C.J. Polychroniou: Noam, the outbreak
of the new coronavirus disease has spread to most parts of the world,
with the United States now having more infected cases than any other
country, including China, where the virus originated. Are these
surprising developments?
Noam Chomsky: The scale of the plague
is surprising, indeed shocking, but not its appearance. Nor the fact
that the U.S. has the worst record in responding to the crisis.
Scientists have been warning of a
pandemic for years, insistently so since the SARS epidemic of 2003, also
caused by a coronavirus, for which vaccines were developed but did not
proceed beyond the pre-clinical level. That was the time to begin to put
in place rapid-response systems in preparation for an outbreak and to
set aside spare capacity that would be needed. Initiatives could also
have been undertaken to develop defenses and modes of treatment for a
likely recurrence with a related virus.
But scientific understanding is not
enough. There has to be someone to pick up the ball and run with it.
That option was barred by the pathology of the contemporary
socioeconomic order. Market signals were clear: There’s no profit in
preventing a future catastrophe. The government could have stepped in,
but that’s barred by reigning doctrine: “Government is the problem,”
Reagan told us with his sunny smile, meaning that decision-making has to
be handed over even more fully to the business world, which is devoted
to private profit and is free from influence by those who might be
concerned with the common good. The years that followed injected a dose
of neoliberal brutality to the unconstrained capitalist order and the
twisted form of markets it constructs.
The depth of the pathology is revealed
clearly by one of the most dramatic — and murderous — failures: the
lack of ventilators that is one the major bottlenecks in confronting the
pandemic. The Department of Health and Human Services foresaw the
problem, and contracted with a small firm to produce inexpensive,
easy-to-use ventilators. But then capitalist logic intervened. The firm
was bought by a major corporation, Covidien, which sidelined the
project, and, “In 2014, with no ventilators having been delivered to the
government, Covidien executives told officials at the [federal]
biomedical research agency that they wanted to get out of the contract,
according to three former federal officials. The executives complained
that it was not sufficiently profitable for the company.”
Doubtless true.
The current administration had ample
warning about a likely pandemic. In fact, a high-level simulation was
run as recently as last October.
Neoliberal logic then intervened,
dictating that the government could not act to overcome the gross market
failure, which is now causing havoc. As The New York Times gently put
the matter, “The stalled efforts to create a new class of cheap,
easy-to-use ventilators highlight the perils of outsourcing projects
with critical public-health implications to private companies; their
focus on maximizing profits is not always consistent with the
government’s goal of preparing for a future crisis.”
Putting aside the ritual obeisance to
the benign government and its laudatory goals, the comment is true
enough. We may add that focus on maximizing profits is also “not always
consistent” with the hope for “the survival of humanity,” to borrow the
phrase of a leaked memo from JPMorgan Chase, [the U.S.’s] largest bank,
warning that “the survival of humanity” is at risk on our current
course, including the bank’s own investments in fossil fuels. Thus,
Chevron canceled a profitable sustainable energy project because there’s
more profit to be made in destroying life on Earth. ExxonMobil
refrained from doing so, because [it] had never opened such a project in
the first place, having made more rational calculations of
profitability.
And rightly so, according to
neoliberal doctrine. As Milton Friedman and other neoliberal luminaries
have instructed us, the task of corporate managers is to maximize
profits. Any deviation from this moral obligation would shatter the
foundations of “civilized life.”
There will be recovery from the
COVID-19 crisis, at severe and possibly horrendous cost, particularly
for the poor and more vulnerable. But there will be no recovery from the
melting of the polar ice sheets and the other devastating consequences
of global warming. Here, too, the catastrophe results from a market
failure — in this case, of truly earth-shaking proportions.
The current administration had ample
warning about a likely pandemic. In fact, a high-level simulation was
run as recently as last October. Trump has reacted during his years in
office in the manner to which we have become accustomed: by defunding
and dismantling every relevant part of government and assiduously
implementing the instructions of his corporate masters to eliminate the
regulations that impede profits while saving lives — and leading the
race to the abyss of environmental catastrophe, by far his greatest
crime — in fact, the greatest crime in history when we consider the
consequences.
By early January, there was little
doubt of what was happening. On December 31, China informed the World
Health Organization (WHO) of the spread of pneumonia-like symptoms with
unknown etiology. On January 7, China informed the WHO that scientists
had identified the source as a coronavirus and had sequenced the genome,
which they made available to the scientific world.
Through January and February, U.S.
intelligence was trying hard to reach Trump’s ear, but failed. Officials
informed the press that “they just couldn’t get him to do anything
about it. The system was blinking red.”
Trump was not silent, however. He
issued a stream of confident pronouncements informing the public that it
was just a cough; he has everything under control; he gets a 10 out of
10 for his handling of the crisis; it’s very serious but he knew it was a
pandemic before anyone else; and the rest of the sorry performance. The
technique is well-designed, much like the practice of reeling out lies
so fast that the very concept of truth vanishes. Whatever happens, Trump
is sure to be vindicated among his loyal followers. When you shoot
arrows at random, some are likely to hit the target.
To crown this impressive record, on
February 10, when the virus was sweeping the country, the White House
released its annual budget proposal, which extends further the sharp
cuts in all the main health-related parts of the government (in fact
just about anything that might help people) while increasing funding for
what’s really important: the military and the wall.
The U.S. is now the global epicenter of the crisis.
One effect is the shockingly belated
and limited testing, well below others, making it impossible to
implement the successful test-and-trace strategies that have prevented
the epidemic from breaking out of control in functioning societies. Even
the best hospitals lack basic equipment. The U.S. is now the global
epicenter of the crisis.
This only skims the surface of Trumpian malevolence, but there’s no space for more here.
It is tempting to cast the blame on
Trump for the disastrous response to the crisis. But if we hope to avert
future catastrophes, we must look beyond him. Trump came to office in a
sick society, afflicted by 40 years of neoliberalism, with still deeper
roots.
The neoliberal version of capitalism
has been in force since Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, beginning shortly
before. There should be no need to detail its grim consequences.
Reagan’s generosity to the super-rich is of direct relevance today as
another bailout is in progress. Reagan quickly lifted the ban on tax
havens and other devices to shift the tax burden to the public, and also
authorized stock buybacks — a device to inflate stock values and enrich
corporate management and the very wealthy (who own most of the stock)
while undermining the productive capacity of the enterprise.
Such policy changes have huge
consequences, in the tens of trillions of dollars. Quite generally,
policy has been designed to benefit a tiny minority while the rest
flounder. That’s how we come to have a society in which 0.1 percent of
the population hold 20 percent of the wealth and the bottom half have
negative net worth and live from paycheck to paycheck. While profits
boomed and CEO salaries skyrocketed, real wages have stagnated. As
economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman show in their book, The
Triumph of Injustice, taxes are basically flat across all income groups,
except at the top, where they decline.
The U.S.’s privatized for-profit
health care system had long been an international scandal, with twice
the per capita expenses of other developed societies and some of the
worst outcomes. Neoliberal doctrine struck another blow, introducing
business measures of efficiency: just-on-time service with no fat in the
system. Any disruption and the system collapses. Much the same is true
of the fragile global economic order forged on neoliberal principles.
This is the world that Trump
inherited, the target of his battering ram. For those concerned with
reconstructing a viable society out of the wreckage that will be left
from the ongoing crisis, it is well to heed the call of Vijay Prashad:
“We won’t go back to normal, because normal was the problem.”
Yet, even now, with the country in the
midst of a public health emergency unlike anything we have seen in a
very long time, the American public continues to be told that the
universal health care is not realistic. Is neoliberalism alone
responsible for this peculiarly unique American perspective on health
care?
It’s a complicated story. To begin
with, for a long time, polls have shown favorable attitudes toward
universal health care, sometimes very strong support. In the late Reagan
years, about 70 percent of the population thought that guaranteed
health care should be in the Constitution, and 40 percent thought it
already was — the Constitution taken to be the repository of all that is
obviously right. There have been referenda showing high support for
universal health care — until the business propaganda offensive begins,
warning of the heavy if not astronomical tax burden, much as what we
have seen recently. Then popular support fades.
As usual, there is an element of truth
to the propaganda. Taxes will go up, but total expenses should sharply
decline, as the record of comparable countries shows. How much? There
are some suggestive estimates. One of the world’s leading medical
journals, The Lancet (U.K.), recently published a study estimating that
universal health care in the U.S. “is likely to lead to a 13% savings in
national health-care expenditure, equivalent to more than US$450
billion annually (based on the value of the US$ in 2017).” The study
continues:
The entire system could be funded with
less financial outlay than is incurred by employers and households
paying for health-care premiums combined with existing government
allocations. This shift to single payer health care would provide the
greatest relief to lower-income households.
Furthermore, we estimate that ensuring health-care access for all Americans would save more than 68,000 lives and 1.73 million life-years every year compared with the status quo.
Furthermore, we estimate that ensuring health-care access for all Americans would save more than 68,000 lives and 1.73 million life-years every year compared with the status quo.
But it would raise taxes. And it seems
that many Americans would prefer to spend more money as long as it
doesn’t go to taxes (incidentally killing tens of thousands of people
annually). That’s a telling indication of the state of American
democracy, as people experience it; and from another perspective, of the
force of the doctrinal system crafted by business power and its
intellectual servants. The neoliberal assault has intensified this
pathological element of the national culture, but the roots go much
deeper and are illustrated in many ways, a topic very much worth
pursuing.
While some European countries are
doing better than others in managing the spread of COVID-19, the
countries that appear to have had greater success with this task lie
primarily outside the Western (neo)liberal universe. They are Singapore,
South Korea, Russia and China itself. Does this fact tell us something
about Western capitalist regimes?
There have been various reactions to
the spread of the virus. China itself seems to have controlled it, at
least for now. The same is true of the countries in China’s periphery
where the early warnings were heeded, including democracies no less
vibrant than those of the West. Europe mostly temporized, but some
European countries acted. Germany appears to hold the global record in
low death rates, thanks to spare health facilities and diagnostic
capacity, and rapid response. The same seems to be true in Norway. Boris
Johnson’s reaction in the U.K. was shameful. Trump’s U.S. brought up
the rear.
The distinguishing feature in responses
seems not to be democracies vs. autocracies, but functioning vs.
dysfunctional societies.
Germany’s solicitude for the
population did not, however, extend beyond its borders. The European
Union proved to be anything but. However, ailing European societies
could reach across the Atlantic for succor. The Cuban superpower was
once again ready to help with doctors and equipment.
Meanwhile, its U.S. neighbor was
cutting back health aid to Yemen, where it had helped create the world’s
worst humanitarian crisis, and was using the opportunity of the
devastating health crisis to tighten its cruel sanctions to ensure
maximal suffering among its chosen enemies. Cuba is the most
longstanding victim, back to the days of Kennedy’s terrorist wars and
economic strangulation, but miraculously has survived.
It should, incidentally, be profoundly
disturbing to Americans to compare the circus in Washington with Angela
Merkel’s sober, measured, factual report to Germans on how the outbreak
should be handled.
The distinguishing feature in
responses seems not to be democracies vs. autocracies, but functioning
vs. dysfunctional societies — what in Trumpian rhetoric are termed
“shithole” countries, like what he is working hard to craft under his
rule.
What do you think of the $2 trillion
coronavirus economic rescue plan? Is it enough to stave off another
possible great recession and to help the most vulnerable groups in
American society?
The rescue plan is better than
nothing. It offers limited relief to some of those who desperately need
it, and contains an ample fund to help the truly vulnerable: the piteous
corporations flocking to the nanny state, hat in hand, hiding their
copies of Ayn Rand and pleading once again for rescue by the public
after having spent the glory years amassing vast profits and magnifying
them with an orgy of stock buybacks. But no need to worry. The slush
fund will be monitored by Trump and his Treasury Secretary, who can be
trusted to be fair and just. And if they decide to disregard the demands
of the new inspector-general and Congress, who is going to do anything
about it? Barr’s Justice Department? Impeachment?
There would have been ways to direct
aid to those who need it, to households, beyond the pittance included
for some. That includes those working people who had authentic jobs and
the huge precariat who were getting by somehow with temporary and
irregular employment, but also others: those who had given up, the
hundreds of thousands of victims of “deaths of despair” — a unique
American tragedy — the homeless, prisoners, the great many with such
inadequate housing that isolation and storing food is not an option, and
plenty of others that are not hard to identify.
Political economists Thomas Ferguson
and Rob Johnson put the matter plainly: While the universal medical care
that is standard elsewhere may be too much to expect in the U.S.,
“there is no reason why it should have one sided single payer insurance
for corporations.” They go on to review simple ways to overcome this
form of corporate robbery.
At the very least, the regular
practice of public bailout out of the corporate sector should require
stiff enforcement of a ban on stock buybacks, meaningful worker
participation in management, an end to the scandalous protectionist
measures of the mislabeled “free trade agreements” that guarantee huge
profits for Big Pharma while raising drug prices far beyond what they
would be under rational arrangements.
At least.
This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.