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Title: After the Jubilee Author: David Graeber Date: September 2012 Language: en Topics: debt Source: Retrieved on 28th November 2021 from https://davidgraeber.org/articles/after-the-jubilee/ Notes: Published in tidal year II.
If you look just at how things look on paper, the entire world is awash
in debt. All governments are in debt. Corporate debt is at historic
highs. And so is what economists like to call āhousehold debtā ā both in
the sense of how many people are in the red, and the sheer quantity of
what they owe. Thereās a consensus among economists that this is a
terrible problem, even if, as usual, economists canāt agree as to why.
The mainstream, conventional view is that the ādebt overhangā from all
three is so vast it is stifling other economic activity. We have to
reduce all of them they say, largely by either raising taxes on ordinary
people, or cutting their services. (Only on ordinary people, mind you ā
mainstream economists are of course paid to come up with reasons why one
should never do either of these things to the rich.) More level heads
point out that national debt, especially for countries like the US, is
nothing like personal debt, since the US government could eliminate its
entire debt overnight if it simply instructed the Federal Reserve to
print the money and hand it over to the government.
No doubt, readers will object: ābut if you just print trillions of
dollars, wouldnāt that cause severe inflation?ā Well, yes, in theory, it
should. But it seems the theory here is flawed, since thatās exactly
what the government is doing: theyāve been printing trillions of
dollars, and so far, it hasnāt had any notable inflationary effect.
The US governmentās policy, both under Bush and under Obama (on such
matters thereās been almost zero difference in policy between the two)
has been to print money and give it to the banks. Actually, this is the
way the US financial system has always worked, but since 2008, it has
been intensified with reckless abandon. The Federal Reserve has whisked
trillions of dollars into existence by waving its magic wand, then lent
it at almost negligible interest rates to large financial institutions
like Bank of America or Goldman Sachs. The supposed purpose was first to
save them from bankruptcy, then, to get them lending and jump-start the
economy. But there seems good reason to believe thereās another purpose,
as well: to flood the economy with so much money that it would, in fact,
create inflation, as a way of reducing debts. (After all, if you owe
$1000.00 and the value of the dollar falls by half, the value of your
debt has just been reduced by half as well).
The problem is it didnāt work. Either to get the economy moving, or to
increase inflation. First of all, banks did not invest the money.
Mainly, they either lent it back to the government again, or deposited
it in the Federal Reserve, which paid them a higher interest rate for
just keeping it there than they were charging those same banks to borrow
it. So in effect, the government has been printing money and giving it
to the banks and the banks have just sat on it. This is perhaps not too
surprising, since the Federal Reserve itself is governed by the very
bankers that it is giving money too. Still, while a policy of allowing
bankers to print money and give it to themselves can work quite well if
your aim is restoring the fortunes of the 1% ā and it has done quite
nicely at this ā and though it has also allowed the rich to pay off
their own debts and sent a good deal of new money sloshing around in the
political system to reward politicians for allowing them to do so, even
the Fed itself now admits its done very little to get employers hiring,
or even to create any significant inflation.
The conclusion is so obvious even the people on the top are increasingly
beginning to recognize it ā at least, that minority of them who actually
do care about the long-term viability of the system (rather than simply
being concerned their own personal short-term enrichment). There will
have to be some kind of mass debt cancellation. And not just the debts
of the rich, which can always be erased in one way or another if they
become inconvenient, but the debts of ordinary citizens as well. In
Europe, even professional economists are beginning to talk of
ājubilees,ā and the Fed itself recently issued a white paper
recommending mass cancellation of mortgage debt.
The very fact that such people are contemplating this shows they know
the system is in trouble. Up till now, the very idea of debt
cancellation was the ultimate taboo. Again: not for those on top
themselves. Donald Trump, for instance, has walked away from billions of
debt and none of his friends find this at all a problem, but all of them
absolutely insist that for the little people, the rules must be
different.
One might well question why. Why should the rich care so much that the
debt of the poor should never be forgiven? Is it simple sadists? Do rich
people somehow get a kick out of knowing that at any moment there are at
least a few hardworking mothers being kicked out of their homes and
having to pawn their childrenās toys to pay for the costs of some
catastrophic illness? This seems implausible. If you know anything about
rich people you know they almost never think about poor people at all ā
except perhaps as occasional objects of charity.
No, the real answer seems to be ideological. To put the matter crudely,
a ruling class whose main claim to wealth is no longer the ability to
make anything, or even really sell anything, but increasingly on a
series of credit-scams propped up by government support, has to rely
very heavily on every mechanism that might make tend to legitimize the
system. This is why the last 30 years of āfinancializationā have been
accompanied by an ideological offensive unparalleled in human history,
arguing that current economic arrangements ā which they have rather
whimsically dubbed āthe free marketā even though it functions almost
entirely through the government giving money to the rich, is not just
the best economic system, but the only economic system that could
possibly exist, except possibly for Soviet-style communism. Much more
energy has been put into creating mechanisms to convince people that the
system is morally justified, and the only viable economic system, than
has been put into actually creating a viable economic system (as its
near collapse in 2008 clearly showed.) The last thing the 1% wants, as
the world economy continues to teeter from crisis to crisis, is to give
up on one of their most powerful moral weapons: the idea that decent
people always pay their debts.
So: some kind of mass debt cancellation is on the way. Almost everyone
is willing to admit this now. Itās the only way to resolve the sovereign
debt crisis in Europe. Itās the only way to resolve the ongoing mortgage
crisis in America. The real battle is over the form that it will take.
Even apart from obvious questions, like how much debt will be cancelled
(just certain mortgage debt? Or a grand jubilee for all personal debt up
to say, $100,000?) and of course, for whom, there are two absolutely
critical factors to look at here:
Will they admit they are doing it? That is, will the debt cancellation
be presented as a debt cancellation, as an honest acknowledgement that
money is really just a political arrangement now, and, therefore, the
beginning of a process of finally beginning to bring such arrangements
under democratic control, or will it be dressed up as something else?
What will come afterwards? That is, will the cancellation just be a way
of preserving the system and its extreme inequalities, perhaps in an
even more savage form, or will it be a way of beginning to move past
them.
The two are obviously linked. To get a sense of what the most
conservative option would be like, one might consult a recent report of
the Boston Consulting Group, a mainstream economic think tank. They
begin by agreeing that since thereās no way to grow or inflate our way
out of debt, cancellation is inevitable. Why postpone it? However, their
solution is to frame the whole thing as a one-time tax on wealth to pay
off, say, 60% of all outstanding debt, and then declare that the price
for such sacrifices by the rich will be even more austerity for
everybody else. Others suggest having the government print money, buying
mortgages, and giving them to homeowners. No one dares to suggest that
the government could just as easily declare those same debts
unenforceable (if you want to pay back your loan youāre free to do so
but the government will no longer recognize its legal standing in court
if you decide not to.) That would open windows those running the system
are desperate to keep opaque.
So what would a radical alternative really look like? There have been
some intriguing suggestions: democratization of the Fed, a full
employment program to pull wages upwards, some sort of basic income
scheme. Some are quite radical but almost all involve both expanding
government, and increasing the overall number of jobs and hours worked.
This is a real problem because feeding the global work machine,
increasing production, productivity, employment levels, is really the
last thing we need to be doing right now if we want to save the planet
from ecological catastrophe.
But this, I think, points us towards a solution. Because in fact, the
ecological crisis and the debt crisis have everything to do with
another.
Here it might help to understand that debts are, basically, promises of
future productivity. Think of it this way. Imagine everyone on earth
produces a trillion dollars worth of goods and services a year. And
imagine they consume about the same ā since of course thatās what
generally happens, we consume most of what we produce, minus a little
wastage. Yet 1% of them somehow contrive to convince 99% of them that
they still, collectively, owe them a trillion dollars. Well, aside from
the fact that someone is obviously being seriously overcharged here,
thereās clearly no way these debts can be repaid at their current value
unless everyone produces even more the next year. In fact, if the
interest payments are set at, say, 5% a year, theyāll have to produce 5%
more just to break even.
This is the real burden of debt weāre passing on to future generations:
the burden of having to work ever harder, while at the same time,
consuming more energy, eroding the earthās ecosystems, and ultimately
accelerating catastrophic climate change at just the moment we
desperately need some way to reverse it. Seen in this light, a debt
cancellation might be the last chance we have to save the planet. The
problem is that conservatives donāt care, and liberals are still caught
up in impossible dreams of returning to the Keynesian economic policies
of the ā50s and ā60s, which based broad prosperity on continual economic
expansion. Weāre going to have to come up with an entirely different
kind of economic policy.
But if a post-jubilee society canāt promise the workers of the world an
endless expansion of new consumer goods, what can it? I think the answer
is obvious. It could offer security in basic needs ā guarantees of food,
housing, and health care that can ensure our children donāt have to face
the fear, shame, and anxiety that defines most of our lives today. And
above all, it can offer them less work. Remember that in the 1870s, the
idea of an 8-hour day seemed just as unrealistic and utopian as, say,
demanding a 4-hour day would seem today. Yet the labor movement managed
to achieve it. So why not demand a 4-hour day? Or a guaranteed four
months of paid vacation? It is very clear that Americans ā those who do
have jobs ā are absurdly overworked. Itās also clear that a very large
proportion of that work is completely unnecessary. And every hour saved
from work is an hour that we can give to our friends, families,
communities.
This is not the place to come up with a detailed economic program of how
it could be done or how such a system could work ā these are matters to
be worked out democratically (myself, Iād like to see wage labor
eliminated entirely. But maybe thatās just me). Anyway, social change
doesnāt begin by someone mapping out a program. It begins with visions
and principles. Our rulers have made it clear they no longer know what
it would it would be like to even have either. But in a way even that
doesnāt matter. Real, lasting change always comes from below. In 2001,
the world saw the first stirrings of a global uprising against the
current empire of debt. It has already begun to alter the global terms
of debate. The prospect of mass debt cancellation provides us with a
unique opportunity to turn that democratic impulse towards a fundamental
transformation of values, and towards a genuinely viable accommodation
with the earth.
Itās not clear if thereās ever been a political moment with so much at
stake.