Focus On The Corporation
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Ponzi Scheme!
The Internet economy, with its fast companies, is poised to replace the old
economy, with its slow ones.
Forget current profits. Sales are booming, and the profits will come. It's
new era economics. The result--a raging bull market.
Geeks with pencils in their shirt pockets become instant millionaires.
Spend your days staring in front of a computer and strike it rich. In some
areas, millionaires are a dime a dozen. The working poor become invisible.
We've become a casino culture.
So, is the booming market for real, or is it a naturally occurring Ponzi
scheme?
Charles Ponzi is the crook from the 1920s who told people he had a business
that made money exploiting mis-pricing in international postage reply
coupons. In fact, there was no such market, but he took people's money and
promised them a spectacular rate of return on their investments. And he
paid off the first round of investors with the money he received from the
second round of investors. And he paid off the second round of investors
with the money he received from the third round--until the scheme ballooned
into a multimillion dollar market. Finally, the bubble burst, leaving the
last round of investors holding the bag.
Sound familiar? Robert Shiller, a professor of Economics at Yale
University, thinks it could be a good explanation for what's happening in
the market now. Except that there is no Charles Ponzi here. And there is no
deception--it just developed naturally. And it's being fed by irrational
exuberance, feedback loops, herd behavior, and epidemic madness.
It seems that people never learn from previous Ponzi schemes until it is
too late. A couple of years ago, in Albania, for example, a gargantuan
Ponzi consumed a good fraction of a year's gross national product for
Albania. When the Ponzi scheme finally collapsed, there was rioting in the
streets, the Army came out, shot some protesters, and the government
resigned in disgrace. There was mass chaos.
Shiller has written a new book, Irrational Exuberance (Princeton
University Press, 2000), in which he looks at the current speculative
bubble in the United States through a lens of behavioral economics. It's
not just numbers driving the market, he reminds us, it's mass psychology,
too.
And Shiller is not just another apolitical market naysayer.
He makes the point that there is a moral demoralization that occurs when
the market bubble inflates to the degree that it has. Instant millionaires
abound, but what about hard-working regular folks who toil
day-in-and-day-out for a living wage, come home, turn on the tube and hear
about the instant millionaires who struck it rich by signing on with this
dot-com or that?
"When people see others flaunting their wealth, it's painful" he told us
recently. "It is so painful to see people devoting their lives to caring
professions--school teachers, police officers, fire fighters--while someone
buys into the market and gets rich. You feel like a sucker. It feels bad.
Nobody wants to be a loser. Today, it seems the world is divided into
winners and losers. The old feeling of solidarity with your fellow human
being is eroded somehow. There was a feeling of labor solidarity. I
remember hearing union songs on the radio when I was growing up in Detroit.
That era is gone. If you work for your money, if you are unionizing, you
are a loser."
And it is not as if Shiller himself wrote the book out of sour grapes. As a
young professor at Yale in 1982, he invested in stocks, and just got out
recently, when, he believes, the market started spinning out of control.
Shiller predicts poor market performance over the next five years, with the
Dow dipping to 5,000 and perhaps slowly coming back to 10,000 by 2020.
"People seem to think that the market has to grow explosively," Shiller
said. "You ask someone--what is the Dow going to be in 2020? And they
say--oh, my God, 200,000. That would be the knee-jerk response. But it
represents a misreading of history."
Shiller recommends that investors get out of stocks now--as he has done.
He points out that one major problem with Ponzi schemes is that until the
end, people are making lots of money. At the end, everyone loses, and
things turn ugly.
--Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor, and co-director of Essential Action, one of the
sponsors of the April 16 Mobilization for Global Justice. Mokhiber and
Weissman are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits
and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999,
http://www.corporatepredators.org).
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