Missing: A Vision of Economic Possibility
Wednesday 03 November 2010
by: David Korten | YES! Magazine | Op-Ed

(Photo: Homayon Zeary / Flickr)
It is now the morning after. Republicans, as expected, are celebrating a sweeping victory. Democrats are licking their wounds. Meanwhile, record numbers of people are still contending with the hardships of unemployment and foreclosure with no relief in sight. And the nation braces for deepening political gridlock.
It is a moment of opportunity for America to set a new course and for a young President Barack Obama to establish his place in history as a path-breaking leader.
So how does electoral failure and political gridlock create a moment of opportunity?
We are a nation consumed by short-term thinking and fragmented political contests centered on narrowly defined issues. Neither of our two major parties has a credible vision for the economic future of our nation.
The Republicans offer only their standard prescription of tax cuts for the rich, a rollback of regulations on predatory corporations, and elimination of the social safety net—a proven prescription for further job loss and devastation of the middle class.
The Democrats have no identifiable program for economic recovery, let alone for adapting our economy to the dramatic demographic, environmental, economic, and political changes that rule out any chance of a return to pre-2008 business as usual.
In an insightful interview, Populist historian Lawrence Goodwyn suggests that this creates a historic opportunity. He observes that bankers have been a dominant ruling power throughout much of our national history and a barrier to realizing the democratic ideal on which our nation was founded. It has not been within the power of any American president to break their hold due to lack of an adequate public understanding of the nature of the problem.
We now have 15 million unemployed people who feel deeply betrayed and upwards of two million homeowners whose homes have been foreclosed—all as a direct consequence of the actions of Wall Street bankers. These same interests used conceptual deception backed by massive political spending to swing the election in favor of right wing extremists devoted to policies that will further decimate the middle class without resolving the pain of the unemployed and the foreclosed.
The deception, which can be maintained only so long, sows the seeds of its own self-destruction. In taking control of the House and leaving the Democrats with only a slim majority in the Senate, Republicans now share responsibility for what is certain to be continued economic failure.
The administration, however, remains in the hands of a now seasoned Democratic president who Goodwyn believes has the potential to rise to the occasion, lead his party to a second term victory, break the power of Wall Street, and actualize the democratic ideal that has for so long eluded us.
It requires, however, a vision of a New Economy that is truly democratic, based on sound market principles, rooted in community values, and accountable to community interests. Economists steeped in the economic models that got us into this mess are not going to provide President Obama with such a vision. He will need to look to the people who are working from the bottom up outside the halls of established power to frame and implement a new economic vision aligned with the values of caring and sharing at the core of authentic spiritual teaching and for which scientists tell us our brains are wired.
This vision is being articulated and popularized by alliances such as the New Economy Working Group and the New Economy Network and implemented by groups such as the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies, the American Independent Business Alliance, Transition Towns, local food movements, and many others. The vision is grounded not in some utopian ideology or theory, but rather on the work and experience of millions of people are already engaged in living the New Economy into being through grassroots actions that flow from their deepest values and aspirations.
The emerging vision calls for a fundamental economic restructuring to put life values ahead of financial values, give the creation of sustainable livelihoods for working people priority over bonuses for Wall Street traders, and root the power to create and allocate money in people and community rather than in Wall Street financial institutions. David Brancaccio has documented impressive examples in a PBS television special titled "Fixing the Future" scheduled to be aired on November 18, 2010.
As awareness grows that no adjustments at the margin of the existing Wall Street-dominated economy will resolve the plights of joblessness and the homelessness, so too does potential political support for fundamental economic restructuring in support of the emerging vision. The political party that responds to this rapidly growing economic and political force will gain a decided advantage in 2012 and beyond.
It is President Obama’s opportunity to win a second term and establish his place in history not only as the first African-American president, but as well the president who liberated the nation, our democracy, and the market from the grip of Wall Street. I have drafted a framing presidential economic address ready for delivery by the future president who dares to take on the challenge. Imagine a president delivering this speech. Let us make it happen.
David Korten is co-founder and board chair of YES! Magazine, co-chair of the New Economy Working Group, president of the People-Centered Development Forum, and a founding board member of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE). His books include Agenda for a New Economy: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth, The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community, and the international best seller When Corporations Rule the World.
All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.



Comments
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Obama could not have become
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 16:47 — Ed Howes (not verified)Obama could not have become president without Wall Street money and he has rewarded them very well for their help, which he will again require if he wants to be re elected. Better start looking for a new candidate.
Kucinich/Dean-2012 "Democrats
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 16:49 — Kevin Schmidt (not verified)Kucinich/Dean-2012
"Democrats are licking their wounds."
Not the incumbent Progressive Democrats who won over 95% of their elections this past Tuesday!
"The Democrats have no identifiable program for economic recovery..."
You must not have talked to the incumbent Progressive Democrats who won over 95% of their elections this past Tuesday! They do indeed have a plan. That's partly why they won their reelections.
"It is President Obama’s opportunity to win a second term [Blah! Blah! Blah!]"
Talk about drinking the Kool-Aid! Obama just gave the FED the OK to prop up Wall Street with another SIX HUNDRED BILLION DOLLARS, with ZERO DOLLARS going to Main Street, again!!! Obama proves once again, and right after losing the election for Blue Dog DINOs, that he is STILL a Blue Dog DINO (Republican Light) to the end.
Hey! Where's Rahmbo???
Oh, that's right, he threw popular Progressive Democrats under the bus and was so completely discredited, he HAD to leave Washington, D.C., and is about to lose another election, this time his own, by running as a Blue Dog DINO for Mayor of Chicago.
The Blue Dog DINOs are nothing but a bunch of greedy, self serving Dodo Birds, too stupid to change, even when faced with their own political extinction.
Obama is threw. If the Republicans don't impeach him, the Progressive Democrats will vote him out in the Democratic Presidential Primary.
Ed, there was more to the
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 17:07 — Kevin Schmidt (not verified)Ed, there was more to the 2008 Presidential Election besides Wall St Money. Obama could not have become president without the support of Progressive Democrats. What was their reward? The wrath of Rahmbo.
sorry to be pedantic, but
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 17:20 — Anonymous (not verified)sorry to be pedantic, but it's "an historic" not "a historic"
good article though.
cheers, Gary from Canada
It's all a game...the pawns
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 17:26 — sue (not verified)It's all a game...the pawns are us the American people and we've been asleep at the wheel...
Who is going to suffer?? All of us....everyone with out exception...
Of course, the Wealthy will fare better longer...but eventually they will go the way of all their predicessors .... Rome will fall...
Just like it began to fall the last time the Republicans won an election...the next time they take control...we are a DONE nation...
I'm disgusted with the whole thing...
Yeah, it's Called the Real
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 18:50 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Yeah, it's Called the Real DEAL: framing presidential economic address
Pedantic Gary, every
Thu, 11/04/2010 - 19:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Pedantic Gary, every sentence should begin with the first word capitalized, and end with a period.
Cheers, Kevin from Pedantocracy
Time to think about breaking
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 08:30 — Anonymous (not verified)Time to think about breaking up the US into various parts: The right-wing whackadoodle middle and south, a new 3rd world country. The North East and New York better start thinking about seceding and joining Canada, and the three Pacific Coast states and Hawaii could do very well alone as a new country, or also join Canada (I like their health care system). Alaska? The new third world whackadoodle country can sell it to Russia to pay off its (Real Amerikkka) debts.
Obama is finished. He played
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 08:43 — Anonymous (not verified)Obama is finished. He played his first two years as Emanuel-Obama, the bipartisan bystander , squandering every opportunity in pandering to Republicans and blue dogs. Now he's rushing to compromise further. He's an empty suit.
Now we're confronted with the problem of ridding ourselves of him without creating conditions that bring us a Palin presidency--truly representative of the electorate, but a global disaster.
Anon@13:30 may have the
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 10:47 — Austin Loomis (not verified)Anon@13:30 may have the right of it. I myself have occasionally thought that the US was too big and noisy to hold together, and that maybe we ought to devolve into several local federalisms, perhaps along the lines depicted by Tim Kreider in his "The Pain -- When Will It End?" illustration of the US as "Kashistan" (October 10, 2001 in the archives at thepaincomics.com). Bonus: many of the regions of Kashistan map well with Garreau's "Nine Nations of North America".
While it's certainly true
Fri, 11/05/2010 - 17:11 — Erich von Freemason (not verified)While it's certainly true that neither party is offering anything other than a re-inflation of the bubble that caused this mess, the author offers nothing, either (and several of the linked articles SUPPORT the current Demublican economic nonsense, such as "stimulus" spending, squandering our limited capital on things that have no economic value, and shuffling money from Person A to Person B).
He blames our current economic mess on Wall-Street bankers. Sure, they took advantage of the situation, but the bubble (and inevitable melt-down) was caused by the FED inflating the money supply and keeping interest rates artificially low. Even if every bank in the country was run by saints there would have been a crash.
He then claims that his "...vision is grounded not in some utopian ideology..." but every link goes to pages that spout exactly that. An economy is the free-market value added by the production of goods and services. It can't be about anything else, because nothing else has economic value. A high standard of living will be had by the society that, thru its work, adds the most per capita value (this isn't rocket science... those who make two loaves of bread per day eat better than those who make one loaf of bread per day). Nothing, in the brief read of the links I looked at, addressed efficiency of production at all, and increasing our efficiency is the only way we'll dig ourselves out of the current economic mess.
Lastly, TruthOut should charge Mr. Korten for publishing this article, as it is nothing more than an advertisement for Mr. Korten's yesmagazine.org web site.