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Columnists

What financial crises teach us about economic democracy

The left can learn an important lesson from the financial upheavals that are becoming routine these days. As elites scramble to confront each successive crisis, they prove by example that which they consistently deny: there is an alternative to the dictates of the free market.

One of the most politically disempowering aspects of neoliberal capitalism is the mantra that we were powerless to resist economic forces. We are constantly told that there is no help for our economic complaints. The free market created the situation, and market forces reign supreme.

Columnists

Financial crisis as a way of life

From Wall Street to Iceland to Greece to Ireland, the world is lurching from one financial crisis to the next. The financial panic of 2008 has morphed into the era of financial crises. If you think you live in an oasis away from financial meltdown, think again. Financial markets are so twitchy (and so interdependent) that a problem anywhere could become a problem everywhere.

How did we become hostage to financial markets? A generation of neoliberal finance set the stage for chronic worldwide financial instability:

Inequality has skyrocketed

Not Rex: Wall Street scuffle

Wall Street started out as a child slavery market and now promotes wage slavery. Either way, it is the perfect target for an occupation. Viva the Occupy Wall Street movement!

Moore at the Stock Exchange

Michael Moore's new film, Capitalism: A Love Story, opens this weekend in Canada. He recently took his message to a labour rally at the New York Stock Exchange.

Related rabble.ca story:

Why won't the bankers show up to testify in Congress?

Barney Frank has repeatedly promised to bring bank executives in to testify before Congress about what they are doing with taxpayer money from the TARP. So far, no hearings have been publicly scheduled. As lending declines, banks continue to pay bonuses and many in Congress are losing patience.

Columnists

How much is a bank CEO worth?

It's probably a while still before we see bank CEOs on street corners selling the homeless news.

But reports last week of bank presidents cutting their own pay were somewhat eye-catching. (For a little perspective: Rick Waugh of Bank of Nova Scotia will take home $7.5 million this year -- after his cut.)

Still, the pay cuts suggest that even inside the most well-fortified Bay Street towers there are jitters that the people down below may start questioning how the economic pie is divided and why they are getting such a small -- and shrinking -- slice.

Trish Hennessy

The quiet limits of greed

| February 4, 2009
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