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The Price of Civilization . Chapters 5-6. Detroit. Where Sachs grew up Home of a lot of riots during the Civil Rights movement Lead to a huge flight of whites to suburbs and out of Detroit Dozens died, city up in flames, mass poverty and abandonment
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The Price of Civilization Chapters 5-6
Detroit • Where Sachs grew up • Home of a lot of riots during the Civil Rights movement • Lead to a huge flight of whites to suburbs and out of Detroit • Dozens died, city up in flames, mass poverty and abandonment • Gave George Wallace (Alabama governor) ability to run third party and win a primary
Civil Rights Movement • Lead to : • Attempting to end discrimination through affirmative action • Desegregation of neighborhood schools • White evangelical Christians congregating into one party (split before, but the desegregation of religious schools made a push into a bloc of opposing racial background) • Came with a lot of political backlash, but also economic and social victory for many African American communities
Surge of Immigration • Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965- ended quotas on national origin, leading to a sharp rise in immigration • Dates: 1970 – 10 million immigrants 1990 – 22 million immigrants 2009 - 48 million immigrants • Proposition 13, a piece of tax legislation in California, lead to mass tax revolts because it required taxes to help lower grade schools where that these new immigrants were filling
Sunbelt vs. Snowbelt • Industry and better education in the North used to mean the North controlled political power along with wealth • Between 1900-1960, the Snowbelt provided all but one U.S presidents, between 1960-2008, the Sunbelt provided every one. This represents the gradual rise of economic power in the South. • The rise of anti-governmental political power created new Sunbelt power without a nationwide swing in values due to demography
Sunbelt Values • Very anti-government • Highly valued Christianity • 37% Evangelical protestants (13% in North) • 65% Protestants (37% in North) • Pro-life • Anti-gay marriage • Anti-Evolution curriculum These views were seen as threatened
Suburban Flight • The baby boom and the automobile led to large suburban flight in the 1960’s • Residential sorting became a way in which educational and income inequalities were propagated • This made Congressional districts “safer”
What Americans think • 72% said income differences are too large • 68% said distribution is unfair • 87% aid the government should spend whatever it needs to in order to ensure good public schools for all • 80% favor having their taxes help pay for retraining programs for those who have been fired • 73% say it is the responsibility of the federal government to make sure everyone has healthcare coverage • 95% say one should always find ways to help those less fortunate
Americans still left thinking • 77% say there is too much power concentrated in the hands of a few businesses • 62% say big businesses make too much profit • 83% say there needs to be stricter environmental regulation • 71% say the government should regulate greenhouse e gases • 66% say renewable energy would be a better long-term investment than fossil fuels
Spending differences • Of the ten largest net-recipient states, Obama carried only two • Of the ten largest giving states, Obama won all Receiving States New Mexico – 57% Mississippi – 43% Alaska – 38% Louisiana – 40% West Virginia – 43% North Dakota – 45% Alabama – 39% South Dakota – 45% Kentucky – 41% Virginia – 53% Giving States Colorado – 54% New York – 63% California – 61% Delaware – 62% Illinois – 62% Minnesota – 54% New Hampshire – 54% Connecticut – 61% Nevada – 55% New Jersey – 57%
Globalization • Started a huge shift in the United States economy in the 1970’s • The lead protagonist was MNC’s or multinational corporations • America’s include: General Electric, Exxon Mobil, Ford Motor Company, Wal-Mart, Chevron Corporation, IBM, etc. • In the 1960’s Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea came to the table • In 1978, the biggest change occurred when the People’s Republic of China joined the global market • 1991- India joined as well
China • In 1985, trade between the U.S and China was equal at 3.9 billion dollars in each direction • By 2009, The United States has raised their output to 69.5 billion dollars • At the same time, China has raised it’s share to 296.4 billion dollars • In 2010, China overtook Japan as the second-largest economy in the World
The 1970’s mishaps • The U.S international monetary fund collapsed in 1971 • In 1973, Oil prices soared – the great stagflation • 1975, the U.S lost the War in Vietnam • Late 1970’s Japan rapidly rose in the auto industry • Reaganomics focused on monetary policy, scarcity of resources, and foreign competition, trying to fix the government from the inside
Alan Greenspan • Alan Greenspan was Federal Reserve Chairman from 1987-2006 • He overlooked the severe risks of his own policies • He pushed down interest rates • He said the inflation was an occurrence of productivity • Inflation was really a product of Chinese imports • The Fed’s monetary policy did create jobs, but in China, rather than the U.S • Ben Bernanke is following down the same path
Different Effects • Three overarching effects of globalization that is transforming the global economy: • The Convergence effect- refers to the new globalization providing the availability for today’s emerging economies to leapfrog technologies – Allowing China to quickly master imports and then branch out (The Process of Absorption) • The Labor effect – refers to China’s opening being tantamount to hundreds of millions of low-skilled worked being thrown into the labor pool – China’s costal cities were designated as “special economic zones” • The Mobility effect – refers to the asymmetry of internationally mobile capital and immobile labor – created a ‘Race to the bottom’
Mobile Capital effects • Globalization has allowed China, India, and others to have the fastest growing economies in history • Internationally mobile capital gains in three ways • The sharp boost in productivity means huge investment opportunities with high rates of return • The surge of global labor means wages around the world are bid down • Governments around the world are cutting corporate taxes easing regulations to raise competition • All three of these effects are negative for U.S workers
Winners and losers • Winners are owners of human capital (i.e. corporate lawyers, high-tech engineers, Wall Street bankers, senior managers, etc.) • The biggest losers BY FAR are those with a low level of education, thus leading to huge income gaps • Governments have cut the EATR (effective average tax rate) which has increased capital mobility • New York and London were two cities over the past twenty years on a dramatic race to the bottom • The end result was a massive financial bubble the imploded in 2008
Solution <3 • International Cooperation! • By banding together to set international minimum norms such as a common approach to eliminate tax havens, financial environmental regulation, etc. • The race led to the depletion of natural resources and long-term damage to earth’s ecosystem • The technological knowhow to deploy technology still requires large-scale research and development • Market regulations are necessary to steer markets toward sustainable solutions – so far such measures have been blocked