While we have been frantically playing defense against relentless assaults on multiple fronts, from anti-union legislation to draconian anti-choice laws to the attempted privatization of Medicare, the selling off of public assets to the private sector has received little attention.
As states face a budget shortfall of $125 billion dollars for fiscal year 2012, leaders are searching for creative ways to fill budget gaps, while refusing to consider the one legitimate solution: forcing tax-dodging corporations and the rich to pay their fair share in taxes. Rather than upset the moneyed interests who bought their seats in office, politicians of all stripes prefer to cut pensions, close schools, slash child nutrition programs, and most importantly privatize, privatize, privatize!
In 2008, Chicago Mayor Richard Daley auctioned off the city’s 36,000 parking meters to a Morgan-Stanley lead partnership, for a lump sum of $1.15 billion. According to Bloomberg, Chicago drivers will pay Morgan Stanley at least $11.6 billion to park at city meters over the next 75 years, 10 times what the system was sold for. The Mayor used millions from the deal to help balance the budget, but since then, Morgan Stanley has raised parking fees 42%. It now plans on stuffing more cars into fewer metered spaces by getting rid of marking lines, raising the number of metered slots and expanding the hours that require fees. Chicago gave up billions of dollars in revenue for a short term fix and now, if the city faces another fiscal crisis, it will be left with an asset that generates revenue for Morgan Stanley. Despite the controversy in Chicago, the Associated Press reports that New York is exploring private options for its parking spaces as well.
Meanwhile, Rep. Dennis Ross (R-FL), a member of the Tea Party Caucus, has suggested that one way to help close the nation’s budget deficit is to “start liquidating” public lands in Utah by privatizing large parts of the state, 70 percent of which is owned by the federal government. Soon after, Utah Governor Gary Herbert hopped on board, agreeing that Ross’s idea was ”worth exploring.” He even went so far as to claim that the land would be better in private hands because private owners maintained Indian artifacts and burial grounds better. Apparently his position is quite popular, since it has been embraced by Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and John McCain (R-AZ), who proposed a bill which would sell off land in Utah and other western states.
The most insidious privatization scheme so far this year was in Wisconsin, the center of the state budget battles. A provision in Republican Governor Scott Walker’s budget repair bill would have empowered politicians to sell any state-owned heating, cooling, or power plant, including those located in prisons and the University of Wisconsin campuses, to anyone for any price at any time, without public approval or a call for bids. Although the provision was ultimately removed from the budget bill just before it passed, it is expected to be taken up again later this year.
In an effort to offset an $8 billion budget deficit, Ohio Republican Governor John Kasich has proposed privatizing five prisons, a sale expected to bring in an estimated $200 million. Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature is set to require the state to privatize prisons in South Florida, home to one-fifth of the statewide inmate population of 101,000. Louisiana Republican Governor Bobby Jindal plans to sell three state prisons to private operators. Similar bills have sprung up in other states, nevermind that evidence showing that private prisons actually save any money is seriously lacking.
In more desperate and bizarre attempts to fill in budget gaps the City Council in Naperville, IL is considering giving corporations exclusive rights to plaster their logos on city property. One proposed municipal sponsorship deal would allow Kentucky Fried Chicken to repair potholes in exchange for stamping the fresh asphalt with the chicken chain’s logo.
It would be foolish to assume that the push for privatization is isolated to the GOP or the states. The “liberal” Obama administration has proposed legislation that would establish a presidentially appointed, seven-member Civilian Property Realignment Board, tasked with evaluating excess federal properties. The surplus includes 12,000 buildings, pieces of land and other property nationwide that the federal government wants to get rid of.
According to McClatchy, the White House claims it would see savings of as much as $15 billion by no longer having to maintain or pay for utilities at some of the underused or unused facilities. The government in 2009 reported spending $134 million to maintain buildings that have been declared excess. It costs an estimated $1.3 billion a year to maintain federal buildings that aren’t yet declared surplus but that go underused. However, it remains unclear if and how this strategy would result in a significant enough amount of savings to make a dent in a trillion dollar deficit.
Ironically, the list includes land where the dorms in Daniel Boone National Forest are located, which once served as a camp for workers from the Civilian Conservation Corps, a Great Depression work program. Rather than invest in jobs programs to put the unemployed back to work like FDR did during the Great Depression — an idea that the Obama administration has all but abandoned — the President has instead chosen the path of austerity and privatization, tactics that have historically been detrimental to society.
It’s no secret that corporate behemoths, backed by their free-market think tanks and foundations have long dreamed of privatizing everything public. Thus far, they have been largely successful in hollowing out the defense department by outsourcing computer, intelligence, and even combat operations to for-profit companies like Lockheed Martin, Halliburton, and Blackwater, to name a few. We now know that this was done intentionally, strategically planned by the likes of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney, who profited magnificently as a result. The terrorist attacks on 9-11 presented the Bush administration with the opportunity to accelerate the outsourcing of war.
In the Shock Doctrine, Naomi Klein thoroughly documents how wealthy elites often use times of crisis and chaos to impose unpopular policies that restructure economies and political systems to further advance their interests. She calls these orchestrated raids on the public sphere in the wake of catastrophic events, combined with the treatment of disasters as exciting market opportunities, “disaster capitalism.”
While catastrophic events, such as natural disasters or terrorist attacks, are difficult to predict, economic disasters are not. With this in mind, it’s difficult to deny that the economic crisis has been somewhat manufactured to serve as a pretext for draconian cuts into social programs that the corporate state has long been eyeing. On it’s face, this theory seems conspiratorial, however a brief review of recent history demonstrates a trend of intentional crisis generation.
Paul Krugman understood this concept in 2003, during the implementation of the Bush era tax cuts for the wealthy, when he wrote the following:
“the gimmicks used to make an $800-billion-plus tax cut carry an official price tag of only $320 billion are a joke, yet the cost without the gimmicks is so large that the nation can’t possibly afford it while keeping its other promises.
But then maybe that’s the point. The Financial Times suggests that ”more extreme Republicans” actually want a fiscal train wreck: ”Proposing to slash federal spending, particularly on social programs, is a tricky electoral proposition, but a fiscal crisis offers the tantalizing prospect of forcing such cuts through the back door.”
It’s no secret that right-wing ideologues want to abolish programs Americans take for granted. But not long ago, to suggest that the Bush administration’s policies might actually be driven by those ideologues — that the administration was deliberately setting the country up for a fiscal crisis in which popular social programs could be sharply cut — was to be accused of spouting conspiracy theories.”
As the free-market ideologues in government continue to neglect America’s aging infrastructure while making deep cuts into education funding and borrowing upwards of a trillion dollars for two failed wars, they reaffirm the perception that the government is inefficient and incapable of providing what they believe private enterprise can do better.
The fact of the matter is that those now shrieking about big government debts and deficits have spent the last decade maximizing government spending with unaffordable wars, financial deregulation, and tax cuts for the wealthy, which they knew would cost trillions of dollars. Today, the consequences of their actions, which they were warned about, are the ploy these very same people are using to justifythe accelerated demise of welfare programs, and the incremental destruction of the meager social safety net that guarantees Americans won’t starve in their old age.
The core tenets of free market fundamentalism — privatization, deregulation, and cuts to government services — has laid the foundation for the economic breakdown we are witnessing today. And this recession-induced breakdown is being used by professional disaster capitalists to warrant more privatization, deregulation, and cuts to government services until there is nothing left. It is clear that the continued auctioning off of pieces of the state to large corporations will result in a total loss of democratic control to the disaster capitalists who are profiting immensely from their orchestrated crisis.




50 Comments

Wisconsin is bad, Rania, but Arizona also offers a horrible example of privatization. If you want an example of this economic ideology in its harshest form unleashed on the people, look no further than Arizona with its Republican governor and Legislature–the shining star for economic neo-liberal ideology.
Privatization is most often NOT the solution–at least not for the majority.
Arizona has already instituted death panels for those in its state who cannot afford heath care. Their Republican legislature, as a “cost-cutting” measure eliminated organ transplants from state assistance. Consequently at least two citizens have died already from this legislation approved by people who refer to themselves as human beings. These are the same people who are the first to spread the utter bullshit that the national bill for health care has death panels–which it does not. Ironic, isn’t it?
To raise cash, the [Arizona] legislature has pursued a series of wild sell-offs and budget cuts.
-It privatized the capitol building and leased it back from its new owner, an arrangement that brought in substantial revenue but over time will cost Arizona far more.
-The legislature has sold off numerous other state properties at bargain prices, and has put up future lottery revenues as collateral on a $450 million loan.
-Meanwhile, Arizona removed more than 300,000 adults from state health coverage and terminated one health-care program for 47,000 poor children. Funding was slashed at the agency that deals with reports of child abuse and neglect, and also at Children’s Rehabilitative Services, so that parents of children with cystic fibrosis, cerebral palsy, and a number of other conditions are now required to pay 100 percent of treatment costs.
-All totaled, the cuts amounted to roughly $1 billion, which came on top of a similar amount that had been slashed the previous year.
-These cuts, in combination with the sale of state assets (which raised more than $700 million) and the securitization of the lottery, plugged a massive hole in next year’s budget.
-But the deficit for 2011 is already projected to be at least $1 billion and possibly double that, on a total budget of only $9 billion. The situation will only worsen from there, as federal stimulus money dries up and the state runs out of short-term sources of cash.
sorry, as usual I got carried away. That’s the way it is with me when I even hear the word “privatization”. I go momentarily nuts and start channeling.
BUT so I don’t get a reputation as Ms Negative here. There are better solutions and source materials to guide people.
Here is one of the best ones that I’ve found thus far. I think it is important to stay as much as possible in the solution mode–to counter their faux “solutions”.
A GUIDE TO EVALUATING PUBLIC ASSET PRIVATIZATION
http://www.inthepublicinterest.org/sites/default/files/privatization_guide_ONLINE.pdf
I recommend that anyone who cares about their local community to make a copy of this booklet for your mayor and city council (unless of course you live in Michigan in which you can forget it because the Wall Street vigilantes have already taken over that state).
There. I feel much better. Thanks again for a great and informative article.
Isn’t it interesting that a government will sell a revenue source, parking meter revenue, to balance a budget for which they will not raise taxes, yet, under the great capitalist god, they then sell that revenue stream and that unsullied paragon of capitalism, promptly raises parking revenue, in effect, raising taxes.
So, government raises taxes is bad.
Corporation raises prices (taxes), good.
As a country, we are truly effed.
In Ohio, Kasich has either signed or is set to sign legislation approving oil and gas drilling in state parks, which passed by almost party-line vote(almost, because a few Republicans with a strong sense of self-preservation voted No. They were the same ones who voted against stripping public sector unions of their collective bargaining ability).
The same people are advocating the sale of the state liquor agencies(which generated tens of millions of dollars of revenue for the state last year) and the state toll roads, which also turned a profit for the state government.
IOW, whatever generates the most revenue for government must be sold to private interests. Kasich and his fascist backers call it “efficiency.” I call it looting.
Thanks Liz, for the rundown about Arizona. You’re right, that state is probably one of the worst hit in terms of draconian budget cuts and privatization. I too find it shocking that people can’t understand that what we have now is death panels, run by private health insurance companies. And it will only get worse as the budgets cuts continue to effect the few social programs that assist the most vulnerable. I will definitely check out the guide you suggested. And btw: Stating the truth, even if it sounds depressing, does not make you or anyone else negative, it makes you realistic and honest. The real pessimists are the people who complain but refuse to take any action, preferring instead to give up.
I say we immediately sell Texas, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Connecticut, Utah, Ohio, and Florida to China for starters. Ah hell, throw in the Old South while we are at it for good measure.
Let’s get some of our T-Bills back.
That’s what I call intellectual deficit reduction.
The progressives can stay, but the rest better be brushing up on their Mandarin and Cantonese.
Oops! Missed Arizona. Throw that one in also.
Bear in mind, that’s our stuff they’re selling off. The citizens should raise a class-action suit for recovery of our embezzled proceeds.
再見 Columbus.
correct.
government …..raise the gas tax…… impossible
savvy wall streeter, engage in uncontrolled speculation which
raises the gas price, and which is essentially the imposition of a private, tax that benefits no one, not even other business operators………..
grumble grumble, pay.
This is a slow motion version of what happened in the Soviet Union, where with the brilliant advice of the “Harvard Boys”
the assets of the Soviet Union were given away, amidst hails of bullets, to a very small group of “savvy investors”
These guys here, must admire what was done to the Soviet Union. destroyed.
MAFR–
Did you read the same article I just finished? Life in a Kleptocracy? http://www.americablog.com/2011/05/life-in-kleptocracy-how-mikhail.html Very disturbing. Guess maybe a philosophical take-away might be that even those who screw others can get screwed themselves . . . it’s just a matter of time. http://www.americablog.com/2011/05/life-in-kleptocracy-how-mikhail.html
As was often heard when the news arrived of the the first attorney (pick your vocation) chained to a bus at the bottom of the Mariana trench: It’s a damn good start, but a lot more work needs to be done. :>)
And ‘nee how ma’ to you. (just a poor phonetic transliteration).
Lately seen any pachydermatous life forms gliding over Columbus?
Didn’t think so.
no, I will though thanks.
In Indiana (where I was born and and raised), it seems Gov. Mitch Daniels hasn’t come across a stretch of interstate he didn’t think needed to be privatized. [alltolled.com]
Thanks for this important post.
If you want to read about the subject, (it’s amazing)
you might try to find this book, I read it, it’s very interesting, a non stop read for me:
Godfather of the Kremlin: The Decline of Russia in the Age of Gangster Capitalism [Paperback]
Paul Klebnikov (Author)
a review about the book
(Publisher’s weekly)
“Paul Klebnikov tells the incredible story of Boris Berezovsky, a one-time Russian car dealer who assembled a huge–and illicit–fortune after the collapse of Communism. “This individual had risen out of nowhere to become the richest businessman in Russia and one of the most powerful individuals in the country,” writes Klebnikov, a respected reporter for Forbes. “This is a story of corruption so profound that many readers might have trouble believing it.” Yet Godfather of the Kremlin is a careful work of journalism in which Klebnikov documents the business dealings of a man who once bragged to the Financial Times that he and six other men controlled half of the Russian economy and rigged Boris Yeltsin’s reelection in 1996. Berezovsky survived both an assassination attempt and a murder investigation, and paved the way to power for Vladimir Putin. He and the other crony capitalists of post-Soviet Russia like to rationalize their deeds, writes Klebnikov: “Whenever I asked Russia’s business magnates about the orgy of crime produced by the market reforms, they invariably excused it by pointing to the robber barons of American capitalism. Russia’s bandit capitalism was no different from American capitalism in the late nineteenth century, they argued.”
I meant, otchmoson.
honestly, the parallels with the former soviet union, are striking,
the endless futile war in Afghanistan, and the growing tendency to give away (as clearly shown in the article here by Rania Kahalek, everything owned by the people, the state.
for instance, oil leases, in national parks. what the hell else do you call that? It’s a giveaway.
they don’t even use the ones they have.
nixon’s proposal for federal revenue sharing.
simple.
The State Capitol to a private owner….Sorry, I had not heard. Guess I cannot wait to learn about the entry fee and the concession stands..I am so sorry.
Scott Walker’s budget bill is a budget bill. The budget was not broken and thus was not in need of repair. Had Walker’s opponent, Tom Barrett, been elected, Wisconsin would have had a budget bill. Plain, old fashioned budget bill. Like we always have. ‘Budget repair bill’ is a Republican frame which we repeat at our peril
…hey, let’s just listen to Boehner and the failed GOP, and go back to cut taxes / cut govt that we tried for the 3 decades of the Reagan/Bush era. In fact, let’s get ANOTHER big tax cut to the wealthiest as we did in 1981 and 2001.
I mean, that worked SO well to deliver Trickle Down prosperity. Almost nobody is unemployed now. And the banks and oil drillers and health insurers, heck – they POLICED THEMSELVES!!! Get government out of the WAY by golly!
Abe Lincoln would have said;
“You can fool some of the people, ALL of the time”… ;^)
– Balkingpoints / www
Think about the 2 to 3 percent the banksters take on every debit or credit card transaction. I don’t even want to go into the usury rates they charge for interest. Wonder how loud the anti-government faction would yell, if someone tried to raise each states sales tax an extra 2 or 3 percentage points.
Then the banksters use the money to buy government assets, speculate in commodity markets to raise the price we pay for energy and food.
No such thing as trickle down economics, the banksters have built a fire hose gushing the money up! Fire hose may not be good metaphor for what they have built.
Slightly OT, but in fact Morgan Stanley, being patriotic Americans, immediately flipped Chicago’s parking to Abu Dhabi, so those parking fees and fines might be paying for IEDs in Iraq and Afghanistan.
You know, Grover Norquist really meant it when he said he wanted to strangle government and then drown it in a bath tub. We are watching Grover’s dream (which is the dream of the whole of the right) come true. Democrats, including the President, are supporting and enabling the process.
Am I really supposed to send these clowns money? Is there any way to get them to stop asking?
Big money needs to find a home.
Public property in many cases is a very attractive target — low risk, potential high return.
There’s a huge difference between building a road, bridge, etc., from scratch, vs. taking over an existing one.
This story of the fire sale of the Indiana Turnpike is over 4 years old, but still very timely:
http://motherjones.com/politics/2007/01/highwaymen
Water systems are likely to be high on the want list for the big investors. Have to hope that cities and states push back hard against that.
Then stand by for more talking heads telling us about “The Tragedy of the Commons”. The real tragedy is that the greedy ones have confiscated so much of the commons.
“the one legitimate solution: forcing tax-dodging corporations and the rich to pay their fair share in taxes”
That pretty much says it all.
But $125 billion is so little compared to the Wall Street bailouts…
It’s hard to abandon something that was never on the table as a possibility in the first place I guess, so you’re technically correct.
However, this idea isn’t even up for consideration within the administration.
The “leaders” (not) have decided to sell everything off; because we, the suckers said nothing when they stole trillions to reward the banksters. The emergency, to bail out the most favored financial institutions, was a farce that transfered public funds to the chosen financial friends of “The Powers That Be”. The non-existent press mimicked the emergency. Since there are no protests, no awakenings happening here, they feel they are free to continue stealing the assets of the country. Unless and until the 99.9% speak up, it will continue until we are all destitute.
It reminds me of what happens when a person inherits an estate and then tries to live off of it without actually working and bringing in cash. You start selling things, the jewelry, the silver, the antiques, pieces of the property, the timber rights, the mineral rights. Its like when you get to the end of the month and you’re broke and need to go to the store or get gas. You look in your coat pockets, under the couch cushions; you collect all the loose change you can find to scrape by. You can live that way for a while, but eventually you are going to run down and hit bottom. Its a sign you are dying. If you don’t pull yourself together and get a job, that’s exactly what is going to happen. Our whole country has to pull its self together and get to work.
Nu? The Congress, the Executive, and the Supreme Court are privatized. Like you didn’t notice already?
People said plenty. In fact they managed to put so much pressure on the House that TARP failed until it was resurrected by the Senate.
The fact is that it doesn’t matter if we say anything or not. They won’t listen. Our political system gives entirely too much power to politicians and comes with entirely too little accountability.
Great post Rania, and I agree when you are telling the truth it is all positive. I live in a pretty liberal state (New York City) but I have had a pretty hard time convincing people the danger of budget cuts and it’s connection to privatization. Keep on truckin and thanks for the information.
I hope the results in the N.Y. 26 victory Kathy Hochul is the start of the country coming to grips with what is bein done to them. Even if it seems hopeless now I think there is a chance the people are starting to get some of it. It sure would help if there were more Bernie Sanders out there.
As rikkidoglake stated, the water rights/access rights are on the table.
And if it weren’t pure evil, I would say it’s genius.
Water will a problem in less than 20 years.
Humans, survive food starvation for up to 2 weeks (depending on factors). Survive water starvation for 2 to 3 DAYS!.
You think food riots are bad?
Water is so critical that lack of causes mineral imbalance in the blood and loss of regulation (Cons wet dream) of every organ system. Cascade failures ensue. Brain effects ensue. Delirium, psychosis, and other mental problems. Cognitive loss, oh ya. And finally good ole coma. Death follows.
And they’re going to get it early. For pennies on the dollar. Monopoly on water? Forget gold.
As I said, if it wasn’t pure evil it would be genius. And they will buy it up like everything else. The “free market” at work.
Your comment about “death panels” is truly scary, and not just in Arizona. Many states are cutting basic health services for the people unable to “buy” health care. Diabetics in Michigan, for example, are now limited to a certain number of blood-sugar testing strips a month, regardless of their physician’s prescriptions, and glucose (blood sugar) sensors are simply forbidden. Too bad if you’re too poor to pay $440 a month for glucose sensors or $300 for test strips anymore. You simply aren’t worth the money to return you to health (and work)!
Meanwhile, the parking regulations enforcement, which is the only thing that gives the meters their financial value, will of course continue to be paid for by the taxpayers of Chicago.
People will be much more efficient if the dead weight of regulation is removed from their internal organs. Stands to reason.
This is how Fascism takes root in a society. The government is still the government in all the things that it does in a society, it just has a private owner thats completely unaccountable to anyone except the big money types. That simple.
Fascism. Start calling this that. Now. Otherwise, by the time it becomes obvious to the masses it will be too late.
Great post on the national privatization scheme enabled by republicans AND democrats.
Don’t forget, Obama’s Race to the Top is a massive give-a-way of our public schools to private corporate interests under the guise of saving poor kids from “failing public schools”. More pernicious is the Obama administration argument that HS and college graduation equals economic success for poor kids. Michael Fiorillo de-constructs this particualar argument being advanced by the public school privatizers:
http://nyceducator.com/2011/01/false-premises-false-promises-corporate.html
Thanx again Miss Rania, nicely stated.
Your essay sparked a recollection of the governator selling of a couple of dozen buildings to the private sector, a plan Jerry Brown has since veered away from. I remember my response at the time was that after starving the revenue streams for states and municipalities, the corporatocracy is buying it all at basement bargain prices, at least as it compares to the overblown bubble that real estate was, or got to as it applies in both residential and commercial properties. The documentary ‘The Corporation’, (available free online) tells the story of Bechtel’s battle over water with people of Bolivia. This is not a ‘free market’ system but a corral of monopolies who share the trait of contempt for any and all who would compete with or impede their access to untold profits at the expense of uncountable millions. Fascism is all that can be bred of this lot and they need to be spanked and sent where they can do no harm. Preferably as servants to peoples of nations who’ve been oppressed much longer and in ways more wicked than we Yankees yet may know.
It is obvious that the elections have pre-determined outcomes , too many states are using the same tactics to implement the new world order for our citizens.
Everyone also must understand that the Republican & Democratic parties are co-conspirators actively aiding and abetting the privatization of our federal government.
Because they will do nothing to stop it, the solution to end and reverse their theft of public property and assets must originate and be imposed from outside the existing political system.
We need a revolution now! Tomorrow is too late.
If the United States, in its present condition, were a sea going vessel, its owners would condemn it, cut it up, and sell it for scrap.
Oh yeah, that’s right, our theocratic, fascistic government is already busy doing just that.
Never mind, sorry to waste your time with the painfully obvious.
You might want to Google “Enclosures Act” and red up of the previous grab for the commons.
I suspect this history is not taught in US Schools.
I would add to your statement, with which I completely agree, a few words from one of the guys who started all of this:
“The merchant has no country.” Thomas Jefferson
And,
“Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God.” Thomas Jefferson, Motto, found among his papers
We indeed are the damned and our St. Louis is floundering, boilers out, badly listing to starboard, and will surely take us all down with her.
“Don’t forget, Obama’s Race to the Top is a massive give-a-way of our public schools to private corporate interests under the guise of saving poor kids from “failing public schools”…
This privatization fetish originated in the 1990′s by assclowns like Newt Gingrich and Grover Norquist. At this point there is no difference between Obama and any other Republican.
It appears to me
that the firedoglake angerometer is pinned.