“There was another reason why the dollar's hegemony grew: the intentional impoverishment of America's working class. A cynic will tell you quite accurately that large quantities of money are attracted to countries where the profit rate is higher. For Wall Street to exercise fully its magnetic powers over foreign capital, profit margins in the United States had to catch up with profit rates in Germany and Japan. A quick and dirty way to do this was to suppress American wages. Cheaper labour makes for lower costs, makes for larger margins. It is no coincidence that, to this day, American working class earnings languish below their 1974 level. It is also no coincidence that union-busting became a thing in the 1970s, culminating in Ronald Reagan's dismissal of every single unionised air traffic controller. A move emulated by Margaret Thatcher in Britain who pulverised whole industries in order to eliminate the trade unions that inhabited them. And faced with the Minotaur's sucking most of the world's capital into America, the European ruling classes reckoned that they had no alternative but to do the same. Reagan had set the pace. Thatcher had shown the way. But it was in Germany and later across continental Europe that the new class war - you might call it universal austerity - was waged most effectively.”
Quote by Yanis Varoufakis
Work
Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Land of Milk and Honey
“Humanities without sciences are helpless, sciences without humanities are lifeless.”
Source: With Love From A Blue Rock
“A dog starvd at his Masters Gate / Predicts the ruin of the State”
Source: Auguries of Innocence
Source: Quo Vadis?
Source: Christian & Oriental Philosophy of Art Formerly: "Why Exhibit Works of Art?"
Source: Emma
“37% of Americans don't have $400 dollars. That's 3.7 out of ten, and I am all four of them.”
Source: Powdered Saxophone Music
Source: Pinocchio
Source: Les Misérables
