Open Thread - Wed. May 4, 2016 - The Neo-liberal Myth of Meritocracy

Good Morning, 99%'ers!

As many of you may already know, Thomas Frank has a new book out titled, Listen Liberal: Or Whatever Happened to the Party of the People. In this book, Frank examines how the Democratic Party abandoned its traditional commitments to the working class, the poor, and those in the greatest need.

In an April 26, New York Time book review, Beverly Gage noted that Frank's book, Listen Liberal, is a scathing indictment of the liberal class and particularly the Democratic party.

Echoing the historian Lily Geismer, Frank argues that the Democratic Party — once “the Party of the People” — now caters to the interests of a “professional-managerial class” consisting of lawyers, doctors, professors, scientists, programmers, even investment bankers. These affluent city dwellers and suburbanites believe firmly in meritocracy and individual opportunity, but shun the kind of social policies that once gave a real leg up to the working class. In the book, Frank points to the Democrats’ neglect of organized labor and support for Nafta as examples of this sensibility, in which “you get what you deserve, and what you deserve is defined by how you did in school.”

This mindset of the neoliberal class based upon meritocracy is a major contributing factor to wealth inequality in the United States and yet most Americans fail to see the linkage. As Thomas Frank so deftly pointed out in his book, there is a real arrogance of the neoliberal class toward the rest of us and such was clearly demonstrated in the words of Larry Summers who has served as Treasury Secretary, President of Harvard, and former chief economist for the World Bank.

“One of the reasons that inequality has probably gone up in our society is that people are being treated closer to the way that they’re supposed to be treated,” Summers commented early in the Obama administration.

“Remember, as you let that last sentence slide slowly down your throat, that this was a Democrat saying this,” Frank writes. From this mind-set stems everything that the Democrats have done to betray the masses, from Bill Clinton’s crime bill and welfare reform policies to Obama’s failure to rein in Wall Street, according to Frank.

This belief in "meritocracy" forms the core basis for neo-liberalism. Meritocracy theoretically rewards individuals with power and wealth based upon their merit only while ignoring the structural reasons why some individuals can more easily succeed due to family wealth and or connections. Such connections can result in legacy appointments to the right schools and family connections to facilitate success. The belief in meritocracy is widely accepted in the United States despite much evidence to the contrary.

Americans are more likely to believe that people are rewarded for their intelligence and skills and are less likely to believe that family wealth plays a key role in getting ahead. And Americans’ support for meritocratic principles has remained stable over the last two decades despite growing economic inequality, recessions, and the fact that there is less mobility in the United States than in most other industrialized countries.

In a December 2015 article in the Atlantic, The False Promise of Meritocracy, author Marianne Cooper examines how skewed the idea of meritocracy is within the real world and why it has greatly contributed to the exacerbation of income inequality in the United States. Studies of hiring and promotions in companies has shown that there is nearly always a bias toward white males when compared to minorities and women.

The paradox of meritocracy builds on other research showing that those who think they are the most objective can actually exhibit the most bias in their evaluations. When people think they are objective and unbiased then they don’t monitor and scrutinize their own behavior. They just assume that they are right and that their assessments are accurate. Yet, studies repeatedly show that stereotypes of all kinds (gender, ethnicity, age, disability etc.) are filters through which we evaluate others, often in ways that advantage dominant groups and disadvantage lower-status groups. For example, studies repeatedly find that the resumes of whites and men are evaluated more positively than are the identical resumes of minorities and women.

In a recent article for In These Times, author Thomas Frank looks at the city of Boston as microcosm of neo-liberalism and the culture of meritocracy. Boston stands out as an example of a once strongly blue collar liberal city that has abandoned its working class in favor of high paying medical and academic industries. What has resulted is a class of people who are doing very well while the rest of the population is stagnating or losing ground financially.

To think about it slightly more critically, Boston is the headquarters for two industries that are steadily bankrupting middle America: big learning and big medicine, both of them imposing costs that everyone else is basically required to pay and which increase at a far more rapid pace than wages or inflation. A thousand dollars a pill, 30 grand a semester: the debts that are gradually choking the life out of people where you live are what has made this city so very rich.

Perhaps it makes sense, then, that another category in which Massachusetts ranks highly is inequality. Once the visitor leaves the brainy bustle of Boston, he discovers that this state is filled with wreckage—with former manufacturing towns in which workers watch their way of life draining away, and with cities that are little more than warehouses for people on Medicare. According to one survey, Massachusetts has the eighth-worst rate of income inequality among the states; by another metric it ranks fourth. However you choose to measure the diverging fortunes of the country’s top 10% and the rest, Massachusetts always seems to finish among the nation’s most unequal places.

The big problem here is not that income inequality is due to a myriad of neo-liberal excuses such as lack of training for the new economy or that unions are the causes. But in reality, it is the greed of rent seeking neo-liberal class that is defining aspect of the neo-liberal ideology and that somehow meritocracy should be rewarded when the deck is stacked against most of the American workforce.

I hope to address more aspects of the neo-liberal ideology and how it has affect us here in the United States and worldwide in future essays.

As always, this is an Open Thread, so feel free to post whatever you may wish.

Share
up
0 users have voted.

Comments

shaharazade's picture

up
0 users have voted.
mimi's picture

I can't keep up with reading. Just here to say thanks and point out to one funny video clip posted in today's BNR comments. Made me laugh.
[video:https://youtu.be/27P-jJOtIm0]

I really would like to know what one can do to push against the Super Delegates with real life actions, that are offline. Like those guys and gals in the video are doing.
Smile

I am happy that Bernie made it yesterday. And I like Jane Sanders fighting spirit too, when she has to deal with all those msm female bitch-journalists. It's amazing to me to see so many female journalists show the worst of them in their own broadcasts. Sanders himself also kicked his ABC interviewers in the leg pointing to her bias. Way to go to fight back at the media. Don Midwest does his good fight with all his participation in the BNR as well. Always grateful for what you are all doing. Please keep it up and have a good day, all.

up
0 users have voted.

Donald Trump Won Because Republicans Have Bad Ideas And People Hate Those Ideas

Movement conservatives, of whom Donald Trump is not one, offer ordinary non-rich Americans a raw deal. Their policies don't even have majority support among self-identified Republicans in the Tea-GOP. Ian Millhiser breaks it down.

up
0 users have voted.

"We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty."

if Florida already had its primary then how is there still a race between Wasserman-S. and Canova? is he running as an independent? does the congressional seat have a different primary day from the presidential primary?

further, how are any of the Berniecrats in the running if their state has already had their primary? are they already the incumbent for their district?

up
0 users have voted.
gulfgal98's picture

for House Congressional seats is August 30, 2016.

up
0 users have voted.

Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

shaharazade's picture

OT gulfgal. I was just thinking about neoliberalism this morning while reading another essay. People often think neoliberal is not a real thing it's considered by some to be just a far lefty insult. It's not. It real and it's wrecking the world. Neoliberalism also ties in with the American neocon's globalized viscous 'foreign policy'. Disaster capitalism.

Meritocracy plays a lot into this brand of viscous unfettered capitalism on steroids economic system. People seem to equate capitalism with freedom these days but forget that it is totally at odds with democracy. The Horatio Alger myth runs deep in the American psyche. Screw or get screw and the winners and losers mentality in this rigged game are the antithesis of the principles any democratic society is founded on.

Ayn Rand may be the RW's economic priestess but the Democrat's have Milton Friedman as their priest. Milton Friedman, the economist of the Chicago Boy's is a neoliberal who's accolades run our economy to this day. I came upon an exert from Naomi Klein's book The Shock Doctrine as I was googling both Robert Rubin and Uncle Miltie this morning. I'll post it here as it ties in with your excellent OT topic.

I already used part of this for another comment elsewhere but it fits.

.....One of those who saw opportunity in the floodwaters of New Orleans was the late Milton Friedman, grand guru of unfettered capitalism and credited with writing the rulebook for the contemporary, hyper-mobile global economy. Ninety-three years old and in failing health, "Uncle Miltie", as he was known to his followers, found the strength to write an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal three months after the levees broke. "Most New Orleans schools are in ruins," Friedman observed, "as are the homes of the children who have attended them. The children are now scattered all over the country. This is a tragedy. It is also an opportunity."......Within 19 months, with most of the city's poor residents still in exile, New Orleans' public school system had been almost completely replaced by privately run charter schools.........
The Friedmanite American Enterprise Institute enthused that "Katrina accomplished in a day ... what Louisiana school reformers couldn't do after years of trying".

Neoliberalism goes hand in hand with our neocon 'foriegn policy' of endless bloody wars...

In one of his most influential essays, Friedman articulated contemporary capitalism's core tactical nostrum, what I have come to understand as "the shock doctrine". He observed that "only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change"....

Once a crisis has struck, the University of Chicago professor was convinced that it was crucial to act swiftly, to impose rapid and irreversible change before the crisis-racked society slipped back into the "tyranny of the status quo". A variation on Machiavelli's advice that "injuries" should be inflicted "all at once", this is one of Friedman's most lasting legacies.

Friedman first learned how to exploit a shock or crisis in the mid-70s, when he advised the dictator General Augusto Pinochet. Not only were Chileans in a state of shock after Pinochet's violent coup, but the country was also traumatised by hyperinflation. Friedman advised Pinochet to impose a rapid-fire transformation of the economy - tax cuts, free trade, privatised services, cuts to social spending and deregulation.

These Chicago Boy's, Uncle Milties acolytes, still run our economy. Both the Clinton and Obama's administration are chock full of them. The global neoliberals are Matt Tiabbi's blood sucking vampire squid on humanities face. The Clinton machine and the DLC/Third Way's New Democratic establishment is a continuation of Milton Friedman viscous neoliberal legacy. This is not what democracy looks like. We need to pry this global vampire squid off humanities face. We can start by not consenting to this inevitable 'world as we find it' out of fear of an even worse evil. That's the first step to prying this sucker off.

up
0 users have voted.
gulfgal98's picture

This comment deserves an essay of its own. Very well done. Thank you for taking the time to construct such a well thought out comment. Good

There are so many approaches to documenting how neo-liberalism has destroyed lives, wrecked economies, and plunders the environment. When I wrote today's essay, I realized that probably this should have been the first in the series because it gets to the psychological under pinnings of why neo-liberalism has been allowed to take over our lives. The Horatio Alger stories and the myth of pulling oneself up by one's own bootstraps coupled with American Exceptionalism had led us down this very ugly path.

up
0 users have voted.

Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

up
0 users have voted.
TheOtherMaven's picture

you can line up to piss on his grave.

Maven

up
0 users have voted.

There is no justice. There can be no peace.

enhydra lutris's picture

up
0 users have voted.

That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Pages