Month: January 2024

The Flaw In Central Banks

Yanis Varoufakis, Vicky Pryce and Roger Hearing debate economic forecasts. This excerpt was taken from ‘Economic fact and economic fantasy,’ recorded December 2023.

 

 

Although there has been a recent fall, central banks are widely seen to have failed to control inflation. At times running up to six times target, the banks blamed the Ukraine war, but critics point to the rapid rise in inflation before war broke out, and amongst other factors often find quantitative easing at fault. Moreover, some claim there is a more fundamental problem that there is no overall coherent economic theory in the first place. Bank models failed to predict the 2008 crash or the more recent cost of living crisis.

In 2015, the European Central Bank claimed that neither monetarist nor Keynesian economics provided solutions to the financial crisis, leading some to question if any economic theory had the answers. Should we conclude that central bank failures to predict, let alone avoid, economic crises are evidence of a deep underlying flaw in their understanding? Or were banks just negligent in their failure to respond to evidence of rising inflation? Do we need a radical new economic theory or should we conclude that the economy is not predictable, forecasting a mugs game, and the options for government policy wider than commonly supposed?

The ‘I Won’t Vote For The Lesser Of Two Evils’ Rubbish

So they tell me they’re not going to vote next November. Or they’ll vote for a third-party candidate.

Maybe you know someone like this. Or you yourself fall into this camp.

Here’s what I tell them: By not voting or voting for a third party, they’re actually casting a vote for Trump.

Some respond by saying that Trump may be a curse, but they’re sick and tired of voting for the lesser of two evils.

Wrong. Biden is not evil. Trump is truly evil.

If there’s one argument I can’t stand, it’s the “I’m not going to vote for the lesser of two evils” argument.

The fact is, America has a two-party system. You may not like it, but that’s our reality. The founders did not opt for a parliamentary system, where citizens have more options of whom to vote for.

So one of the nominees from one of the two major parties is going to win. And if you don’t vote, or you vote for a third party candidate, you’re inevitably hurting the candidate from one of the major parties who’s closest to you in values — and helping the one farthest from you.

Which perhaps wasn’t of huge consequence 50 years ago. But as the Republican Party has gone fascist, with unhinged Trump at its head, the potential consequences of your not voting or voting for a third=party candidate are horrific.

In 2016, many people knew Trump was out of his gourd. But they disliked Hillary Clinton so much they decided to sit on their hands, or vote for the Green Party candidate, Jill Stein, rather than vote for what they described as “the lesser of two evils.”

And look what we got.

If Trump gets back into the Oval Office, it’s likely to be even worse this time.

***

On Amy Goodman’s “Democracy Now” broadcast of August 4, 2016, I debated journalist and author Chris Hedges, who was supporting Green Party candidate Jill Stein. [The following transcript has been edited for length. You can find the unedited transcript here, or if you have the time you may want to watch the entire 35-minute debate, which I’ve posted here.]

Me: Hillary Clinton is going to be the nominee. I support her. And I support her not only because she will be a good president, if not a great president, but also, frankly, because I am tremendously worried about the alternative. And the alternative is somebody who is a megalomaniac and a bigot who will set back the progressive movement decades, if not more.

Hedges: Clinton has abandoned children. She and her husband destroyed welfare as we know it, and 70 percent of the original recipients were children. I don’t like Trump, but Trump is responding to a phenomenon created by neoliberalism. And we may get rid of Trump, but we will get something even more vile, maybe Ted Cruz.

Me: If Donald Trump becomes president, irrevocable negative changes will happen in the United States, including appointments to the Supreme Court that will worsen the structure of this country. Voting for Donald Trump or equating Hillary Clinton with Donald Trump is insane. 

Hedges: I admire Robert and have read much of his stuff and like his stuff, but if you listen to what he’s been saying, the message is the same message of the Trump campaign, and that is fear. And fear is all the Democrats have to offer now and all the Republicans have to offer now.

Me: Given our two-party, winner-take-all system, it’s just too much of a risk to say, “I’m not going to vote for the lesser of two evils.” If you do not support Hillary Clinton, you are increasing the odds of a true, clear and present danger to the United States, a menace to the United States. And you’re increasing the possibility that the United States will be changed for the worse. I must urge everyone who is listening or who is watching to do whatever they can to make sure that Hillary Clinton is the next president, and not Donald Trump.

Hedges: I find Trump a vile and disturbing and disgusting figure, but I don’t believe that voting for the Democratic establishment [will help]. The TPP [Trans Pacific Partnership] is going to go through, whether it’s Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton. Endless war is going to be continued, whether it’s Trump or Clinton. We’re not going to get our privacy back, whether it’s under Clinton or Trump. The idea that, at this point, the figure in the executive branch exercises that much power, given the power of the war industry and Wall Street, is a myth.

***

Starting five months after this discussion, we had four years of Trump. We saw what his bigotry and hatefulness did to America. We witnessed how he divided America into two angry camps that are still furious with each other. We endured his giant tax cut to the rich and big corporations. We watched his attempted coup. We suffered through his refusal to concede the 2020 election and his big lie that it was “stolen” from him. He is now running again, in an even more paranoid and bigoted campaign than in 2016 or 2020.

I rest my case.

Common Ground Is A Testament To The Power Of Film To Change Hearts And Minds

Soil. It’s where our food comes from and the foundation of all life on land.

The way human beings have traditionally farmed in the modern era devastates the soil. It impacts the quality of the food that people and farmed animals eat, and thus our collective health. It’s not sustainable, vastly reducing the amount of farmable land available to us and our ability to continue to feed the planet.

There’s a solution. One that we need to consider carefully, that offers a path towards sustainability and environmental health. It’s called regenerative farming.

The recent documentary film Common Ground provides a groundbreaking look into this critically important crisis and how we can fix it with regenerative farming. Normally when I’m asked to watch the latest “environmental documentary,” I admit to being susceptible to that mild sense of dread we all get when we’re about to be presented with the problems of the world further solidified before our eyes. But Common Ground is anything but bleak. To the contrary, it offers desperately needed hope at a time when environmental degradation, the climate crisis, the extinction crisis, and threats to our natural resources are driving cynicism among even the most optimistic.

Common Ground explores how, as Gabe Brown, a Bismarck, North Dakota regenerative rancher featured in film, puts it, the current dominant system industrial agriculture, “is working to kill things,” while regenerative agriculture “works in harmony and synchrony with nature, with life.”

The status quo system of industrial agriculture abuses and degrades our soil with tillage, synthetic substances, monocultures – that is, the cultivation of just one crop in a given area – and not sequestering carbon. Regenerative agriculture, in short, doesn’t rely on these things. In contrast, it relies on methods that protect the soil and offers a sustainable, healthy alternative.

Even before today’s high-tech agribusiness, industrial farming methods used by small and large farmers alike were causing devastation to our topsoil. Brown points out that the Dust Bowl of the 1930s wasn’t caused by drought alone but by “copious amounts of tillage.”

Common Ground uses historical examples in its storytelling that, as a lifelong student of history, I love. One highlight is a newly told account of the revolutionary agricultural genius, George Washington Carver (told by Leah Penniman, herself a farmer and author of the book, Farming While Black). While Carver is known in history books as “the peanut guy,” he was far more. Carver understood that to take farmers out of poverty, you had to build healthy soil. Peanuts, it turns out, put nitrogen into the soil. Using peanuts and various techniques he developed by studying nature, Carver taught an entire generation of Black farmers how to farm in harmony with nature, like the indigenous peoples of America.

Common Ground also strikes an important chord in addressing climate. Healthy soil has the potential to sequester tremendous quantities of CO2. From large farms to urban gardens, the caretaking of soil can produce more profitable and more nutritious food and help mitigate the climate crisis.

The entertainment industry, through film and television, can be a powerful catalyst for change. It can motivate, enlighten, and inspire us to tackle daunting challenges.

“The slap heard around the world” by Sidney Poitier’s character in 1967’s In the Heat of the Night was an important symbol of the right and need to stand up for Black dignity. And, of course, how can we forget the societal impact of the TV shows like All in the Family, The Jeffersons, and Good Times, created by Norman Lear – my dear friend who recently passed away at the age of 101.

Common Ground’s celebrity narrators open the film by passing on reflections in the form of a letter to current and future generations. One of them, Woody Harrelson, mentions that what viewers are about to receive are “hard truths.” I couldn’t help but think of Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth, which was instrumental in sounding the alarm and raising global awareness about climate change.

The impact and influence of An Inconvenient Truth got an important cultural boost when the film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature of 2006. It would benefit all of us for Common Ground to gain similar recognition (for the Academy’s and America’s consideration).

To borrow a phrase from Woody Harrelson, “the one thing that’s keeping us all alive is that soil you’re standing on.” Let’s get hopeful again about environmental solutions (including soil). Let’s work to find our common ground.

Technology And Jobs: Understanding The Shift, Not The Scare

Technology is constantly changing the job landscape, but is it a threat or an opportunity?

 

 

This video breaks down the real impact of technological advancements on jobs. And remember, regardless of technology or the speed of innovation, people are still people, and the rules of humanity still apply.

Inflation Has Come Down In Spite Of The Fed, Not Because Of It

US Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell is earning plaudits these days because a scary spike in US inflation appears to be receding without major job losses or economic contraction.

But American economist Stephanie Kelton argues that the Fed’s role in creating a “soft landing” is wildly overstated. A leading proponent of modern monetary theory, she contends that higher interest rates do not always slow economic growth. When a mismatch between supply and demand causes inflation, governments are mistaken if they try to tame it by cutting government deficits and crimping demand. “A better way to resolve the imbalance is through boosting supply,” she argues.

To that end, she believes the White House ought to focus on building up the US economy’s ability to create more goods and services, by redoubling its efforts to stimulate investment in fighting climate change, building more housing and making childcare affordable.

Kelton, an economics professor at Stony Brook University in New York and a former adviser to Bernie Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign, has decidedly nonconformist views. She considers rising bond yields to be a subsidy for “people who already have money”. So she thinks the US should stop selling Treasuries to fund the federal deficit and governments everywhere ought to invest in public jobs programmes so that workers who lose their jobs never become fully unemployed: “It would truncate downturns, provide income support where it’s needed and enhance price stability,” she says.

Her views challenge those of traditional economists and budget hawks, who are concerned that US government debt just topped $34tn. They contend that the fact that Covid-era fiscal stimulus was followed by rapid inflation is evidence that MMT has too benign a view of government deficits.

In this interview, Kelton offers her counterargument and discusses some of the ideas behind her upcoming book.

Brooke Masters: So Stephanie, we are in a period where inflation absolutely shot up and is now maybe coming down. Why do you think this happened?

Stephanie Kelton: I think a substantial factor is the pandemic. Everyone remembers the supply chains breaking and we all saw images of ships backed up at ports, and we know that shipping costs increased. We also couldn’t spend money the way we were accustomed to. In the US, 80 per cent or so of economic activity is wrapped up around the service sector, and all of a sudden we were told you can’t go to restaurants and bars and nail salons. So what did we do? We ploughed a lot of money into goods that had to be manufactured somewhere and transported to us.

So we got early inflation in durable goods, and then a series of supply shocks. The pandemic came in waves, and different parts of the world were shutting factories down at different times. Then of course Russia and Ukraine, and another round of energy and food price shocks and we just found ourselves dealing with supply shock after supply shock.

BM: But you also hear people say, “Spending by governments caused this.”

SK: We can’t ignore that part of the story. Governments around the world responded, to varying degrees, with fiscal policy, some with very bold programmes. In the case of the US, it was really three big fiscal packages [that included] stimulus cheques, support in the form of child tax credit expansion, payroll protection programmes and expanded employment insurance benefits. That definitely put a lot of money into a lot of people’s hands.

It was the collision of the pandemic, the added income support and the brittle supply chains that combined to give us that early inflationary pressure. There is also evidence that, later, once we all got kind of accustomed to prices going up, companies started taking advantage of that inflationary environment to push prices up even higher to fatten up their profit margins. People threw around terms like “greedflation” and many people tried to dismiss it but I think we can’t ignore that completely. It was a factor at play.

BM: Why does inflation seem to be plateauing and coming down? Is it just that the demand slowed down and supply chains untangled, or was it the government?

SK: Mostly, it was the former. The forces that drove inflation up in the first place reversed themselves. Basically we’re getting back to normal. I think it was always destined to happen. I was a vocal member of “team transitory”, and I never used the word transitory to mean shortlived. I meant that inflationary pressures would abate when enough time had passed to allow the snarls in the supply chain and the things that had disrupted the economy to work themselves out. I didn’t expect prices to return to what had been “normal”, but I thought inflationary pressures would largely abate on their own.

BM: Given that you think inflation is transitory, should the US Federal Reserve stop raising rates? Should it cut rates?

SK: If you annualise the last six months, US inflation is running at 1.9 per cent. The Fed’s target is 2 per cent for core PCE [personal consumption expenditure]. If we look at the eurozone, year over year, headline inflation has come crashing down faster than anticipated. It’s running at 2.9 per cent and the six month annualised core rate is 2.15 per cent.

Everybody talks about a soft landing and the Fed pulling off the near impossible. But from where I sit — and this is definitely not the conventional view — I don’t want to give central banks a whole lot of credit. My view is that economists and other experts have overestimated the role of monetary policy.

I think inflation has come down in spite of what the Fed has done, not because of what the Fed has done. Think back to what happened after the 2008 financial crisis, when central banks the world over were trying to get inflation up to their 2 per cent targets. We watched the European Central Bank and the Bank of England and everybody just struggling, year after year after year, running quantitative easing, zero interest rates and all the rest, trying to push inflation higher.

It didn’t work, but somehow we’re all supposed to believe that monetary policy is really effective if you turn the dials in the other direction. Why should we believe that?

BM: Believing the Fed doesn’t matter very much is definitely an unconventional view.

SK: When central banks raise interest rates, of course it matters. The cost of financing a home has increased a lot. It costs a lot more money if you want to buy a car and you’ve got to finance it. Your credit card bills are higher. That’s the brake pedal. It’s meant to slow spending. That’s the goal of the Federal Reserve, to slow everything down and get some disinflationary pressures under way.

Ironically, you’re trying to fight the cost of living crisis by raising the cost of living for millions of people.

But economists like me who look at this through the lens of modern monetary theory understand that there is also an accelerator effect from the Fed raising interest rates and this is too often under-appreciated.

When the Fed raises interest rates, it forces the Treasury to pay out more in interest income to bondholders as bonds mature and new securities are issued. All of a sudden the government is paying out hundreds of billions of dollars in additional income to holders of US Treasuries. That income can be saved, used to pay down debt, or spent back into the economy.

It’s like a basic income payment that goes to relatively wealthy people. You have to have enough comfort in your income level to be a saver, to have dollars that you can park in Treasuries in order to capture that subsidy. So it is a regressive form of fiscal stimulus.

Effectively, the central bank has put a part of fiscal policy on autopilot. The Treasury is paying out all this additional interest income because of the actions of the Fed.

BM: So from your point of view, the negative impact of a rate increase on car prices and house prices affects everybody, but relatively the benefits of it go to the rich. Does that mean the Fed should stop raising rates?

SK: I don’t think the rate hikes are working to reduce inflation. They create winners and losers and it looks to me, so far at the macro level, like the boon to the winners has more than offset the hit to the losers. The US economy grew at 4.9 per cent in real terms in Q3. It’s allowed the economy to churn out these incredible growth numbers. But I don’t view this as the best use of fiscal space. You hear people complain that the federal government is spending more on interest than on the military. Interest payments are getting be around $1tn a year in subsidies for people who already have money.

Brooke: You also look at government deficits differently from many conventional economists. They tend to associate big government deficits with increased inflation. Do you buy that?

SK: No. First, this idea that deficits are inherently inflationary is pretty easily debunked, just by looking at the data. Japan has had large fiscal deficits, persistent deficits for the last three decades and, until Covid, no inflation to show for it. Clearly, you can have very large chronic deficits without an inflation problem.

Then look at the Clinton years. The federal government’s budget was in surplus for four years from 1998 to 2001, but inflation accelerated and ended up at 3 per cent. Then you had the period after the financial crisis, again large fiscal deficits in the US, QE, zero interest rates, and we couldn’t get core inflation up to 2 per cent. There’s no direct relationship between the size of the deficit and inflation.

BM: Should we cut interest rates and have the government switch from paying interest on Treasuries to spending more?

SK: I don’t see the benefit of keeping interest rates high. I think Congress should use the fiscal space that’s available to them to deliver meaningful improvements in people’s lives. We’re short millions of units of housing. We absolutely should be dealing with that, which would help with the inflation problem over time, because chronic shortages are a big part of the reason why the price of shelter is going up so rapidly.

BM: You have called bonds a big giveaway. Walk me through that, because most people don’t see it that way.

SK: What is the real purpose of bonds? We have a floating exchange rate and a fiat currency. The federal government doesn’t promise to pay defence contractors, civil servants or any of its vendors in US Treasuries; they promise to pay US dollars. So why does it issue bonds?

Think about what would happen if it didn’t and just spent more than it taxed. When the government spends, someone receives a payment that is deposited into a bank account and some bank ends up with a credit to its reserve account at the Fed. You get a newly created demand deposit and new base money in the form of reserves. When we pay taxes, the reverse happens. Accounts are debited and money is deleted out of the system. When the government spends more than it subtracts away by taxing, it leaves the banking system as a whole flush with excess reserves.

In the old days, this would push the overnight interest rate down, as banks tried to rid themselves of excess reserves in the Fed funds market. The bid for those funds would quickly fall towards zero. To hit a positive interest rate target, bonds were sold to mop up the excess reserves and move the interest rate higher. Everyone thinks the government sells bonds to finance fiscal deficits, but the real purpose was to avoid moving the interest rate away from the central bank’s target.

But we aren’t in that world anymore. Today, the Fed hits its interest rate target by paying interest on reserves. It just announces what the interest rate is and pays it. So, what is the further purpose of selling Treasuries? We could just let the reserves pile up in the system, where they would earn whatever the Fed chooses to pay.

BM: If they just stopped selling bonds and said, we’re just going to run deficits, conventional monetary folks would say that the US would be hit by horrifying inflation. Why don’t you believe that will happen?

SK: Because the inflation is embedded in the spending itself, not in whether the bonds are sold or not sold. Countries that experience hyperinflation sell bonds.

I used to play this little game when I was the chief economist for the Democrats on the Senate budget committee. I would ask either members of the Senate or their staff, if you had a magic wand and you could wave the magic wand and make the US national debt just disappear, would you wave the wand? Everyone immediately says, “Yes.” No hesitation. Then you say, what if I gave you a different wand that would eradicate the world of US Treasuries? Bills, bonds, notes, they’re all just gone. Would you wave that wand? People would say, “Why on earth would I do that?”

It was so telling, because I was asking the same question two different ways. This thing we call the national debt is nothing more than the whole of the US Treasury market. They’re one and the same.

Politicians don’t like debts and deficits because their constituents hear it and think that they’re somehow mismanaging the nation’s finances. But Treasuries are seen as benign and desirable. I’m trying to help people understand that selling bonds is a policy choice, not an economic imperative. The Treasury market is nothing more than our after-tax savings.

BM: So would you stop selling new bonds?

SK: At this point, yes. There’s too much confusion about why governments issue bonds, and it leads to bad public policy. Instead of having the Treasury issue securities to match the deficit, you could let the Fed issue securities and chose the interest rate on different securities. It would just make everything more transparent.

BM: Does it matter whether the US is in surplus or in deficit?

SK: It matters because government deficits are the sole source of net financial assets, in dollars, for the non-government sector. Any economy in the world can be broken down into three parts: the domestic private sector, the domestic public sector and the rest of the world. There will be sectors in deficit and sectors in surplus. It’s impossible for everyone to be in surplus at the same time. In the US, we run current account deficits with the rest of the world, which means our trading partners are in surplus.

Everything must net to zero, leaving only two options: either the US private sector spends more than its income and runs a deficit, or the US government does. It should be obvious which one is more sustainable over time. Government deficits need to be at least as big as the US current account deficit, in order for the private sector as a whole to save.

BM: How do you keep demand in balance with what the economy can provide? People have always talked about controlling deficits as a way to do that.

SK: If the problem is a mismatch between supply and demand, you could make the argument for less spending, but a better way to resolve the imbalance is through boosting supply. I sometimes imagine I’m watching a couple of runners. One of them is way out in the lead and he’s wearing a jersey that says “demand”. Then there’s somebody wearing the “supply” jersey, who is huffing and puffing, just trying to catch up. Why shorten the distance by kneecapping the guy who is in the lead? Maybe the other runner just needs an energy drink.

Think about the US in 2023. Deficits jumped way up, growth soared and inflation continued to cool. Clearly, you don’t need austerity to keep demand in balance with what the economy can provide. We’re building a lot of additional capacity, which helps supply catch up to demand. That’s a lot smarter than kneecapping the recovery.

BM: So to wrap this up, Stephanie, let’s imagine you’re in charge of the world economy. What’s your five-point plan?

SK: First, I would stop using interest rates for demand management and have central banks focus on things like financial stability. I would move to a permanent zero-interest rate policy and no government bonds for countries with sovereign currencies like the US.

Second, restore the primary role of fiscal policy in managing aggregate demand. Monetary policy has always been a sideshow. If you want to talk about what really works to stabilise the economy, it’s always been about fiscal policy.

Third, establish a proper fiscal union in the eurozone and introduce a new budgetary framework. Abandon arbitrary targets for debt-to-GDP or deficit-to-GDP ratios. Stop trying to keep government spending deficit neutral. Work to keep it inflation neutral.

Four, governments everywhere should budget for a job guarantee programme. That would be a very powerful automatic stabiliser for the economy. When people start to lose their jobs, the programme automatically absorbs them and helps them transition back into private employment.

It would truncate downturns, provide income support where it’s needed and enhance price stability.

BM: How so?

SK: Because the private sector does not like to hire the unemployed. When they’re trying to restaff, they go for their competitors’ employees and bid up their wages. That is where a lot of the wage pressure comes in. If you had a job guarantee, you’d have a ready pool of workers who have had their skills either maintained or upgraded through the downturn and are available to hire.

BM: And your plan’s last point?

SK: Nothing is more important than meaningful action on climate. Because climate breakdown will probably be the key driver of ongoing inflationary problems in the decades to come. Not to mention threatening our very survival on this planet.

The above transcript has been edited for brevity and clarity

The Unspoken Suicide Pandemic Is The Sharp Edge Of Social Isolation

The news stays filled with endless examples of hyper-partisanship out of Washington. It is no surprise most people think that’s the only thing happening in Washington. It’s not.

People still reach out across party lines to try to get great things done.

A few weeks ago, I was at a bipartisan press conference reintroducing the Outdoors For All Act. Members of Congress from both parties spoke.

Unfortunately – and surprisingly – most of the press missed the chance to cover the rare and encouraging example of bipartisanship. More striking, though, was the reason both lawmakers had such a passion for the bill. In addition to the benefits for the planet and equity, each was urgently concerned about the need for parks to help their communities combat growing social isolation.

Social isolation drives many social epidemics in America, including our country’s mental health crisis and the silent pandemic of suicide.

Community parks can ensure access to natural spaces, which is a human right. The health benefits of getting out in nature are physical and mental, but they also can be social. Especially in more densely populated areas. Building and protecting parks is one the few things government can do to structurally decrease social isolation.

I’ve researched the impact of social isolation in leading to mental health crises and suicide. I wrote about it in my book, Never Forget Our People Were Always Free.

Human connection, as well as connection to nature, makes us resilient. Social isolation attacks our ability to have those lifesaving connections.

And suicide, which is at crisis levels in our country, is the sharp edge of that isolation. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2020, there were nearly twice as many deaths by suicide (45,979) in the US as there were homicides (24,576).

That sharp edge cuts deepest among men. A good test for social isolation is to ask someone how many people they talk to when they are having or just had a really bad day. Women, on average, will say they speak with multiple people. Men, too often, don’t talk to anyone.

And while men in general – and white men a bit more than most, are the hardest hit – the social isolation fueling the suicide pandemic knows no racial or economic bounds.

The lack of opportunity and downward economic mobility we often see in our low-income and inner-city communities can lead to despair and addiction, which in turn lead to suicide. So can the physical isolation and lack of interdependence in the suburbs and exurbs. If you live somewhere where people are often asking for help, sure that can be felt as a burden, but it also creates a sense of communal responsibility and empathy.

That the social isolation crisis cuts across every race … across urban and rural, affluent, and poor, Republican and Democrat, alike, means we have an opportunity to build bridges and find common ground across the lines that too often divide us. Protecting access to nature is only one remedy.

But it’s encouraging that members of both parties acknowledge the importance of social isolation. Because the only way we’re going to fix this problem for all of us is to do it together. And maybe we can help heal the soul of our country in the process.

Afghanistan’s Education Crisis: A Plea For Global Policy Measures Against Taliban Indoctrination

The author, an Afghan legal scholar, laments the Taliban’s ever-strengthening grip on Afghan education, but argues that hope is not lost for the country’s women and girls…

“The Taliban’s new curriculum is all about killing people in the name of Jihad,” a Kabul-based teacher* told me in a recent interview.

“I’m not going to teach that material, even if I know it means I will almost certainly lose my job,” the teacher said, citing an early draft of the new curriculum.

Upon seizing the capital in 2021, the Taliban promptly set about barring girls and women from attending school. Initially, they said these students would be able to return to school in early 2022, but here we are in early 2024, and their return has yet to materialize. Despite the hopeful anticipation of millions of female students across Afghanistan, the Taliban ultimately reversed their decision, opting instead to keep half of Afghanistan’s population essentially imprisoned in their own homes.

Human rights and education activists around the world have sounded the alarm, publicly counting the number of days Afghanistan’s women and girls have been deprived of their rights to an education, and adopting hashtags like #LetAfghanGirlsGoToSchool and #LetAfghanGirlsLearn in a bid to publicly shame the regime.

Unsurprisingly, the Taliban appears to be internalizing no such shame. To the contrary, in December 2022 they banned women from pursuing higher education in universities. And rather than allowing girls to return to their general studies, they have slowly begun to build madrasas across the country.

Madrasas may be educational institutions, but they do not prepare women and girls to participate in public life.

As described in a recent JURIST interview by educational activist and father of Malala, Ziauddin Yousafzai:

Madrasa education is only helpful for educating women and girls on performing basic religious rituals and activities, like prayers, going to Hajj, taking ablution, and certain moral issues. But you cannot run modern institutions without modern education. You cannot run a hospital with a madrasa education. You cannot run a business with a madrasa education. You cannot fly an airplane with a madrasa education. You can’t even drive a car with a madrasa education. It is not an education that will teach girls and women to participate in the economy. It is not a modern education.

And even beyond these limitations, under the Taliban, Madrasa curricula can be concretely damaging. Crafted in accordance with the Taliban’s uniquely strict interpretation of Islamic law, the regime’s draft madrasa curricula for men and women alike aim not to foster education, but rather to give rise to a new generation of jihadists.

The regime’s approach to education has been pilloried for its prioritization of indoctrination underpinned by a lack of understanding of Islamic principles. [Ed: While interpretations of Islamic law vary broadly around the world, the Taliban’s interpretation has been described by scholars as a blend of Deobandi jurisprudence and the group’s own “lived experience as a predominantly rural and tribal society”]. The regime takes pride in the high number of Taliban suicide attacks in the last two decades, and it aims to instill its peculiar ideological interpretations in every child in Afghanistan.

So what’s left for the women and girls of Afghanistan? Should we accept defeat? Or is there a way out of this crisis — an option that could ensure we will receive a safe and proper education, and that we can build our country and serve our nation in what we hope will be a brighter future ahead?

I would argue that there’s still hope.

Option 1: International Scholarships for Afghanistan’s Women and Girls

Realistically, it’s hard to conclude anything other than that for women and girls in Afghanistan today, a madrasa education is worse than having no education at all. But a far better solution is to create pathways for women and girls to study abroad. By offering scholarship opportunities to Afghanistan’s women and girls, universities, individuals, and organizations could move mountains in terms of preventing lost time and wasted talent.

In late August 2023, the Taliban blocked a group of female students at Kabul airport from traveling to study in the United Arab Emirates. Additionally, in mid-November 2023, the Taliban’s Ministry of Higher Education prevented some 500 male students from leaving the country for a scholarship program in Russia.

Despite the heartbreaking situation, organizations must not give up. It’s a matter of life and the loss of time and energy. The international community, governments, and their special representatives should exert pressure on the Taliban. Instead of urging them to open schools and universities within the country, the focus should be on allowing people, especially women and girls, to study abroad, as there is no longer a safe and proper education for all students in Afghanistan. The risk is that without proper education, more students might become radicalized, resembling groups like ISIS and Hamas, who disregard human lives and exploit individuals [source].

Option 2: Offer Afghanistan’s Women and Girls Online Education and Certification Programs

Between Afghanistan’s mountainous terrain and its ongoing economic crisis, it is nearly impossible for the majority of the population to depend on reliable internet access. But steps can be taken to remove some of the resulting obstacles from the paths of women and girls seeking educational options.

One option would be for billionaire Elon Musk to offer internet access to the country, just as he has to Ukraine via the Starlink system. Activists have been advocating for this option since at least last year.

Another option would be to create a mechanism that would enable Afghanistan’s women and girls to pursue certifications through hybrid or correspondence learning. Global universities and schools could contribute to this initiative by sharing the policies and strategies they employed during the global COVID pandemic for online education. This collaborative effort could also open avenues to deploy female teachers who lost their jobs due to the ban on female students’ education in schools and universities. Teaching online would not only contribute to the education process but also offer these teachers an opportunity to regain employment.

Now is the time for action, and everyone should contribute whatever they can to ensure that no one is forcibly indoctrinated by the Taliban. Supporting and assisting female Afghan students in obtaining a proper and secure education is crucial, not only to protecting their own fundamental rights, but to securing the futures of Afghan citizens generations to come.

The author of this commentary is an Afghan legal scholar who cannot be named for security reasons. 

*The teacher requested anonymity, also for security reasons. 

Mainstream Media Is Playing Into Trump’s Neo-Fascist Hands

I’m sticking with democracy and the Guardian. I trust the Guardian to illuminate what’s really happening as America faces an election in which one of the two likely candidates engaged in an attempted coup. The reason I write a column for the Guardian is the same reason I read it daily: I trust it.

Not just the facts it conveys but also its judgment about what to convey – the stories it believes worthy of reporting, and doing it in ways that illuminate what’s really happening.

That judgment is especially important as the US faces an election in 2024 in which one of the two likely candidates was engaged in an attempted coup and has given every indication of wanting to substitute neo-fascism for democracy.

Again and again, the mainstream media have drawn a false equivalence between Donald Trump and Joe Biden – asserting that Biden’s political handicap is his age while Trump’s corresponding handicap is his criminal indictments.

But Trump is almost as old as Biden, and Trump’s public remarks and posts are becoming ever more unhinged – suggesting that advancing age may be a bigger problem for Trump than for Biden.

The Guardian has been picking up on this, but why isn’t the mainstream media reporting on Trump’s increasing senescence?

Similarly, every time the mainstream media reveal another move by the Republican Party toward authoritarianism, they point out some superfluous fault in the Democratic party in order to provide “balance”.

So readers are left to assume all politics is rotten.

A recent Washington Post article was headlined: “In a swing Wisconsin county, everyone is tired of politics.”

“How do Americans feel about politics?” the New York Times asked recently, answering:

“Disgust isn’t a strong enough word.”

But where is it reported that the mainstream media have contributed to making people tired and disgusted with politics?

And where is it acknowledged that this helps Trump and his Republican allies?

They want voters to be so turned off of politics that they’re unaware of Biden’s accomplishments, such as an economy that continues to generate a large number of new jobs, with real (adjusted for inflation) wages finally trending upward, inflation dropping and no recession in sight.

Plus, billions of dollars pumped out to fix and improve the nation’s roads, ports, pipelines and internet. Hundreds of billions allocated to combat climate change. Medicare, now lowering the cost of prescription drugs. Billions in student debt canceled. Monopolies attacked. Workers’ rights to organize, defended.

One person interviewed by the Post admitted, “I can’t really speak to anything [Biden] has done because I’ve tuned it out, like a lot of people have. We’re so tired of the us-against-them politics.”

As if the “us-against-them politics” is the fault of Democrats as much as it is Republicans, when in fact the GOP is the party of dysfunctional politics.

Much of the GOP no longer accepts the rule of law, the norms of liberal democracy, the legitimacy of the opposing party or the premise that governing requires negotiation and compromise.

Why isn’t this being reported?

Trump and his allies want Americans to feel so disgusted with politics they believe the nation has become ungovernable. The worse things seem, the stronger Trump’s case for an authoritarian like him to take over: “I’d get it done in one day.” “I am your voice.” “Leave it all to me.”

By focusing on Trump’s rantings and ignoring Biden’s steady hand, the mainstream media are playing directly into Trump’s neo-fascist hands.

I’m sticking with democracy, and the Guardian.

Statement In Remembrance Of January 6th

WASHIINGTON – U.S. Representative Pramila Jayapal (WA-07) released the following statement on the third anniversary of the January 6th insurrection:

“Three years ago today, we witnessed the deadliest and most destructive attack on our Capitol since the War of 1812. What happened on January 6, 2021 was a violent insurrection — an attempt to stop the certification of a free and fair election.

“After the House floor was cleared that day, I was left trapped in the Gallery with about 30 other members. I remember hearing the pounding on the doors, the shouting and screaming of both those trying to overrun the institution and those putting their lives on the line to defend it.

“I wasn’t sure I would make it out alive, and some of the brave officers who fought to protect us tragically lost their lives. The sacrifices they made for our country will never be forgotten, and I am eternally grateful to all those who helped preserve our democracy that day.

“But the horrific events didn’t stop after January 6th — the former president and many in his party continue to this day to fan the flames of political violence. This led to events around the country, including a man showing up to my home with a gun, shouting threats and profanities.

“The January 6th Committee did amazing work, uncovering disturbing details and showing the nation just how close we were to losing our democracy that day. The Department of Justice has also continued to hold those who stormed the Capitol accountable — a necessary step in ensuring this never happens again.

“As a Member of Congress, I see democracy at work almost everyday, and it is a beautiful thing. Those who attempt to undermine and destroy it have zero business in places of power — not the House, not the Senate, and certainly not the presidency.

“Democracy is sacred. It is a principle we must consistently engage with as we work to protect and improve America. Three years after the horrific events of January 6th, I am grateful for the democracy we still have and am more committed than ever to defending its existence.

“We all must remember that Jan 6th, 2025 may be right around the corner as we move into another presidential election. Almost a third of Americans still believe Donald Trump’s lies that the 2020 election was stolen. We must all stand up and work to protect our democracy and remember just how fragile it is.”

Jayapal was trapped in the House Gallery on January 6th, after many members had been evacuated from the chamber. In the aftermath, she has been a vocal critic of President Trump’s role in the insurrection and joins a group of members that are suing the former President for his role that day.

Democrats Must Not Repeat The Mistakes Of Globalization

The New York Times 

Last September, tech’s biggest names trekked to Capitol Hill for a forum on artificial intelligence. In a meeting closed to journalists, executives briefed nearly two-thirds of the Senate on the future of A.I. A few respected labor and civic leaders were present, but the tech titans dominated the headlines.

There’s an assumption in Silicon Valley that the first trillionaire may well be an A.I. entrepreneur, so tech leaders were eager to share their thoughts on some rules of the road. They warned of killer robots and the “Terminator” scenario, of misinformation and fake videos but gave short shrift to broader issues of economic fairness and wealth disparity that are of more urgent concern to most Americans.

Watching Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates and Sam Altman lead a confab on the ethical principles and regulations that should guide A.I. development was reminiscent of Davos conferences in the 1990s and early 2000s.

You remember the story that those Davos conferences broadcast to the world: Everyone will be able to get a knowledge job. Consumer goods will become cheaper. Globalization coupled with the internet will lead to prosperity for everyone.

Well, it didn’t quite work out that way.

What these Davos participants missed was how unfettered globalization hollowed out the working class here at home. We are all familiar with the consequences now: shuttered factories and rural communities that never saw the promised jobs materialize. As the American dream slipped away from them, many people developed deep and justified resentment. They saw the obscene concentration of wealth and opportunity in districts like mine in the heart of Silicon Valley. The evangelists for the new economy were prescient about the wealth generation that globalization and the internet would unleash but wrong that it would increase economic opportunities for all Americans.

Like globalization, A.I. will undoubtedly bring benefits — tremendous benefits — to our economy, with higher productivity, personalized medicine and education and more efficient energy use. Generative A.I. has the potential to help those with fewer resources or experience quickly learn and develop new skills. The real challenge, though, is how to center the dignity and economic security of working-class Americans during the changes to come. And unlike the Industrial Revolution, which spanned half a century at least, the A.I. revolution is unfolding at lightning speed.

Today the Democratic Party is at a crossroads, as it was in the 1990s, when the dominant wing in the party argued for prioritizing private-sector growth and letting the chips fall where they may. The criticism of this approach offered around that time by Senator Paul Wellstone, Senator Russ Feingold and Representative Bernie Sanders (as he was then) — that the offshoring globalization debacle was not helping the working class and was, in fact, hurting it — was largely ignored.

When it comes to A.I., the fault lines for the Democratic Party similarly run between business and labor, between donors and grass-roots activists and between those concerned foremost with our global competitiveness and those concerned with the economic well-being of the working class.

The tension between business and labor became clear in the battle over proposed legislation in California, A.B. 316, which divided me and many California legislators from Gov. Gavin Newsom. The bill would have required, for at least five years, a human driver on board self-driving trucks weighing more than 10,000 pounds that are transporting goods or passengers.

Tech companies argue that replacing human drivers with A.I. is feasible, will reduce labor costs and will therefore make it cheaper to transport goods and services. They lobbied heavily against the bill. The bill nonetheless passed overwhelmingly, with support from more than 80 percent of the California Legislature and more than 70 percent of California voters. Unfortunately, Mr. Newsom sided with the business advocates in September and vetoed the bill.

I supported A.B. 316 because drivers say it’s currently an unnecessary risk to have large trucks on public roads without a human on board. This is especially true if there is extreme weather, hazardous conditions or heavy cargo on board. No one understands the safety risks at play here better than the drivers themselves, and it’s both foolish and insulting to suggest they would make up such concerns to keep jobs that do not add value. We wouldn’t trust planes to fly without pilots, even with the most sophisticated and well-tested autopilot systems, and we shouldn’t trust large trucks to drive without operators.

It’s not just the A.I. concerns of truck drivers that are causing divides in the Democratic coalition. Last summer, some California politicians were hesitant to support the Writers Guild of America strike publicly, given Hollywood’s cultural importance and fund-raising power. I was proud to join the picket line. As in the case of self-driving trucks, the issue comes down to giving workers a say.

Writers were intrigued by the ways A.I. could help as a research tool and unlock new potential for movies and TV but were concerned that studios might rush to use A.I. to write cookie-cutter scripts and sacrifice imagination and creativity on the altar of profits. It’s better for writers, not executives, to slowly discover the best uses of A.I. in entertainment. In their new contract with the studios, the writers won important A.I. guardrails concerning credits and compensation — protections that can evolve over time. Even though writers’ jobs are very different from truck drivers’ jobs, labor solidarity is one of the few countervailing forces that can blunt the dehumanization of work motivated by short-term profit maximization in a world where A.I. is capable of suddenly disrupting both blue- and white-collar work.

That said, workers need more than just a voice and guardrails. They should also share in company profits, whether they are working for a trucking company, a production studio or a car manufacturer. Like many chief executives, workers should receive compensation based on profits and the company’s performance, not solely hours worked. It’s the only way workers can fully thrive as A.I. increases America’s productive capacity.

Of course, there are Beltway skeptics of pro-labor policies. What about the threat that leading A.I. companies will flee to China if we pay workers here more? they ask. Don’t raise worker bonuses or have them share in profits, or we’ll lose the global race, they warn. We caved to that blackmail in the 1990s and 2000s, and look where it has landed us. Ordinary Americans are tired of hearing about abstract notions of our global competitiveness while their pay doesn’t keep up and their costs of living rise.

There are already reports that A.I. could displace tens of thousands of jobs this year at big companies, potentially causing damage to their culture and their local communities — and starting a concerning trend. A work force committee at each company should weigh in on how A.I. could help employees better do their existing jobs, whether new hiring should slow down and what new credentialing or roles for affected employees could look like before restructuring and letting people go.

This is not to dismiss the need for dynamism, fluidity and flexibility in our markets. American companies must continue to adopt cutting-edge technology. These technologies can unleash a manufacturing revolution here at home — which America should celebrate, in part because jobs in the trades that require craftsmanship appear less likely to be eliminated. It’s a development that can reverse the decline of new American factories. Even so, federal policy should require public companies to have active worker participation when making decisions on how A.I. will change jobs that have functions that might be automated and provide tax incentives to companies that give workers a direct stake in their profits.

Here’s the balance we need to strike. We should encourage disruptive innovation at our universities, start-ups and even large companies but prioritize the perspective and earnings of workers in the adoption of any such technology that develops. This is a vision for democratic innovation that will still allow us to compete economically and militarily but not at all human costs. Democratic innovation recognizes that the need for social cohesion may be the ultimate determiner of the success of the American experiment and American leadership.

The Democratic Party cannot claim to be the party of the working class if we allow A.I. to erode the earnings and security of the working class. The party can be forgiven once for the mistake of abetting globalization to run amok, just not twice.

Technologies — our technologies — are meant to complement and enhance human initiative, not subordinate or exploit it. We must push for workers to have a decision-making role in how and when to adopt technologies, and we must insist on workers’ profiting from the implementation of these technologies. Our generational task is to ensure that A.I. is a tool for lessening the vast disparities of wealth and opportunity that plague us, not exacerbating them.

Ro Khanna, who represents the 17th Congressional District in California, which includes Silicon Valley, is the author of “Dignity in a Digital Age: Making Tech Work for All of Us.”