The Debt-Peonage Society

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
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A recent study concluded that Medical bills make up half of bankruptcies.

The true abuse of bankruptcy is being carried out by those persons and corporations who can well afford to pay their bills. Or by corporate criminals who use bankruptcy to shield their ill gotten gains.

The banking industry (which, BTW, was bailed out by U.S. taxpayers to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars during the Savings and Loan debacle of the Reagan administration) and the credit card industry have lobbied (read: paid off their "friends" in Congress) to limit U.S. bankruptcy law for Americans who have no other recourse.

Will we all become a "sharecroppers' society" as Warren Buffet warns? Or will America become a "debt-peonage society"?

Paul Krugman nails the bankruptcy "reform" disaster.


OP-ED COLUMNIST

The Debt-Peonage Society

By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: March 8, 2005

Today the Senate is expected to vote to limit debate on a bill that toughens the existing bankruptcy law, probably ensuring the bill's passage. A solid bloc of Republican senators, assisted by some Democrats, has already voted down a series of amendments that would either have closed loopholes for the rich or provided protection for some poor and middle-class families.

The bankruptcy bill was written by and for credit card companies, and the industry's political muscle is the reason it seems unstoppable. But the bill also fits into the broader context of what Jacob Hacker, a political scientist at Yale, calls "risk privatization": a steady erosion of the protection the government provides against personal misfortune, even as ordinary families face ever-growing economic insecurity.

The bill would make it much harder for families in distress to write off their debts and make a fresh start. Instead, many debtors would find themselves on an endless treadmill of payments.

The credit card companies say this is needed because people have been abusing the bankruptcy law, borrowing irresponsibly and walking away from debts. The facts say otherwise.

A vast majority of personal bankruptcies in the United States are the result of severe misfortune. One recent study found that more than half of bankruptcies are the result of medical emergencies. The rest are overwhelmingly the result either of job loss or of divorce.

To the extent that there is significant abuse of the system, it's concentrated among the wealthy - including corporate executives found guilty of misleading investors - who can exploit loopholes in the law to protect their wealth, no matter how ill-gotten.

One increasingly popular loophole is the creation of an "asset protection trust," which is worth doing only for the wealthy. Senator Charles Schumer introduced an amendment that would have limited the exemption on such trusts, but apparently it's O.K. to game the system if you're rich: 54 Republicans and 2 Democrats voted against the Schumer amendment.

Other amendments were aimed at protecting families and individuals who have clearly been forced into bankruptcy by events, or who would face extreme hardship in repaying debts. Ted Kennedy introduced an exemption for cases of medical bankruptcy. Russ Feingold introduced an amendment protecting the homes of the elderly. Dick Durbin asked for protection for armed services members and veterans. All were rejected.

None of this should come as a surprise: it's all part of the pattern.

As Mr. Hacker and others have documented, over the past three decades the lives of ordinary Americans have become steadily less secure, and their chances of plunging from the middle class into acute poverty ever larger. Job stability has declined; spells of unemployment, when they happen, last longer; fewer workers receive health insurance from their employers; fewer workers have guaranteed pensions.

Some of these changes are the result of a changing economy. But the underlying economic trends have been reinforced by an ideologically driven effort to strip away the protections the government used to provide. For example, long-term unemployment has become much more common, but unemployment benefits expire sooner. Health insurance coverage is declining, but new initiatives like health savings accounts (introduced in the 2003 Medicare bill), rather than discouraging that trend, further undermine the incentives of employers to provide coverage.

Above all, of course, at a time when ever-fewer workers can count on pensions from their employers, the current administration wants to phase out Social Security.

The bankruptcy bill fits right into this picture. When everything else goes wrong, Americans can still get a measure of relief by filing for bankruptcy - and rising insecurity means that they are forced to do this more often than in the past. But Congress is now poised to make bankruptcy law harsher, too.

Warren Buffett recently made headlines by saying America is more likely to turn into a "sharecroppers' society" than an "ownership society." But I think the right term is a "debt peonage" society - after the system, prevalent in the post-Civil War South, in which debtors were forced to work for their creditors. The bankruptcy bill won't get us back to those bad old days all by itself, but it's a significant step in that direction.

And any senator who votes for the bill should be ashamed.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
The true abuse of bankruptcy is being carried out by those persons and corporations who can well afford to pay their bills. Or by corporate criminals who use bankruptcy to shield their ill gotten gains.
=========================
This should be in the No Sh1t Sherlock thread
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
WHAT NEW CBO DATA INDICATE ABOUT LONG-TERM INCOME DISTRIBUTION TRENDS
http://www.cbpp.org/3-7-05tax.htm
The Congressional Budget Office releases the most comprehensive data available on changes in incomes and taxes for different income groups. The data that CBO issues have two main advantages compared with the more widely-cited Census data. The CBO data capture trends at the very top of the income scale; Census data explicitly do not. (For example, the standard Census data do not include wage and salary incomes above $1 million or capital gains income.) The CBO data also measure after-tax income, a better measure of how much income households have at their disposal than the before-tax income measure used by Census.

CBO has just released its income and tax information for 2002.[1] This information underscores the degree to which income gains have been concentrated at the top of the income scale over the past two-plus decades. Between 1979 (the first year the CBO data cover) and 2002:

-The average after-tax income of the top one percent of the population more than doubled, rising from $298,900 to $631,700, for a total increase of $332,800, or 111 percent. (CBO adjusted these figures for inflation and expressed them in 2002 dollars.)

-By contrast, the average after-tax income of the middle fifth of the population rose a relatively modest 15 percent, or $5,700, reaching $43,700 in 2002.

-The average after-tax income of the poorest fifth of the population rose just 5 percent, or $600, over the period.


Because incomes grew fastest among the most affluent, this group?s share of the total national income grew as well.

-The top one percent of the population received 11.4 percent of national after-tax income in 2002, up from its already-large 7.5 percent share in 1979. (Each percentage point of after-tax income is equivalent to $62 billion in 2002 dollars.)

-In contrast, the shares of national income received by various groups of low- and middle-income people all fell. The middle fifth of the population received 16.5 percent of the national after-tax income in 1979, but 15.8 percent in 2002. The bottom fifth received 6.8 percent of such income in 1979, but 5.1 percent in 2002.


Income is now more concentrated at the very top of the income spectrum than in all but six years since the mid-1930s. This conclusion is reached by viewing the CBO data in conjunction with data from a ground-breaking historical analysis of income distribution trends published in a leading economics journal in 2003.[2] Viewed together, the studies indicate that the richest one percent of households now receive a larger share of the national income than at any time since 1937, except for 1988 and the period from 1997 to 2001.[3]

Income concentration peaked in 2000, the year the stock market peaked. From 2000 to 2002, income became less concentrated at the very top, at least in part due to the drop in the stock market. The after-tax incomes of most groups fell from 2000 to 2002, but fell significantly more sharply for the top one percent. Even so, after-tax remained exceptionally concentrated among the top one percent in 2002.

Since 2002 income gains at the top may have outpaced the gains across the rest of the income spectrum. For instance, the ratio of the pay of the nation?s chief executive officers to the pay of average workers fell sharply from 2000 to 2002, but rose from 2002 to 2003.[4] Further, in August 2004 the Census Bureau released a variety of indicators of income inequality going through 2003. These income inequality measures suggest, if anything, that the gap between the most well-off and other Americans became larger in 2003 than it was in 2002 (the qualification ?if anything? is necessary because the changes in 2003 in certain income measures were not statistically significant). The Census measures also show a long-term trend toward greater income concentration.

Chart
http://www.cbpp.org/3-7-05tax-f1.jpg


Bush is a great President, if you're rich.
The economy is booming, if you're rich.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
That just about says it all, Conjur. And to think we live in a nation where some 60 million Americans are willing accomplises in the economic demise of our democracy just makes me sick.

If these fools were in the majority in 1776 we'd still be ruled by a the king of England.

They've chosen Bush as their replacement.

 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
I fail to see how people making more money in the top 1% equals the demise of our democracy.

But lets just jump on the drama bandwagon because it has served us to well in the past.

If Warren is so worried about this then maybe he should spend some of his billions and redistribute some of that apparently grotesque wealth of his.

 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: conjur
WHAT NEW CBO DATA INDICATE ABOUT LONG-TERM INCOME DISTRIBUTION TRENDS
http://www.cbpp.org/3-7-05tax.htm
The Congressional Budget Office releases the most comprehensive data available on changes in incomes and taxes for different income groups. The data that CBO issues have two main advantages compared with the more widely-cited Census data. The CBO data capture trends at the very top of the income scale; Census data explicitly do not. (For example, the standard Census data do not include wage and salary incomes above $1 million or capital gains income.) The CBO data also measure after-tax income, a better measure of how much income households have at their disposal than the before-tax income measure used by Census.

CBO has just released its income and tax information for 2002.[1] This information underscores the degree to which income gains have been concentrated at the top of the income scale over the past two-plus decades. Between 1979 (the first year the CBO data cover) and 2002:

-The average after-tax income of the top one percent of the population more than doubled, rising from $298,900 to $631,700, for a total increase of $332,800, or 111 percent. (CBO adjusted these figures for inflation and expressed them in 2002 dollars.)

-By contrast, the average after-tax income of the middle fifth of the population rose a relatively modest 15 percent, or $5,700, reaching $43,700 in 2002.

-The average after-tax income of the poorest fifth of the population rose just 5 percent, or $600, over the period.


Because incomes grew fastest among the most affluent, this group?s share of the total national income grew as well.

-The top one percent of the population received 11.4 percent of national after-tax income in 2002, up from its already-large 7.5 percent share in 1979. (Each percentage point of after-tax income is equivalent to $62 billion in 2002 dollars.)

-In contrast, the shares of national income received by various groups of low- and middle-income people all fell. The middle fifth of the population received 16.5 percent of the national after-tax income in 1979, but 15.8 percent in 2002. The bottom fifth received 6.8 percent of such income in 1979, but 5.1 percent in 2002.


Income is now more concentrated at the very top of the income spectrum than in all but six years since the mid-1930s. This conclusion is reached by viewing the CBO data in conjunction with data from a ground-breaking historical analysis of income distribution trends published in a leading economics journal in 2003.[2] Viewed together, the studies indicate that the richest one percent of households now receive a larger share of the national income than at any time since 1937, except for 1988 and the period from 1997 to 2001.[3]

Income concentration peaked in 2000, the year the stock market peaked. From 2000 to 2002, income became less concentrated at the very top, at least in part due to the drop in the stock market. The after-tax incomes of most groups fell from 2000 to 2002, but fell significantly more sharply for the top one percent. Even so, after-tax remained exceptionally concentrated among the top one percent in 2002.

Since 2002 income gains at the top may have outpaced the gains across the rest of the income spectrum. For instance, the ratio of the pay of the nation?s chief executive officers to the pay of average workers fell sharply from 2000 to 2002, but rose from 2002 to 2003.[4] Further, in August 2004 the Census Bureau released a variety of indicators of income inequality going through 2003. These income inequality measures suggest, if anything, that the gap between the most well-off and other Americans became larger in 2003 than it was in 2002 (the qualification ?if anything? is necessary because the changes in 2003 in certain income measures were not statistically significant). The Census measures also show a long-term trend toward greater income concentration.

Chart
http://www.cbpp.org/3-7-05tax-f1.jpg


Bush is a great President, if you're rich.
The economy is booming, if you're rich.



I doubt the graph was radically different in the late 90s when the economy was perfect.....
 

racebannon

Member
Dec 5, 2004
67
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Originally posted by: charrison

I doubt the graph was radically different in the late 90s when the economy was perfect.....

And the right-wing didn't give a crap then, either.
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
Originally posted by: charrison
I doubt the graph was radically different in the late 90s when the economy was perfect.....
Did you read the article? Apparently not.


Viewed together, the studies indicate that the richest one percent of households now receive a larger share of the national income than at any time since 1937, except for 1988 and the period from 1997 to 2001
The latter being due to the huge dot-com bubble.
 

charrison

Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
17,033
1
81
Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: charrison
I doubt the graph was radically different in the late 90s when the economy was perfect.....
Did you read the article? Apparently not.


Viewed together, the studies indicate that the richest one percent of households now receive a larger share of the national income than at any time since 1937, except for 1988 and the period from 1997 to 2001
The latter being due to the huge dot-com bubble.


Given that they failed to give the numbers for those time periods, I can only conclude that they were better, but not radically different.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: BBond
That just about says it all, Conjur. And to think we live in a nation where some 60 million Americans are willing accomplises in the economic demise of our democracy just makes me sick.

If these fools were in the majority in 1776 we'd still be ruled by a the king of England.

They've chosen Bush as their replacement.

I wish I got a pic of a pickup yesterday with giant King W on the back and had all kinds of Republican stickers all over it. Stickers featured newly elected Republicans from Louisisana Senator David Vitter and Congressmen.

It also had a sticker that said "How did our Oil get under their sand"
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
I fail to see how people making more money in the top 1% equals the demise of our democracy.

But lets just jump on the drama bandwagon because it has served us to well in the past.

If Warren is so worried about this then maybe he should spend some of his billions and redistribute some of that apparently grotesque wealth of his.

But instead, "Warren" is getting his share of the Bush tax cuts. :roll:

Wealth in the U.S. has been redistributed and the effort is continuing.

Bush tax cut 1.

Bush tax cut 2.

War in Iraq.

Federal tax redistribution by state.

How much richer do you want the top 1% to get?
 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
I don't mind the idea in theory, but the fact that senators voted down some key ammendments makes me ill.

protecting soldiers who went into debt because their salary from their day job was halved when they shipped out to Iraq?

protecting the homes of elderly people?

protecting people who went into debt because of medical emergencies?

how could anyone vote against things like that?
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
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0
Originally posted by: loki8481
I don't mind the idea in theory, but the fact that senators voted down some key ammendments makes me ill.

protecting soldiers who went into debt because their salary from their day job was halved when they shipped out to Iraq?

protecting the homes of elderly people?

protecting people who went into debt because of medical emergencies?

how could anyone vote against things like that?

Because they're being paid by the banking and credit card industries to vote that way.

 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: loki8481
I don't mind the idea in theory, but the fact that senators voted down some key ammendments makes me ill.

protecting soldiers who went into debt because their salary from their day job was halved when they shipped out to Iraq?

protecting the homes of elderly people?

protecting people who went into debt because of medical emergencies?

how could anyone vote against things like that?

Because they're being paid by the banking and credit card industries to vote that way.

OMG, there is some non-brainwashed real "compassionate" folks in P&N???

 

nageov3t

Lifer
Feb 18, 2004
42,808
83
91
just read about another amendment that was voted down... the amendment that would have prevented violent protesters from using the bankruptcy laws to shield themselves from judgments awarded in civil lawsuits.

and it seems that the general consensus from bankruptcy law professionals is that the most hurt by this will be some pretty solidly Republican, heartland states where the filing rates are highest -- Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, and Tennessee where the ones that stood out.

seriously. wtf is wrong with these people?
 

Alistar7

Lifer
May 13, 2002
11,978
0
0
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: loki8481
I don't mind the idea in theory, but the fact that senators voted down some key ammendments makes me ill.

protecting soldiers who went into debt because their salary from their day job was halved when they shipped out to Iraq?

protecting the homes of elderly people?

protecting people who went into debt because of medical emergencies?

how could anyone vote against things like that?

Because they're being paid by the banking and credit card industries to vote that way.


Americans will get the last laugh on the bankers though, as soon as the dollar reaches it's inevitable death. Once it is revauled that owerwhelming personal debt will be wiped out with leftover pocket change. Imagine a 100-1 revaluation on the dollar, your $100,000 mortage could be paid off with a paltry $1,000 of our original currency.
 

Hayabusa Rider

Admin Emeritus & Elite Member
Jan 26, 2000
50,879
4,266
126
Originally posted by: Alistar7
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: loki8481
I don't mind the idea in theory, but the fact that senators voted down some key ammendments makes me ill.

protecting soldiers who went into debt because their salary from their day job was halved when they shipped out to Iraq?

protecting the homes of elderly people?

protecting people who went into debt because of medical emergencies?

how could anyone vote against things like that?

Because they're being paid by the banking and credit card industries to vote that way.


Americans will get the last laugh on the bankers though, as soon as the dollar reaches it's inevitable death. Once it is revauled that owerwhelming personal debt will be wiped out with leftover pocket change. Imagine a 100-1 revaluation on the dollar, your $100,000 mortage could be paid off with a paltry $1,000 of our original currency.

That's a Pyrrhic victory. Long before the bankers feels it, everyone else will have been ruined. I'll take little comfort gloating from a bread line.

BTW, another reason for a lockbox SS plan rather than private accounts.
 

Jhhnn

IN MEMORIAM
Nov 11, 1999
62,365
14,681
136
From Alistar7-

"Americans will get the last laugh on the bankers though, as soon as the dollar reaches it's inevitable death. Once it is revauled that owerwhelming personal debt will be wiped out with leftover pocket change. Imagine a 100-1 revaluation on the dollar, your $100,000 mortage could be paid off with a paltry $1,000 of our original currency. "

Wishful thinking, at best. Inflationary spirals hit the middle and working class hardest, since wages lag behind in such scenarios. Yeh, the value of debt decreases, but since the price of everything else goes up faster than the value of wages, you're still screwed...

The only way to come out on top in an inflationary scenario is to be on the delivering end on goods and services folks can't do without- energy, medical, insurance, food, rental housing. Wonder who that might be....

Another link-

http://www.inequality.org/facts.html

One of the more interesting aspects of it all is the ability of the truly wealthy to hide in the top 1%, where inequality is just as great as in the rest of the population... and the fact that the so-called progressive income tax structure is actually regressive at the very top...

Not that the anti-tax foamers would admit to anything, but it all started downhill with the Kennedy taxcuts of the 60's, accelerated under Reagan's tutulage, and now approaches cataclysm with the Bush cuts...

 

MonkeyK

Golden Member
May 27, 2001
1,396
8
81
The credit card companies say this is needed because people have been abusing the bankruptcy law, borrowing irresponsibly and walking away from debts.

Flip-side of that is the irresponsible lending. I've seen credit ads saying things like "need cash?" marketed to students. Students are stupid to borrow money that they can't afford to pay back, but credit card companies are stupid to lend money to people who can't afford to pay it back (except for the 20% interest on the principle). Both parties bear a responsibility.

note: while it is more profitable to be paid the componded 20% interest, if it is not paid back, the writeoff of principle + 20% compounded masks income from the cases where it was paid back
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: MonkeyK
The credit card companies say this is needed because people have been abusing the bankruptcy law, borrowing irresponsibly and walking away from debts.

Flip-side of that is the irresponsible lending. I've seen credit ads saying things like "need cash?" marketed to students. Students are stupid to borrow money that they can't afford to pay back, but credit card companies are stupid to lend money to people who can't afford to pay it back (except for the 20% interest on the principle). Both parties bear a responsibility.

note: while it is more profitable to be paid the componded 20% interest, if it is not paid back, the writeoff of principle + 20% compounded masks income from the cases where it was paid back

BTW, those same credit card companies are run by banks who were bailed out by the same taxpayers they now want to deny a bail out to.

Hypocrites.

 

cquark

Golden Member
Apr 4, 2004
1,741
0
0
Originally posted by: Genx87
I fail to see how people making more money in the top 1% equals the demise of our democracy.

That's not the crisis. Focus on the words "sharecropper" and "debt peonage." They're effective ways of having a feudal system even in a Democratic society. For those who aren't familiar with how such a system works, here's an explanation from Francisco Pascual's "The Development and Historical Context of the Debt Crisis":
As it was in ancient society when usury thrived under conditions of
widespread impoverishment on the one hand and the concentration of
wealth on the other hand; so does usury in modern society thrives
under condition of massive accumulation and concentration of finance
capital coupled with widespread underdevelopment. This is the
situation in the world today. And for as long as such opposite poles
of concentration of wealth and poverty is maintained the cycle of
indebtedness continues.

How usury thrives in such polarized situation is clearly demonstrated
in the case of the backward agricultural economies still prevalent in
much of the third world where usury still remains a major form of
exploitation and debt peonage a means of subjugation of a mass of
impoverished peasants. Usury and other forms of exploitation leave the
peasant barely enough for his means of subsistence; a situation that
ensures his perennial dependence on the moneylender.

It does not matter to the usurer whether the peasant had a good crop
or not. What matters to him is that debt is paid even if nothing is
left for the peasant's subsistence and, much less to improve his
production. In fact, if misfortune befalls the peasant as in the case
of a bad crop, the moneylender would only be too willing to extend
another round of loans to the peasant to be paid after the next
harvest. This trick assures the moneylender a good share of the next
harvest even before the crop has even been planted.

As often happen the debt grows to the extent that it cannot by any
stretch of imagination be paid. Then the moneylender can take
possession of the land step by step until he fully owns it. But even
under these new circumstances he will not banish the peasant from the
land; he can make him a sharecropper and, as before, still advance his
subsistence and production needs as well. And the cycle of
indebtedness, therefore, continues but under more onerous terms and,
often, from one generation to the next.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Wangari Maathai, the first African woman and first environmentalist to receive the Nobel Peace Prize was on Demcoracy Now yesterday. She spoke with Amy Goodman on this subject.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Wangari Maathai, the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize winner. You have been traveling the world since you won the prize, and one of the places you went was Japan, where you held a news conference in Tokyo, calling for cancellation of debt repayments by African countries. Can you talk about this issue?

WANGARI MAATHAI: This issue of debt has been discussed for many years. In the year 2000, there was a global campaign called, Jubilee 2000 Campaign, and it was calling for the cancellation of the debts. We all know about these debts. We all know that many of these debts were actually accumulated at a time when there was no democracy in many of our countries, when business was being done with dictators, people who were not responsible and accountable to their people. The people who were doing business with them, who are now the governments that are now demanding the repayments of these debts knew that these were dictators, that these people were not accountable to their people, but now sometimes after these dictators are no longer in power, it is the ordinary people, the ordinary rural populations, who are being punished, who are being sacrificed by their governments so that their governments can service the debts. That's why we are saying, really, if there is a will to assist African countries and other developing countries, these debts should be canceled and mechanisms should be found either to repay these monies or recover, because they're known where they are. So, we think that ? and I'm very grateful to some of the governments, especially within G8, that are advocating that indeed the debts should be canceled. Some countries don't pay, and those who pay are quite often sacrificing their people, sacrificing poor people, sacrificing sick people, sacrificing people who are unable to send their children to school.

AMY GOODMAN: Would you recommend that countries simply don't pay the debt?

WANGARI MAATHAI: Well, I know some people have said, ?Why do these people bother? Why do they sacrifice their people, even though they know the facts on the ground?? Now we know that many of these countries that are demanding the payments of debts are in a position to greatly punish any country that refuses to pay those debts, to service those debts, and that, I?m sure, is the reason why many of our governments continue to sacrifice their people, because the punishment that they could get would be greater, and it would have even a greater impact on their people. Punishments such as having the markets completely closed, refusing to provide any aid, refusing to do any trade. So, I think that it?s a very unfair system that we are facing in the world today, and it's a system where in all aspects the might is right and can do whatever it does -- it want to do, because the weak are too weak to refuse to punish itself.

AMY GOODMAN: Wangari Maathai, can you talk about how you founded the Green Belt Movement?

WANGARI MAATHAI: Well, almost 30 years ago now as we were preparing to go to Mexico to the very first United Nations Conference on Women, the conference that declared the Women's Decade in Mexico, we were discussing at the national level under the umbrella of the National Council of Women of Kenya, and here women from all different sectors came and met around the table. And as we talked, I listened to the women from the rural areas, and I noticed that the issues that they were raising had something to do with the land. They were asking for firewood. They said they needed firewood. They needed energy, which is their main sources of energy. They needed clean drinking water. They needed food. They needed income, because they were poor.

And I recognized the linkage between their problems and the environment, which was degraded and was not able to sustain them. And so, perhaps because of my biological background, because I did my studies in biology, in ecology, I immediately understood that what we really needed to address those problems is to rehabilitate the environment. I did not go to Mexico, but I stayed home and immediately started encouraging women that we plant trees. That's how it all started. But as I went deeper into that exercise, I started to see a labyrinth, a labyrinth of problems, linkages of problems in other sectors, such as governance. Governance became a very important cause or root cause of environmental degradation. Bad governance, misgovernance, logging, deforestation, allowing soil erosion, irresponsible management of these resources by the government. And that is why eventually the movement started the campaign for the greater democratic space and became eventually a joint -- eventually, the pro-democracy movement in Kenya.


 

JEDI

Lifer
Sep 25, 2001
29,391
2,736
126
Originally posted by: BBond
A recent study concluded that Medical bills make up half of bankruptcies.

The true abuse of bankruptcy is being carried out by those persons and corporations who can well afford to pay their bills. Or by corporate criminals who use bankruptcy to shield their ill gotten gains.

The banking industry (which, BTW, was bailed out by U.S. taxpayers to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars during the Savings and Loan debacle of the Reagan administration) and the credit card industry have lobbied (read: paid off their "friends" in Congress) to limit U.S. bankruptcy law for Americans who have no other recourse.

Will we all become a "sharecroppers' society" as Warren Buffet warns? Or will America become a "debt-peonage society"?

Paul Krugman nails the bankruptcy "reform" disaster.


OP-ED COLUMNIST

The Debt-Peonage Society

By PAUL KRUGMAN

Published: March 8, 2005

Today the Senate is expected to vote to limit debate on a bill that toughens the existing bankruptcy law, probably ensuring the bill's passage. A solid bloc of Republican senators, assisted by some Democrats, has already voted down a series of amendments that would either have closed loopholes for the rich or provided protection for some poor and middle-class families.

The bankruptcy bill was written by and for credit card companies, and the industry's political muscle is the reason it seems unstoppable. But the bill also fits into the broader context of what Jacob Hacker, a political scientist at Yale, calls "risk privatization": a steady erosion of the protection the government provides against personal misfortune, even as ordinary families face ever-growing economic insecurity.

The bill would make it much harder for families in distress to write off their debts and make a fresh start. Instead, many debtors would find themselves on an endless treadmill of payments.

The credit card companies say this is needed because people have been abusing the bankruptcy law, borrowing irresponsibly and walking away from debts. The facts say otherwise.

A vast majority of personal bankruptcies in the United States are the result of severe misfortune. One recent study found that more than half of bankruptcies are the result of medical emergencies. The rest are overwhelmingly the result either of job loss or of divorce.

To the extent that there is significant abuse of the system, it's concentrated among the wealthy - including corporate executives found guilty of misleading investors - who can exploit loopholes in the law to protect their wealth, no matter how ill-gotten.

One increasingly popular loophole is the creation of an "asset protection trust," which is worth doing only for the wealthy. Senator Charles Schumer introduced an amendment that would have limited the exemption on such trusts, but apparently it's O.K. to game the system if you're rich: 54 Republicans and 2 Democrats voted against the Schumer amendment.

Other amendments were aimed at protecting families and individuals who have clearly been forced into bankruptcy by events, or who would face extreme hardship in repaying debts. Ted Kennedy introduced an exemption for cases of medical bankruptcy. Russ Feingold introduced an amendment protecting the homes of the elderly. Dick Durbin asked for protection for armed services members and veterans. All were rejected.

None of this should come as a surprise: it's all part of the pattern.

As Mr. Hacker and others have documented, over the past three decades the lives of ordinary Americans have become steadily less secure, and their chances of plunging from the middle class into acute poverty ever larger. Job stability has declined; spells of unemployment, when they happen, last longer; fewer workers receive health insurance from their employers; fewer workers have guaranteed pensions.

Some of these changes are the result of a changing economy. But the underlying economic trends have been reinforced by an ideologically driven effort to strip away the protections the government used to provide. For example, long-term unemployment has become much more common, but unemployment benefits expire sooner. Health insurance coverage is declining, but new initiatives like health savings accounts (introduced in the 2003 Medicare bill), rather than discouraging that trend, further undermine the incentives of employers to provide coverage.

Above all, of course, at a time when ever-fewer workers can count on pensions from their employers, the current administration wants to phase out Social Security.

The bankruptcy bill fits right into this picture. When everything else goes wrong, Americans can still get a measure of relief by filing for bankruptcy - and rising insecurity means that they are forced to do this more often than in the past. But Congress is now poised to make bankruptcy law harsher, too.

Warren Buffett recently made headlines by saying America is more likely to turn into a "sharecroppers' society" than an "ownership society." But I think the right term is a "debt peonage" society - after the system, prevalent in the post-Civil War South, in which debtors were forced to work for their creditors. The bankruptcy bill won't get us back to those bad old days all by itself, but it's a significant step in that direction.

And any senator who votes for the bill should be ashamed.

what is a 'sharecroppers' society?
 
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