The Ratchet Effect
by David Atkins
Kudos due to Digby and Atrios
for keeping a keen eye on the planned cuts to middle class benefits,
made in exchange for cuts to wealthy benefits that will quietly
disappear when the bright spotlight is off after the Presidential
election.
This phenomenon is part of what Hacker and Pierson refer to as a ratchet effect:
one in which the institutions of government are squared more and more
firmly against the interests of the 99%, usually through policies made
through toothless "compromise" measures. Think big tax cuts for the
wealthy with "expiration" dates that are never really meant to expire,
in exchange for little-noticed middle-class tax cuts that barely make a
dent. Or trading short-term unemployment benefits and treaties for
long-term tax cut extensions. Or changing the structure of Medicare and
Social Security in exchange for closing easily re-insertable and
malleable loopholes in the tax code. Or handing over the entire health
insurance market to private industry in exchange for more universal
coverage that continues to increase in cost regardless. Or the recent
institutional acceptance of the 60-vote filibuster threshold, which
makes real reform to help the 99% almost impossible, but is accepted by
Democrats partly because it helps them stop things like Social Security
privatization should Republicans take a Senate majority--without
realizing that Social Security and programs like it will die a death of
1,000 cuts without institutional reform.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
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