Archive for the ‘URPE Internal’ Category

Post

David Laibman: Concerning the Occupy Movement and “Insidious Threats”

In Economics & Politics,International,Labor,U.S.,URPE Internal on December 16, 2011 by juliohuato

One strain of argument in the great debate about the future of the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) Movement is one that I will call the “Beware of Insidious Threats” position (hereafter: BIT).  This view is neatly expressed in a recent essay by Ismael Hossein-zadeh (“An Insidious Threat to the Occupy Movement”), which appeared in various places online, and in the URPE Newsletter (Vol. 43, No., 1, Fall, 2011).

Hossein-zadeh writes of the “threat of preemption, or cooptation, posed by the Democratic Party and union officials.”  He is wary of all approaches from liberals and labor that propose alliances with the occupiers: “. . . the Democrats are trying to utilize the Occupy movement the way the Republicans do the Tea Party.”  Liberals are “trying to build bridges between the Democratic Party and the Occupy movement in an effort to channel the protesters’ energy to the party’s electoral machine.”  Citing the Democratic Party’s “record of cooptation and betrayal,” he urges OWS to “chart a political movement of the working people and other grass-roots independent of both parties of big business.”

This is an old argument.  It was around (even dominant) in New Left circles in the 1960s.  Of course, just because an argument is old doesn’t mean it’s false; my counterargument was also around back then.

In the BIT scenario, the “energy” of the protest movement is a fixed quantity, which can be captured by some force outside the movement by means of trickery and sly manipulation of ideas and feelings.  But this separates OWS’ energy from the actual crisis and its impact.  If the crisis is profound, and if it points toward radical social transformation for its resolution, it will reach ever-new layers of the working population and draw new energy from deepening responses to it.

That is a lot for Democrats (and “union officials”) to “coopt”; they will be able to use their deadly wiles to harness that energy only if their view of the crisis, and the society that spawned it, is valid.  That view is the reformist one: the crisis is an aberration of the financial system and can be overcome by wise policy, entirely within the existing structure of power and privilege ‒‒ in other words, without confronting, let alone replacing, capitalist social relations.

To the extent large numbers of working people share this reformist view ‒‒ or at least do not (yet?) have the foundation to oppose it consistently ‒‒ they are indeed susceptible to cooptation.  Now suppose the coopted Occupiers help Obama win a second term in November, and the Dems get secure control of both houses of Congress.  If, and only if, the reformist view is indeed correct, government will then pass new financial regulations, progressive taxes, full-employment legislation, comprehensive health care, fully funded education, housing guarantees, etc.  The crisis will be over.  The era of shared capitalist prosperity will begin.  The Occupiers will go home, vacate Zuccotti Park and all other occupied locations, because their goals will have been met.  Capitalism will have solved its crises within itself, and socialism will be left out in the cold.

In the BIT view, therefore, socialism only has a chance if we somehow prevent capitalism from reforming itself.  The chain of reasoning is inescapable: capitalism can solve its problems.  The BIT position thus coincides, fatefully, with the official (liberal) Democratic Party view of the world.  The Dems try to fix capitalism; our job is to oppose these fixes, even if this means that we place ourselves in opposition to struggles and demands for things that the 99% really need.  Socialism is then an Idea, one that can only come from outside of the massive reality of life within capitalist society.

Of course, if the OWS Movement were to help Obama & Co., and get coopted in the process, it could also be betrayed.  The Dems could say: “Hey, our fingers were crossed!”  No progressive legislation, no financial regulation, no end to the crisis.  Then the BITers will say: “See, we told you so.  They can’t be trusted.”  Who, then, can the Occupy Movement trust?  Why us, of course!  It is like a Biblical commitment of faith: place your trust in true prophets (the prophets of socialism), not false ones.  Of course, when facing two opposing claims to true prophesy, one is well advised to heed the old Biblical advice: “By their deeds ye shall know them.”  And, let’s face it, if the BITers have their way, our deeds will not come off so well.  Working people are suffering, and we say: “Don’t listen to those who claim to be able to fix things.  Wait.  The Idea of socialism will eventually triumph.”  You can hear the likely response to this: “The Idea of socialism and $2.20 will get me into the subway.  Ideas don’t pay the rent.”  It is hardly surprising that many working people listen to the left and to the political mainstream, and say “A plague on both your houses.”

The BITers are worried about illusions concerning the Democratic Party.  Hossein-zadeh:  “The Democrats are as much responsible for the economic problems that have triggered the protests as their Republican counterparts.”  This formulation speaks volumes.  Neither Democrats nor Republicans “are responsible for” the crisis.  Capitalism is.  Again, we see the deeply rooted assumption: if only morally and intellectually worthy political forces were at work, there would have been no “problems.”  The crisis could be solved within capitalism, if only the will were there.

But what if the assumption shared by both the Dems and (implicitly) the BITers ‒‒ that stable and final solutions can be found within capitalism ‒‒ is false?  This is where political economy must play a role in the OWS Movement, going forward.  What if, as someone once said, the contradictions are immanent, inherent, irreconcilable?  What if shifts in the balance of power between the 1% and the 99% (in favor of the latter) generate new pressures and tensions, creating the need for more advanced demands and proposals, ones that encroach further upon the prerogatives of wealth and privilege?  What if the massive effort to organize to win new people-supporting and -empowering institutions ‒‒ think of the New Deal ‒‒ and to staff those institutions, once created, and implement their purposes, generates more of both the experience underlying a stable shift of consciousness toward socialist values, and the capacity to actually carry out the transfer of power to the 99%?  Then, over time, socialism becomes not just an Idea, but the result of living history.  The revolutionary will that we seek develops within the existing society.  This is, at bottom, just another way of saying that capitalism is inherently and structurally flawed, and that its core nature is the best source of the agency for its eventual transformation.  One wonders how many people on the left who give advice to OWS believe that.

The energy of OWS, then, is not a fixed quantity.  It can’t, ultimately, be coopted, for the simple reason that the crisis that created it, and continually re-creates it, will remain unsolved.  This is so even if partial victories are won, and steps in the direction of a humane society achieved.  Socialists should embrace all of those legislative victories mentioned above, which the BITers fear, not because they will result in a glorious and permanent new stage of soulful capitalism, but because they will not do that; because they will place new, more comprehensive, restraints against capitalist prerogatives on the political agenda.

All of this clearly depends on our view of capitalist society, and that is why critical political economy ‒‒ which has been, and remains, essentially Marxist, even while it draws on many other sources ‒‒ is essential.  If capitalism is basically sound, requiring only some reformist tinkering, then nothing we do will stop OWS from eventually climbing into bed with the Democrats.  If capitalism is a monolithic system in which subaltern social forces are entirely powerless, change can come only from outside, that is to say, from an Idea.  In that case, by all means warn the occupiers of the danger of cooptation; urge them to be wary of getting involved with movements and programs that do not fly exclusively anti-capitalist banners.  If, by contrast to both of these accounts, capitalism is a system in which ruling and subordinate social classes are locked in an ever-present conflictual embrace; and if capitalism necessarily and always creates the tensions that are the source of its transformation from within, then build the widest possible alliances of people who are mobilized against its abuses, because this mobilization itself is the ultimate source of the consciousness of the capitalist social system as such, and of the agency to transcend that system, which we seek.

Now of course the Dems will try to coopt and channel OWS.  That is their role, and it is to be expected.  It is based on their belief that stable and final solutions within the system are possible.  We, on the other hand, can enthusiastically both cooperate with reformist political forces and independently build OWS (and a revitalized trade union movement, and much else), always fortifying the mass activism, grass-roots mobilization and open-ended militancy that must be the signature of a genuine movement from below.  Our arguments for radical imagination and for eventual revolutionary transcendence, however, will not be decisive, no matter how clever we are.  What will finally convince our base, and the millions of working people who must join that base, is their own experience in the struggle to win small victories in the battle for a dignified life, and to contain the predations of capitalist power in the present.  And this experience accumulates over long stretches of time during which the concepts “capitalism” and “socialism” will not yet be available to many of them, and in places, such as the base organizations (not the leaderships) of the two major parties, where progressive activists will almost certainly be found.  (Yes, I am thinking that we can even go after parts of the Republican base, especially the Tea Party.)  It is the actual confrontation itself, the practical engagement with capitalist society on every terrain, that matters most for transformation of understanding.

So if this is on target, we need not fear cooptation, and betrayal.  If we are betrayed (and we will be, from time to time), that will help lay foundations for greater political independence.  If we are coopted (and certain individuals and organizations that are part of our coalition will undoubtedly fall into reformist and naively electoral traps), the crisis and the need to mobilize against it will not go away as a result.  Much then depends on how we pursue the multi-front struggles for reforms, which are at bottom nothing other than small shifts in the balance of social power, in the right direction.  These can divert the energy of OWS, leading to discouragement, cynicism, fragmentation, etc. and postponing socialism.  But, with imaginative and militant leadership, they can also create new energy and possibilities, especially since ‒‒ as we know ‒‒ capitalism cannot deliver complete and stable solutions to its “problems,” which are in fact central to its functioning.  Ultimately, it is the nature of the society that we must take charge of and transform that will determine our growth path.  And eventually we will be the ones doing the coopting.

Post

URPE Newsletter F11

In Economics & Politics,International,Labor,U.S.,URPE Internal on December 13, 2011 by juliohuato

URPE Newsletter Fall 2011, Vol. 43, No. 1 (pdf)

In This Issue:
URPE Supports OWS: Report from New York
Announcements

On Radicals and Economists
An Insidious Threat to the Occupy Movement
2012 ASSA program
Economy Connection
The Role of URPE…
Paddy Quick: URPE Supports OWS
OWS: A Gift for the Economy
The Fires Were Already Burning
Reflecting on OWS

* * *


URPE Supports OWS: A Report from New York

People participating in Occupy Wall Street shared their experience at the URPE “War on the Working Class” conference in Brooklyn on Saturday October 1, and a group of 9 people also attended Sunday’s Membership Meeting. URPE members applauded the activists and the discussion turned to ways in which we could cooperate in working for our shared goals. It is clear that the activists will succeed in continuing the occupation for a long time, and also that the fledgling movement will grow. Already there have been occupations in 45 states, and increasing numbers of people are openly challenging “the system.” Two of the popular chants are: “They got bailed out, we got sold out” and “We are the 99%.”

The activists are eager to discuss their own perspectives and are open to a wide range of ideas. There is a general recognition that the economic system has failed to provide for the people and that the political system does not provide for their representation. Several URPE members have already visited “Liberty Park” where informal discussions are continually taking place. The occupants come from a wide variety of backgrounds. Young people who have never held regular jobs mix with students from both public and private universities and are joined by unemployed people from “Main Street” to ”Wall Street.” There is a daily “General Assembly” each evening at 7 where decisions are made by consensus with scrupulous attention to democratic procedure, including a policy for preferential under-represented in traditional discussions. (This resembles URPE’s own “affirmative action” policy for recognition based on gender and race/ethnicity/nationality, but includes preference for GLBT people.) URPE members also participated in the New York October 5th demonstration of 20,000 people which brought more than 30 trade unions, many community organizations and students walking out from several universities to march in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street. It is hard to describe the ways in which the possibility of a broad-based, unified movement in opposition to “the system” generated a welcome sense of optimism about the future, in place of the despondency which has been an all too common a response to the increasing attacks we have been experiencing for a long, long time. On a small scale, the participation of Occupy Wall Street people in Sunday’s URPE Membership meeting was a terrific experience for URPE members, and the activists were delighted to be greeted with such enthusiastic support.

The activists are committed to a long-term struggle. They know that it will be hard to continue the actual occupation in New York in its present form in the cold months of winter, and there is ongoing discussion of how to build the movement into the future. New York activists talked, at Sunday’s URPE meeting, of setting up a “free university” which would allow for more structured learning, and URPE offered to help in this. Sunday’s discussion included ways in which we could share out experiences on how to ensure transparency and accountability among our members/participants. In the meantime, please note the following:

· Occupied Wall Street Journal (a newsletter produced by Occupy Wall Street) is taking in submissions from everyone at occupymedia@gmail.com. If you could pass this info around with the people in URPE, that would be great.

· For live feed go to: http://www.livestream.com/globalrevolution

· In New York, the people working on URPE and Occupy Wall Street are: Julio Huato (juliohuato@gmail.com), Ruthie Indeck (soapbox@comcast.net), Paddy Quick ( paddyquick@aol.com), and Chris Rude (chris.rude@ciper.org).

· URPE members who are active in this movement in other parts of the country are encouraged to share their experiences on URPE listserv, which can be found at www.urpe.org.

· Please sign the Higher Education petition: Higher Education Faculty support the OCCUPY WALL STREET protest. We see the impact of the economic crisis in our classrooms and on our campuses each day. Our students are burdened with crippling student loans as they face a bleak and depressed job market and an economic recession with no end in sight, while our institutions increasingly rely on adjunct and part time faculty. We teach more and more for less and less, and our students suffer as we lose our ability to mentor because of our own lack of time and financial insecurity. The OCCUPY WALL STREET movement is a step towards a better and more just future for our past, current, and future students and for higher education faculty. We stand in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street. To read more and to sign, please visit: http://chn.ge/vx7Gqw

Report submitted: October 8, 2011

* * *


Announcements


RRPE Editorial Board Election Results

Your votes are in! Seventy-five members voted to fill eleven positions on the RRPE Editorial Board from a slate of thirteen candidates. Those elected for the 2011-2014 term are: Brigitte Bechtold, Firat Demir, William Dugger, Don Goldstein, Jon Goldstein, Fadhel Kaboub, Tim Koechlin, Minqi Li, Andrew Mearman, Shaianne Osterriech, and Bruce Pietrykowski.

Our sincere thanks to retiring board member Richard Cornwall, who brought such breadth and depth of knowledge to the ranks of reviewers. Richard is a true philosopher.

Hazel Dayton Gunn, Managing Editor


URPE Conference: Brooklyn, NY

The War on the Working Class October 1 & 2, 2011

Thanks go out to all of the presenters, speakers, attendees, volunteers, and the staff of St. Francis College for helping to make the URPE 2011 Brooklyn conference a success.

On behalf of the URPE Steering Committee, I would like to thank everyone in attendance for being patient throughout the day as we all had to deal with the fire alarm fiasco. The conditions were not ideal; however, many people were still able to share ideas, learn something new, and make connections to individuals and groups that share their common interests and goals.

For audio and video of selected presentations, go to the URPE website, www.urpe.org.

In Solidarity, Frances Boyes (for the URPE Steering Committee)


URPE at ASSA Chicago 2012

URPE will be sponsoring the following events in Chicago for the annual ASSA conference.

The URPE cocktail reception will be Friday, January 6th at 6 p.m. at the Palmer House Hilton in the Wilson Room.

The URPE membership meeting is Saturday, January 7th at 4:45 p.m at the Palmer House Hilton in the Indiana Room.

For a complete schedule of URPE sessions at the 2012 ASSA, please click here.


URPE 2012 Summer Conference

August 10-13, 2012

Political Economy of the 99%: Today and Tomorrow

For more details, workshop submissions, and registration information, please visit www.urpe.org.


Update on Economy Connection, URPE’s Resource/Speakers Bureau

By Ruthie Indeck, Coordinator (201-792-7459 or soapbox@urpe.org)

Seniors Fight Back “You’re smarter than the average,” Renee Toback told an audience of seniors living at a NYC residence, as they replied with a chorus of “No!” to her question: “Is Social Security going to disappear?” They might not be camping out on Wall St., but they were certainly eager to learn about the economy and explore ways to exercise their political power. Armed with charts on productivity, inequality of income and wealth, and tax and deficit rates over time, Renee began her Sept. 7 talk with a discussion of the Social Security non-crisis, and then moved on to the deficit, inequality, taxes, creation of demand, interest rates, and the politics of attacking New Deal programs. She concluded with suggestions on how to fight back. The Social Security system is not in crisis, Renee said – it currently has a surplus. Mainstream conservative predictions of failure are based on conservative assumptions, and many predictions about what will be happening 75 years from now, or even a few years from now, are as likely to be accurate as predicting the weather. Shortfalls that may arise in the future can be fixed by such measures as lifting the cap on the level of income that is taxed. She responded to politically-motivated anguish about Social Security being financed by government IOUs – money that has already been spent – by noting that the “IOUs” are more commonly known as bonds or treasury bills, which are considered safe by lenders around the world. When the government, or anyone, borrows money, this money is generally spent or invested – that’s why it was borrowed in the first place! Moving on to deficits, Renee demonstrated that our current deficit is lower as a percentage of GDP than some earlier deficits, especially the deficit incurred during World War II. As a percentage of GDP, the US is 35th on the list of countries in deficit. It is not a cause for hysteria at this time, and austerity measures will make it worse. What we should be worrying about, Renee said, pointing to her chart, is growing inequality of income and wealth. We should raise taxes on the rich. Demand will not be created by giving more money to the rich; they can’t spend all the money they have already! The rest of us create demand through consumption, but currently most of us don’t have much money to spend. That leaves government, which could generate demand by spending money on a long list of infrastructure and social service needs. When asked why Obama’s stimulus didn’t work, Renee said that it did work to some degree, but it was too little and too short. Renee responded to the argument that government borrowing would raise interest rates, which are now so low that she couldn’t even see them because of all the 000′s before the numbers. Why, then, do politicians want to destroy New Deal programs? She suggested a few reasons: scaring people into subservience and weakening labor’s power to resist, and preserving a climate in which large companies can buy up failing smaller companies. Profits are doing well, Renee noted. In response to questions about what people can do, Renee recommended several courses of action: “Don’t fall for it!”; educate people and talk to your friends; visit and write to your political representatives; vote, and march. Renee ended by quoting a woman she met at a protest march: “I’ve been marching since the New Deal, so stop complaining and move!” Fixing the Broken Economy Renee Toback also spoke to members of Northwest Bronx for Change on September 17. The topic was: “The Budget Deficit Crisis: The Inconvenient Truths They Don’t Want to Talk About When It Comes to: Jobs, Taxes, Balancing the Budget, the Recession, and Unemployment.” A comment on the NwBx website: “Our September 17th NwBxFC General Meeting turned into an economic version of the popular Discovery Channel show as progressive educator/economist Renee Toback debunked several of the conservative myths that the media is so fond of repeating endlessly.” Members of NwBx were first introduced to Renee when she and Eric Laursen spoke at a March 2010 MoveOn.Org event on corporate political and economic power.

A Radical Political Economist’s View of OWS: Chris Rude on KPFA On October 1, Chris Rude took a break from the URPE Brooklyn Conference to be interviewed by Kris Welch of Pacifica’s KPFA Berkeley. Kris was looking for a radical political economist’s viewpoint on Occupy Wall Street. Chris began by placing the Occupation in the context of the ongoing economic crisis. He noted that the economy is in its most serious crisis since the 1930s, and that as soon as the banking crisis was stabilized (though not solved) through massive intervention by the Fed, a new crisis phase emerged: a fiscal crisis of the state – a crisis of sovereign debt. In the US, banks are profitable again, largely because of foreign investments, but are not lending domestically; the domestic economy remains frozen. The two outstanding features of the current crisis, Chris said, are persistent unemployment and a foreclosure crisis, which feed one another and keep the economy at a standstill. Bipartisan government policies of austerity have made the situation worse. Chris does not think the powers that be have any solutions to the crisis. Chris went on to enthusiastically describe Occupy Wall Street, to some extent an outgrowth of an earlier struggle over the mayor’s budget which culminated in an encampment near City Hall called Bloombergville. Chris has been particularly struck by the self-organization of OWS. And not only are other organizations, like unions, supporting OWS, but the occupiers are sending people to support other movements, such as joining teachers in a picket line. Chris finds people at Liberty Plaza to be eager for knowledge – he has spoken there a few times. Chris worked on Wall Street for a number of years and is struck by the increased security in the area, and by “how scared they are by ragtag demonstrators.” Chris is inspired by OWS and feels that their presence is having a profound political effect that overrides any lack of specific demands. During the interview Kris Welch talked about the URPE conference taking place in Brooklyn and listed some of the workshops. Chris talked about our website, and some of URPE’s regular activities. You can listen to the interview at http://www.kpfa.org/archive/id/73830.

Could Wall St. and Climate Change Be Connected? “I was listening to AM news radio reporting on the Wall St. demonstrations and the announcer seemed genuinely perplexed that there could be a connection between the ‘Wall Streetification’ of the U.S. and climate change,” Eco-Logic (WBAI) host Ken Gale said, while introducing the topic of his Oct. 4 show featuring talks by Brian Tokar and Chris Williams. “The two authors analyze the connections between economics/economic systems and climate change, energy sources and social movements.” The two talks were recorded at URPE’s 2011 Left Forum Panel “Capitalism, Climate Change and Social Conflicts.” Their use on the radio was suggested by EC. Brian began by talking about the disconnect between how climate change is discussed in the mainstream press and what’s really happening in climate science. The popular press debates whether climate change is real and if so, whether it is caused by greenhouse gasses. Brian says that among scientists, that debate was over 30 years ago; now they talk about the severity of climate change, how quickly it’s developing, and the implications for humanity. “When we look at what’s really being said by the climate scientists today, it makes an increasingly compelling case for the inherent incompatibility of capitalism with the continued thriving of life on earth, particularly human civilizations.” Brian went on to talk about the December 2009 Copenhagen conference, which many had anticipated would take further steps toward reducing greenhouse gasses. Instead, the US led a backward march from legally-binding rules to voluntary compliance and coercive backroom processes. Developing countries were asked to submit greenhouse gas reduction pledges in order to be eligible for US aid. Brian then presented scenarios of the effects of varying degrees of temperature change. Brian concluded by proposing some real solutions: a drastic reduction in energy use, and an economy that is not capitalist – one that allows us to reduce consumption while improving the quality of life.

With an augmented sense of urgency from Japan’s disaster, and inspired by Wisconsin’s spirited activism, Chris Williams painted a picture of what a better world might look like and explored how to get there. He talked about physical changes (no radiation or toxic chemicals, more jobs and infrastructure repairs, food rather than guns) as well as lifestyle changes (working less, more choices about work, less pollution, goods that would last, more decision-making power). Chris gave a scathing critique of current energy policies – “clean” coal, “safe” nuclear power, offshore drilling, hydrofracking – and noted that we can’t explain recent US wars without talking about the need to control oil. To fight these policies, we need a movement for labor, social and ecological justice based on the twin pillars of renewable energy and jobs, Chris said, quoting the Wisconsin slogan “I am the union!” Chris agreed with Brian about the need for a new economic system based on cooperation, production for need not profit, and democratic decision making about production. He wants a world where people have time for arts and culture, can eat the food and drink the water, and can live sustainably. After the two recordings, Chris gave a live update, expressing hopeful feelings about a new unity among labor, students and community members based on current OWS activities. You can listen to Brian, Chris and Younes Abouyoub at www.urpe.org/conf/lf/LFproceed11.html.

URPE Members Participate in #Occupy Wall St.

Many URPE/EC members and others from the general URPE community have signed themselves up to do teach-ins and forums at various Occupations. Economics Forums at Occupy Boston’s Free School University have featured URPE folks and some of their talks are online. See these pages:

http://dollarsandsense.org/blog/ (scroll down)

http://wiki.occupyboston.org/wiki/FSU
http://www.occupyboston.org/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/ OccupyBostonFSU

If you are in the Boston area and want to sign up for a teach-in, email Christ Sturr: mailto:sturr@dollarsandsense.org. EC has received requests for speakers in Chicago and Albuquerque. More in the next issue if these develop.

In NYC the URPE presence has been a combination of people signing up on their own, and a small group (Julio Huato, Paddy Quick, Chris Rude, Sara Burke and me) thinking about ways to involve URPE. This group has begun to schedule some open forums and teach-ins, and to look for ways to make URPE resources accessible to OWS. For past and future NYC events, at Liberty Plaza and Washington Square Park, you can look through these two calendars: http://www.occupywallst.org/

http://www.nycga.net/events/

NYC archived Listserv post on getting involved:

http://greenhouse.economics.utah.edu/pipermail/urpe-announcements/attachments/20111024/9d522c5f/attachment.txt

URPE steering committee member Jenny Brown and other reporters at Labor Notes have been covering OWS, particularly its connection to labor. It would be great to hear from participants in other parts of the country! See Sara Burke’s article in this newsletter for an in-depth discussion of OWS.

Resource Questions:

Who Creates Jobs? A woman working with a Queens community organization loosely affiliated with MoveOn.Org contacted EC with a general request for more fact sheets and short, clear informational pieces for use by activists. She also had a specific request: a fact sheet on whether rich people create jobs. This would be used to combat the current bombardment of mainstream arguments that rich people and their companies won’t create jobs without an assurance that their taxes will be low. A number of people responded to my listserv request for input, and several of us have been collecting information on job creation. The original question has given rise to a number of others: has anybody been creating jobs, either during the recession or during the past few decades; which sectors create more jobs and what is the net job creation; how do technological advancements and increases in productivity affect job creation; how much do taxes really affect investment decisions; how does the “race to the bottom” affect which countries attract investment. (Warren Buffet confirmed what we already knew – that profit is the determining factor in investment decisions – but tax breaks are one part of a package that lures companies to other countries.). This project is in progress.

Economics Resources for Children

A teacher from Bank Street School wanted economics resources for teaching children in elementary and middle school, and suggestions on integrating progressive economic concepts into classes on various commonly-taught subjects. This inspired an update of Economy Connection’s “High School” page. The page contains links to websites, reading lists and publications that can be used for students in grades 1-12, and some of these resources can also be used for popular education purposes. A few weeks later a man working on children’s curricula for Occupy Wall St. was looking for additional resources, and we exchanged links. Please send additions to this page to soapbox@urpe.org. HS page: http://www.urpe.org/ec/high_school.htm

Resources from the URPE Brooklyn Conference We are collecting supporting materials from panels that took place at the October 1 URPE Conference in Brooklyn, “The War on the Working Class.” This page is in progress. If you participated and have papers (pdf format please), web links, recordings, etc., please send them to soapbox@urpe.org.

* * *



Editor’s note

This issue of the URPE newsletter is dedicated to information and analysis about the Occupy Movement. The pieces printed are what were submitted as of November 1st. Recognizing that this is a rapidly changing movement with new events happening daily, what is printed on the pages of this issue can only reflect the thought and involvement of URPE members to a certain point. URPE, as an organization, is a “big tent” with many perspectives encouraged and shared. Nothing printed reflects any official position of URPE, as that would be impossible to establish. The purpose of this issue is to capture the activities of URPE and its diverse membership in this exciting time. Please feel free to respond to the pieces in this issue, as well as submit your own contributions related to the Occupy Movement for print in our next issue. All submissions should be emailed to franceskboyes@gmail.com by April 7, 2012.

My hope is that everyone reading this newsletter is as encouraged and inspired as the contributors (including myself) are.

Hasta la victoria siempre!

Frances Boyes, newsletter editor

Post

URPE SC: The Role of URPE…

In URPE Internal on December 13, 2011 by juliohuato

The Role of URPE…

Dear URPE members,

Over the last years URPE has been launching a number of projects. The goal is always to increase URPE’s usefulness to the process of developing and promoting political economy. And the Occupy Wall Street and other “Occupy” events of the last months, which can be expected, with ups and downs, to deepen in the future, make URPE’s work more important (and arguably more satisfying) than ever.

URPE was set up to be as participatory an organization as its members would make it. We on the Steering Committee (SC) would like to get more feedback from “the URPE grass roots” on what URPE should be doing, on what would help URPE members and others in teaching, and in working for and fighting for social economic justice.

We heard from a number of our members at our Brooklyn Conference and yearly business meeting the weekend of October 1-2. Two meetings coming up in the next 3 months will bring together other URPE members, namely the membership meeting at the ICAPE conference in November and next year’s business meeting at the URPE at ASSA meetings in January.

To get as many clearly formulated ideas as possible on what URPE could and should be doing to develop and promote political economy (and not simply have a meeting where ideas are thrown out and float off into space) we invite URPE members to:

  • Present them at any future URPE business or membership meeting.
  • Write up their ideas at any time in a few paragraphs and send them to the National Office (urpe@labornet.org).
  • The SC will review all proposals. It will then do 4 things to make this an ongoing process of putting ideas into action.
  • The SC will post all proposed ideas of the Web site, and encourage all URPE members to look at and consider them.
  • The SC will spend part of its twice yearly steering committee meeting reviewing proposals made.
  • The SC will enter into dialogue with the authors of all ideas to discuss whether their ideas can be put into effect on the basis of our existing resources, or with the additional input of the authors and others who could be brought into different projects.
  • The SC will report at future business meetings on each and every proposal made, and on whether or not it can be put into effect.

The new activism that we are seeing today makes it ever more important for URPE to be an organization which promotes and develops radical political economy. URPE members are encouraged to share their ideas on how URPE can best do so.

This then is a call to begin now to share your ideas on what URPE can and should do. If you have any questions about this, please feel to contact Al Campbell directly at Al@economics.utah.edu.

- The URPE Steering Committee

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 44 other followers