"The Debt-Peonage Society." Krugman on the new bankruptcy bill. As usual, he's exactly correct:
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.
In some ways this is the single most outrageous thing the Republicans have done in four years. They *know* that
between at least forty and probably over fifty percent of personal bankrupcies are caused not by fraud or unbridled spending but
by medical costs, with the rest mostly caused by job loss and divorce. They just don't care.
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.
I direct you back to the heart of conservative ideology,
The Just World Hypothesis. [/end politics] This is a scandal, we're a plutocracy, and it's all very sad.
# posted by
Gerry Canavan @ 11:37 AM
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