In the
wake of the Great Recession, I had been charting employment growth/decline
monthly on LaMarotte. I’d started in
March 2011. For years after that, I used to wonder why I saw almost no sign of
a popular upheaval over the sluggishly-performing economy. But the upheaval did
finally came with the nomination/election of Donald Trump in 2016. And suddenly
everyone is using the word populism.
To be
sure, it is a euphemism. In a country where one may only refer to the
population as “middle class,” it is painful for pundits to speak of the lower class. To
call something a “populist revolt” is more acceptable than calling it a “lower
class revolt.” But one thing is certain. William Jennings Bryan’s famous Cross
of Gold plays a major role every time that populism rises to the surface. If
you ask Google NGram (the word-usage application) to chart “populism” and, say,
“tea party,” you’ll discover that until 1962 “populism” was much less used than
“tea party”; beginning that year, however, “populism” began to soar in printed
mentions so that by 2008 it was used five times more often than “tea party”;
and since then (NGram only goes up to ‘08), it must have had an even more
sharply rising usage.
I note
that until 1962 indices of productivity and real hourly compensation were essentially
the same (since 1947). They begin to diverge in 1962, with productivity higher
(and higher, and higher) as time advances. The 1960s mark the start of an
economic divide—which grows and grows…and grows. And so does the use of the
word populism.
Bryan
said, in a speech at the Democratic National Convention of 1896, “you shall not
crucify mankind on a cross of gold.” The context here was monetary policy,
specifically money supply. The United States, operating on the gold standard,
had an insufficiency of money. Bryan advocated bimetallism, meaning the use of
silver along with gold to increase the supply—which would have benefitted the
agricultural producers, a vastly larger segment of the population then than it
is today. The subject of bimetallism deserves its own entry; for now, let’s
just say that the gold standard favored East Coast money interests; bimetallism
would have helped (let’s call it) the middle class.
Many
parallels mark the 2016 and the 1896 elections. Little-known Bryan emerged as a
very popular figure and won the Democratic nomination. But he lost the election
(no Putin helped him, I suppose; Nicholas II ran Russia then). The gold standard
was kept in place. William McKinley won the election. (We disclose here
voluntarily that our last address was 259 McKinley.) Another parallel was that
a large but little-heard portion of the population—the red states of that time—were
disaffected but not as successful as the voters of the same type that managed
to capture the presidency in 2016.
Populism?
The lower classes in revolt against elites—after long stagnation and suffering.
The Golden Cross just got too heavy. Amazing how much 1% can weigh. The
ultimate outcome? Who can foretell the future?
One of the interesting observations for me is that the “rage” you expect
to see by studying statistics is not necessarily visible until some voice
starts shouting it to mobs. Then we have populism. And it can win even without
the majority of the popular vote.
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