Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Meet the Grinch Stealing the Future of Gen Y And Z


Salaries in the U.S. aren’t keeping up with inflation, despite pandemic-related increases in some sectors. That’s a major threat to the future for all working Americans – especially the youngest.

Social Security is your future. And that future could come sooner than you think.

Conversations about the program often pit younger workers against retirees, but Social Security is really an intergenerational compact that boosts the well-being of Americans of all ages — that’s one of the reasons the program is so cherished.

One in five Americans receives a Social Security benefit today, and about one in three of these aren’t retired. Social Security protects young workers and their families if they become disabled, and it provides benefits to the survivors of deceased workers, including their kids. Studies show that a 20-year-old worker has a one in three chance of qualifying for disability benefits before reaching retirement age.

Today’s seniors rely on Social Security for most of their income – and younger generations without traditional pensions will need the program even more. The situation is dire: we already know that the total wealth of Millennials is lower than that of their parents and grandparents at the same age. Social Security protects the health and dignity of younger folks down the road – it’s the only guaranteed source of retirement income that isn’t subject to the vagaries of investment risk or financial market fluctuations.

Yet threats to the program are coming fast and furious, from calls to cut benefits by changing how cost-of-living adjustments are calculated to schemes to raise the retirement age (which already happened in 1983 under Reagan).

There’s one threat that gets far less attention, which has been impacting American workers since the 1970s: wages that just don’t keep up, despite increased productivity. Social Security was designed for wages that rise with inflation – but that’s not happening. In an interview with the Institute for New Economic Thinking, Eric Laursen, author of The People’s Pension: The Struggle to Defend Social Security Since Reagan, breaks down how the program works, why wage stagnation represents a mounting threat, and what can be done to strengthen and update the program for the 21stcentury.

Lynn Parramore: Social Security has been America’s most successful retirement program for the last 87 years. Yet the public is constantly hearing that the program is going to “run out of money.” Is that actually true? Can Social Security actually go bankrupt?

Eric Laursen: No, and the word bankrupt is just about a complete misnomer when it comes to Social Security. The program is funded by contributions that participants and their employers make through their paychecks. It’s also backed by a Trust Fund which is accumulated over time.

That Trust Fund is dwindling now, and it’s expected to run out of money in the early 2030s. But Social Security can’t actually go bankrupt. If the situation arises where there is not enough money either in the Trust Fund or coming through from contributions to fund current benefits, then those benefits can’t be paid, perhaps as much as 25%. In that case, Congress would be faced with a choice to either cut benefits or increase contributions.

There’s a lot of pressure from people who want to cut Social Security to do it now rather than waiting for that point in the future, because at that point, Congress would be under a lot of pressure to make good on what people have been promised.

LP: About these predictions that the Trust Fund will run out of money -- does anybody really know what will be happening in 2030? Economists, after all, are actually very bad at making predictions (most didn’t see the 2007-8 crash coming, for example). We don’t actually know for certain there will be a shortfall, do we?

EL: That’s absolutely correct. Although you’d be surprised how much certainty economists assume when they make their predictions!

LP: Can you explain how the payroll tax works and how the amount of earnings that are subject to this tax makes a big difference in the whole equation? The press often doesn’t do a very good job of making it clear.

EL. Sure. The payroll tax is a 6.2 percent tax on employees and 6.2 percent for employers that is used to fund Social Security. The way the system works is a little bit convoluted, but essentially, that money goes to purchase Treasury bills, which go into the Trust Fund. Those Treasury bills are liquidated in order to pay benefits. The result is that Social Security is not like any other social benefit program in that it’s completely self-funded. It belongs to the people who put the money in. The Treasury can use the money it gets from those Treasury bills to do other things, but ultimately, those are obligations to the people who contribute to the program.

There are definitely alternatives to cutting Social Security if the Trust Fund runs out of money. For example, you could simply raise the payroll tax to some extent. This is used to scare people by critics of the system because people think “wait, raising taxes is always bad.” But the fact is that Social Security taxes have been raised repeatedly in the decades when the system was being expanded and improved in the ‘50s and ‘60s, for example, with no complaint about it. In fact, people polled consistently answer yes to the question, “Would you be willing to pay more in payroll taxes in order to keep your present Social Security level?”

It’s a myth that taxes are the third rail somehow. The importance of Social Security to people today is huge. It’s the one part of the old age benefit picture that has remained stable over the last 40 years. Employer-based pension systems have disintegrated and 401(k) plans have proved to be inadequate. People depend on Social Security more and more. Raising the payroll tax is a viable thing if it’s done in a gradual way.

LP: Isn’t that how the program was intended to work in the first place?

EL: Yes. The way the system works is that the contributions you make to Social Security only go up to a certain level of income. So if you’re making $147,000 a year—going up to $162,200 in 2023—up to that amount you pay payroll tax on your income. One of the reasons that the Trust Fund money is dwindling is that so much income of upper-income people is now above that amount. There’s a lot of income in this country that doesn’t get taxed for payroll. Some of the proposals we’ve seen from people on the Democratic side would address that.

The real reason for the shortfall doesn’t have to do with lower birth rates or life expectancies, which is what is usually discussed in the media and on the right as being the culprits. Those changes were actually pretty well understood and anticipated 40 years ago, which is the last time the program was updated in a major way. The real culprit is wage stagnation. Wages have not kept up at all with the pace they had prior to the early 1980s. This was not anticipated. The result is a system that is not bringing in money the way it formerly had.

LP: There are reports that President Biden is suggesting not only raising the cap but changing the measure of inflation to something called the CPI-E. Why is the program’s inflationary tether important and which measure do you think should be used?

EL: The CPI is what’s used to calculate increases in benefits every year. This past year we had a very big increase in benefits because the CPI jumped a lot. That was important to protect retirees from the impact of inflation.

The CPI-E is a measure developed back in the ‘80s, I believe, and it is geared particularly towards the basket of goods and services that the elderly – people over the age of 62 – use to a greater extent, like medical care and housing. The idea is to apply that to Social Security rather than the standard CPI.

On the right, there is another measure called the chained CPI, which they have been pushing. The chained CPI is designed to provide a more accurate read of inflation by more aggressively applying substitutions to the basket of goods and services. So if the price of beef is going up, the idea is that people will switch to eating chicken, so you factor that into the CPI. That slows the growth of the CPI, so it slows the growth of benefits in terms of how inflation is seen to impact elder benefits. There’s been a tug of war. The right wants chained CPI, which would slow the growth of Social Security benefits, while people on the progressive side want the CPI-E.

I’m in favor of the CPI-E. It’s a more accurate reflection of how inflation impacts the elderly. If we want to have a Social Security benefit that addresses their needs, that’s the most direct way to do it.

LP: I’m a Gen Xer born in 1970, which means that when Ronald Reagan was in office, two years of my Social Security benefits were taken away on the advice of the Greenspan Commission before I was old enough to vote. The age at which Social Security benefits could be collected was raised on people born after 1960 from 65 to 67. What’s your assessment of the economic and political aspects of that move? Was it necessary?

EL: I address this in my book, The People’s Pension. There’s a lot of murkiness surrounding it because not everyone’s motives were 100% clear when the Social Security amendments of 1983 were passed, which were proposed initially by the Greenspan Commission and then enacted by Congress.

The reality is that it was not necessary to institute this sort of phased raising of the retirement age at the time. It resulted in Social Security building up a larger Trust Fund, but it wasn’t the thing that saved the system back in 1983, a time when it really was in trouble. The truth is that as a result of the raising of the retirement age, the lifetime benefits which people will receive were eroded. Put simply, the change in the retirement age lowers the amount of money you’re going to get from Social Security after you retire. In the early ‘80s, Social Security, on average, replaced about 42% of the final salary or compensation for workers who were retiring. That’s down to about 32%.

LP: That’s a big difference.

EL: A very big difference. Social Security was never designed to be a total pension for everybody, although there’s a strong argument now for turning it into one. It was supposed to give you a critical mass so that you could supplement that with a private pension and private savings and come up with something comparable to what you were making before you retired. It doesn’t do that anymore, and the increase in the retirement age is one of the things that has created that situation, so it would be a very good thing if that could be reversed or simply held in place.

I understand your frustration, that this is not something you were able to weigh in on even though you were alive at the time. It also affects people who are retired now. It was done as a way to assuage major critics of the system of the time. It really isn’t something that had to be done.

LP: How worried should younger generations today be that something like this could happen again? What can they do to protect their futures?

EL: I have to come down on the side of saying they should be worried. The reason has nothing to do with the economics or fiscal viability of the system. It has to do with politics.

Social Security is in need of being improved and updated for the 21st century. It has been 40 years since any significant improvements or tweaks were made to the program. But the fact that there has been this constant pressure from the right, from the Republican Party and some Democrats, to cut benefits and to “save the program” – which really means cutting it back to the point where it would not be very useful at all – has kept people who support the system in Washington on the defensive for a good 40 years now. So the whole political energy has been around trying to play defense against these efforts to cut it, rather than to try to improve it. That’s the real danger for people in their 20s and 30s.

The reality is that it’s the stagnation in wages that has been the real problem for the program.

We’re going through a period right now in which there is a tight labor market and wages have been going up in some sectors, but that’s very much tied to the pandemic and the economic repercussions from that, and it’s not going to last unless there are changes made to some of the conditions in which the labor market operates – there we’re talking about offshoring of industries, the conditions for labor organizing, and so on.

If you really wanted to save Social Security and make sure that it was around for you, the thing to do is not to worry about the structure of the program, but to push for an economy that provides good jobs, good pay, that increases over time. That’s what we really need. So this is not a problem that younger people should think of as something happening down the road. It’s closely tied to the problem they have right now – that this economy doesn’t produce well-paying jobs. That’s something that arguably was engineered back in the ‘70s and ‘80s, right around the time that Social Security started to be neglected. That’s the real threat to younger people.

The interesting thing about this is that when people on the right and the center-right of the Democratic Party try and sell Social Security “reform,” which generally means cutting it, one of the tricks they have is to say, well, of course, we’re not going to touch the benefits of current retirees – they’ll be protected. The problem is that current retirees still do fairly well under the program, despite the erosion in benefits. It’s younger people who are really going to depend on Social Security. They are the ones that need the program to be improved.

LP: Dare we use the word “expanded”?

EL: Exactly.

LP: Many people may assume that the threats to Social Security come from the right and the Republican Party. How do you assess Biden's history on this issue?

EL: You have to remember that Biden and most of the other leaders in Washington think like politicians. They’re concerned first and foremost to get themselves reelected and they’re very sensitive to how far they can push things. Biden, in the ‘80s and ‘90s, was a vociferous supporter of “reforming” Social Security – freezing entitlements, cutting back on benefits in order to “save the system.” Many people in the Democratic leadership at the time thought the same way. That was the popular thing. “Reforming” Social Security has always been a peculiarly Washington obsession. The trick has always been to come up with a critical mass of Republicans plus enough center-right Democrats to push it through.

These days it’s not as popular a thing. Mitch McConnell, for example, has so far ruled out doing anything to Social Security over the next couple of years because he knows it’s a political loser. It won’t fly right now. But it’s always there in the background. And I should point out that this last election was very revealing. It’s sometimes thought that the real Trump-y members of Congress and the Republicans from that side of the party are less enthusiastic about cutting Social Security – that they’re friendlier towards entitlements as long as they go to their kind of people. But in fact, some of the most radical proposals for Social Security in this past election came from some of the most far-right people in the party – the ones who are closest to Trump.

LP: The ones who claim to be populists.

EL: Exactly. You’ve got people like Senator Ron Johnson [R-WI] who is literally saying Social Security should not be self-financed anymore. He says it should be thrown into the pot along with every other federal expenditure and hashed out every single year. Now, you can’t run a retirement program that way because there’s no certainty. But that doesn’t seem to make any difference to him.

LP: So Sen. Ron Johnson wants to remove the very aspect of the program that makes it work so well – the part that guarantees people can depend on that check coming year after year.

EL: Yes. And that’s why the fact that it’s a self-financing program is so important. There is an element of mutual aid to Social Security that is in its DNA. It’s people of a wide range of generations supporting each other because they know that at a certain point they will be the recipient rather than the payer. Once you destroy that element of social solidarity, the program is just like any other welfare program. And of course, the history of those over the last 40 or 50 years in this country is that they get cut.

LP: How do you rate the Biden Administration on Social Security now?

EL: It’s fairly positive. This goes back to 2016 when the election was looming, and Bernie Sanders was pushing very, very hard, and a number of progressives in Congress were pushing very hard for a platform that would improve the program. Obama, in his last year as president, got behind them. Hillary Clinton got behind them. That was a big opportunity that was lost when Trump won the presidency because there would have been some momentum for that. That all died under Trump. This year there are proposals again in Congress to improve Social Security. It won’t be easy to do in the Congress that’s about to take its seat, but the Biden administration has been, at least in a general way, positive towards it. But we’re not going to see a lot of progress tomorrow.

LP: What would you do to make sure that Social Security is protected and remains strong? Does it need to be modernized in some ways to keep it effective?

EL: There are a number of things that can be done. One is to raise the cap. More of income beyond the $147,000 threshold needs to be taxed for payroll tax purposes. Another thing that can be done is passing the Social Security Expansion Act that Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and others have backed. There is a special minimum benefit for Social Security recipients that’s aimed at keeping people who have really low incomes during their lifetimes above the poverty level, and that needs to be improved. That’s not asking a lot. It should be done.

You can also change the rules for wealthy people. One of the differences between now and 40 years ago is that people in the really high income brackets get much more of their income from investments, stock options, and other business holdings than they do from salaries and wages. We need to figure out a formula for applying the payroll tax to at least some of that investment income – like capital gains and so forth. Definitely, the CPI-E needs to be instituted. There should be an expansion of benefits across the board for Social Security benefits. We need the CPI-E at a base level that’s more reasonable. Another thing I think is important: one of the changes that happened in ’83 that was really bad was that Social Security survivor benefits were ended for children of deceased or disabled workers above the age of 18. It used to be that you could get those until 22 and they would help you to go to college. That was abolished. It would be a very good thing if that could be reinstated so that more people have some level of security to pursue higher education.

LP: If there’s one thing you could get the public to understand right now about Social Security, what would it be?

EL: I’ll make it two things. First, Social Security is not something you can consider in isolation. It gets back to what I said about how if you have good pay with steady increases, then you can have a healthy Social Security system in a fiscal sense. Without that, you can make all the cuts you want, you can tweak it any way you want to make benefits more moderate, and the system will still deteriorate. You must have a good economy, and that includes everything from encouraging the development of industries that generate those kinds of jobs. It means not making it harder for unions to organize so they can push for higher wages. Social Security is closely tied up in that aspect of the economy.

Second, keep in mind that Social Security belongs to you as a working person who is contributing to it. It doesn’t belong to the politicians, although they make decisions about it. It belongs to you and I think that there needs to be a sort of consciousness among people of this so that when they discuss it or make their views known to politicians, the politicians understand in Washington that this is something that is not theirs to play with.


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Thursday, December 15, 2022

High-level Panel Discussion: Development Prospects in a Fractured World


As 2022 comes to a close, panelists discuss the immediate prospects for the global economy, the dangers of a lost decade for developing countries and what needs to be done to put the SDGs back on track.

Moderator: Richard Kozul-Wright, Director of the Globalization and Development Strategies Division

UNCTAD Panelists:

  • Jeffrey D. Sachs, University Professor and Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University
  • Jose Antonio Ocampo, Minister of Finance and Public Credit, Republic of Colombia
  • Jayati Ghosh, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts-Amherst https://unctad.org/meeting/high-level...

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Bankman-Fried, Political Money, and the Crash of FTX


How Showering Money on Both Parties Paralyzed Regulators

Late last week, Samuel Bankman-Fried, in the eyes of many our century’s answer to 18th-century fraudster John Law, Charles Ponzi, and the con artists who puffed tulips back in the Dutch Golden Age, allowed that he would be willing to testify before the House Committee on Financial Services. Curiously, for someone usually so eager to jump on stages where he could trumpet his determination to make the world a better place, Mr. Bankman-Fried was far more tentative about the possibility of appearing before the Senate Banking Committee.

That little factoid, reported with no real explanation in the media accounts we saw, suggested to us that a little basic research might be in order. Like everybody else, we were eyeing the astronomical totals of political contributions ascribed to Mr. Bankman-Fried (hereafter SBF), his colleagues, and FTX, the crypto-currency exchange that SBF ran before it filed for bankruptcy. But past experience with mass media and scholarly analyses of campaign finance suggested to us a deep dive into the data would still prove highly instructive.

And so it turns out. In the interests of basic fairness and because so much data from the 2022 election cycle is still being posted on the websites of the Federal Election Commission and the Internal Revenue Service (which reports so-called “527” contributions usually neglected by journalists and scholars), we need to wave a few cautionary yellow flags about what we found.

Note first of all that as yet Mr. Bankman-Fried and his coworkers have not been convicted of anything, though the swiftness with which he and some of his colleagues made themselves scarce within the territorial United States as FTX imploded was striking. Recent comments and Congressional testimony by John J. Ray, the executive who is now presiding over the bankrupt shell of FTX, are also not encouraging. Indeed, coming from someone who helped liquidate Enron and a long line of other financial duds, they are downright chilling: “Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here.

We also take to heart warnings from public figures who admit they spent a lot more political money than the press recognized. While his recent public utterances clearly often mix poetry and truth, some of SBF’s statements on this score are noteworthy: “I donated to both parties. I donated about the same amount to both parties this year.” He added that “that was not generally known, because, despite Citizens United [the famous court case widely, if mostly mistakenly, blamed for opening the floodgates to giant waves of money in politics] being literally the highest-profile Supreme Court case of the decade and the thing everyone talks about when they talk about campaign finance, for some reason, in practice, no one could possibly fathom the idea that someone in practice actually gave dark.”[1]

“Dark money,” of course refers to contributions that are laundered through gifts to qualifying charities that are not themselves required to report where the money came from, only whom it went to. Election money analysts, accordingly, can see the money gushing out, but not the invisible spring it really comes from. As we have documented from time to time, Mitch McConnell along with many other politicos, including nowadays many Democrats, are past masters of stuffing campaign piggybanks in this stealthy way.

A passage from one of the indictments of SBF just unsealed underscores the need for wariness and, we would add, far more disclosure:

In furtherance of the conspiracy and to effect the illegal objects thereof, the following overt act, among others, was committed in the Southern District of New York and elsewhere: in or about 2022, SAMUEL BANKMAN-FRIED a/k/a “SBF,” the defendant,and one or more other conspirators agreed to and did make corporate contributions to candidates and committees in the Southern District of New York that were reported in the name of another person.[2]

In other words, the government contends, SBF and colleagues used dummies, too.

Here we can deal only with the on-the-record money. Dark money by definition stays dark unless some Congressional committee demands disclosure of how many of its own members and their colleagues really supped at the trough or prosecutors find the records.

But in the case of SBF and his colleagues, the public totals are quite something, even by the standards of American political finance.

Money in politics today is a Category 5 hurricane. Just when you think you have finally absorbed the worst punch the storm has to offer, some other eddy comes blasting down. We have tried to pull together the many streams of political money from SBF, his senior associates, and all other employees of FTX, together with the executives of Alameda Research, the crypto hedge fund that SBF had co-founded and remained involved with. We include individual donations and PAC contributions, but also the often gigantic 527 transfers reported to the IRS. We counted his brother, but not his parents. We have not looked at law firms that represented SBF or the firms or other possible sources of more money. And we warn readers that the group donated lavishly to think tanks, including the Center for American Progress. It also nourished a stable of former regulators, especially from its preferred regulatory venue, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and – secretly – at least one media outlet.

Still, our total is substantially higher than most others reported: over $89 million dollars since 2019, with the bulk of it coming during the 2021-22 political cycle when the campaign to keep crypto clear of federal regulation swung into high gear.

Three graphs clarify some of the issues debated in public. Figure 1 displays the time path of all the contributions we identified; Figures 2 and 3 display total contributions to Republicans and Democrats respectively. Figures 2 and 3 do not quite sum to the totals in Figure 1, since some streams of money could not be clearly pigeonholed in partisan terms. These last mostly represented donations to popular fundraising vehicles within the crypto industry or broader sectors of business that dispense money to politicians of both parties.

Figure 1 - Total Contributions

Figure 2 - Total $ to Republicans

Figure 3 - Total to Democrats

A strong current of Twitter feeds and press clips on the far, far right suggest that FTX was deeply involved with US-Ukrainian relations. So far, very little has come to light about FTX’s foreign subsidiaries or international dealings, save that some investors in the Bahamas were allegedly afforded a special opportunity to withdraw funds after the firm stopped withdrawals by other customers. But details of the public donations and their timing offer virtually no support to suggestions that eastern Europe was much on the mind of SBF and his colleagues. Many 2022 cycle contributions predate the outbreak of the war, though obviously not all do. Nor, though readers will have to take our word for it at least for now, the rivers of political money were not heading toward key foreign policy players in Congress. The FTX group focused on financial regulation. These little piggies were going to market: they wanted to keep crypto lightly regulated while dramatically expanding their field of action.

The alleged progressive tilt of the group’s donations was a smokescreen, as SBF’s confession quoted earlier testifies. The trough was quite bipartisan, even if tilted toward Democrats. The public data show that many Republicans received large sums from the donor group. Election financing vehicles controlled by McConnell, McCarthy, and other Republicans received substantial amounts, as did some very prominent representatives noisily involved in the battle to regulate crypto, such as Representative Tom Emmer (R-MN), Ritchie Torres (D-NY), and Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ). Stories suggesting that the group tilted toward liberal Democrats are also nonsense. That is not true even for SBF alone; his own contributions to Republican groups were substantial, including over $105,000 to Alabama Conservative Fund, the Super PAC supporting the newly elected Katie Britt in June 2022. When he gave to Democrats, the money flowed almost entirely to corporate Democratic groups and centrist Democratic politicians, not AOC or Justice Democrats.

A look at the institutional context clarifies what was really at stake in all this hyperactivity. FTX’s real aim was to put across a drastic rewrite of longstanding regulations governing commodity clearing houses in favor of a new system that would allow it to “offer direct clearing access to margined futures contracts.” This was no detail; it implied a sweeping change in the “structure of the entire futures market” that would vastly increase “the participation of retail speculators in futures markets, which have historically been markets for physical producers and purchases to hedge price risk, almost always by institutional participants who have the financial resources and sophistication to protect themselves.”[3] Or in other words, invite a vast new herd of eager, but inexperienced lambs to run free in the heady world of leveraged derivatives using crypto, alongside very experienced and well-capitalized wolves.

What could possibly go wrong?

Other major exchanges opposed this but warned that if the Commodity Futures Trading Commission allowed FTX to do this they would follow suit. Regulatory legislation on the books gave significant roles to both the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. But the crypto industry constantly contested the authority of the SEC. It sought to shunt exclusive jurisdiction to the CFTC, which was more than happy to play along.[4] Thus the FTX group (along with many others in the industry) heavily supported representatives of both parties who favored locating regulation in the Commodity Future Trading Commission.

The Agricultural Committees in Congress principally oversee the CFTC, not the Banking committees. So the FTX groups donated heavily to members of those committees, including at least 19 members of the House Agriculture Committee. The ranking member of that committee, Glenn Thompson (R-PA), took in over $61,000 of direct contributions, for example. Other top recipients on the House Agriculture Committee included Josh Harder (D-CA), Salud Carbajal (D-CA), and Angie Craig (D-MN).

Senate Agriculture was a big winner: McConnell ($3,626,100 – you read that right); Democrat Debbie Stabenow, whose former aide chairs the CFTC ($38,200); John Boozman ($33,200), John Thune ($14,200), and Kirsten Gillibrand ($13,700). By comparison, only six members of the Senate Banking Committee received contributions. Jon Tester led the way with a paltry $8,300.[5]

The FTX group did direct some serious money to the House Financial Services Committee: Ann Wagner (R-MO) led the way with $50,000, but not far behind were some of the most vocal critics of the SEC: Ritchie Torres receiving nearly $30,000, Josh Gottheimer collected $16,600, with Tom Emmer garnering $11,600. An unsympathetic observer might thus conclude, in the spirit of the “revealed preference” theory common in modern economics, that that is the reason SBF preferred to talk to the House, but not Senate Banking Committee. In the House, his appearance would have been more like a Christmas visit from Santa.

If all this brings to mind the long, disgraceful battles over derivatives regulation in the nineteen nineties, it should. It is a near carbon copy of that earlier travesty, right down to the vast clamor from the media and think tanks that all but drowns out critics. The industry was on the verge of getting its way when the crypto dominoes started tumbling down, temporarily slowing its momentum.

But the crypto story, if not FTX’s, is really a zombie movie. Despite everything that’s happened, crypto forces in Congress are still pushing to change the rules on exchanges and to allow pension funds to invest in crypto. Borrowing another leaf from the nineties, they are striving to pin the blame on the disaster that’s occurred on the stronger regulator, the SEC, for not acting, even though they spent years trying to block it from doing so. It strikes us, accordingly, that the first item of business ought to be the demand for full disclosure of all political money SBF, his colleagues, and their firms contributed to everyone on the Congressional committees and in the rest of the political system, together with a full accounting of grants to think tanks and researchers. And the second should be drastic changes at the CFTC, which has once again failed to protect the public.

Notes

[1] Bankman-Fried advanced the claim in an interview with Tiffany Fong. The quotations are taken from CNBC. This article draws also from a complaint by the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

Bankman-Fried went on to add that he concealed the donations “because reporters freak the f--- out if you donate to a Republican because they’re all super liberal. And I didn’t want to have that fight.” “So, I made all the Republican ones dark.” In fact, there was plenty of money to Republicans on the record from both the group as a whole and Bankman-Fried himself, as we show below. Some other comments he has made about his political giving being limited to primaries are equally discordant with the public record; we refrain from a longer discussion.

A few press accounts recognized the bipartisan nature of the campaign. See especially Politico and The American Prospect.

[2] The quotation comes from the indictment presented here. Several other sections deal with political money.

[3] Letter Dennis M. Kelleher, Stephen W. Hall, Jason Grimes, Scott Farnin of Better Markets, Inc. to The Honorable Rostin Behnam, Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, June 16, 2022.

[4] See, among many sources, the compelling summaries here and here.

[5] The totals here and below to individual representatives combine cash streaming into a variety of committees they drew on for resources, not simply their individual campaign committees.


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Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Why Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals


Despite the accumulation of serious and unsolvable problems, the Consumer Welfare Standard survives and continues to be taught to students for reasons unrelated to theoretical consistency and empirical confirmation.

In the later New Deal, a policy consensus emerged that included strong regulation of finance, income equalization, support for unions, and strong antitrust enforcement. This set of policies is often referred to as the New Deal Consensus. During its period of dominance from the late 1930s to the late 1970s the American economy experienced its greatest period of economic growth and prosperity. During the crisis of the 1970s, neoliberalism rose to policy prominence. It expressed confidence that the unfettered actions of big business would result in positive economic outcomes for everyone. The Chicago School of antitrust was an integral part of the neoliberal revolution. It held that most traditional anticompetitive concerns were misplaced. At the heart of the Chicago School’s program for antitrust is the Consumer Welfare Standard which Chicago School advocates claimed to be the proper normative economic approach to determining antitrust goals. Its adoption was partly based on the argument that its tenets could find support in microeconomic theory.

The Chicago School’s neoliberal program for antitrust has resulted in a massive increase in market power in the U.S. economy and no evidence of any positive influence on macroeconomic performance. As a result, support for most of the remaining tenets of the Chicago School program for antitrust is in decline. But the Consumer Welfare Standard remains. In our paper, we show that the Consumer Welfare Standard is based on Alfred Marshall’s theory of consumer surplus, or more generally, the surplus approach to economic welfare. Neoclassical economists trained in industrial organization learn this approach and apply it in antitrust cases.

But welfare economists, the specialist subgroup of economists who study welfare economics, have abandoned the surplus approach. Our new INET Working Paper “Why Economists Should Support Populist Antitrust Goals,” shows that the consumer welfare standard is (1) too narrow, (2) biased toward big business and the rich, and (3) theoretically inconsistent, and therefore economists should abandon their support for this approach to antitrust policy. The consumer welfare standard is too narrow because it recognizes only antitrust goals that can be measured using the economic surplus concept. This means only policy that directly impacts demand or price is a proper goal. But this eliminates the progressive traditional antitrust goals that motivated the original passage of the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act: preservation of political democracy and protection of small business. It makes no sense to adopt a policy standard that a priori eliminates policy goals that both impact human welfare and can be influenced by competition policy solely because a particular economic theory can’t assess it.

The consumer welfare standard is also biased. In order to aggregate surplus across individuals the theory assumes that there is a constant and equal marginal utility of money or its ordinal equivalent. In other words, an additional dollar has the same value to both rich and poor. Even worse, the rich will always have a greater influence on surplus, so the theory is inherently biased.

Finally, we describe the inconsistencies that have caused the specialists in this area to abandon the surplus approach. As sometimes occurs in economics, despite the accumulation of serious and unsolvable problems, a theory survives and continues to be taught to students for reasons unrelated to theoretical consistency and empirical confirmation. This is what Paul Krugman calls “Zombie” economics (think the aggregate production function or that tax cuts create growth). The Consumer Welfare Standard stubbornly endures in antitrust policy circles even though on the merits it needs to be jettisoned once and for all.


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Il faut une analyse désagrégée des conséquences de la guerre en Ukraine sur les économies en Afrique de l’Ouest


Entretien avec Gilles Yabi, directeur exécutif du Think Tank ouest-africain WATHI, sur la sécurité alimentaire en Afrique

Gilles Yabi est le fondateur et directeur exécutif de WATHI. Il oriente et supervise les activités du think tank dont l'équipe permanente est basée à Dakar (Sénégal). WATHI est une plateforme ouverte de production et de dissémination de connaissances et de propositions sur toutes les questions cruciales pour le présent et le futur de l’Afrique de l’Ouest et des autres régions du continent. Gilles Yabi est régulièrement invité à partager ses réflexions sur les questions politiques, économiques, d'éducation et de sécurité avec diverses organisations africaines et internationales. Il a également une longue expérience de l’interaction avec les médias, publie depuis une quinzaine d’années des tribunes sur les questions politiques et économiques africaines. Il anime la chronique hebdomadaire « Ça fait débat avec WATHI » diffusée sur Radio France Internationale (RFI).

Pensez-vous que la crise induite par la guerre en Ukraine constitue une opportunité pour repenser les modèles de développement en Afrique ?

Ma réponse est oui mais j’ajouterai toute suite que j’ai l’impression qu’on a dit exactement la même chose de la crise sanitaire (la COVID-19). Évidemment, c’était une crise sanitaire, donc produisant des effets graves négatifs mais on a estimé aussi que cela pouvait être une opportunité pour repenser un certain nombre de politiques en matière de santé mais aussi sur le plan économique. Dans beaucoup de domaines, on pouvait estimer qu’il y avait des leçons à tirer de la crise sanitaire et la possibilité de s’en servir comme d’une opportunité pour faire des changements assez profonds en Afrique. J’ai l’impression qu’on dit la même la chose en commentant la crise en Ukraine. Les effets ne sont pas les mêmes, les manifestations ne sont pas les mêmes que celles de la crise sanitaire, mais on est dans la même situation où on semble redécouvrir des fragilités qui sont de mon point de vue des fragilités connues, anciennes et documentées. Ce que je trouve un peu affligeant, c’est de les redécouvrir ou de faire semblant de les découvrir à chaque crise et d’attendre une prochaine pour faire le même commentaire et le même vœu. Il ne faudrait peut-être pas attendre une nouvelle crise majeure et globale pour se dire qu’il y a des choses à changer au niveau des politiques publiques.

Plusieurs analystes disent qu’il faut repenser notamment la question des politiques agricoles sur le continent pour aller vers une autosuffisance alimentaire et moins de dépendance sur les flux venant de l’extérieur ; ce n’est pas la première fois que cela se dit ; mais à votre avis et vu l’urgence causée par le contexte actuel, comment pensez-vous que ces politiques agricoles peuvent être repensées ?

Oui, alors, je reviens encore à la crise sanitaire parce que dans le cadre des travaux du think tank que j’anime, Wathi, on avait publié un rapport sur les leçons à tirer de la crise sanitaire pour les économies ouest-africaines et on avait aussi travaillé sur les leçons à tirer en matière de gouvernance politique. Nous allons publier dans les semaines prochaines un document sur les leçons de la crise en termes d’éducation. Sur le plan économique, la toute première recommandation de notre document sur les leçons de la crise pour les économies ouest-africaines concernait justement le besoin d’investir dans l’agriculture. Les politiques agricoles des pays du continent devraient permettre d’avoir une production plus importante permettant de répondre au besoin des populations en forte croissance dans un cadre régional et pas nécessairement en considérant l’autosuffisance au niveau de chaque pays comme étant la priorité absolue. Il s’agit d’adapter les productions agricoles aux conditions écologiques de chacun des pays et de s’attaquer aux obstacles les plus redoutables au développement agricole et agro-industriel, spécifiquement les énormes faiblesses en termes d’infrastructures logistiques et énergétiques, pour la conservation, le stockage, mais aussi les transports. Il faut s’intéresser enfin de manière très forte à l’économie réelle et identifier dans chaque secteur, notamment dans le secteur agricole, les obstacles les plus concrets à l’amélioration de la productivité. Ces obstacles ne sont pas seulement en rapport directement avec les politiques agricoles mais concernent aussi ces obstacles en termes de logistique, de transports qui alourdissent énormément les coûts et rendent parfois impossible la circulation des biens notamment agricoles d’une région à une autre même au sein d’un même pays. Il y a toute une série de sous-recommandations qu’on peut tirer sur la question des politiques agricoles, y compris sur les questions essentielles de formation, d’encadrement et de financement des producteurs, de recherche scientifique et d’amélioration des conditions de vie dans les zones rurales.

Je crois que si on devrait faire le même exercice aujourd’hui par rapport à la crise en Ukraine, on ferait exactement les mêmes recommandations. On a des problèmes de fond sur le plan économique qui sont bien connus. On doit essayer de travailler sur ces problèmes de fond qui sont des obstacles à la modernisation de l’agriculture et à la transformation des ressources naturelles, donc à l’industrialisation qui a aussi été négligée, même ignorée, au cours des dernières décennies dans beaucoup de pays africains. Comment est-ce qu’on profite, d’une certaine manière de ces crises successives pour remettre sur la table la question de l’industrialisation et des modalités de cette industrialisation dans un contexte qui est également celui de la contrainte imposée par les changements climatiques ? Comment est-ce qu’on peut développer une agriculture plus performante et assurer une transformation des produits agricoles ? Comment le faire en préservant l’environnement et avec des méthodes qui n’aggravent pas le problème climatique ? Il faut regarder l’ensemble des problèmes, ne pas simplement vouloir répondre à un problème spécifique aujourd’hui sur les céréales, sur tel ou tel produit. Ce que je veux ajouter aussi c’est que par rapport à la crise actuelle, il y a toute la discussion sur les céréales et la dépendance de beaucoup de pays dans le monde à l’égard de la Russie et de l’Ukraine. Mais lorsqu’on regarde de manière plus spécifique les différentes régions du continent et même des pays au sein de ces régions, on voit que les situations sont très contrastées et qu’il faut se méfier des généralisations. La question du blé est importante mais elle l’est beaucoup plus pour des pays spécifiques en Afrique du Nord comme l’Égypte que pour la plupart des pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest par exemple. La question de la disponibilité et du prix des engrais – largement importés - est cruciale pour la production agricole en Afrique de l’Ouest. La forte dépendance à l’égard de l’engrais importé expose effectivement très dangereusement les capacités de production des pays. Seul le Nigéria dispose dans toute cette région de quelques entreprises de production d’engrais, avec des capacités fort limitées par rapport aux besoins. On a semblé découvrir cette dépendance assez critique à l’occasion de cette crise. Les engrais sont stratégiques dans la mesure où ils impactent très fortement les rendements agricoles et donc la production alimentaire. Je crois qu’il faut donc regarder de manière désagrégée les conséquences de la crise russo-ukrainienne sur le plan économique parce qu’elles ne sont pas les mêmes d’un pays à un autre et d’une région à une autre du continent.

Les gouvernements africains ont tenté plusieurs mesures pour essayer de fixer/geler les prix afin que les populations soient moins impactées par l’inflation. Ces mesures ont eu un succès variable…comment analysez-vous ces différentes mesures et comment les évaluer à ce jour ?

Les mesures que vous évoquez sont des mesures assez traditionnelles de protection des populations par rapport à l’inflation, en essayant de limiter la hausse des prix des produits de consommation courante, notamment les prix des biens alimentaires et les prix de produits pétroliers qui affectent le prix des transports et par ce truchement, celui d’autres biens. Ces mesures sont importantes pour limiter les souffrances des populations brutalement impactées par la hausse des prix mais ce sont des mesures de court terme qui ne peuvent pas être maintenues au-delà d’une certaine durée. Faire des efforts pour protéger les populations notamment urbaines, c’est aussi, pour les gouvernements, essayer de réduire le risque d’éclatement de crises sociales voire de crises politiques. On ne peut pas dire qu’il ne faut rien faire alors que le risque de crises économiques, sociales et politiques est réel. Il est de la responsabilité des gouvernements de réagir mais il faut clarifier la hiérarchie des objectifs lorsqu’on intervient pour soulager les populations qui font face à une forte inflation : s’agit-il de protéger les populations les plus pauvres et les plus vulnérables ? S’agit-il de limiter les effets de l’inflation sur des secteurs d’activité économique spécifiques ou sur l’ensemble de l’économie qui est perturbée lorsqu’il y a une grande incertitude sur l’évolution des prix ?

Les gouvernements doivent se poser toutes ces questions et prendre aussi le temps de la concertation avec les acteurs de la vie économique et sociale avant de prendre des décisions qui ont un coût important. La question du ciblage de ce type de mesure est essentielle et elle n’est pas simple. On sait par exemple qu’elle se pose lorsqu’on décide de subventions importantes sur des produits pétroliers par exemple. Qui sont les acteurs qui en bénéficient le plus ? Dispose-t-on d’alternatives mieux ciblées sur les populations les plus vulnérables ? Il faut regarder de près ce que signifie chaque mesure en termes de catégorie de bénéficiaires, et éviter que des décisions censées soulager les plus démunis soient détournées au profit d’acteurs économiques intermédiaires très bien placés pour profiter de toute décision de politique publique du fait d’un accès privilégié à l’information. Les mesures de court-terme viennent généralement avec le risque d’absence de transparence et de contrôle. On a vu que les réponses économiques de court terme des États à la pandémie se sont traduites dans de nombreux pays par des scandales de corruption, de détournement de ressources ou de gaspillage. Ensuite, se pose la question de la capacité des gouvernements à maintenir des mesures comme la fixation et le contrôle de certains prix au-delà de quelques semaines ou de quelques mois. Si la guerre en Ukraine se poursuit et que les incertitudes économiques qui en résultent se traduisent par toujours plus d’inflation, il ne sera pas possible de continuer à répondre par des mesures qui coûtent très cher aux États. Les inquiétudes reviennent dans les pays africains quant à la stabilité macro-économique, en particulier le ré-endettement rapide. Comment répondre aux conséquences immédiates de l’inflation tout en préservant la capacité d’investissement public et privé dans les secteurs clés pour l’avenir ? Cela reste un défi majeur. Nous ne devons jamais perdre de vue la perspective de moyen et de long terme et les réponses aux faiblesses structurelles des économies africaines.

Dans ce contexte de Cop 27, les priorités de beaucoup de pays africains est la question de l’adaptation et des mécanismes pour y parvenir. Mais il y a aussi tout un débat autour de l’exploitation des ressources de l’énergie fossile surtout le gaz. Comment vous voyez cela en termes des avantages que cela pourrait amener à court terme à un pays comme le Sénégal par exemple en termes de soutien à l’industrialisation ? Quels sont les risques à moyen et long terme pour la mise en place des industries qui sont basées sur une énergie fossile ?

C’est une question très importante, très délicate et très actuelle. Il est difficile de demander à un pays qui vient de découvrir d‘importantes ressources énergétiques, donc stratégiques, comme le gaz et qui se dit que cela représente une opportunité inespérée de bénéficier de rentes, une bénédiction, de renoncer à exploiter ses réserves. Cette question se poserait à tout autre pays dans toutes les régions du monde dans la même situation. Les rentes issues du gaz pourraient être une manne financière qui pourrait changer la trajectoire économique d’un pays si les réserves sont vraiment massives et si les rentes sont bien gérées et intelligemment réinvesties dans des secteurs productifs et dans le développement humain. Je pense qu’il faut donc reconnaître qu’il s’agit d’une question difficile et qu’il n’y a pas d’injonction à donner à un pays comme le Sénégal, ou le Mozambique à l’autre bout du continent, dont les réserves de gaz sont beaucoup plus importantes. WATHI a organisé il n’y a pas longtemps une conversation publique avec le vice-président du Groupe intergouvernemental d’études sur le climat (GIEC), Youba Sokona, citoyen et scientifique malien spécialisé sur les questions d’énergie. Nous avons abordé beaucoup de questions dont celle de l’exploitation ou non d’énergies fossiles comme le gaz par les pays africains. Son propos consistait à dire qu’il fallait se garder de toute réponse simple et immédiate et d’abord disposer de résultats de recherche pour pouvoir se décider. Ce qui est certain, c’est que les choix de chaque pays doivent être guidés par la prise en compte de la situation initiale en termes de sources d’énergie disponibles, d’accès des populations à l’énergie, de possibilités de développer les énergies renouvelables au cours des prochaines décennies et de projection d’évolution des besoins d’énergie. L’un des messages clés consiste donc à ne pas prendre des décisions aujourd’hui sur la seule base d’une conjoncture favorable pour le gaz naturel par exemple en raison de la crise russo-ukrainienne actuelle en oubliant l’impératif de réduction globale, donc partout où cela est possible, des émissions de carbone issues des énergies fossiles, en oubliant les nombreux exemples non concluants de pays africains producteurs de pétrole et de gaz pendant des décennies qui n’ont pas amélioré les conditions de vie de leurs populations. Et en oubliant que les choix énergétiques se traduisent par des investissements lourds et coûteux et que ces choix ne sont donc pas réversibles à court ou même à moyen terme.

Il faut disposer de données scientifiques précises pour pouvoir se prononcer sur la question de nouveaux projets d’exploitation des ressources gazières dans un contexte d’urgence à réduire les émissions de carbone à l’échelle de la planète. Dans l’échange que j’ai eu avec le Professeur Youba Sokona, il s’agissait précisément de contextualiser la question du changement climatique et de focaliser la réflexion sur comment réconcilier les exigences globales par rapport au changement climatique avec le besoin d’amélioration des conditions de vie des populations. Cela nous amène à une discussion large sur les adaptations concrètes, tous les changements d’approche, à faire dans tous les domaines de l’activité humaine dans les pays africains. Cela va des transports à la cuisson pour l’alimentation, en passant par les modes de production agricole et industrielle. On ne discute plus seulement de concepts généraux comme l’atténuation et l’adaptation au changement climatique mais de développement économique, social, humain, compatible avec la protection du climat et celle de la biodiversité, de développement durable en somme.

Quel rôle peuvent jouer les acteurs de la société civile dans ce contexte de guerre en Ukraine, de l’inflation et aussi la question énergétique. Quel rôle joue Wathi en tant que Think tank ouest-africain basé en Afrique dans ce contexte spécifique ? Avez-vous pu avancer un certain nombre de mesures pour trouver des solutions à ces crises auprès des différents gouvernements et comment ces mesures sont-elles reçues ?

Wathi se définit comme un think tank citoyen, et a donc un positionnement particulier. Il y a des think tank et des centres de recherche spécialisés qui produisent des publications et formulent des recommandations sur des sujets spécifiques sur lesquels ils travaillent au quotidien. Wathi est un think tank qui est généraliste et qui met l’accent sur le débat public permanent ouvert à des experts, des observateurs, des acteurs politiques, économiques et sociaux très divers. Même s’il nous arrive de travailler sur des questions spécifiques et de produire des publications assorties de recommandations, nous nous abstenons de réagir à tous les faits d’actualité par des recommandations précises sans avoir eu le temps de faire de la recherche ou d’examiner la recherche produite par d’autres. Pour répondre tout de même à votre question, le premier élément pour nous, c’est la nécessité de ne pas être justement toujours dans la réaction à des crises, c’est le fait de garder le cap, la focalisation sur les questions qui sont fondamentales pour les pays de la région, celles qui déterminent la capacité des États et des acteurs de la société à trouver les réponses appropriées aux crises qui ne manqueront pas de survenir, sans compromettre les objectifs stratégiques de moyen et de long terme. C’est vraiment le positionnement dès le départ de Wathi : décrypter les systèmes économiques, les systèmes politiques, les systèmes d’éducation tels qu’ils fonctionnent dans la réalité, de manière à changer ce qui doit l’être et à nous projeter dans l’avenir avec davantage de clarté et de sérénité. On adopte cette approche aussi parce que la marge de manœuvre aujourd’hui pour répondre aux crises, qu’elles soient politiques ou économiques, est limitée par ce qu’on n’a pas fait – ou bien fait - pendant 20, 30, 40 ans dans les pays de la région. Si on prend l’exemple des questions agricoles, on découvre qu’on a eu une très grande dépendance par rapport à certaines céréales ou par rapport aux engrais. On peut prendre des mesures de court terme pour diversifier les sources d’approvisionnement, trouver des ressources extérieures pour faire face à la hausse des prix, mais évidemment on ne va pas d’une année à une autre, même en deux ou trois ans en réalité, faire émerger des unités de production d’engrais par exemple. On peut en dire autant dans plusieurs domaines. Nous devons nous attaquer aux déficits structurels, d’infrastructures, de transports, de logistique et de formation, d’éducation, de recherche scientifique. Nous estimons qu’il faut travailler sur ce qui nous permettrait de renforcer nos institutions : les États dans leur capacité à concevoir et à mettre en œuvre des politiques publiques ; nos institutions politiques de manière à ce que les gouvernants puissent écouter les populations qu’ils sont censés servir; les institutions éducatives parce qu’elles constituent le socle sur lequel repose tout le reste. Si on n’a pas le capital humain qu’il faut, on n’aura jamais la capacité de répondre efficacement aux différentes crises, dans un monde extrêmement complexe avec de l’interdépendance à tous les niveaux et des rapports de forces qui ne sont pas favorables aux pays africains. Le coût aujourd’hui des choix qui ont été faits hier par beaucoup de dirigeants, parfois ou souvent encouragés par des acteurs extérieurs, est énorme. Si on prend par exemple l’exemple des infrastructures de transport, comment expliquer qu’on n’ait même pas su maintenir les quelques lignes de train qu’il y avait dans les pays ouest-africains il y a quelques décennies, sans même parler de les développer et de faire du rail la première priorité en termes d’infrastructure pour accélérer l’intégration économique et humaine en Afrique de l’Ouest ? Le positionnement qui est le nôtre consiste à dire qu’il y a l’actualité internationale, il y a ce qui mobilise l’attention lors des multiples rencontre internationales, il y a ce sur quoi on veut nous faire réfléchir, et il y a ce qui est le plus important et prioritaire pour les pays africains. Nous devons rester concentrés sur nos enjeux vitaux du présent et surtout du futur : améliorer nos infrastructures, notre capital humain, la gouvernance de nos États et de nos sociétés, optimiser l’usage de nos ressources, naturelles, humaines, financières… Si on ne fait pas cela, on sera toujours dans une grande incapacité à répondre aux crises et à défendre l’intérêt des populations africaines actuelles et à venir dans un monde rugueux où les rapports de forces, davantage que la solidarité et le sens d’un avenir commun, restent le facteur dominant.

J’ai suivi un peu le rôle de votre organisation dans la région sahélienne. Comment vous voyez l’avenir de la région sahélienne et les options militaires par rapport au dialogue politique en cours de négociation. On a vu presque 10 ans d’action militaire dans un pays comme le Mali et le Burkina avec peu de succès. Quelle est l’approche qui mériterait d’être suivie afin de résoudre ce qui semble bien ancré sur le terrain en termes de conflit et de contestation entre les groupes armés et les populations ?

Sur la question sur le Mali, ou du Sahel du manière plus générale, le constat actuellement est que la situation est très mauvaise, très préoccupante et particulièrement incertaine. On ne peut pas se projeter aujourd’hui sur la situation au Mali ou au Burkina Faso même à 6 mois. On ne sait pas exactement ce qui peut se passer. La diversité des acteurs et la divergence de leurs intérêts sont telles qu’on ne peut pas anticiper les actions qui peuvent être entreprises par les uns et les autres. On voit bien qu’il n’y a pas une vision claire au niveau des autorités en place au Mali sur l’avenir politique du pays. On a un projet de nouvelle constitution, on a un calendrier électoral censé aboutir au retour à un pouvoir disposant d’une légitimité démocratique. Mais lorsqu’on lit le projet de constitution, on n’a pas vraiment l’impression qu’il répond au besoin de refondation institutionnelle qui a pourtant été présentée comme étant des arguments majeurs de la transition et de sa durée. Et on n’a pas l’impression que le gouvernement actuel à Bamako dispose aussi d’un agenda politique clair par rapport au nord du pays d’où est partie la crise en 2012. Est-ce que l’accord de paix de Bamako issu du processus d’Alger est toujours la base d’une véritable réunification du pays, de l’instauration d’un ordre politique et d’une organisation de l’État acceptées partout, de Kidal à Sikasso, de Menaka à Kayes? Il y a donc beaucoup d’incertitudes sur la vision des autorités en place et d’autre part, une situation sécuritaire très dégradée dans certaines parties du pays où ce sont les groupes armés rivaux qui se disputent le contrôle du territoire, à coups d’affrontements réguliers violents. Les autorités maliennes se félicitent souvent de la montée en puissance de l’armée, de ses victoires sur les groupes terroristes et elles assument aussi le changement d’alliance stratégique spectaculaire en faveur de la Russie officielle mais les succès militaires annoncés sont difficiles à apprécier dans un contexte d’information extrêmement limité et contrôlé. Il faut aussi dire qu’au Mali comme au Burkina Faso, on a déjà entrepris des dialogues avec les groupes armés. Ce sont certes des dialogues ponctuels, localisés, mais il s’agit bien de dialogues. La question n’est donc pas de savoir s’il faut dialoguer ou pas avec des groupes armés qui recourent au terrorisme, elle est de savoir dans quel cadre on dialogue et avec quels objectifs. Est-ce qu’il s’agit de dialogue pour permettre une forme de stabilisation locale, un retour à la sécurité des populations dans une localité donnée, ou est-ce qu’on envisage le dialogue avec tous les groupes armés comme étant une stratégie politique de sortie de crise. Sur cette dernière question, je suis assez circonspect. Je pense qu’on a tort d’opposer réponse sécuritaire et réponse politique dont le dialogue est une composante. Je pense qu’il faut se poser la question de ce que ça signifierait d’accepter que le rapport de force soit durablement en faveur des groupes armés et donc en défaveur des États, même si ceux-ci ont largement contribué par leurs défaillances, leurs compromissions, leurs graves errements, à faciliter le travail d’implantation et de consolidation des groupes armés. Je ne suis pas sûr que le dialogue des États en position de grande faiblesse avec les groupes armés, y compris les plus violents, créerait les conditions d’un avenir serein pour la région. On ne peut pas seulement réfléchir à des solutions de court terme pour améliorer la sécurité, et ignorer les implications possibles pour l’ensemble de la région ouest-africaine dans 5, 10 ans ou 15 ans. Qu’est-ce qu’on veut construire comme système politique ? Qu’est-ce qu’on veut comme évolution des sociétés sahéliennes et ouest-africaines ? Quel type de rapport entre la religion, l’État et la société, permettrait d’avoir le plus de chances de gérer la riche diversité des communautés humaines qui coexistent dans chacun des pays de la région ? Comment réduire les incitations et les possibilités de recourir à la violence pour la défense des intérêts de tel ou tel groupe à la moindre frustration ? Il y a beaucoup de questions qu’il faut se poser pour réduire le risque de choisir des options qui pourraient améliorer la situation sécuritaire à court terme mais assombrir les perspectives de paix, de sécurité et de progrès économique et social de toute la région à moyen et à long terme.


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Monday, December 12, 2022

The Misguided Forces Driving Conflict Escalation Between the US & China


Roach explores how much of the adversarial nationalist rhetoric in both China and the USA is dangerously misguided and more a reflection of each nation’s fears and vulnerabilities than a credible assessment of the risks they face.


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Turning Africa's Food Crisis into a Development Opportunity


"We need to disaggregate the impact of the war in Ukraine to understand how its been affecting different West African economies"

In this interview for the “Food security and inflation in Africa” series, Folashadé Soulé and Camilla Toulmin interview Gilles Yabi, founder and executive director of the West African Think Tank - WATHI. He guides and supervises the activities of the think tank, whose permanent team is based in Dakar, Senegal. WATHI is an open platform for the production and dissemination of knowledge and proposals on all issues crucial to the present and future of West Africa and other regions of the continent. Gilles Yabi is regularly invited to share his thoughts on political, economic, educational, and security issues with various African and international organizations. He also has long experience interacting with the media and has been publishing columns on African political and economic issues for the past fifteen years. He hosts the weekly column "Ça fait débat avec WATHI" on Radio France Internationale (RFI).

Do you think that the food crisis created by the Ukraine invasion represents a major opportunity to rethink African development models?

Absolutely, yes! But I would add that I have the impression people said exactly the same thing about the COVID health emergency. Granted that it was a very serious health crisis, provoking new thinking about policies to deliver better health, it also led people to ask questions about overall economic strategy. In many areas, you could identify lessons from the health crisis which could bring deep changes to Africa’s development model. I have the sense that we’re all saying the same thing about the impacts of the Ukraine crisis. While the effects are not identical and do not touch on health in the same way, the current fragilities demonstrate long-standing weaknesses which are well-known and documented. It is upsetting to rediscover these weaknesses on each occasion, as though for the first time, knowing that each new shock will generate the same commentary and wish list. Let’s not wait for each subsequent crisis to tell us what we know needs to be done – to redesign better public policies.

Many analysts identify the need to re-think agricultural policy measures across the continent, to attain greater food self-sufficiency, and reduce dependence on external sources of food; certainly it is not the first time we hear this being said; but from your viewpoint, given the extreme difficulties caused by current circumstances, what do you consider the essential changes to agricultural policy?

In our role as a think-tank, named WATHI, we have drawn from experience during the pandemic to prepare and publish a paper outlining the lessons which need to be learned by West African nations, as regards both the economy and political governance. We will also publish shortly a document examining lessons from the COVID crisis for the education sector. In terms of lessons for the economy, the first recommendation does indeed focus on the need to invest more in agriculture across the West African region. Agricultural policies across the African continent must help generate higher levels of production, better able to respond to the needs of a rapidly growing population. Such responses do not need to operate at the level of each and every country, but it is an absolute priority to achieve self-sufficiency at a regional level. Agricultural production needs to build on the ecological and other specificities of each country and tackle the biggest and most troublesome barriers faced by farming and agro-industrial growth. These include infrastructural weaknesses, whether energy or logistics, such as conservation, storage, and transport of produce. We need an approach grounded in the real problems faced every day, in each sector, and identify the tangible obstacles which are holding back growth in productivity.

These obstacles are not only directly linked to agricultural policies but relate to the burdens of high transport costs which make very difficult the movement of farm produce from one region to another, even within the same country. And then there are many other supportive essential actions that need to be taken, such as better training, extension services, and access to credit, as well as investing in scientific research and improving the quality of life in rural areas. If we were to carry out the same exercise today, to derive lessons from the effects of the current Ukraine crisis, we would identify the same set of recommendations. There are well-established economic problems which are well-known. We need to work on addressing these fundamental problems which get in the way of modernizing the farming sector, alongside the transformation of our multiple natural resources through industrialization, a priority that has continually been set aside and ignored for decades in so many African countries. How might we make much better use of these successive crises to put back on the agenda the question of industrialization and how to get there, set within the constraints imposed by climate change?

How might we develop a more productive farming system and benefit from much greater levels of agro-processing? How might we achieve this while also ensuring environmental sustainability and pursuit of a low-carbon pathway? We need to look at all the problems together, in a systematic way, rather than taking a specific issue today such as a shortage of grain. But let me also add, we need to avoid generalizations that mask reality. Everyone talks about the high levels of dependence on grain from Ukraine and Russia, but if you take specific regions of Africa, you see that there are strong contrasts between high levels of wheat imports into North African countries, like Egypt, and much lesser reliance for many West African nations.

There is also a crucial issue for agriculture in West Africa related to the availability and price of fertilizers, which are very largely imported. This high level of dependence as regards fertilizer imports leaves farm production very vulnerable to external shocks. Within the region, only Nigeria has a serious domestic capacity to produce chemical fertilizers, but this output is way below levels of need. We seem to have “discovered” this dependence on outside supplies as a result of this latest crisis. Access to fertilizer has a big effect on farm yields and, hence, food production. More broadly, we need to disaggregate the economic impacts of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in different West African countries, since they will vary from one place to the next.

Many African governments have tried measures to fix or freeze prices, to reduce the impact of inflation on their people. Such measures have had mixed success. How would you assess these different interventions?

The measures you refer to are pretty conventional tools to protect people from inflation by trying to impose a ceiling on consumer prices, especially those for food stuffs and petrol, the latter because the cost of transport obviously feeds into the price of most other commodities. These are really important short-term measures that help limit the suffering of low-income households which would be hit hard by large price increases. But they cannot be maintained for long. Protection of urban populations is especially important for governments in trying to reduce the risk of social and political crisis, and unrest. Governments certainly cannot sit back and do nothing, given that the risk of economic, social, and political unrest is very real. Responsibility lies with governments to act, but one needs to question the hierarchy of objectives every time one steps in to try and protect people from big price increases: is the aim to protect the poorest and most vulnerable? Or are we trying to limit the effects of inflation on specific sectors of the economy, or across the entire economy – in cases when it has been shaken up by the shock from prices and uncertainty?

Governments need to ask themselves these questions and take the time needed to work with a range of economic and social stakeholders, before taking on a set of measures that have very considerable costs. Targeting of measures is essential, but not simple. This arises, as we know well, in relation to petrol – who are the people who really benefit the most? Can we find other, better-targeted routes to reach the most vulnerable? We need to look closely at each and every measure to ensure it responds to the needs of particular target groups, and avoid carrying out policies which, while intending to help the poorest, in fact end up benefitting those able to profit from playing an intermediary role, since having privileged access to information, they know how best to position themselves to gain from public measures.

Short-term measures of this kind often come with the risk of poor transparency, and weak control. We could see with the pandemic how rapid short-term measures put in place by a number of governments led to waste, diversion of resources, and corruption scandals. We must also ask whether it is possible for governments to keep such price controls in place for more than a certain number of weeks or months. If the Ukraine conflict continues for much longer, with the set of economic uncertainties this has brought, it will not be possible to continue with these measures which are hugely costly to state budgets. Many African countries are now facing renewed concerns about macroeconomic stability and rapidly rising levels of debt. How is it possible to respond to the immediate consequences of inflation and at the same time maintain investment capacity, both public and private, in those activities essential for the future? This is a big challenge. We must never lose from sight of the mid- to longer-term perspective and need to address structural weaknesses in African economies.

Watching what is happening at COP27, we can see the priorities of many African countries concern adaptation measures. But there is also an important debate going on about the role of fossil fuels in Africa, especially gas. How do you assess the role of gas for a country like Senegal, in terms of short-term gains, especially for industrialization? What might be some of the medium to longer-term risks from industrialization based on fossil fuels?

This is a very important current issue, which is also politically sensitive. It is hard to tell a country that has just discovered substantial energy resources, such as gas, which offer a strategic and unexpected source of revenue, that such resources should be left in the ground. The questions involved relate to all countries, wherever they are in the world, which find themselves in this situation. The revenues which can be generated by gas represent a massive financial gain that could transform the economic trajectory of the country if the reserves are indeed large and the revenues are well-managed and intelligently reinvested in productive activity and development of human capital. We must acknowledge these are difficult questions, and no one offers a formula, whether for Senegal or for a country like Mozambique on the other side of the continent, which has considerably larger gas reserves.

A short while ago, WATHI organized a public dialogue with IPCC co-chair Youba Sokona, a citizen of Mali and a scientist who has devoted his life to questions of energy. We addressed a large number of questions, including those about whether African countries should use fossil energy resources, like gas. The argument he made revolved around the need to avoid quick and instant answers, and ensure your choices are based on well-established evidence. What remains certain is that each country must choose, based on its initial energy situation and taking into account how it can meet the energy needs of its people, what chance it has of developing significant renewable energy over the next few years, and how its energy needs map out over future decades.

So, a key message is to avoid taking big decisions today based on current prices, which have been massively increased by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and which have temporarily obscured the urgent need to bring down the use of all fossil fuels everywhere across the world. Should we also forget the fact that over the decades, many major oil-exporting African countries have not managed to improve the well-being of their people? And should we also avoid thinking about the very large, heavy, costly infrastructure required to channel such fossil fuel resources, infrastructure which is difficult to re-purpose in the short or medium term?

To make wise decisions about opening up new gas fields, you need detailed scientific data concerning the urgency of bringing down carbon emissions at the planetary level. In my discussion with Professor Youba Sokona, we talked a lot about the broader global context and how to reconcile planetary constraints with the need to improve living conditions for the population. This opens up a wide set of questions about tangible adaptation measures and the many changes needed to make progress for people across the African continent. Such changes in approach stretch from methods of transport to clean cooking alternatives, via agricultural production and industrial processes. We have to move beyond a focus on cutting back on carbon and addressing adaptation, towards broader patterns of economic, social, and human development that are fully compatible with the protection of the climate, biological diversity, and pursuit of sustainable development.

What role can civil society play in the current context of the war in Ukraine, and the associated inflation and energy crisis? As a think tank based in West Africa, what can you contribute to this specific situation? Have you been able to put forward a certain number of recommendations for governments, and how have such proposals been received?

WATHI calls itself a “citizen think tank” and thus has a particular position. There are a number of think tanks and specialized research centers which produce position papers and reports containing recommendations on the subjects on which they work day-to-day. WATHI is more of a generalist think tank, focused on opening up public debate to a diverse set of people, experts, commentators, and economic, political, and social actors. Even if we work on a given subject and generate reports with recommendations, we try to avoid reacting and commenting on every issue in the news, since we need the time to examine the subject and ensure our research draws on the work of others. In response to your question, we need to avoid jumping in to respond to each and every problem but stay the course by focusing on issues that are fundamental to our region. These include the capacity of states and society to identify the right response to each crisis as it comes along, without losing sight of strategic medium- and longer-term objectives. This is the true starting point for WATHI: to analyze how our various systems work in reality, whether economic, political, or educational, to figure out ways to make them more like we want them to be so that our future is clearer and more stable. This has to be our approach in West Africa since the room for maneuvering in tackling each set of crises has shrunk, and become more limited as a consequence of what we have failed to do over the last 20, 30, or 40 years.

If we take the agricultural question, we can see how dependent we’ve become on the import of certain cereals and fertilizers. In the short term, it is possible to diversify sources of supply or seek external funding to tackle price rises, but it’s clearly not the work of two or three years to set up factories producing fertilizer. And the same applies in many other fields. We have to tackle the underlying, fundamental weaknesses of infrastructure, transport, logistics, training, education, and scientific research. At WATHI, we think it is really vital to strengthen our institutions so that the state has the ability to consider and listen to the population it is meant to serve and put in place public policies which respond to people’s concerns and establish and maintain educational institutions since they form the bedrock on which everything else is built.

Without well-trained human capital, we will never be able to respond effectively to the range of crises we face. The world is extremely complex, with multiple interconnections within and between scales, and in global power politics, African countries hold few of the cards. We face today enormous costs from the bad choices made by earlier political leaders, often under the influence of external pressures and organizations. Let’s take the example of the transport network: why have we failed even to maintain the few train lines we had in West Africa which operated effectively a few decades ago? And why have we not invested in growing this rail network which should be a top priority for accelerating economic and human integration within West Africa?

We take the position of saying that there are many novelties that catch global attention, especially at the numerous international conferences which are held, there are things on which we need to reflect, and then there are those things that are the greatest priorities for African countries. We really must stay focused on the things that matter most for us, now and above all for the future: such as improving our infrastructure, investing in human capital, good governance of our state and society, and making the best use of our multiple resources – natural, financial, human. Unless we focus, we risk always being buffeted by the next crisis and failing to stand up for the interests of African people today and tomorrow, in a rough world in which strength matters a lot more than solidarity and a sense of common purpose.

Having followed the work of your organization and the Sahel region more broadly, what future do you see for resolving conflict through political negotiation or military force? For example, there have been nearly ten years of military intervention in Mali and Burkina Faso, but with little obvious success. What approach might bring better results on the ground, to manage and resolve conflict and contest between armed groups and the population?

For Mali, and the Sahel region more broadly, the current outlook is bad, very worrying, and particularly uncertain. It is really hard to predict what might happen even in the next 6 months, in Mali and Burkina Faso. The wide range of actors and the diverse nature of their interests are such that we cannot predict the likely actions of any of them. We can also see an absence of clear direction for the future of the country from the leaders of Mali. A new constitution has been drafted, and there is an electoral calendar in place for a return to democratic legitimacy. But a reading of the draft constitution gives little confidence that it will address the fundamental needs to rebuild the institutional structure of the country, as had been argued for the transition and its long duration.

I also lack any sign that the current government in Bamako has a clear political vision for the northern part of the country, which after all was the starting point of the crisis in 2012. Does the Peace Agreement signed in Bamako, built on the Algiers Agreement, constitute the basis for a full reunification of the country from which a political order and government can be installed? Will its writ be accepted across this large country, from Kidal to Sikasso, from Menaka to Kayes? Many uncertainties remain on the one hand as regards the vision of the transitional authorities and on the other the state of security in many parts of the country, where different armed groups are struggling to control territory, leading to fighting and violent conflict. The Malian government has been congratulating itself on the success of the army, and its power to defeat the terrorist groups, in part as a result of the strategic shift made to ally with Russia. But it is not easy to judge the extent of such successes, given the very limited information available.

There have been a number of political dialogues with some of the armed groups in both Mali and Burkina Faso, often one-off and locally specific, but dialogues nonetheless. The question is therefore less one of whether should we dialogue with armed terrorist groups, but rather what is the framework within which these dialogues take place and with what objectives? Is it a means to achieve a degree of local stabilization, increased security for local people in a given area, or a more strategic political move to find a way out of the current crisis? I am pretty cautious about this last question and think it is wrong to contrast a security approach based on military strength with a political response that includes dialogues.

I think we need to ask ourselves what it means to accept that these armed groups are in a strong position vis-à-vis central government, even if the latter must bear much of the blame for armed groups being able to establish and consolidate their position across the region, due to the state’s weaknesses, compromises, and serious mistakes. I am not convinced that dialogue between our severely weakened states and these armed groups, including those practicing extreme violence, will create calm and stable conditions for the future. Let’s not only think about short-term responses to try and improve security but also consider the possible implications of this approach for the entire West African region in 5, 10, or 15 years.

What is the political system we wish to build? In which direction would we hope to see Sahelian and West African societies evolve? What relationship would we want to see between religion, the state, and society, to enable the very diverse communities to flourish in each country and the region more broadly? How might we diminish the incentives and the possibilities of resorting to violence in order to protect and defend the interests of a particular group, which considers itself threatened? We must ask many questions to reduce the risk that we opt for making improvements to security in the short term while darkening the likelihood of achieving peace, security, and social and economic progress for the region in the medium to long term.


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Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Sick with “Shareholder Value”: US Pharma’s Financialized Business Model During the Pandemic


Evidence sharply contradicts PhRMA’s contention that its member companies need unregulated drug prices to generate profits that they then reinvest in drug innovation.

Congress finally takes action, with the predictable PhRMA reaction

On August 16, 2022, Congress passed the Inflation Reduction Act, which, among other things, enables Medicare to negotiate the prices of certain high-cost prescription drugs, beginning in 2026.[1] Even though it is just one step forward in confronting US pharma’s financialized business model, this legislation was a long time coming.[2] A New York Times article published almost four decades ago reported accusations against pharmaceutical companies by then-US Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) of “outrageous price increases” and “greed on a massive scale.” In response to Waxman, drug-company executives asserted that “prices have climbed recently to cover accelerated investment in researching and developing new and better medications to protect Americans.”[3]

Over the decades, the argument that pharmaceutical companies need high drug prices to finance drug innovation has been a mainstay of the industry’s opposition to price regulation. Not surprisingly, with Medicare’s right to negotiate prescription drug prices as a key policy objective of the Biden administration’s Build Back Better agenda, the industry lobby association, Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), spewed out a slew of blog posts, with data from commissioned “studies,” to argue that government regulation of drug prices would deprive its member companies of the profits needed to augment and accelerate investment in drug innovation.[4]

Included in PhRMA’s lobbying effort was a letter dated August 4, 2022, signed by PhRMA president Stephen Ubl and 31 senior pharmaceutical company executives (mostly CEOs) on PhRMA’s board of directors, in which they sounded the alarm on drug-price regulation under the Inflation Reduction Act:

While the bill saves the federal government $300 billion, it takes far more from the biopharmaceutical industry and will have significant consequences for innovation and patients’ hope for the future. Some economists estimate upwards of 100 new treatments may be sacrificed over the next two decades if this bill becomes law. This includes treatments for multiple chronic conditions, the annual $2.7 trillion medical and lost productivity costs of which far exceed the direct federal “savings” this bill would achieve.[5]

How US pharmaceutical companies actually allocate their profits

Underpinning PhRMA’s argument of the devastating impact of price regulation on drug innovation and patient access to medicines is the assumption that pharmaceutical companies systematically reinvest corporate profits in productive capabilities that improve the development, manufacture, and delivery of drugs. The corporate executives who signed the PhRMA letter contend that price regulation will reduce profits and stifle drug innovation. Negating this assumption, however, is abundant—and indeed overwhelming—evidence that most of these pharmaceutical executives allocate corporate profits to massive distributions to shareholders in the form of cash dividends and stock buybacks.[6] Rather than devoting the high profits from high drug prices to augmenting and accelerating investment in drug innovation, US pharmaceutical companies burden US patients and taxpayers with high drug prices so that, through massive distributions to shareholders, the senior executives who make these allocation decisions can boost the yields on the companies’ publicly traded shares.

Data for the 474 corporations included in the S&P 500 Index in January 2022 and publicly traded from 2012 through 2021 reveal that these corporations distributed $5.7 trillion as share repurchases during the 2012-2021 fiscal years, representing 55 percent of net income, and $4.2 trillion as dividends, an additional 41 percent of net income (see Table 1). The vast majority (we estimate about 95 percent of the total) of the share repurchases were done as open-market repurchases (OMRs) of common shares, the purpose of which is to manipulate the company’s stock price.

Table 1. Financial data, 2012-2021, and 2021 employment for 474 corporations, including 14 pharmaceutical companies, in the S&P 500 Index in January 2022 that were publicly listed 2012-2021 (year founded; year of IPO for each pharmaceutical company)

As shown in Table 1, for the decade 2012-2021, distributions to shareholders by the 14 pharmaceutical companies that were among the 474 S&P 500 companies in the database represented 110 percent of net income,[7] a larger proportion than the highly financialized 96 percent for all 474 companies. At 55 percent, the stock buybacks of the subset of pharmaceutical companies was the same proportion of net income as the 474 companies, but, at 54 percent versus 41 percent, pharmaceutical dividends as a proportion of net income far exceeded that of all the companies in the dataset. The 14 pharmaceutical companies accounted for 3.1 percent of the revenues of all 474 companies but 6.6 percent of the net income, 6.6 percent of the buybacks, and 8.8 percent of the dividends. The $747 billion that the pharmaceutical companies distributed to shareholders was 13 percent greater than the $660 billion that these corporations expended on research & development over the decade.

Note that, employing an analytical distinction that Lazonick elaborates in detail in his 2009 book, Sustainable Prosperity in the New Economy?,[8] among the 14 pharmaceutical companies in Table 1, seven—J&J, Pfizer, Merck, Abbvie, BMS, Lilly, and Baxter—have their historical roots in the “Old Economy” business model (OEBM) that dominated the US pharmaceutical industry coming into the 1980s, while the other seven—Gilead, Amgen, Biogen, Viatris, Regeneron, Vertex, and Incyte—all of which were founded in 1971 or later, have emerged and grown on the basis of the “New Economy” business model (NEBM). Under OEBM, the most successful companies, now known as “Big Pharma,” integrated the development, manufacture, and delivery of drugs and provided their employees with the expectation of a career with one company, manifested by decades of service with the company, company-funded nonportable defined-benefit pensions, and company-subsidized healthcare coverage in employment and retirement. Under NEBM, associated with the biotech revolution, companies specialize in drug development, typically outsourcing manufacturing to contract development and manufacturing organizations (CDMOs), and depend on a scientific labor force that is highly mobile from company to company and even across nations, with pensions in the form of portable defined-contribution 401(k) plans.

Of critical importance in the rise of NEBM have been the changing functions of the stock market. Under OEBM, as it existed in pharmaceuticals prior to the 1980s, the role of the stock market was to separate share ownership from managerial control. Precipitating this separation was not, as is commonly assumed, the need for these companies to raise cash from the stock market to fund their growth. Rather the function of public share issues was to enable the owner-entrepreneurs and their family members who had led the successful growth of their firms to monetize their investments, passing on strategic control of the companies to professional managers in what the business historian Alfred D. Chandler, Jr. called “the managerial revolution in American business.”[9]

Given the decades-long time lags between the years in which the OEBM companies in Table 1 were founded and the years in which they did their initial public offerings (IPOs), these companies were already highly profitable when they listed on the stock market—in each case the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). These corporations did not rely on the stock market to issue treasury shares for cash to invest in the growth of the firm. Rather their source of investment finance for internal growth was earnings retained earnings out of profits, leveraged (if necessary) by bond issues, while striving to pay a steady dividend to shareholders.

With the rise of NEBM from the 1970s, an IPO continued to play a “control” function, enabling venture capitalists and owner-entrepreneurs to cash in their founder shares. In many cases, in the context of an IPO, professional managers assumed strategic control. With the very short time lags between the founding of a company and its IPO, however, as can be seen for the cases of the seven NEBM companies in Table 1, owner-entrepreneurs have often continued to exercise managerial control for a time after the IPO. The rapid transition from founding to IPO has been made possible by the existence of NASDAQ, the automated quotation system for “over-the-counter” stocks established in 1971. By enabling startups to go public without a profit or even a product, a NASDAQ IPO has provided venture capitalists with a quick “exit strategy” that was not possible on NYSE, with its stringent listing requirements. Thus, in the presence of the highly speculative NASDAQ, the stock market began to perform a “creation” function, inducing venture capital to invest in uncertain new firms because of the possibility of a relatively rapid exit from these investments via an IPO. Indeed, all seven firms identified as NEBM in Table 1 are listed on NASDAQ.

With the rise and expansion of NEBM in information-and-communication-technology (ICT) and biotechnology in the 1980s and 1990s, the stock market also began performing “combination” and “compensation” functions. A small company could grow large by using its stock as a combination currency in lieu of cash to acquire other companies.[10] In addition, and of profound importance, a startup company, which, given its uncertain future, could not hold out the expectation to employees of an OEBM-style career with one company, could use its stock as a compensation currency, typically in the form of stock options, to attract, retain, motivate, and reward a broad base of employees. During the 1980s and 1990s, with NASDAQ generally booming, the use of stock options by New Economy biopharma startups to lure scientific and managerial personnel from secure employment with established Old Economy companies eroded the organizational capabilities of Big Pharma’s corporate research labs, eventually compelling these Old Economy companies to use stock-based pay to compete with New Economy companies for personnel.

As already stated, prior to the 1980s Old Economy pharmaceutical companies did not make significant use of the stock market to raise cash for investment in the growth of the firm. Nor did they do significant amounts of share repurchases, which can be viewed as the “negative cash” function of the stock market. That changed from the mid-1980s as Big Pharma companies sought to compete for acquisitions and personnel using their stock as a currency, with stock buybacks as a tool for giving manipulative boosts to their own companies’ stock prices. Enabling large-scale stock buybacks as OMRs, which at Big Pharma companies were in addition to a steady stream of dividends, was Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Rule 10b-18, adopted in November 1982, which is aptly called “a license to loot” the corporate treasury.[11] Legitimizing this use of corporate cash from the late 1980s was the flawed ideology emanating from US business schools and board rooms that, for the sake of economic efficiency, a business corporation should be run to “maximize shareholder value.”[12]

Meanwhile, from the beginning of the 1980s New Economy biopharma startups found that, even without products or profits, they could raise substantial amounts of cash for internal investment through their IPOs and subsequent secondary stock issues on NASDAQ, as long as this highly speculative stock market was booming, and hence liquid, so that stock traders who absorbed these new share issues could look for the opportunity to sell their shares for a capital gain. As indicated in Table 1, however, once some of these New Economy biopharma companies generated profitable drugs, they also turned to stock buybacks as OMRs to give manipulative boosts to their stock prices.

Although President Joe Biden and Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer, along with many elected Congressional Democrats, have been sharp critics of stock buybacks,[13] in 2021 a record $882 billion in share repurchases by companies in the S&P 500 Index easily outstripped the previous annual high—fueled by the Republican 2017 corporate tax cuts—of $806 billion in 2018.[14] In the first quarter of 2022, S&P 500 buybacks set an all-time record of over $260 billion, and, with second-quarter buybacks at $240 billion,[15] the 2022 total could surpass the obscene stock-market manipulations of 2021.

Senior executives pad their take-home pay by doing massive distributions to shareholders

These data on distributions to shareholders sharply contradict PhRMA’s contention that its member companies need unregulated drug prices to generate profits that they then reinvest in drug innovation. At the same time, significant beneficiaries of these distributions to shareholders have been the very same senior executives who control the pharmaceutical companies’ resource-allocation decisions. Table 2 displays data on the compensation of the 500 highest-paid executives in the United States for each year from 2006 through 2021 and the subset of pharmaceutical executives among these 500 highest-paid.

Table 2. 500 highest-paid executives in each year, US corporations, with proportions of mean total direct compensation from stock options and stock awards, and representation of pharmaceutical executives among the top 500, 2006-2021

From 2006 through 2021, the average total direct compensation (TDC) of the 500 highest-paid executives ranged from, with the stock market depressed, a low of $15.9 million in 2009, of which 60 percent were realized gains from stock-based pay, to, with the stock market booming, a high of $47.4 million in 2021, of which 88 percent were realized gains from stock-based pay.[16] In most years, the average TDC of the pharmaceutical executives was higher than for all 500 executives.

Distributions to shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks inflate executives’ realized gains on stock-based pay. In the case of stock buybacks, not even the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which purportedly regulates US financial markets, knows the precise days on which buybacks as OMRs are executed.[17] But the CEO and CFO of the repurchasing corporation possess this material insider information, and, moreover, they decide when to execute buybacks. Even with SEC Rule 10b5-1, adopted in 2000 to give corporate executives a safe harbor against insider-trading charges in stock sales by doing them according to a pre-announced plan, top executives can time their option exercises and stock sales to increase their pay.[18] OMRs will result in stock-price increases that can, if the senior executives correctly time their stock sales, augment their stock-based pay. The executives’ strategic control over resource-allocation decisions and insider information about the timing of buybacks can contribute to the gains that these executives realize in exercising stock options and the vesting of stock awards.[19]

The extraordinarily high TDC and percentages of it that were stock based in 2014 and 2015 were largely the result of the bonanza reaped by a number of executives at Gilead Sciences through the impacts on the company’s stock price of its soaring sales of the high-priced Sovaldi/Harvoni hepatitis-C drugs combined with its use of its inflated profits to do stock buybacks.[20] Also, when the average pay of the top 500 executives exploded to new heights in 2020 and 2021, the pay of the subset of pharmaceutical executives took off even more. As the pandemic raged, the average TDC of 27 pharmaceutical executives among the top 500 rose to an unprecedented $61.6 million, with 93 percent of it coming from realized gains on stock-based pay, the highest proportion since data on realized gains on stock awards as well as stock options became available in 2006.[21]

Tables 3a and 3b show distributions to shareholders by Merck and Pfizer, two US-based Big Pharma companies that for decades have been among the most financialized of all US corporations. Merck began doing large-scale buybacks in the second half of the 1980s, and Pfizer in the first half of the 1990s. Merck greatly increased its buybacks in the late 1990s and Pfizer even more so in the early 2000s. Over the 25-year period 1995-2019, Merck distributed an amount equal to 118 percent of net income to shareholders, with 54 percent as buybacks, while Pfizer paid out 114 percent of net income, with 58 percent as buybacks. As discussed below, Pfizer ceased doing buybacks from August 2019 through February 2022, while its net income soared in 2021 on profits from its Covid-19 medicines. As a result, its buybacks as a proportion of net income fell to 32 percent in 2017-2021, while Merck’s proportion was 52 percent.

Table 3a. Merck’s distributions to shareholders as stock buybacks and cash dividends, in billions of current dollars and as percent of net income, 1972-2021

Table 3b. Pfizer’s distributions to shareholders as stock buybacks and cash dividends, in billions of current dollars and as percent of net income, 1972-2021

Notes: REV=revenues, NI=net income, BB=stock buybacks, DV=dividends, R&D=research & development expenditures, EE=end-of-fiscal-year employment for last year in cell, %change=change in employment over the five-year period.

Sources: Calculations from data in the S&P Compustat database and company 10-K reports.

Table 4 shows the TDC for 2007-2021 of Kenneth Frazier, who was CEO of Merck from January 1, 2011, to June 30, 2021. Over the years of his CEO tenure, Frazier averaged $27.4 million per year in TDC, of which 72 percent was stock based. As also shown in Table 4, Ian Read was Pfizer CEO from December 5, 2010, to January 1, 2019. Over his tenure as CEO from 2011 through 2018, Read averaged $30.2 million per year in TDC, of which 64 percent was stock based. In addition, Read stayed on as Pfizer executive chairman in 2019, pocketing another $49.7 million (89 percent stock based) on his way to retirement.

Table 4. Total direct compensation (TDC) and percentage stock-based (%SB) 2007-2021, Kenneth Frazier (Merck CEO, 2011-2021) and Ian Read (Pfizer CEO, 2011-2018; Chair, 2019)[22]

Sources: S&P ExecuComp database and company proxy statements

The explosion of pay of “New Economy” biopharma executives

As displayed in Table 5, the top executives of younger “New Economy” companies such as Regeneron and Vertex, and most recently Moderna, have provided these enormous pay packages, partly supported by stock buybacks as OMRs. Their bonanzas are mainly the results of soaring stock prices, driven by a combination of innovation and speculation, and the abundant amounts of stock-based pay that their boards (of which they are often members) have lavished on these executives.[23] In the case of Regeneron, Schleifer and Yancopoulos are founders and board members as well as CEO and CSO, respectively, and their enormous TDC included in the data in Table 5 does not include their sales of founder shares. Nor does it include the fortunes made from founder shares by Moderna chairman Noubar Afeyan and CEO Stéphane Bancel.

Table 5 shows the data for six New Economy biopharma companies that in one or more years from 2012 through 2021 had one or more executives among the annual lists of 500 highest-paid US executives. In every year, the average TDC of the New Economy biopharma executives in the top500 is far higher than the average TDC for all pharmaceutical executives and (except for 2018) even more so than for all top500 executives.

Table 5. Total direct compensation of leading New Economy biopharma companies with one or more executives in one or more annual list of highest-paid US corporate executives, 2012-2021

Notes: Celgene was acquired by Bristol Meyers Squibb in 2019; Alexion was acquired by AstraZeneca in 2021; Moderna did its IPO on December 6, 2018.

Sources: S&P ExecuComp database and company proxy statements

Table 6, which selects from all pharmaceutical executives in the S&P ExecuComp database (and not just from those companies in the S&P 500 Index), identifies the six highest-paid pharmaceutical executives for each year from 2006 through 2021. Note the prominence of executives from three of the New Economy biopharma companies in Table 5: Regeneron (19 of 96 cells, all during 2012-2021), Gilead Sciences (17 of 96 cells), and Celgene (8 of 96 cells). Also note the extent to which their pay is stock based. Of the 96 cells in Table 6, the pay levels in 88 cells are 60 percent or more stock based, with 61 cells 90 percent or more, 17 between 80 and 90 percent, seven between 70 and 80 percent, and three between 60 and 70 percent.

Table 6. Six highest-paid pharmaceutical executives, 2006-2021, with total direct compensation (TDC) in millions of dollars (stock-based pay as percent of TDC)

Notes: Abbvie is a 2013 spinoff from Abbott Laboratories; Life Technologies was created by the merger of Invitrogen and Applied Biosystem in 2008, with Gregory T. Lucier as the CEO of both Invitrogen and, then, Life Technologies,

Source: S&P ExecuComp database and company proxy statements

Of the highest-paid executives, founders of the companies include Leonard Schleifer and George Yancopoulos, Regeneron (founded in 1988; IPO in 1991); Leonard Bell, Alexion (1992; 1996); Martine Rothblatt, United Therapeutics (1996; 1999); Sol Barer, Celgene (1986; 1987); and Jonah Shacknai, Medicis Pharmaceutical (1988; 1990). As indicated, all these companies went public within a few years after their founding, a phenomenon encouraged by the creation of the highly speculative NASDAQ stock exchange in 1971 and its subsequent growth. The compensation of these individuals shown in Table 6 is as executive employees of the companies and does not include personal income received by selling founder shares.

A ten-time “medalist” in the highest-paid rankings is Gilead’s John C. Martin, who was the company’s CEO from 1996 to 2016 and executive chairman from 2016 to 2018. He appears on the top-six list in each of the first 12 years, 2006-2017, including five times in first place, three times in second, and twice in third. His average annual TDC of $197.9 million in 2013-2015 was more than double the $85.5 million he took home in 2012 and the $98.4 million in 2016. Propelling Martin’s megapay in 2013-2015 were surges of Gilead’s profits and stock price, based on massive revenues from its price-gouged Sovaldi/Harvoni drugs, aided by $15.3 billion in buybacks in 2014-2015 and Gilead’s first dividend ($1.9 billion) in 2015. From 2012 to 2015, Gilead’s revenues increased by 3.4 times, its profits by 7.0 times, and its stock price by 4.4 times (July 2012 to its all-time peak in 2015). In 2016, Gilead distributed $11.0 billion in buybacks and $2.5 billion in dividends—a combined 99.7 percent of net income—but its profits declined from $18.1 billion to $13.5 billion, and its stock price declined from $118 (July 2015) to $72 (December 2016). As a result, CEO Martin’s 2016 compensation fell to $98.4 million—a sum which nevertheless placed him at the top of the pharma executive-pay podium for that year.

The established “Old Economy” companies known as Big Pharma, including Wyeth (founded 1860; IPO in 1926), Abbott (1888: 1929), Johnson & Johnson (1886: 1944), and Merck (1891: 1941), were better represented among the top six in the earlier years, including four from Merck in 2009. Both 2018 and 2019 were bountiful years for Big Pharma executives, with Merck’s Frazier and Pfizer’s Read at, respectively, #3 and #4 in 2018 and #4 and #5 in 2019. Johnson & Johnson CEO Alex Gorsky was #5 in 2018, and Lilly CEO David Ricks #6 in 2019.

In 2020 and 2021, Regeneron’s Yancopoulos and Schleifer took turns at #1, with three Regeneron executives holding the top three positions in 2020. Looking back a decade to 2012, Yancopoulos was #1 and #2 three times each, #3 twice, and #4 once, while Schleifer was also #1 and #2 three times each as well as #3, #4 and #5 once each. Moderna’s massive stock-price explosion (see the discussion below), based on its involvement in the development, manufacture, and delivery of the Covid-19 vaccine, enabled two of its executives to enter the top six in 2020, and then two different executives in 2021. Not in the top six in 2020 or 2021 were Moderna’s Afeyan and Bancel, both of whom took home vast fortunes by selling founders’ shares at high stock prices.[24]

The mRNA Covid-19 bonanzas of Pfizer and Moderna

The Academic-Industry Research Network is currently engaged in an in-depth assessment of the tension between innovation and financialization at those pharmaceutical companies that participated in the development, manufacture, and delivery of the Covid-19 vaccines which received emergency use authorization (EUA) in the United States, United Kingdom, and the European Union.[25] With the riches garnered from Covid-19 medicines overspilling their corporate coffers, let us take a peek at how Pfizer and Moderna have managed the innovation-financialization tension during the pandemic.

The case of Pfizer clearly illustrates that, even within a business corporation that has become one of the leading repurchasers of its own stock, there is an ongoing tension between innovation and financialization, with specific sets of circumstances determining the outcome.[26] A highly financialized corporation from the late 1980s, Pfizer in early 2019 committed to doing $8.9 billion in buybacks, of which $6.8 billion was in the form of an “accelerated share repurchase” to be completed by August 1 of that year.[27] Thereafter, the company ceased doing buybacks as it turned its strategic attention to conserving a portion of its profits to finance investment in its drug pipeline. Previously, Pfizer’s strategy had been to acquire other companies with lucrative drugs on the market that had years of patent life left and to extract the profits from these drugs to fund its distributions to shareholders. By 2019, however, with Big Pharma acquisition targets disappearing and the patents on some of Pfizer’s major drugs expiring, its board recognized that Pfizer itself could be taken over by another Big Pharma company unless it could build a pipeline of internally developed drugs.

For the sake of internal drug development, Pfizer refrained from doing buybacks from August 2019 through February 2022. Indeed, in an almost unheard of move among US corporations, in January 2020 Pfizer publicly announced its commitment to forego buybacks that year, and it did so again in January 2021. The company did, however, increase its dividend in 2019, 2020, 2021 and the first nine months of 2022.

The implementation of the change in Pfizer’s investment strategy followed the end of Ian Read’s tenure as Pfizer CEO as of January 1, 2019, in favor of current CEO Albert Bourla. As CEO from 2011, Read had engaged in a resource-allocation strategy of “downsize-and-distribute”: Pfizer downsized its labor force and distributed corporate cash to shareholders.[28] In an earnings call with stock-market analysts in January 2020, Bourla made an extraordinary admission of the company’s financialized past, declaring that Pfizer had stopped doing buybacks so that the company could invest in innovation:

The reason why in our capital allocation, we are allocating right now money [is] to increase the dividend and also to invest in our business…all the CapEx to modernize our facilities. The reason why we don't do right now share repurchases, it is because we want to make sure that we maintain very strong firepower to invest in the business. The past was a very different Pfizer. The past of the last decade had to deal with declining of revenues, constant declining of revenues. And we had to do what we had to do even if that was financial engineering, purchasing back ourselves. We couldn't invest them and create higher value. Now it's a very different situation. We are a very different company.[29]

Bourla did not explain why the “old” Pfizer—which, less than 12 months before, had done $8.9 billion in buybacks—“had to do what we had to do even if that was financial engineering, purchasing back ourselves.” But his rambling statement is a very rare recognition by a CEO of a major US corporation that stock buybacks are the enemy of investment in innovation.[30]

Shortly thereafter, SARS-CoV-2 was declared a pandemic, and Pfizer found itself in what turned out to be a very lucrative partnership with the German firm, BioNTech, to develop, manufacture, and deliver a Covid-19 mRNA vaccine. Even though Pfizer’s revenues almost doubled from $41.9 billion in 2020 to $81.3 billion in 2021, with profits soaring from $9.6 billion to $22.0 billion, the company refrained from doing buybacks, while the dividend payout ratio declined from 88 percent to 40 percent.

With revenues and profits continuing to explode in 2022, bolstered by sales of its Covid-19 antiviral pill Paxlovid—given EUA by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on December 22, 2021—Pfizer did $2.0 billion in buybacks, all of them in March 2022, at an average price of $51.10. Why, for the first time since early 2019, did Pfizer decide to repurchase shares in March 2022? While Pfizer has not provided any explanation for this break in its no-buybacks policy, the graph of Pfizer’s daily stock price in Figure 1 suggests a straightforward answer: In March 2022, Pfizer’s CFO Frank D’Amelio (who would be retiring from that position on May 1, 2022) decided that the time was right to give a manipulative boost to Pfizer’s stock price.

On March 23, 2020, a week after the World Health Organization declared SARS-CoV-2 a pandemic, causing stock markets to plummet, Pfizer’s stock was at $27.03, its lowest price since October 22, 2014. Subsequently, as the stock markets recovered, and indeed boomed, during 2020 and 2021, the company’s stock price climbed to $41.12 on December 11, 2020, the date on which the BioNTech-Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine Comimaty secured EUA from the FDA. From that point, Pfizer’s stock price rose in fits and starts during 2021, as the revenues and profits from Comimaty rolled in, reaching an all-time high of $61.25 on December 16, 2021, in apparent anticipation of approval of Pfizer’s Covid-19 antiviral pill, Paxlovid, which secured EUA from the FDA on December 22.

Figure 1: Pfizer’s daily closing stock price, Jan. 3, 2017-Nov. 18, 2022

Source: Yahoo Finance daily stock prices

By March 1, 2022, however, the stock price had declined to $45.75. We can assume that Pfizer did the $2.0 billion in buybacks in March 2022 to give a manipulative boost to its sagging stock price. [31] If so, it apparently worked, with the stock hitting $55.17 on April 8, 2022. In the press releases of its results for the first, second and third quarters of 2022, Pfizer repeated that the company “does not anticipate any additional share repurchases in 2022.”[32] In the earnings press release of July 28, Pfizer’s new CFO, David Denton, declared: “We continue to prioritize high-value uses for our capital, with an emphasis on reinvesting in our business by funding both internally- and externally-developed science and innovation while also continuing to grow our dividend and buy back shares, when appropriate, to help offset dilution.”[33]

During the second and third quarters of 2022, Pfizer refrained from doing another round of buybacks, with the stock price gyrating in the $50 range until mid-August before declining to about $44 in the last week of September. Note, however, in Figure 1 the continuing price decline to $41.75 on October 10, and its subsequent recovery to $49.24 on November 14. Did Pfizer engage in more buybacks during October to “financial engineer” this turnaround? Maybe not, because unlike the decline of Pfizer’s stock price in the first two months of 2022, which occurred even though the NYSE Index was stable, the decline of Pfizer’s stock price during September and early October and then its rise through mid-November matched the movements of the NYSE Index. When Pfizer issues its 2022 10-K filing in February 2023, we will find out whether the company did any buybacks during the fourth quarter of 2022.

If Old Economy Pfizer seems to be concerned with using a portion of its pandemic profits to continue its strategy of investing in innovation, New Economy Moderna’s executives appear to be laser focused on the company’s stock-price performance, in, as can be seen in Figure 2, a market that has placed highly fluctuating valuations on its shares. At $67.47 on October 30, 2020, the stock price almost tripled to $183.74 on February 12, 2021, before falling to $115.49 on March 30, and then more than quadrupling to a high of $484.47 on August 9. By March 7, 2022, the price had collapsed to $126.46, and it then fluctuated around $150 through mid-November 2022.

Figure 2: Moderna’s daily closing stock price, Dec. 7, 2018-Nov. 18, 2022

Source: Yahoo Finance daily stock prices

Founded in 2010 with its NASDAQ IPO in December 2018, Moderna, headquartered in Norwood MA, had 830 employees at the end of 2019. In seeking its first commercial product with the Covid-19 vaccine, Moderna collaborated with the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), whose team of researchers conducted most of the Covid-19 vaccine development effort, including clinical trials.[34] In May 2020, Moderna entered into a ten-year pact with Lonza, a long-established Switzerland-based CDMO, to mass produce the vaccines, initially at a plant in New Hampshire (which Lonza had acquired from a British company in 1993), a 90-minute drive from Moderna’s headquarters in Norwood, and subsequently on dedicated lines at Lonza plants in Switzerland.[35] While accepting substantial Covid-19 vaccine development and procurement funds from the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed, Moderna retained control of marketing the vaccine, enabling it to keep the lion’s share of the profits subsequent to EUA, notwithstanding the critical contributions of NIH and Lonza—not to mention decades of research by the wider scientific community—to the success of the vaccine.

Providing venture capital to Moderna was Flagship Pioneering, based in Cambridge MA, whose CEO, Noubar Afeyan, hired Stéphane Bancel as Moderna CEO in 2011, giving him a substantial quantity of co-founder shares in the startup. In 2014, Moderna was the first biopharma startup, not yet publicly listed, to gain “unicorn” status (a $1 billion valuation), even though it had no products in clinical trial. At the IPO in late 2018, Moderna had 21 drugs in development, with no expectation of a product launch for several years. Bancel was, however, a hyper-aggressive fundraiser, with Moderna securing $2 billion in private equity and another $600 million in the IPO.[36]

From May 2020, seven months before the Moderna vaccine received EUA, Flagship and Moderna senior executives began selling their shares. Over the course of about one month from late February to late March 2021, two Flagship funds sold a portion of their Moderna shareholdings for $1.4 billion, with Afeyan gaining from not only his 75-percent ownership of Flagship Pioneering but also venture-capital fees and the “carried interest” (typically 20 percent) of the funds’ profits.[37] It was reported in March 2022 that Bancel had sold shares valued at $408 million since January 2020.[38] The 2021 compensation of Moderna’s five highest-paid executives totaled $362 million. Indeed, Moderna CMO Tal Zaks sold stock to the tune of $1 million per week from May 2020, only to announce in February 2021 that he would leave the company (riches in hand) in September 2021, in advance of a possible EUA for the Moderna vaccine. As we have seen in Table 6 above, among the highest-paid pharmaceutical executives were, in 2020, Moderna CFO Lorence Kim ($89.7 million) and Zaks ($68.8 million) and, in 2021, CTO Juan Andres ($195.9 million) and president Stephen Hoge ($167.7 million). As we have also mentioned, Afeyan and Bancel were not among the highest “paid” executives because their stock sales were founders’ shares.

Moderna has not yet paid a dividend, but, with its stock price declining from its peak of $484 in August 2021, the company did $857 million in stock buybacks in the last quarter of the year at an average price of $245.76, including $540 million in November. Moderna did another $143 million in buybacks in January 2022 at an average price of $236.33. After its stock continued its free fall to $147.63 on January 27, the company did no buybacks in February as its fluctuating stock price appeared to stabilize. Nevertheless, it dropped to $126.46 on March 3, and from March through September Moderna did buybacks every month for a seven-month total of $2.8 billion (average price: $142.72), ranging from $222 million in July to $533 million in September. The $3.8 billion that Moderna spent on buybacks to manipulate its stock price in 2021 and the first nine months of 2022 represented 20.2 percent of its substantial pandemic profits over the 21 months. With its stock declining further to $119.32 on October 7 but then climbing to $175.25 on November 15, we expect that Moderna continued to do repurchases over these two months, and that the company will remain addicted to doing buybacks to manipulate its stock price in the years to come.

Given its 10-year contract with Lonza, Moderna is not investing in manufacturing capacity (beyond a plant it already had in Norwood prior to the pandemic designed for manufacture of doses for relatively small-scale clinical trials of cancer candidates). Additionally, as a potentially significant constraint on Moderna’s growth as a multiproduct firm, Flagship Pioneering, which exercises strategic control over Moderna, has a business model which favors the creation of new startups for the development of new drug candidates because of the stock-market gains that can be made from an IPO, even when, as is typically the case among biopharma startups, it is product-less, compared with the typically much smaller stock-market gains from the growth via new products of an already profitable firm from successful drug innovation that, in the highly financialized US environment, has already experienced its external fundraising and its most highly speculative stock-price runup early in its history as a publicly listed company (as displayed for the case of Moderna in Figure 2 above).

The incentive of a venture-capital firm such as Flagship to “maximize shareholder value” via a proliferation of startups is currently being tested, however, by the very weak biopharma IPO market, with Flagship cutting staff at some of its ventures.[39] With the NASDAQ stock exchange highly liquid, there were 77 biopharma IPOs in 2020 and 96 in 2021. But, in 2022, with stock prices falling, there have been only eight biopharma IPOs thus far.[40] Note, however, that an even more extreme biopharma IPO drought occurred in 2008-2010, yet the speculative phenomenon of what we call the “product-less IPO” (PLIPO) remerged even stronger in the subsequent decade. As the liquidity of NASDAQ was restored in the 2010s, stock traders became willing to absorb initial and secondary stock issues precisely because they had the expectation that they would be able to sell the shares for a gain without having to hold them until the issuing pharmaceutical company might generate product revenues, much less profits. Rather, the liquid market has enabled stock traders to try to time the buying and selling of shares to realize financial gains. It is ever-present speculation, not innovation, which has yet to occur, and which may never occur, that drives the stock-price movements of most publicly listed biopharma startups.[41]

Meanwhile, both Pfizer and Moderna are fighting to be sure that any benefit that the world gets from mRNA medicines means more money in their corporate treasuries. Given the novelty of mRNA technology, there are myriad patent claims, with Moderna challenging not only the intellectual property rights of Pfizer/BioNTech but also the NIH, whose scientists developed the “Moderna” Covid-19 vaccine.[42] Both Moderna and Pfizer are preventing the US government from providing expired doses of their Covid-19 vaccines to researchers who want to use them in experiments to develop next-generation applications such as nasal vaccines.[43] Both companies are determined to raise the prices of their Covid-19 vaccines—driven by so-called “normal market forces”[44]—well above the $20 per dose negotiated with the US government during the pandemic.

Augmented profits will then be available to flow out of the companies as distributions to shareholders, which executives will claim as “necessary” to support their stock prices. All the while, insofar as they invest internally in the drug pipeline or gain control over products through M&A deals, these companies will benefit from massive and persistent NIH spending on life sciences research. The NIH budget for 2022 is $45.2 billion, continuing government funding that, dating back to 1938, has now totaled more than $1.3 trillion in 2022 dollars of taxpayer money.[45] In addition, the US government grants companies like Pfizer and Moderna patent production, while these companies can avail themselves of various other types of federal, state, and local subsidies.[46] Yet, their grossly overpaid executives whine about price regulation.

US government regulation of drug prices is just a first step in policy reform for drug innovation

As noted at the outset of this article, PhRMA makes a valid point that, in principle, the earnings that a pharmaceutical company retains out of profits provide the financial foundation for corporate investment in drug innovation. The problem is that, in practice, as the evidence presented in this article makes abundantly clear, contrary to PhRMA’s claims, major US pharmaceutical companies typically distribute all their profits and even more to shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks. In implementing price regulation, government agencies should possess the analytical capability to evaluate whether, in fact, price caps stifle drug innovation.[47]

Within the US context of corporate financialization, however, government policy that seeks to support the generation of safe, effective, accessible, and affordable medicines must go much further than “smart” price regulation. Adopting a policy agenda that AIRnet advises to foster innovation across all industrial sectors,[48] the US government should 1) ban open-market repurchases; 2) disconnect executive pay from a company’s stock-price performance; 3) place representatives of stakeholders, including employees, taxpayers, and consumers, on corporate boards; 4) reform the corporate tax code to reward innovation and penalize financialization; and 5) support the working population in gaining access to productive and remunerative employment on a sustained basis through “collective and cumulative” careers. These reforms are relevant to US industrial corporations in general, and not just to pharmaceutical companies. The shareholder-value sickness that afflicts the US pharmaceutical industry is, in fact, an American socioeconomic epidemic that was present for decades before the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic further exposed this chronic disease.

1) Ban stock buybacks:

Enabled since 1982 by the Reagan-era SEC Rule 10b-18, AIRnet’s research has shown that, to quote the subtitle of a well-known Harvard Business Review article, “stock buybacks manipulate the market and leave most Americans worse off.”[49] In 2018, US Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) proposed rescinding Rule 10b-18 as part of the Reward Work Act, reintroduced in the Senate by Baldwin with three co-sponsors in March 2019[50] and in the House by Reps. Jésus García (D-IL), Peter DeFazio (D-OR), and Ro Khanna (D-CA) in October 2022.[51]

Without the “safe harbor” against stock-price manipulation charges that Rule 10b-18 has provided for 40 years, the practice of OMRs would have to end. Shareholders who purchase shares of a company on the stock exchange would look to dividends to get a yield on that portfolio investment by holding shares. OMRs, in contrast, increase the gains of sharesellers who, as professional stock traders, are in the business of timing the buying and selling of shares, benefiting from access to nonpublic information on the precise days on which the company is executing buybacks. These privileged sharesellers include senior executives of the company doing the buybacks, Wall Street bankers, and hedge-fund managers.[52]

Indeed, stable shareholders who buy corporate stocks for dividend yields should be opposed to buybacks. Instead, they should want corporate management to reinvest in the productive capabilities of the company as a basis for creating the next round of competitive products that can generate the profits out of which a stream of dividends can continue to be paid. If the company is successful in making these investments in innovation, its shares should rise in value, giving shareholders a financial gain if and when they decide to sell some or all of their shares.

2) Disconnect executive pay from stock-price performance:

In its 2023 Budget, President Biden took aim at realized gains on executive pay as an incentive for senior management to do stock buybacks.

The President also supports legislation that would align execu­tives’ interests with the long-term interests of shareholders, workers, and the economy by re­quiring executives to hold on to company shares that they receive for several years after receiving them, and prohibiting them from selling shares in the years after a stock buyback. This would discourage corporations from using profits to re­purchase stock and enrich executives, rather than investing in long-term growth and innovation.[53]

If the Biden administration is intent on preventing corporate financialization from inflating executive pay, it should, as a first step, ask the SEC to institute the correct measurement of executives’ actual realized gains (ARG) on their stock-based compensation rather than the highly misleading estimated “fair value” (EFV) measures currently in use. As AIRnet has shown, EFV uses grant-date stock prices to value stock options and stock awards, thus understating—vastly when the company’s stock price is booming—the actual take-home compensation of these executives, based on their ARG from stock-based pay. The EFV use of grant-date stock prices to measure executive pay obscures the financial incentive for senior executives to boost the company’s stock price by any means possible—first and foremost buybacks—to inflate their own ARG from stock options and stock awards.[54]

When measured correctly, our analysis of the extraordinarily high stock-based pay of US executives strongly suggests that they are rewarded much more for stock prices that are inflated by speculation and manipulation, as distinct from innovation. Moreover, even when senior-executive ARG reward stock-price increases driven by innovation, the board’s focus on lavish stock-based pay for those at the top means that senior executives extract far more value in their remuneration packages than is warranted compared with other corporate employees whose skills and efforts have resulted in innovative products.[55] Indeed, in the presence of a “downsize-and-distribute” resource allocation strategy, it is often the case that senior executives lay off employees who have been key contributors in the innovation of products that have resulted in corporate profits, while at the same time padding their ARG by fomenting stock-price speculation and engaging in stock-price manipulation.[56]

The remedies are to disconnect executive pay from stock-price performance and to reward all corporate employees for the company’s success at innovation through a stable and equitable compensation plan that reflects all contributions to the organizational-learning processes that are the essence of innovation. As vice president and in his campaign for the nomination as Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden was a sharp critic of stock buybacks and their link to executive pay.[57] As he concluded in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, “How Short-Termism Saps the Economy,” published in September 2016:

The federal government can help foster private enterprise by providing worker training, building world-class infrastructure, and supporting research and innovation. But government should also take a look at regulations that promote share buybacks, tax laws that discourage long-term investment and corporate reporting standards that fail to account for long-run growth. The future of the economy depends on it.[58]

3) Place stakeholder representatives on corporate boards:

Households as workers and taxpayers are risk-takers who invest in the firm’s productive capabilities.[59] Hence, there is a clear rationale for extending to them the right to voting representation on corporate boards. In the US context, however, it is viewed as a radical proposition.[60] The extension of democratic rights in corporate governance to previously disenfranchised groups of people represents major social change, but radical change is urgently required given the damage that the prevailing system of US corporate governance is inflicting on the attainment of stable and equitable growth.

Shaped by the highly flawed ideology that public shareholding represents “ownership” of productive assets, the SEC-sanctioned proxy-voting system as it now exists undermines sustainable prosperity.[61] All board members should function as trustees who recognize the generation of innovative products as the purpose of the corporation, subject to the social norms of providing stable employment and an equitable distribution of income to the company’s employees. Board members should represent the participants in the corporation—including households as workers, taxpayers, and consumers—who bear the risk of value creation. By the same token, those whose interest in the corporation is predatory value extraction should be excluded from directorships.

In addition to rescinding SEC Rule 10b-18, the Reward Work Act, which, as we have noted, has been introduced in the Senate and the House, would have representatives of workers as one-third of board members of each publicly listed company in the United States.[62] In August 2018, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) introduced the Accountable Capitalism Act, which, among other things, would require US corporations with $1 billion or more in annual revenues to have worker representatives as forty percent of board members.[63] In the case of the pharmaceutical industry there is a very strong case to be made to include board members who represent both taxpayers, who collectively fund life sciences research, and patients, for whom access to medicines is often a matter of life or death.

4) Reform the corporate tax system:

In the debate over the Republican-supported 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, both its advocates and critics recognized that the main corporate use of the extra income gained from lowering the corporate tax rates on domestic and repatriated profits would be increased distributions to shareholders in the form of cash dividends and stock buybacks.[64] Indeed, Senate Democrats called out the 2017 Act as #GOPTaxScam, emphasizing that the tax breaks were being used to fund stock buybacks.[65] As Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) put it in a #GOPTaxScam report, issued in February 2018:

The record-setting pace of stock buybacks is proof that companies across the country are stuffing the savings from the Republican tax bill into their own pockets and the pockets of their wealthy investors, rather than workers. These numbers prove that the bulk of the savings from this bill aren’t trickling down into higher wages, but into bigger gains for giant corporations and the wealthy.[66]

Manifesting the heightened predatory value extraction that has characterized financialized corporate governance during the pandemic, buybacks have been, as noted above, far greater in 2021 and 2022, under the Biden administration, than in the three previous years, with the Republican corporate tax cut from 35 percent to 21 percent in place. The Biden administration has been unable, and perhaps unwilling, to raise the corporate rate, settling instead on a 15-percent minimum corporate tax.[67]

Meanwhile, in August 2022, Democrats were forced to include a one-percent tax on buybacks in the Inflation Reduction Act as a concession to secure the vote of US Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ), needed to pass the Act in the Senate. She declared that her vote for the Act could be had if the Democrats would drop from it a provision to put an end to capital-gains tax treatment of “carried interest” income by hedge funds, replacing it with the one-percent buybacks tax with a view to raising $74 billion in tax revenue over ten years.[68]

In our view, this one-percent tax on buybacks only serves to legitimize a toxic practice that should be banned. Moreover, the revenue raised from the tax on buybacks will come nowhere near to offsetting the immense damage to the US economy and US households that buybacks cause.[69] If the Biden administration insists on taxing rather than banning buybacks, then it should set the surcharge at, say, 40 percent, with a mandatory warning banner on the corporate repurchaser’s website that reads: STOCK BUYBACKS DESTROY THE MIDDLE CLASS.

5) Support collective and cumulative careers:

In a world of rapid technological innovation and intense global competition, the value-creating economy depends on the continuous augmentation of the productive capabilities of the labor force. That means that both higher education and the work experience of the national labor force need constant upgrading as a necessary condition for producing innovative products. Achieving productive outcomes and returning a substantial portion of the profits from the productivity gains to productive workers are fundamental to achieving sustainable prosperity.[70]

The innovation process entails collective and cumulative learning: “collective” because individual employees rely on shared work experience to become more productive, and “cumulative” because what the “collectivite” learned yesterday determines what it can learn today. For individual employees to contribute their skill and efforts to innovation, they need access to collective and cumulative careers (CCCs) that provide them with opportunities to be productive over working lives that now span four decades or more.

Under the Old Economy business model that prevailed in the decades after World War II, companies provided CCCs through the “career-with-one-company” (CWOC) employment norm. With the rise to dominance of the New Economy business model in the 1980s and 1990s, however, the CWOC norm disappeared.[71] New Economy start-ups could not attract talent by offering a career with one company because a CWOC was not an inducement that start-ups with uncertain futures could promise to fulfill. Rather, implementing the process called “marketization,” New Economy start-ups could induce talent to leave or eschew CWOC employment with Old Economy companies for the sake of stock options that could become very valuable if and when the company did an IPO on NASDAQ.[72]

This New Economy practice of using stock options to attract and retain a broad base of employees remained intact even after some start-ups became going concerns with employees in the tens of thousands. Over the course of the 1980s and 1990s, this marketization process corroded the CWOC norm at Old Economy companies, with IBM’s deliberate downsizing of its labor force from 374,000 in 1990 to 220,000 in 1994 representing a pivotal case.[73] With the growth of the startup biopharma sector, Big Pharma companies also had to compete for employees on “New Economy” terms, while the rise to dominance of the destructive ideology that a company should be run to “maximize shareholder value” provided senior pharmaceutical executives, as in other industries, with a self-serving rationale for downsizing the labor force and distributing corporate cash to shareholders.[74]

In the 21st century, the globalization of the labor force, particularly in advanced-technology fields, has completed the erosion of the CWOC norm in the United States, as key jobs are offshored to lower-wage areas of the world and as key employees are recruited from globalized labor supplies, often on temporary nonimmigrant visas, to fill high-end technology jobs in the United States.[75] Meanwhile, the human capabilities of older workers, accumulated through many years of education and decades of work experience, atrophy at a time when the application of those capabilities to confront new economic and social challenges is what a value-creating economy needs.

In a globalized economy with rapid technological change, the CWOC norm will not be restored. This dramatic erosion and devaluation of CWOC in the now-dominant business model has created enormous challenges for members of the US labor force to construct for themselves, through interorganizational mobility, the CCCs that a middle-class existence requires. CCCs have become increasingly necessary for individuals to maintain a good standard of living over an expected forty to fifty years of their working lives, with sufficient savings from employment income to sustain them for twenty years or more in retirement. Without CCCs, people who were deemed to be highly productive in their forties may become obsolete in their fifties, or they may find that educated and experienced workers in lower-wage areas of the world have become equally or even better qualified to do their jobs.

For the sake of sustainable prosperity, social institutions must be restructured to support CCCs across business corporations and government agencies as well as civil-society organizations. There are many different paths by which individuals can structure their CCCs. Over the course of their careers, people may develop skills through a series of jobs with different employers in an interlinked network of business corporations, government agencies, and civil-society organizations. In addition, a CCC may be followed across national borders, often with employment by one multinational corporation, agency, or organization or through a more individualized search for a globalized career path.[76]

As they have been doing since the late 1980s, many of the most talented and ambitious young people embarking on careers may look for a quick hit on Wall Street or a venture-backed IPO that can provide them with enough income for a lifetime without pursuing a CCC. The problem is especially acute when the large corporations that used to be the bedrocks of CCCs—including the Big Pharma companies—support the dominance of the “financial economy” over the “productive economy” by distributing almost all, if not more, of their profits to shareholders in the form of stock buybacks and cash dividends. If the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has taught us anything, it is that in pharmaceuticals, as in the US economy more generally, the policy cure for the shareholder-value sickness must begin right now.

Notes

The authors gratefully acknowledge funding from the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) and comments from Thomas Ferguson, Matt Hopkins, and Ken Jacobson.

[1] The White House, “FACT SHEET: The Inflation Reduction Act supports workers and families,” Briefing Room press release, August 19, 2022; Juliette Cubanski, Tricia Newman, and Meredith Freed, “Explaining the prescription drug provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act,” KFF, September 22, 2022.

[2] For the research of the Academic-Industry Research Network on the financialized business model of the US pharmaceutical industry, see William Lazonick and Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, “Do Financial Markets Support Innovation or Inequity in the Biotech Drug Development Process?” paper presented at the Conference on Innovation and Inequality: Pharma and Beyond, Pisa, Italy, May 15, 2010; William Lazonick and Öner Tulum, “US Biopharmaceutical Finance and the Sustainability of the Biotech Business Model,” Research Policy, 40, 9, 2011: 1170-1187; William Lazonick, Matt Hopkins, Ken Jacobson, Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, and Öner Tulum, “Life Sciences? How ‘Maximizing Shareholder Value’ Increases Drug Prices, Restricts Access, and Stifles Innovation,” Submission to the United Nations Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Access to Medicines, February 28, 2016; William Lazonick, Matt Hopkins, Ken Jacobson, Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, and Öner Tulum “U.S. Pharma’s Business Model: Why It Is Broken, and How It Can Be Fixed,“, Submission to the United Nations Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Access to Medicines, February 28, 2016; William Lazonick and Ken Jacobson, “We stopped Pfizer’s tax dodge, now let’s end the buybacks,” Huffington Post, April 8, 2016; William Lazonick, Matt Hopkins, Ken Jacobson, Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, and Öner Tulum, “U.S. Pharma’s Business Model: Why It Is Broken, and How It Can Be Fixed,” in David Tyfield, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls, and Charles Thorpe, eds., The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science, Routledge, 2017: 83-100; Öner Tulum and William Lazonick, “Financialized Corporations in a National Innovation System: The US Pharmaceutical Industry,” International Journal of Political Economy, 47, 3-4, 2018: 281-316; William Lazonick and Öner Tulum, “How high drug prices inflate C.E.O.s’ pay,” New York Times, February 26, 2019; William Lazonick, Öner Tulum, Matt Hopkins, Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, and Ken Jacobson, “Financialization of the U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry,” Institute for New Economic Thinking, December 2, 2019; William Lazonick, “US pharma companies need price regulation amid focus on stock prices and executive pay,” Business and Human Rights Resource Center, January 15, 2020; Rosie Collington and William Lazonick, “Pricing for Medicine Innovation: A Regulatory Approach to Support Drug Development and Patient Access,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper No. 178, February 2022; William Lazonick and Öner Tulum, “Innovation and Financialization in the U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry: A Perspective on the Integration of History and Theory in Support of a Prospectus on Collaborative Research,” AIR Working Paper #22-10/19, revised November 2022.

[3] Sari Horwitz, “Drug industry accused of gouging public,” New York Times, July 16, 1985, p. E1.

[4] See “Recent Posts” by Nicole Longo, PhRMA’s senior director of public affairs, including, among others, “A price control by any other name would still put patients at risk and threaten innovation,” PhRMA, December 9, 2021; “Government price setting leaves behind families counting on new medicines,” PhRMA, February 3, 2022; “Correcting the record: Putting medicine costs and spending in context,” PhRMA, March 24, 2022; “By the numbers: Patients lose when the government sets prices,” PhRMA, July 8, 2022; “The Senate’s latest price setting proposal will undermine: Patient access to medicines,” PhRMA, July 22, 2022; “The Senate’s latest price setting proposal will undermine: American medical innovation,” PhRMA, July 27, 2022; “The Senate’s latest price setting proposal will undermine: Our health care system,” PhRMA, July 28, 2022; “The Senate’s latest price setting proposal will undermine U.S. economic growth,” PhRMA, August 3, 2022; “Myth vs. fact: The Senate’s latest price setting proposal,” PhRMA, August 5, 2022; “This week’s reading list: All the reasons the Senate-passed drug pricing bill is bad policy, PhRMA, August 10, 2022; “New government price setting policy threatens post-approval research,” PhRMA, November 10, 2022.

[5] Stephen Ubl, “An open letter to Congress: Stand with patients and future cures,” PhRMA, August 4, 2022.

[6] See the references in note 2, above.

[7] Note that when a company’s distributions to shareholders exceed 100 percent over a certain time period, that excess can be financed by drawing on cash reserves, taking on debt, selling assets, and/or downsizing the labor force (e.g., suppressing wage, laying off workers).

[8] See William Lazonick, Sustainable Prosperity in the New Economy? Business Organization and High-tech Employment in the United States, W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2009; see also Lazonick and Tulum, “US Biopharmaceutical Finance and the Sustainability of the Biotech Business Model”; Lazonick and Tulum, “Innovation and Financialization in the U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry.”

[9] Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business, Harvard University Press, 1977. See also Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., Shaping the Industrial Century: The Remarkable Story of the Evolution of the Modern Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industries, Harvard University Press, 2005; William Lazonick, “Alfred Chandler’s Managerial Revolution: Developing and Utilizing Productive Resources,” in William Lazonick and David J. Teece, eds., Management Innovation: Essays in the Spirit of Alfred D. Chandler, Jr., Oxford University Press, 2012: 3-29.

[10] For what became the classic NEBM case of stock-based growth through acquisition, see Marie Carpenter and William Lazonick, “In Pursuit of Shareholder Value: Cisco’s Transformation from Innovation to Financialization,” Academic-Industry Research Network, December 2022.

[11] See William Lazonick and Ken Jacobson, “Letter to SEC: How Stock Buybacks Undermine Investment in Innovation for the Sake of Stock-Price Manipulation,” Institute for New Economic Thinking, April 1, 2022 (submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as a public comment on Share Repurchase Disclosure Modernization, File No. S7-21-21); see Ken Jacobson and William Lazonick, “A License to Loot: Alternative Views of Capital Formation and the Origins of SEC Rule 10b-18,” The Academic-Industry Research Network, forthcoming.

[12] William Lazonick and Mary O’Sullivan, “Maximizing Shareholder Value: A New Ideology for Corporate Governance,” Economy and Society, 29, 1, 2000: 13–35; William Lazonick, “Maximizing Shareholder Value as an Ideology of Predatory Value Extraction,” in Knut Sogner and Andrea Colli, eds., The Emergence of Corporate Governance, Routledge, 2021: 170-186.

[13] See William Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation: Confronting Predatory Value Extraction in the U.S. Corporation,” AIR Working Paper #22-09/01, September 26, 2022 (forthcoming in Cambridge Elements: Corporate Governance, Cambridge University Press, 2023).

[14] Bob Pisani, “Buybacks are poised for a record year, but who do they help?” CNBC, December 30, 2021.

[15] Edward Yardeni, Joe Abbott, and. Mali Quintana, “Corporate Finance Briefing: S&P 500 Buybacks and Dividends,” Yardeni Research Inc., November 18, 2022.

[16] Most reports on executive pay by academics, think tanks, and the media use the meaningless estimated “fair value” measures of stock options and stock awards, which, using grant-date stock prices, fail to capture the actual realized gains which flow to executives when they exercise stock options or when awards vest. See Matt Hopkins and William Lazonick, “The Mismeasure of Mammon: Uses and Abuses of Executive Pay Data,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper No. 49, August 29, 2016; William Lazonick and Matt Hopkins, “Corporate executives are making way more money than anybody reports,” The Atlantic, September 15, 2016; William Lazonick and Matt Hopkins, “If the SEC Measured CEO Pay Packages Properly, They Would Look Even More Outrageous,” Harvard Business Review, December 22, 2016; William Lazonick and Matt Hopkins, “Comment on the Pay Ratio Disclosure Rule,” public comment to the US Securities and Exchange Commission, March 21, 2017. See also Bob Herman, “The sky-high pay of health care CEOs,” Axios, July 24, 2017.

[17] See Lazonick and Jacobson, “Letter to SEC.”.

[18] Allan Horwich, “The Origin, Application, Validity, and Potential Misuse of Rule 10b5-1,” The Business Lawyer, 61, May 2007: 913-954; Alan B. Jagolinzer, “SEC Rule 10b5-1 and Insiders’ Strategic Trade,” Management Science, 55, 2, 2009: 231-259; Jesse Eisinger, “Repeated good fortune in timing of CEO’s stock sale,” New York Times, February 19, 2014. Chris Prentice and Manya Saini, “U.S. probes insider trading in pre-arranged stock sales,” Reuters, November 3, 2022.

[19] Robert J. Jackson, Jr., “Stock Buybacks and Corporate Cashouts,” Commissioner’s speech, US Securities and Exchange Commission, June 11, 2018; Lenore Palladino, “Do Corporate Insiders Use Stock Buybacks for Personal Gain?,” International Review of Applied Economics, 34:2, 2020: 152-174.

[20] Lazonick et al., “U.S. Pharma’s Business Model”; Victor Roy, The Financialization of a Cure: The Political Economy of Biomedical Innovation, Product Pricing, and Public Health, PhD dissertation, University of Cambridge, June 2017.

[21] See Hopkins and Lazonick, “The Mismeasure of Mammon.”

[22] Kenneth C. Frazier became CEO of Merck on January 1, 2011, and retired as CEO on June 30, 2021. Ian C. Read became CEO of Pfizer on December 5, 2010. He stepped down as CEO on January 1, 2019, but remained Pfizer’s executive chairman until December 31, 2019, receiving all the components of executive pay in 2019 except the company’s long-term incentive award.

[23] On innovation, speculation, and manipulation as drivers of stock prices, see William Lazonick, “The Functions of the Stock Market and the Fallacies of Shareholder Value,” in Ciaran Driver and Grahame Thompson, eds., What Next for Corporate Governance? Oxford University Press, 2018: 117-151; William Lazonick, “The Value-Extracting CEO: How Executive Stock-Based Pay Undermines Investment in Productive Capabilities,” Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 48, 2019: 53–68.

[24] Giacomo Tognini, “VC firm of Moderna chairman sold $1.4 billion of stock in two months,” Forbes, April , 22, 2021; Spencer Kimball, “Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel has sold more than $400 million of company stock during the pandemic” CNBC, March 17, 2022.

[25] For the type of study required for this research initiative, see Öner Tulum, Antonio Andreoni, and William Lazonick, From Financialization to Innovation in UK Big Pharma: AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline, Cambridge Elements: Reinventing Capitalism, Cambridge University Press, 2022.

[26] See also ibid.

[27] Pfizer’s broker executed $2.1 billion in open-market repurchases in the first quarter of 2019 (ending March 31) but none thereafter. In addition, on February 7, 2019, Pfizer entered into a $6.8 billion “accelerated share repurchase” (ASR) agreement with Goldman Sachs. An ASR (which Pfizer had also done in February 2017 and March 2018) is a device for stock-price manipulation that enables a company to reduce its shares outstanding by the full number of shares in the agreement on the date on which it signs the ASR contract. This arrangement gives an immediate, i.e., “accelerated,” boost to the company’s earnings-per-share (EPS), without the company transgressing the daily limit for buybacks under Rule 10b-18. The bank (in this case Goldman Sachs) borrows the shares specified in the ASR agreement from asset funds that are not seeking to sell the shares. Then, during the life of the ASR agreement, the bank purchases the company’s shares on the stock market in smaller amounts at its discretion at various points in time and returns the borrowed shares to the asset funds. In the case of Pfizer’s 2019 $6.8 billion ASR, Goldman Sachs completed it on August 1, 2019.

[28] William Lazonick, et al., “Financialization of the U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry.” On the distinction between retain-and-reinvest and downsize-and-distribute, see Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation.”

[29] Pfizer Inc., “Event Brief of Q4 2019 Pfizer Inc Earnings Call – Final,” CQ FD Disclosure, January 28, 2020.

[30] See also a statement to this effect by Pat Gelsinger, after he became Intel CEO in February 2021. CNET, “Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger! (CNET’s full interview),” CNET Highlights, November 19, 2021. See also William Lazonick and Matt Hopkins, “Why the CHIPS Are Down: Stock Buybacks and Subsidies in the U.S. Semiconductor Industry,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper No. 165, November 1, 2021: Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation.”

[31] In Pfizer, “Pfizer reports first-quarter 2022 results,” Pfizer press release, May 3, 2022, p. 2, CFO Frank D’Amelio states: “We also entered the open market to repurchase shares of our stock for the first time since 2019. We will continue to thoughtfully deploy our capital in a variety of shareholder-friendly ways with the goal of maximizing the value we provide to all of our stakeholders, including patients and shareholders.” Under “Capital Allocation,” the report states that a $3.3 billion repurchase authorization remains, but that “[c]urrent financial guidance does not anticipate any additional share repurchases in 2022.”

[32] Pfizer, “Pfizer reports first-quarter 2022 results,” p. 5; Pfizer, “Pfizer reports second-quarter 2022 results,” Pfizer press release, July 28, 2022, p. 5; Pfizer, “Pfizer reports strong third-quarter 2022 results and raises 2022 outlook,” Pfizer press release, November 1, 2022, p. 6.

[33] Pfizer, “Pfizer reports second-quarter results,” p. 2.

[34] See Melissa Glim, “That Record-breaking Sprint to Develop a Covid019 Vaccine,” The NIH Catalyst, September-October 2021. See also “Moderna feud with NIH over COVID vaccine,” Nature Biotechnology, 39, 1481, 2021.

[35] Öner Tulum, William Lazonick, and Ken Jacobson, “Who are the CDMOs? For whom is their capacity being deployed to produce COVID vaccines?” INET-AIR COVID Vaccine Project, April 2, 2021; Ellen Chappelka, William Lazonick, and Ken Jacobson, “Help Wanted: Biomanufacturing workers needed for COVID-19 vaccines,” INET-AIR COVID Vaccine Project, June 18, 2021.

[36] Much of our information on Moderna draws upon an in-process AIRnet study, directed by Öner Tulum, that compares the business models of BioNTech and Moderna. See Öner Tulum, “Money for Science or Science for Money? BioNTech and Moderna in the Development of the mRNA Covid-19 Vaccines,” Abstract of a paper submitted for presentation at the 2023 Business History Conference meeting, Detroit, March 16-18, 2023.

[37] Tognini, “VC firm of Moderna chairman sold $1.4 billion of stock in two months.”

[38] Kimball, “Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel has sold more than $400 million in company stock during the pandemic.”

[39] John Carroll, “UPDATED: Flagship startup brings out the budget ax, chops staff and clinical plans as share price flounders,” Endpoints News, January 3, 2022; Gwendolyn Wu,” Vesalius Therapeutics, a buzzy, Flagship-backed startup, cuts jobs six months after public launch, Biopharma Dive, September 19, 2022; Rowan Walrath, “Rubius Therapeutics lays off most of its staff, explores sale,” Boston Business Journal, November 3, 2022; Max Bayer, “UPDATE: “Flagship-founded Repertoire reveals culls, cut and a new CEO marking dismal clinical start,” Fierce Biotech, November 7, 2022;

[40] Jay R. Ritter, “Initial Public Offerings: Biopharma (Biotech and Pharma) IPOs through 2021,” University of Florida, June 17, 2022.

[41] Lazonick and Tulum, “US Biopharmaceutical Finance and the Sustainability of the Biotech Business Model”; Lazonick, et al., “U.S. Pharma’s Business Model: Why It Is Broken, and How It Can Be Fixed.”

[42] Guillermo Aquino-Jacquin, “The patent dispute over the breakthrough mRNA technology,” Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology, November 3, 2022.

[43] Benjamin Mueller, “The End of Vaccines at ‘Warp Speed’,” New York Times, November 18, 2022.

[44] John LaMattina, “What is driving the Covid-19 vaccine price increases?” Forbes, October 26, 2022.

[45] Office of Budget, National Institutes of Health, “Supplementary Appropriation Data Table for History of Congressional Appropriations, Fiscal Years 2020 – 2022,” accessed November 23, 2022.

[46] Tulum and Lazonick, “Financialized Corporations in a National Innovation System.”

[47] Collington and Lazonick, “Pricing for Medicine Innovation.”

[48] Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation.”

[49] William Lazonick, “Profits Without Prosperity: Stock Buybacks Manipulate the Market and Leave Most Americans Worse Off,” Harvard Business Review, September 2014, 46–55. On SEC Rule 10b-18, see Lazonick and Jacobson, “Letter to SEC.”

[50] Tammy Baldwin, “U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin reintroduces legislation to rein in stock buybacks and give workers a voice on corporate boards,” Sen. Tammy Baldwin press release, March 27, 2019.

[51] Chuy Garcia, “Representatives García, DeFazio, and Khanna introduce legislation increase worker power and rein in harmful stock buybacks,” Rep. Chuy Garcia press release, October 7, 2022.

[52] William Lazonick and Jang-Sup Shin, Predatory Value Extraction: How the Looting of the Business Corporation Became the US Norm and How Sustainable Prosperity Can Be Restored, Oxford University Press, 2020.

[53] The White House, Budget of the U.S. Government: Fiscal Year 2023, Government Printing Office, 2022, p. 16.

[54] See the references in note 16, above.

[55] See Lazonick, Sustainable Prosperity in the New Economy?, pp. 61-66; William Lazonick, “Taking Stock: How Executive Pay Results in an Inequitable and Unstable Economy,” Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute White Paper, June 5, 2014; Carpenter and Lazonick, “In Pursuit of Shareholder Value.”

[56] Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation.”

[57] Joe Biden, “How Short-Termism Saps the Economy,” Wall Street Journal, September 27, 2016; Sun Staff, “Sun’s 2020 sit-down with Joe Biden shines a light on how he will lead the country,” Las Vegas Sun, January 31, 2021; Joe Biden, @JoeBiden, March 20, 2020. See also William Lazonick, “Where Did You Go, Vice President Joe?” Institute for New Economic Thinking, March 4, 2022.

[58] Biden, “How Short-Termism Saps the Economy.”

[59] Lazonick, “Investing in Innovation.”

[60] See Susan R. Holmberg, “Fighting Short-Termism with Worker Power: Can Germany’s Co-Determination System Fix American Corporate Governance?” Roosevelt Institute, October 2017; Susan R. Holmberg, “Workers on corporate boards: Germany’s had them for decades,” New York Times, January 6, 2019; Lenore Palladino, “Economic Democracy at Work: Why (and How) Workers Should Be Represented on US Corporate Boards,” Journal of Law and Political Economy, 1, 3, 2021: 373-396; William Lazonick and Ulrich Jürgens, “International Workshop Series on the German System of Codetermination,” Institut für die Geschichte und Zukunft der Arbeit in collaboration with Wissenschaftszentrum-Berlin and Academic-Industry Research Network, October 2020-February 2021.

[61] Jang-Sup Shin, “The Subversion of Shareholder Democracy and the Rise of Hedge-Fund Activism,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper No. 77, July 2018; Lazonick and Shin, Predatory Value Extraction, chs. 5-7.

[62] Baldwin, “U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin reintroduces legislation to rein in stock buybacks and give workers a voice on corporate boards.”

[63] Matthew Yglesias, “Elizabeth Warren has a plan to save capitalism,” Vox, August 15, 2018.

[64] William Lazonick, “How Congress can turn the Republican tax cuts into middle-class jobs,” The Hill, February 5, 2018; Rick Wartzman and William Lazonick, “Don’t let pay increases coming out of tax reform fool you,” Washington Post, February 6, 2018.

[65] Senate Democrats, “SPECIAL REPORT: The #GOPTaxScam Is Setting All The Wrong Records: In Two Months, $200 Billion In Corporate Share Buybacks Have Been Announced, Overwhelmingly Funneling Huge Amounts Of Money To Corporate Executives And Wealthy Shareholders While The Middle Class Gets Left Behind,” press release, February 28, 2018. See William Lazonick, Mustafa Erdem Sakinç, and Matt Hopkins, “Why Stock Buybacks are Dangerous for the Economy,” Harvard Business Review, January 7, 2020

[66] Senate Democrats, “SPECIAL REPORT”; See also DSCC, “#GOPTaxScam Two Years Later: ‘A Lot of Stock Buybacks’ for Corporate Shareholders & ‘Negligible Benefits’ for Workers,” press release, December 17, 2019. See Lazonick et al., “Why Stock Buybacks Are Dangerous for the Economy.”

[67] The White House, “Build Back Better Framework,” Briefing room press release, October 28, 2021.

[68] Tobias Burns and Karl Evers-Hillstrom, “Democrats add stock buyback tax, scrap carried interest to win Sinema over,” The Hill, August 5, 2022.

[69] Lazonick et al., “Why Stock Buybacks Are Dangerous for the Economy.”

[70] William Lazonick, Philip Moss, and Joshua Weitz, “‘Build Back Better’ Needs an Agenda for Upward Mobility,” Institute for New Economic Thinking, January 25, 2021.

[71] Lazonick, Sustainable Prosperity in the New Economy?.

[72] Ibid.

[73] Ibid., ch. 2.

[74] See the pharmaceutical industry references in note 2, above, and also William Lazonick, Philip Moss, Hal Salzman, and Öner Tulum “Skill Development and Sustainable Prosperity: Collective and Cumulative Careers versus Skill-Biased Technical Change,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Group on the Political Economy of Distribution Working Paper No. 7, December 2014; William Lazonick, “Labor in the Twenty-First Century: The Top 0.1% and the Disappearing Middle Class,” in Christian E. Weller, ed., Inequality, Uncertainty, and Opportunity: The Varied and Growing Role of Finance in Labor Relations, Cornell University Press, 2015: 143-192;

[75] William Lazonick, Philip Moss, and Joshua Weitz, “Equality Denied: Tech and African Americans,” Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper No. 177, February 18, 2022

[76] Lazonick, Sustainable Prosperity in the New Economy?, ch. 5; Lazonick, “Labor in the Twenty-First Century.”


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