Global Research, August 14, 2012
This study asks: Who are the the
world’s One percent power elite?
And to what extent do they
operate in unison for their own private gains over benefits for the 99
percent?We examine a sample of the 1 percent: the extractor sector,
whose companies are on the ground extracting material from the global commons,
and using low-cost labor to amass wealth. These companies include oil, gas, and
various mineral extraction organizations, whereby the value of the material
removed far exceeds the actual cost of removal.We also examine the investment
sector of the global 1 percent: companies whose primary activity is the amassing
and reinvesting of capital. This sector includes global central banks, major
investment money management firms, and other companies whose primary efforts are
the concentration and expansion of money, such as insurance companies.
Finally, we
analyze how global networks of centralized power—the elite 1 percent, their
companies, and various governments in their service—plan, manipulate, and
enforce policies that benefit their continued concentration of wealth and power.
We demonstrate how the US/NATO military-industrial-media empire operates in
service to the transnational corporate class for the protection of international
capital in the world.
The Occupy Movement has developed a mantra that
addresses the great inequality of wealth and power between the world’s
wealthiest 1 percent and the rest of us, the other 99 percent. While the 99
percent mantra undoubtedly serves as a motivational tool for open involvement,
there is little understanding as to who comprises the 1 percent and how they
maintain power in the world. Though a good deal of academic research has dealt
with the power elite in the United States, only in the past decade and half has
research on the transnational corporate class begun to emerge.[i]
Foremost among the early works on the idea of an
interconnected 1 percent within global capitalism was Leslie Sklair’s 2001 book,
The Transnational Capitalist Class.[ii]
Sklair believed that globalization was moving transnational corporations (TNC)
into broader international roles, whereby corporations’ states of orgin became
less important than international argreements developed through the World Trade
Organization and other international institutions. Emerging from these
multinational corporations was a transnational capitalist class, whose
loyalities and interests, while still rooted in their corporations, was
increasingly international in scope. Sklair writes:
The transnational capitalist class can be
analytically divided into four main fractions: (i) owners and controllers of
TNCs and their local affiliates; (ii) globalizing bureaucrats and politicians;
(iii) globalizing professionals; (iv) consumerist elites (merchants and media).
. . . It is also important to note, of course, that the TCC [transnational
corporate class] and each of its fractions are not always entirely united on
every issue. Nevertheless, together, leading personnel in these groups
constitute a global power elite, dominant class or inner circle in the sense
that these terms have been used to characterize the dominant class structures of
specific countries.[iii]
Estimates are that the total world’s wealth is
close to $200 trillion, with the US and Europe holding approximately 63 percent.
To be among the wealthiest half of the world, an adult needs only $4,000 in
assets once debts have been subtracted. An adult requires more than $72,000 to
belong to the top 10 percent of global wealth holders, and more than $588,000 to
be a member of the top 1 percent. As of 2010, the top 1 percent of the
wealthist people in the world had hidden away between $21 trillion to $32
trillion in secret tax exempt bank accounts spread all over the world.[iv]
Meanwhile, the poorest half of the global population together possesses less
than 2 percent of global wealth.[v]
The World Bank reports that, in 2008, 1.29 billion people were living in extreme
poverty, on less than $1.25 a day, and 1.2 billion more were living on less than
$2.00 a day.[vi]
Starvation.net reports that 35,000 people, mostly young children, die every day
from starvation in the world.[vii]
The numbers of unnecessary deaths have exceeded 300 million people over the past
forty years. Farmers around the world grow more than enough food to feed the
entire world adequately. Global grain production yielded a record 2.3 billion
tons in 2007, up 4 percent from the year before—yet, billions of people go
hungry every day. Grain.org describes the core reasons for ongoing hunger in a
recent article, “Corporations Are Still Making a Killing from Hunger”: while
farmers grow enough food to feed the world, commodity speculators and huge grain
traders like Cargill control global food prices and distribution.[viii]
Addressing the power of the global 1 percent—identifying who they are and what
their goals are—are clearly life and death questions.
It is also
important to examine the questions of how wealth is created, and how it becomes
concentrated. Historically, wealth has been captured and concentrated through
conquest by various powerful enities. One need only look at Spain’s
appropriation of the wealth of the Aztec and Inca empires in the early sixteenth
century for an historical example of this process. The histories of the Roman
and British empires are also filled with examples of wealth captured.
Once acquired, wealth can then be used to
establish means of production, such as the early British cotton mills, which
exploit workers’ labor power to produce goods whose exchange value is greater
than the cost of the labor, a process analyzed by Karl Marx in
Capital.[ix]
A human being is able to produce a product that has a certain value. Organized
business hires workers who are paid below the value of their labor power. The
result is the creation of what Marx called surplus value, over and above the
cost of labor. The creation of surplus value allows those who own the means of
production to concentrate capital even more. In addition, concentrated capital
accelerates the exploition of natural resources by private entrepreneurs—even
though these natural resources are actually the common heritage of all living
beings.[x]
In this article,
we ask: Who are the the world’s 1 percent power elite? And to what extent do
they operate in unison for their own private gains over benefits for the 99
percent? We will examine a sample of the 1 percent: the extractor sector, whose
companies are on the ground extracting material from the global commons, and
using low-cost labor to amass wealth. These companies include oil, gas, and
various mineral extraction organizations, whereby the value of the material
removed far exceeds the actual cost of removal.
We will also
examine the investment sector of the global 1 percent: companies whose primary
activity is the amassing and reinvesting of capital. This sector includes global
central banks, major investment money management firms, and other companies
whose primary efforts are the concentration and expansion of money, such as
insurance companies.
Finally, we
analyze how global networks of centralized power—the elite 1 percent, their
companies, and various governments in their service—plan, manipulate, and
enforce policies that benefit their continued concentration of wealth and
power.
The
Extractor Sector: The Case of Freeport-McMoRan (FCX)
Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) is the world’s largest
extractor of copper and gold. The company controls huge deposits in Papua,
Indonesia, and also operates in North and South America, and in Africa. In 2010,
the company sold 3.9 billion pounds of copper, 1.9 million ounces of gold, and
67 million pounds of molybdenum. In 2010, Freeport-McMoRan reported revenues of
$18.9 billion and a net income of $4.2 billion.[xi]
The Grasberg mine in Papua, Indonesia, employs
23,000 workers at wages below three dollars an hour. In September 2011, workers
went on strike for higher wages and better working conditions. Freeport had
offered a 22 percent increase in wages, and strikers said it was not enough,
demanding an increase to an international standard of seventeen to forty-three
dollars an hour. The dispute over pay attracted local tribesmen, who had their
own grievances over land rights and pollution; armed with spears and arrows,
they joined Freeport workers blocking the mine’s supply roads.[xii]
During the strikers’ attempt to block busloads of replacement workers, security
forces financed by Freeport killed or wounded several strikers.
Freeport has come under fire internationally for
payments to authorities for security. Since 1991, Freeport has paid nearly
thirteen billion dollars to the Indonesian government—one of Indonesia’s largest
sources of income—at a 1.5 percent royalty rate on extracted gold and copper,
and, as a result, the Indonesian military and regional police are in their
pockets. In October 2011, the Jakarta Globe reported that Indonesian
security forces in West Papua, notably the police, receive extensive direct cash
payments from Freeport-McMoRan. Indonesian National Police Chief Timur Pradopo
admitted that officers received close to ten million dollars annually from
Freeport, payments Pradopo described as “lunch money.” Prominent Indonesian
nongovernmental organization Imparsial puts the annual figure at fourteen
million dollars.[xiii]
These payments recall even larger ones made by Freeport to Indonesian military
forces over the years which, once revealed, prompted a US Security and Exchange
Commission investigation of Freeport’s liability under the United States’
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
In addition, the state’s police and army have been
criticized many times for human rights violations in the remote mountainous
region, where a separatist movement has simmered for decades. Amnesty
International has documented numerous cases in which Indonesian police have used
unnecessary force against strikers and their supporters. For example, Indonesian
security forces attacked a mass gathering in the Papua capital, Jayapura, and
striking workers at the Freeport mine in the southern highlands. At least five
people were killed and many more injured in the assaults, which shows a
continuing pattern of overt violence against peaceful dissent. Another brutal
and unjustified attack on October 19, 2011, on thousands of Papuans exercising
their rights to assembly and freedom of speech, resulted in the death of at
least three Papuan civilians, the beating of many, the detention of hundreds,
and the arrest of six, reportedly on treason charges.[xiv]
On November 7, 2011, the Jakarta Globe
reported that “striking workers employed by Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold’s
subsidiary in Papua have dropped their minimum wage increase demands from $7.50
to $4.00 an hour, the All-Indonesia Workers Union (SPSI) said.”[xv]
Virgo Solosa, an official from the union, told the Jakarta Globe that
they considered the demands, up from the (then) minimum wage of $1.50 an hour,
to be “the best solution for all.”
Workers at
Freeport’s Cerro Verde copper mine in Peru also went on strike around the same
time, highlighting the global dimension of the Freeport confrontation. The Cerro
Verde workers demanded pay raises of 11 percent, while the company offered just
3 percent.
The Peruvian strike ended on November 28, 2011.[xvi]
And on December 14, 2011, Freeport-McMoRan announced a settlement at the
Indonesian mine, extending the union’s contract by two years. Workers at the
Indonesia operation are to see base wages, which currently start at as little as
$2.00 an hour, rise 24 percent in the first year of the pact and 13 percent in
the second year. The accord also includes improvements in benefits and a
one-time signing bonus equivalent to three months of wages.[xvii]
In both Freeport strikes, the governments
pressured strikers to settle. Not only was domestic militrary and police force
evident, but also higher levels of international involvement. Throughout the
Freeport-McMoRan strike, the Obama administration ignored the egregious
violation of human rights and instead advanced US–Indonesian military ties. US
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, who arrived in Indonesia in the immediate
wake of the Jayapura attack, offered no criticism of the assault and reaffirmed
US support for Indonesia’s territorial integrity. Panetta also reportedly
commended Indonesia’s handling of a weeks-long strike at Freeport-McMoRan.[xviii]
US President Barack Obama visited Indonesia in
November 2011 to strengthen relations with Jakarta as part of Washington’s
escalating efforts to combat Chinese influence in the Asia–Pacific region. Obama
had just announced that the US and Australia would begin a rotating deployment
of 2,500 US Marines to a base in Darwin, a move ostensibly to modernize the US
posture in the region, and to allow participation in “joint training” with
Australian military counterparts. But some speculate that the US has a hidden
agenda in deploying marines to Australia. The Thai newspaper The Nation
has suggested that one of the reasons why US Marines might be stationed in
Darwin could be that they would provide remote security assurance to US-owned
Freeport-McMoRan’s gold and copper mine in West Papua, less than a two-hour
flight away.[xix]
The fact that workers at Freeport’s Sociedad
Minera Cerro Verde copper mine in Peru were also striking at the same time
highlights the global dimension of the Freeport confrontation. The Peruvian
workers are demanding pay rises of eleven percent, while the company has offered
just three percent. The strike was lifted on November 28, 2011.[xx]
In both Freeport
strikes, the governments pressured strikers to settle. Not only was domestic
militrary and police force evident, but also higher levels of international
involvement. The fact that the US Secretary of Defense mentioned a domestic
strike in Indonesa shows that the highest level of power are in play on issues
affecting the international corporate 1 percent and their profits.
Public opinion is strongly against Freeport in
Indonesia. On August 8, 2011, Karishma Vaswani of the BBC reported that “the US
mining firm Freeport-McMoRan has been accused of everything from polluting the
environment to funding repression in its four decades working in the Indonesian
province of Papau. . . . Ask any Papuan on the street what they think of
Freeport and they will tell you that the firm is a thief, said Nelels Tebay, a
Papuan pastor and coordinator of the Papua Peace Network.”[xxi]
Freeport strikers won support from the US Occupy
movement. Occupy Phoenix and East Timor Action Network activists marched to
Freeport headquarters in Phoenix on October 28, 2011, to demonstrate against the
Indonesian police killings at Freeport-McMoRan’s Grasberg mine.[xxii]
Freeport-McMoRan
(FCX) chairman of the board James R. Moffett owns over four million shares with
a value of close to $42.00 each. According to the FCX annual meeting report
released in June 2011, Moffett’s annual compensation from FCX in 2010 was $30.57
million. Richard C. Adkerson, president of the board of FCX, owns over 5.3
million shares. His total compensation in was also $30.57 million in 2010
Moffett’s and Adkerson’s incomes put them in the upper levels of the world’s top
1 percent. Their interconnectness with the highest levels of power in the White
House and the Pentagon, as indicated by the specific attention given to them by
the US secretary of defense, and as suggested by the US president’s awareness of
their circumstances, leaves no doubt that Freeport-MacMoRan executives and board
are firmly positioned at the highest levels of the transnational corporate
class.
Freeport-McMoRan’s Board of Directors
James R. Moffett—Corporate and policy
affiliations: cochairman, president, and CEO of McMoRan Exploration Co.; PT
Freeport Indonesia; Madison Minerals Inc.; Horatio Alger
Association of Distinguished Americans; Agrico, Inc.;
Petro-Lewis Funds, Inc.; Bright
Real Estate Services, LLC; PLC–ALPC, Inc.; FM Services Co.
Richard C.
Adkerson—Corporate and policy affiliations: Arthur Anderson Company; chairman of
International Council on Mining and Metals; executive board of the International
Copper Association, Business Council, Business Roundtable, Advisory Board of the
Kissinger Institute, Madison Minerals Inc.
Robert Allison
Jr.—Corporate affiliations: Anadarko Petroleum (2010 revenue: $11 billion);
Amoco Projection Company.
Robert A.
Day—Corporate affiliations: CEO of W. M. Keck Foundation (2010 assets: more than
$1 billion); attorney in Costa Mesa, California.
Gerald J.
Ford—Corporate affiliations: Hilltop Holdings Inc, First Acceptance Corporation,
Pacific Capital Bancorp (Annual Sales $13 billion), Golden State Bancorp, FSB
(federal savings bank that merged with Citigroup in 2002) Rio Hondo Land &
Cattle Company (annual sales $1.6 million), Diamond Ford, Dallas (sales: $200
million), Scientific Games Corp., SWS Group (annual sales: $422 million);
American Residential Cmnts LLC.
H. Devon Graham
Jr.—Corporate affiliations: R. E. Smith Interests (an asset management company;
income: $670,000).
Charles C.
Krulak—Corporate and governmental affiliations: president of Birmingham-South
College; commandant of the Marine Corp, 1995–1999; MBNA Corp.; Union Pacific
Corporation (annual sales: $17 billion); Phelps Dodge (acquired by FCX in
2007).
Bobby Lee
Lackey—Corporate affiliations: CEO of McManusWyatt-Hidalgo Produce Marketing
Co.
Jon C.
Madonna—Corporate affiliations: CEO of KPMG, (professional services auditors;
annual sales: $22.7 billion); AT&T (2011 revenue: $122 billion); Tidewater
Inc. (2011 revenue: $1.4 billion).
Dustan E.
McCoy—Corporate affiliations: CEO of Brunswick Corp. (revenue: $4.6 billion);
Louisiana-Pacific Corp. (2011 revenue: $1.7 billion).
B. M. Rankin
Jr.—Corporate affiliations: board vice chairman of FCX; cofounder of McMoRan Oil
and Gas in 1969.
Stephen
Siegele—Corporate affiliations: founder/CEO of Advanced Delivery and Chemical
Systems Inc.; Advanced Technology Solutions; Flourine on Call Ltd.
The board of
directors of Freeport-McMoRan represents a portion of the global 1 percent who
not only control the largest gold and copper mining company in the world, but
who are also interconnected by board membership with over two dozen major
multinational corporations, banks, foundations, military, and policy groups.
This twelve-member board is a tight network of individuals who are interlocked
with—and influence the policies of—other major companies controlling
approximately $200 billion in annual revenues.
Freeport-McMoRan
exemplifies how the extractor sector acquires wealth from the common heritage of
natural materials—which rightfully belongs to us all—by appropriating the
surplus value of working people’s labor in the theft of our commons. This
process is protected by governments in various countries where Freeport
maintains mining operations, with the ultimate protector being the military
empire of the US and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Further,
Freeport-McMoRan is connected to one of the most elite transnational capitalist
groups in the world: over 7 percent of Freeport’s stock is held by BlackRock,
Inc., a major investment management firm based in New York City.
The
Investment Sector: The Case of BlackRock, Inc.
Internationally,
many firms operate primarily as investment organizations, managing capital and
investing in other companies. These firms often do not actually make anything
except money, and are keen to prevent interference with return on capital by
taxation, regulations, and governmental interventions anywhere in the world.
BlackRock, based in Manhattan, is the largest
assets management firm in the world, with over 10,000 employees and investment
teams in twenty-seven countries. Their client base includes corporate, public,
union, and industry pension plans; governments; insurance companies; third-party
mutual funds; endowments; foundations; charities; corporations; official
institutions; sovereign wealth funds; banks; financial professionals; and
individuals worldwide. BlackRock acquired Barclay Global Investors in December
of 2009. As of March 2012, BlackRock manages assets worth $3.68 trillion in
equity, fixed income, cash management, alternative investment, real estate, and
advisory strategies.[xxiii]
In addition to Freeport-McMoRan, BlackRock has
major holdings in Chevron (49 million shares, 2.5 percent), Goldman Sachs Group
(13 million shares, 2.7 percent), Exxon Mobil (121 million shares, 2.5 percent),
Bank of America (251 million shares, 2.4 percent), Monsanto Company (12 million
shares, 2.4 percent), Microsoft Corp. (185 million shares, 2.2 percent), and
many more.[xxiv]
BlackRock
manages investments of both public and private funds, including California
Public Employee’s Retirement System, California State Teacher’s Retirement
System, Freddie Mac, Boy Scouts of America, Boeing, Sears, Verizon, Raytheon,
PG&E, NY City Retirement Systems, LA County Employees Retirement
Association, GE, Cisco, and numerous others.
According to
BlackRock’s April 2011 annual report to stockholders, the board of directors
consists of eighteen members. The board is classified into three equal
groups—Class I, Class II, and Class III—with terms of office of the members of
one class expiring each year in rotation. Members of one class are generally
elected at each annual meeting and serve for full three-year terms, or until
successors are elected and qualified. Each class consists of approximately
one-third of the total number of directors constituting the entire board of
directors.
BlackRock has
stockholder agreements with Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., a wholly owned
subsidiary of Bank of America Corporation; and Barclays Bank PLC and its
subsidiaries. Two to four members of the board are from BlackRock management;
one director is designated by Merrill Lynch; two directors, each in a different
class, are designated by PNC Bank; two directors, each in a different class, are
designated by Barclays; and the remaining directors are independent.
BlackRock’s Board of Directors
Class I
Directors (terms expire in 2012):
William S.
Demchak—Corporate affiliations: senior vice chairman of PNC (assets: $271
billion); J. P. Morgan Chase & Co. (2011 assets: $2.2 trillion).
Kenneth B. Dunn,
PhD—Corporate and institutional affiliations: professor of financial economics
at the David A. Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon University; former
managing director of Morgan Stanley Investment (assets: $807 billion).
Laurence D.
Fink—Corporate and institutional affiliations: chairman/CEO of BlackRock;
trustee of New York University; trustee of Boys Club of NY.
Robert S.
Kapito—Corporate and institutional affiliations: president of BlackRock; trustee
of Wharton School University of Pennsylvania.
Thomas H.
O’Brien—Corporate affiliations: former CEO of PNC; Verizon Communications, Inc.
(2011 revenue: $110 billion).
Ivan G. Seidenberg—Corporate and policy
affiliations: board chairman of Verizon Communications; former CEO of Bell
Atlantic; Honeywell International Inc. (2010 revenue: $33.3 billion); Pfizer
Inc. (2011 revenue: $64 billion); chairman of the Business Roundtable; National
Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee; President’s Council of the New
York Academy of Sciences.[xxv]
Class II
Directors (terms expire in 2013):
Abdlatif Yousef
Al-Hamad—Corporate and institutional affiliations: board chairman of Arab Fund
for Economic and Social Development (assets: $2.7 trillion); former Minister of
Finance and Minister of Planning of Kuwait, Kuwait Investment Authority.
Multilateral Development Banks, International Advisory Boards of Morgan Stanley,
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc., American International Group, Inc. and the
National Bank of Kuwait.
Mathis
Cabiallavetta—Corporate affiliations: Swiss Reinsurance Company (2010 revenue:
$28 billion); CEO of Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc. (2011 revenue: $11.5
billion); Union Bank of Switzerland-UBS A.G. (2012 assets: $620 billion); Philip
Morris International Inc. (2010 revenue: $27 billion).
Dennis D.
Dammerman—Corporate affiliations: General Electric Company (2012 revenue: $147
billion); Capmark Financial Group Inc. (formally GMAC); American International
Group (AIG) (2010 revenue: $77 billion); Genworth Financial (2010 assets: $100
billion); Swiss Reinsurance Company (2012 assets: $620 billion); Discover
Financial Services (2011 revenue: $3.4 billion).
Robert E.
Diamond Jr.—Corporate and policy affiliations: CEO of Barclays (2011 revenue:
$32 billion); International Advisory Board of the British-American Business
Council.
David H.
Komansky—Corporate affiliations: CEO of Merrill Lynch (division of Bank of
America 2009) (2011 assets management: $2.3 trillion); Burt’s Bees, Inc. (owned
by Clorox); WPP Group plc (2011 revenue: $15 billion).
James E.
Rohr—Corporate affiliations: CEO of PNC (2011 revenue: $14 billion).
James
Grosfeld—Corporate affiliations: CEO of Pulte Homes, Inc. (2010 revenue: $4.5
billion); Lexington Realty Trust (2011 assets: $1.2 billion).
Sir Deryck
Maughan—Corporate and policy affiliations: Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (2011 assets:
$8.6 billion); former CEO of Salomon Brothers from 1992 to 1997 a Chairman of
the US-Japan Business Council; GlaxoSmithKline plc (2011 revenue: $41 billion);
Thomson Reuters Corporation (2011 revenue: $13.8 billion).
Thomas K.
Montag—Corporate affiliations: president of Global Banking & Markets for
Bank of America (2011 revenue: $94 billion); Merrill Lynch (division of Bank of
America, 2009; 2011 assets management: $2.3 trillion); Goldman Sachs (2011
revenue: $28.8 billion).
Class III
Directors (terms expire in 2014):
Murry S.
Gerber—Corporate affiliations: executive chairman of EQT (2010 revenue: $1.3
billion); Halliburton Company.
Linda Gosden
Robinson—Corporate affiliations: former CEO of Robinson Lerer & Montgomery;
Young & Rubicam Inc.; WPP Group plc. (2011 revenue: $15 billion); Revlon,
Inc. (2011 revenue: $1.3 billion).
John S.
Varley—Corporate affiliations: CEO of Barclays (2011 revenue: $32 billion);
AstraZeneca PLC (2011 revenue: $33.5 billion).
BlackRock is one
of the most concentrated power networks among the global 1 percent. The
eightteen members of the board of directors are connected to a significant part
of the world’s core financial assests. Their decisions can change empires,
destroy currencies, and impoverish millions. Some of the top financial giants of
the capitalist world are connected by interlocking boards of directors at
BlackRock, including Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, PNC Bank,
Barclays, Swiss Reinsurance Company, American International Group (AIG), UBS
A.G., Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development, J. P. Morgan Chase &
Co., and Morgan Stanley.
A 2011 University of Zurich study, research
completed by Stefania Vitali, James B. Glattfelder, Stefano Battiston at the
Swiss Federal Institute, reports that a small group of companies—mainly
banks—wields huge power over the global economy.[xxvi]
Using data from Orbis 2007, a database listing thirty-seven million companies
and investors, the Swiss researchers applied mathematical models—usually used to
model natural systems—to the world economy. The study is the first to look at
all 43,060 transnational corporations and the web of ownership between them. The
research created a “map” of 1,318 companies at the heart of the global economy.
The study found that 147 companies formed a “super entity” within this map,
controlling some 40 percent of its wealth. The top twenty-five of the 147
super-connected companies includes:
1. Barclays
PLC*
2. Capital Group
Companies Inc.
3. FMR
Corporation
4. AXA
5. State Street
Corporation
6. J. P. Morgan
Chase & Co.*
7. Legal &
General Group PLC
8. Vanguard
Group Inc.
9. UBS AG
10. Merrill
Lynch & Co. Inc.*
11. Wellington
Management Co. LLP
12. Deutsche
Bank AG
13. Franklin
Resources Inc.
14. Credit
Suisse Group*
15. Walton
Enterprises LLC
16. Bank of New
York Mellon Corp
17. Natixis
18. Goldman
Sachs Group Inc.*
19. T Rowe Price
Group Inc.
20. Legg Mason
Inc.
21. Morgan
Stanley*
22. Mitsubishi
UFJ Financial Group Inc.
23. Northern
Trust Corporation
24. Société
Générale
25. Bank of
America Corporation*
* BlackRock
Directors
Notably, for our
purposes, BlackRock board members have direct connections to at least seven of
the top twenty-five corporations that Vitali et al. identify as an international
“super entity.” BlackRock’s board has direct links to seven of the twenty-five
most interconnected corporations in the world. BlackRock’s eighteen board
members control and influence tens of trillions of dollars of wealth in the
world and represent a core of the super-connected financial sector
corporations.
Below is a
sample cross section of key figures and corporate assets among the global
economic “super entity” identified by Vitali et al.
Other
Key Figures and Corporate Connections within the Highest Levels of the Global
Economic “Super Entity”
Capital Group
Companies—Privately held, based in Los Angeles, manages $1 trillion in
assets.
FMR—One of the
world’s largest mutual fund firms, managing $1.5 trillion in assets and serving
more than twenty million individual and institutional clients; Edward C. (Ned)
Johnson III, Chairman and CEO.
AXA—Manages $1.5
trillion in assets, serving 101 million clients; Henri de Castries, CEO AXA, and
Director, Nestlé (Switzerland).
State Street
Corporation—Operates from Boston with assest management at $1.9 trillion;
directors include Joseph L. Hooley, CEO of State Street Corporation; Kennett F.
Burnes, retired chairman and CEO of Cabot Corporation(2011 revenue: $3.1
billion).
JP Morgan/Chase (2011 assets: $2.3 trillion)—Board
of directors: James
A. Bell, retired executive VP of The Boeing Company; Stephen
B. Burke, CEO of NBC Universal, and executive VP of Comcast Corporation;
David M. Cote, CEO of Honeywell International, Inc.; Timothy
P. Flynn, retired chairman of KPMG International; and Lee
R. Raymond, retired CEO of Exxon Mobil Corporation.
Vanguard (2011
assets under management: $1.6 trillion)—Directors: Emerson U. Fullwood, VP of
Xerox Corporation; JoAnn Heffernan Heisen, VP of Johnson & Johnson, Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation; Mark Loughridge, CFO of IBM, Global Financing; Alfred
M. Rankin Jr., CEO of NACCO Industries, Inc., National Association of
Manufacturers, Goodrich Corp, and chairman of Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland.
UBS AG (2012
assets: $620 billion)—Directors include: Michel Demaré, board member of Syngenta
and the IMD Foundation (Lausanne); David Sidwell, former CFO of Morgan
Stanley.
Merrill Lynch
(Bank of America) (2011 assets management: $2.3 trillion)—Directors include:
Brian T. Moynihan, CEO of Bank of America; Rosemary T. Berkery, general counsel
for Bank of America/Merrill Lynch (formerly Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc),
member of New York Stock Exchange’s Legal Advisory Committee, director at
Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association; Mark A. Ellman, managing
director of Credit Suisse, First Boston; Dick J. Barrett, cofounder of Ellman
Stoddard Capital Partners, MetLife, Citi Group, UBS, Carlyle Group, ImpreMedia,
Verizon Communications, Commonewealth Scientific and Industrial Research Org,
Fluor Corp, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs Group.
The directors of
these super-connected companies represent a small portion of the global 1
percent. Most people with assets in excess of $588,000 are not major players in
international finance. At best, they hire asset management firms to produce a
return on their capital. Often their net worth is tied up in nonfinancial assets
such a real estate and businesses.
Analysis: TCC and Global Power
So how does the transnational corporate class
(TCC) maintain wealth concentration and power in the world? The wealthiest 1
percent of the world’s population represents approximately forty million adults.
These forty million people are the richest segment of the first tier populations
in the core countries and intermittently in other regions. Most of this 1
percent have professional jobs with security and tenure working for or
associated with established institutions. Approximately ten million of these
individuals have assets in excess of one million dollars, and approximately
100,000 have financials assets worth over thirty million dollars. Immediately
below the 1 percent in the first tier are working people with regular employment
in major corporations, government, self-owned businesses, and various
institutions of the world. This first tier constitutes about 30–40 percent of
the employed in the core developed countries, and some 30 percent in the second
tier economies and down to 20 percent in the periphery economies (sometimes
referred to as the 3rd world). The second tier of global workers represents
growing armies of casual labor: the global factory workers, street workers, and
day laborers intermittently employed with increasingly less support from
government and social welfare organizations. These workers, mostly concentrated
in the megacities, constitute some 30–40 percent of the workers in the core
industrialized economies and some 20 percent in the second tier and peripheral
economies. This leaves a third tier of destitute people worldwide ranging from
30 percent of adults in the core and secondary economies to fully 50 percent of
the people in peripherial countries who have extremely limited income
opportunities and struggle to survive on a few dollars a day. These are the 2.5
billion people who live on less than two dollars a day, die by the tens of
thousands every day from malnutrition and easily curible illnesses, and who have
probably never even heard a dial tone.[xxvii]
As seen in our
extractor sector and investment sector samples, corporate elites are
interconnected through direct board connections with some seventy major
multinational corporations, policy groups, media organizations, and other
academic or nonprofit institutions. The investment sector sample shows much more
powerful financial links than the extractor sample; nonetheless, both represent
vast networks of resources concentrated within each company’s board of
directors. The short sample of directors and resources from eight other of the
superconnected companies replicates this pattern of multiple board corporate
connections, policy groups, media and government, controlling vast global
resources. These interlock relationships recur across the top interconnected
companies among the transnational corporate class, resulting in a highly
concentrated and powerful network of individuals who share a common interest in
preserving their elite domination.
Sociological research shows that interlocking
directorates have the potential to faciliate political cohesion. A sense of a
collective “we” emerges within such power networks, whereby members think and
act in unison, not just for themselves and their individual firms, but for a
larger sense of purpose—the good of the order, so to speak.[xxviii]
Transnational
corporate boards meet on a regular basis to encourage the maximunization of
profit and the long-term viability of their firm’s business plans. If they
arrange for payments to government officials, conduct activities that undermine
labor organizations, seek to manipulate the price of commodies (e.g. gold), or
engage in insider trading in some capacity, they are in fact forming
conspiratorial alliances inside those boards of directors. Our sample of thirty
directors inside two connected companies have influence with some of the most
powerful policy groups in the world, including British–American Business
Council, US–Japan Business Council, Business Roundtable, Business Council, and
the Kissinger Institute. They influence some ten trillion dollars in monetery
resouces and control the working lives of many hundreds of thousands of people.
All in all, they are a power elite unto themselves, operating in a world of
power elite networks as the de facto ruling class of the capitalist
world.
Moreover, this 1 percent global elite dominates
and controls public relations firms and the corporate media. Global corporate
media protect the interests of the 1 percent by serving as a propaganda machine
for the superclass. The corporate media provide entertainment for the masses and
distorts the realities of inequality. Corporate news is managed by the 1 percent
to maintain illusions of hope and to divert blame from the powerful for hard
times.[xxix]
Four of the thirty directors in our two-firm
sample are directly connected with public relations and media. Thomas H. O’Brien
and Ivan G. Seidenberg are both on the board of Verizon Communications, where
Seidenberg serves as chairman. Verizon reported over $110 billion in operating
revenues in 2011.[xxx]
David H. Komansky and Linda Gosden Robinson are on the board of WPP Group, which
describes itself as the world leader in marketing communications services,
grossing over $65 billion in 2011. WPP is a conglomerate of many of the world’s
leading PR and marketing firms, in fields that include advertising, media
investment management, consumer insight, branding and identity, health care
communications, and direct digital promotion and relationship marketing.[xxxi]
Even deeper inside the 1 percent of wealthy elites
is what David Rothkopf calls the superclass. David Rothkopf, former managing
director of Kissinger Associates and deputy undersecretary of commerce for
international trade policies, published his book Superclass: the Global
Power Elite and the World They Are Making, in 2008.[xxxii]
According to Rothkopf, the superclass constitutes approximately 0.0001 percent
of the world’s population, comprised of 6,000 to 7,000 people—some say 6,660.
They are the Davos-attending, Gulfstream/private jet–flying, money-incrusted,
megacorporation-interlocked, policy-building elites of the world, people at the
absolute peak of the global power pyramid. They are 94 percent male,
predominantly white, and mostly from North America and Europe. These are the
people setting the agendas at the Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg Group, G-8,
G-20, NATO, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization. They are from the
highest levels of finance capital, transnational corporations, the government,
the military, the academy, nongovernmental organizations, spiritual leaders, and
other shadow elites. Shadow elites include, for instance, the deep politics of
national security organizations in connection with international drug cartels,
who extract 8,000 tons of opium from US war zones annually, then launder $500
billion through transnational banks, half of which are US-based.[xxxiii]
Rothkoft’s understanding of the superclass is one
based on influence and power. Although there are over 1,000 billionaires in the
world, not all are necessarily part of the superclass in terms of influencing
global policies. Yet these 1,000 billionaires have twice as much wealth as the
2.5 billion least wealthy people, and they are fully aware of the vast
inequalities in the world. The billionaires and the global 1 percent are similar
to colonial plantation owners. They know they are a small minority with vast
resources and power, yet they must continually worry about the unruly exploited
masses rising in rebellion. As a result of these class insecurities, the
superclass works hard to protect this structure of concentrated wealth.
Protection of capital is the prime reason that NATO countries now account for 85
percent of the world’s defense spending, with the US spending more on military
than the rest of the world combined.[xxxiv]
Fears of inequality rebellions and other forms of unrest motivate NATO’s global
agenda in the war on terror.[xxxv]
The Chicago 2012 NATO Summit Declaration reads:
As Alliance
leaders, we are determined to ensure that NATO retains and develops the
capabilities necessary to perform its essential core tasks collective defence,
crisis management and cooperative security—and thereby to play an essential role
promoting security in the world. We must meet this responsibility while dealing
with an acute financial crisis and responding to evolving geo-strategic
challenges. NATO allows us to achieve greater security than any one Ally could
attain acting alone.
We confirm the continued importance of a strong
transatlantic link and Alliance solidarity as well as the significance of
sharing responsibilities, roles, and risks to meet the challenges North-American
and European Allies face together . . . we have confidently set ourselves the
goal of NATO Forces 2020: modern, tightly connected forces equipped, trained,
exercised and commanded so that they can operate together and with partners in
any (emphaisis added) environment.[xxxvi]
NATO is quickly
emerging as the police force for the transnational corporate class. As the TCC
more fully emerged in the 1980s, coinciding with the collapse of the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), NATO began broader operations. NATO first
ventured into the Balkans, where it remains, and then moved into Afghanistan.
NATO started a training mission in Iraq in 2005, has recently conducted
operations in Libya, and, as of July 2012, is considering military action in
Syria.
It has become clear that the superclass uses NATO
for its global security. This is part of an expanding strategy of US military
domination around the world, wherby the US/NATO military-industrial-media empire
operates in service to the transnational corporate class for the protection of
international capital anywhere in the world.[xxxvii]
Sociologists William Robinson and Jerry Harris
anticipated this situation in 2000, when they described “a shift from the social
welfare state to the social control (police) state replete with the dramatic
expansion of public and private security forces, the mass incarceration of the
excluded populations (disproportionately minorities), new forms of social
apartheid . . . and anti-immigrant legislation.”[xxxviii]
Robinson and Harris’s theory accurately predicts the agenda of today’s global
superclass, including
—President
Obama’s continuation of the police state agendas of his executive predecessors,
George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George H. W. Bush;
—the long-range
global dominance agenda of the superclass, which uses US/NATO military forces to
discourage resisting states and maintain internal police repression, in service
of the capitalist system’s orderly maintenance;
—and the continued consolidation of capital around
the world without interference from governments or egalitarian social
movements.[xxxix]
Furthermore, this agenda leads to the further
pauperization of the poorest half of the world’s population, and an unrelenting
downward spiral of wages for everyone in the second tier, and even some within
the first tier.[xl]
It is a world facing economic crisis, where the neoliberal solution is to spend
less on human needs and more on security.[xli]
It is a world of financial institutions run amok, where the answer to bankruptcy
is to print more money through quantitative easing with trillions of new
inflation-producing dollars. It is a world of permanent war, whereby spending
for destruction requires even more spending to rebuild, a cycle that profits the
TCC and its global networks of economic power. It is a world of drone killings,
extrajudicial assassinations, and death and destruction, at home and abroad.
As Andrew Kollin states in State Power and
Democracy, “There is an Orwellian dimension to the Administration’s (Bush
and later Obama) perspective, it chose to disregard the law, instead creating
decrees to legitimate illegal actions, giving itself permision to act without
any semblances of power sharing as required by the Constitution or international
law.”[xlii]
And in Globalization and the Demolition of
Society, Dennis Loo writes, “The bottom line, the fundamential division of
our society, is between, on the one hand, those whose interests rest on the
dominance and the drive for monopolizing the society and planet’s resources and,
on the other hand, those whose interests lie in the husbanding of thoses
resources for the good of the whole rather than the part.”[xliii]
The Occupy
movement uses the 1 percent vs. 99 percent mantra as a master concept in its
demonstrations, disruptions, and challenges to the practices of the
transnational corporate class, within which the global superclass is a key
element in the implementation of a superelite agenda for permanent war and total
social control. Occupy is exactly what the superclass fears the most—a global
democratic movement that exposes the TCC agenda and the continuing theater of
government elections, wherein the actors may change but the marquee remains the
same. The more that Occupy refuses to cooperate with the TCC agenda and
mobilizes activists, the more likely the whole TCC system of dominance will fall
to its knees under the people power of democractic
movements.
Peter Phillips is a professor of sociology at Sonoma State University and president of the Media Freedom Foundation/Project Censored.
Peter Phillips is a professor of sociology at Sonoma State University and president of the Media Freedom Foundation/Project Censored.
Kimberly
Soeiro is a sociology student at Sonoma State University, library
researcher, and activist.
Special
thanks to Mickey Huff, director of Project Censored,
and Andy Roth, associate director of Project Censored, for editing and for
important suggestons for this article.
Notes
[i]
For a more scholarly background on this subject, the following are required
reading: C. Wright Mills, The Power Elite, New York, Oxford University
Press, 1956; G. Willian Domhoff, Who Rules America 6th
edition, Boston, McGraw Hill Higher Education, 2009; William Carroll, The
Making of a Transnational Capitalist Class, Zed Books, 2010.
[ii]
Leslie Sklair, The Transnational Capitalist Class, Oxford, UK,
Blackwell, 2001.
Tax Havens: Super-rich hiding at least $21
trillion, BBC News, July 22, 2012, http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18944097
“World Bank Sees Progress Against Extreme Poverty,
But Flags Vulnerabilities,” World Bank, Press Release No. 2012/297/Dec.,
February 29, 2012, http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/NEWS/0,,contentMDK:23130032~pagePK:64257043~piPK:437376~theSitePK:4607,00.html.
[ix]
On the extraction of surplus-value from labor, see Karl Marx, Capital,
Vol. 3 (New York and London: Penguin, 1991[1894]).
[x]
See, e.g., Paul Burkett, Marx and Nature: A Red and Green Perspective
(New York: St. Martins, 1999), Chapter 6; for additional information on the Fair
Share of the Common Heritage see, http://www.fairsharecommonheritage.org/.
[xi]
Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold, Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders, June
15, 2011, document April 28, 2001, www.ecocumentview.com/FCX_MTG.
“Freeport Indonesia Miners, Tribesmen Defend Road
Blockades,” Reuters Africa, November 4, 2011, http://af.reuters.com/article/metalsNews/idAFL4E7M410020111104.
[xiii]
“Police Admit to Receiving Freeport ‘Lunch Money,’” Frank Arnaz, Jakarta
Globe, October 28, 2011,
“Indonesia must investigate mine strike protest
killing,” Amnesty International News, October 10, 2011, http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/indonesia-must-investigate-mine-strike-protest-killing-2011-10-10;
West Papua Report, November 2011, http://www.etan.org/issues/wpapua/2011/1111wpap.htm.
, | November 7, 2011, http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/business/striking-freeport-employees-lower-wage-increase-demands/476800.
[xvi]
Alex Emery, “Freeport Cerro Verde, Workers Sign Three-Year Labor Accord,”
Bloomberg News,
December 22, 2011, http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-22/freeport-cerro-verde-peru-workers-sign-three-year-labor-accord.
, December 14, 2011, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203893404577098222935896112.html.
March 1, 2012, http://westpapuamedia.info/tag/freeport-McMoRan/.
(Thailand), November 30, 2011, http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/Reasons-to-go-to-Darwin-30170893.html
[xxi]
Karishma Vaswani, “US Firm Freeport Struggles to Escape Its Past in Papua,”
BBC News, Jakarta,
Phoenix Arizona, October 28, 2011, Youtube report:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvJxy2GvOHE.
BlackRock About Us: http://www2.blackrock.com/global/home/AboutUs/index.htm.
[xxiv]
Data for this section is drawn for StreetInsider.com.
[xxv]
Data for the corporations listed in this section comes fron the annual report at
each corporation’s website. Biography information was gained from the FAX annual
report to investors and online biographies for individuals wihen available.
, October 26, 2011, http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0025995.
[xxvii]
Willian Robinson and Jerry Harris, “Towards a Global Ruling Class? Globalization
and the Transnational Capitalist Class,” Science and Society
64, no. 1 (Spring 2000).
[xxviii]
Val Burris, “Interlocking Directorates and Political Cohesion Among Corporate
Elites,” American Journal of Sociology 3, no. 1 (July 2005).
[xxix]
Peter Phillips and Mickey Huff, “Truth Emergency: Inside the Military-Industrial
Media Empire,” Censored 2010 (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2009),
197–220.
Verizon Financials 2012, http://www22.verizon.com/investor/
Hoovers describes Verizon as, “the #2 US telecom services provider overall after
AT&T, but it holds the top spot in wireless services ahead of rival AT&T
Mobility.” Hoovers Inc. http://www.hoovers.com/company/Verizon_Communications_Inc/rfrski-1.html.
[xxxii]
David Rothkopf, SuperClass: the Global Power Elite and the World They are
Making (New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2008).
[xxxiii]
Peter Dale Scott, American War Machine, Deep Politics, the CIA Global Drug
Connection, and the Road to Afghanistan (Lanham, MD: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, 2010). See also Censored Story #22, “Wachovia Bank
Laundered Money for Latin American Drug Cartels,” in Chapter 1.
[xxxiv]
David Rothkopf, Superclass, Public Address: Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, April 9, 2008.
NATO: Defence Against Terrorism Programme, http://www.nato.int/cps/en/SID-EBFFE857-6607109D/natolive/topics_50313.htm?selectedLocale=en.
For an expanded analysis of the history of US
“global dominance,” see Peter Phillips, Bridget Thornton and Celeste Vogler,
“The Global Dominance Group: 9/11 Pre-Warnings & Election Irregularities in
Context,” May 2, 2010, http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/the-global-dominance-group/
and Peter Phillips, Bridget Thornton, and Lew Brown, “The Global Dominance Group
and U.S. Corporate Media,” Censored 2007 (New York: Seven Stories, 2006),
307–333.
[xxxviii]
Willian Robinson and Jerry Harris, “Towards a Global Ruling Class? Globalization
and the Transnational Capitalist Class,” Science and Society
64, no. 1 (Spring 2000).
[xxxix]
John Pilger, The New Rulers of the World (New York: Verso, 2003).
[xl]
Michel Chossudovsky and Andrew Gavin Marshall, eds., The Global Economic
Crisis (Montréal: Global Research Publishers, 2010).
[xli]
Dennis Loo, Globalization and the Demolition of Society (Glendale, CA:
Larkmead Press, 2011).
[xlii]
Andrew Kolin, State Power and Democracy (New York: Palgrave
MacMillan,c2011), 141.
[xliii]
Loo, Globalization, op cit., 357.
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