From Nationalization to Neoliberalism: How Privatization Weakened America’s Industrial Core

The 1930s Crisis & Wartime Mobilization
During the Great Depression, massive private-sector failures forced widespread nationalization of industries. As the epicenter of the crisis, the U.S. suffered most severely—with contested estimates of up to 7 million starvation deaths. This state-led restructuring created an industrial juggernaut: Government-owned factories enabled America’s unprecedented WWII production, building 300,000 aircraft and 100,000 tanks in five years.

Postwar Privatization Wave

SectorTimelineKey Actions
Defense1945–1965– Truman/Eisenhower: Rapid sell-off of arms plants
– McNamara (1961–1968): Closed remaining state-owned facilities
Railroads1970s–1980s– 1970: Amtrak nationalized passenger rail (still state-run)
– 1980: Staggers Act privatized freight rail → safety declines
Housing Finance1968–1970– Fannie Mae fully privatized by 1970
Postal ServiceOngoing– Trump proposed privatization (2018); remains government corporation

Consequences of Dismantling State Capacity

  1. Military Decline:
    • Loss of integrated supply chains contributed to defeats in Korea/Vietnam.
  2. Infrastructure Decay:
    • Private freight operators cut 30% of rail lines by 1990; maintenance spending dropped 45%.
  3. Housing Instability:
    • Privatized Fannie Mae prioritized profits, fueling 2008 subprime crisis.

The “Parasitic Dependency” Critique
With self-sustaining industrial ability gutted, the U.S. shifted to:

  • Financialization: Wall Street profits grew 400% (1980–2000) while manufacturing halved.
  • Global Extraction: Dollar hegemony and sanctions replaced domestic production.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *