On
Tuesday, Elon Musk launched some stuff into space. The SpaceX Falcon
Heavy rocket was shot into the Solar System, tailed by a Tesla
Roadster blasting David Bowie songs, reportedly the fastest car ever
to be released into orbit. Each Falcon launch is only expected to
cost around $90 million—a bargain in the world of extraterrestrial
exploration.
Scientific
American gawked,
“Elon Musk Does It Again,” praising the “bold technological
innovations and newfound operational efficiencies that allow SpaceX
to not only build its rockets for less money, but also reuse them.”
That view—shared by several other outlets—fits comfortably with
the Tony Stark-like image Musk has crafted for himself over the
years: a quirky and slightly off-kilter playboy genius inventor
capable of conquering everything from outer space to the climate
crisis with the sheer force of his imagination.
One
of Musk’s long-term goals is to create a self-sustaining colony on
Mars, and make humanity an interplanetary species. He hopes to
shoot two
very wealthy people around the moon at some point this year.
Musk has invested an awful lot of public money into making those
dreams a reality. But why should Americans keep footing the bill for
projects where only Musk and his wealthy friends can reap the
rewards? Enter: the case for nationalizing Elon Musk, and making the
U.S. government a major stakeholder in his companies.
The
common logic now holds that the private sector—and prodigies like
Musk, in particular—are better at coming up with world-changing
ideas than the public sector, which is allegedly bloated and allergic
to new, outside-the-box thinking. Corporations’ hunt for profits
and lack of bureaucratic constraints, it’s said, compel
cutting-edge research and development in a way that the government is
simply incapable of. With any hope, more of these billionaires’
breakthroughs than not will be in the public interest.
The
reality, as economist Mariana Mazzucato argues in her 2013 book The
Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector
Myths,
is very different. Many of the companies that are today considered to
be headed by brilliant savants—people like Steve Jobs and, yes,
Elon Musk—owe much of their success to decades of public sector
innovation, through repackaging technologies developed over the
course of several decades into new products. Take the iPhone,
essentially a collection of Defense Department research and National
Science Foundation-grant projects packed into one shiny machine.
“The
prospect of the State owning a stake in a private corporation may be
anathema to many parts of the capitalist world,” Mazzucato writes,
“but given that governments are already investing in the private
sector, they may as well earn a return on those investments.”
As
she notes, Musk’s future-oriented empire—Tesla Motors, SolarCity
and SpaceX—has benefitted from around $5 billion in local, state
and federal government support, not to mention many years of
foundational public research into programs like rocket technology.
SpaceX itself exists largely for the sake of competing for government
contracts, like its $5.5 billion partnership with NASA and the U.S.
Air Force. The U.S. Department of Energy invested directly in that
company, as well as in Tesla’s work on battery technology and solar
panels.
The latter is perhaps the biggest success story of the
Department of Energy stimulus grant that also supported Solyndra, a
solar energy company reliably held up by the Right as an example of
the government’s failure to make wise investment decisions.
“Taxpayers footed the bill for Solyndra’s losses—yet got hardly
any of Tesla’s profits,” Mazzucato notes.
As
Mazzucato finds, the private sector hasn’t done much to earn its
reputation as a risk-taker. Corporations and venture capitalists
often adopt conservative thinking and fall into “path dependency,”
and are generally reluctant to invest in important early-stage
research that won’t necessarily turn a profit in the short-run.
This kind of research is inherently risky, and the vast majority of
this kind of protean R&D (research and development) fails. For
every internet—birthed in the Defense Department—there are a well
over a dozen Solyndras, but it’s virtually impossible to have one
without the other.
The
problem runs deeper still. Whereas in the past public sector research
has been able to attract top-tier talent, the myth that the private
sector can do what the State can’t has created a negative feedback
loop whereby bright young scientists and engineers flock toward a
private sector that goes on to further its reputation for being the
place where the real innovation
is happening.
The
alternative Mazzucato suggests is to socialize risk and reward alike,
rather than simply allowing companies that enjoy the benefits of
public innovation to funnel their profits into things like stock
buybacks and tax havens—or, for that matter, flamethrowers.
When companies like SpaceX make it big, they’d be obligated to
return some portion of their gains to the public infrastructure that
helped them succeed, expanding the government’s capacity to
facilitate more innovative development.
All
this is not to say that there isn’t a critical role to play for
people like Jobs and Musk in bringing new technology to the market.
In all likelihood, Tesla’s Powerwall and SolarCity panels will play
a key role in our transition off of fossil fuels. But lionizing Musk
as the sole creator of the Powerwall and this week’s space launch
stands to perpetuate a dangerous series of myths about who’s
responsible for such cutting-edge development. Through smart
supply-and-demand-side policy, states can play a crucial role in
shaping and creating markets for the technologies we’ll need to
navigate the 21st century. This can happen not just through R&D
but also through developments like fuel efficiency standards, which
encourage carmakers to prioritize vehicles that run off of renewable
energy.
Given
the mounting reality of climate change and the necessity to rapidly
switch over to a clean energy economy, there’s also a bigger
question about how actively the state should be encouraging
certain kinds of
research and manufacturing. During World War II, the United States
essentially had a planned
economy: By 1945, around a quarter of manufacturing in the
country was under state control. The reason for that was simple—the
U.S. government saw an existential threat, and directed some of its
biggest corporations to pitch in to stop it or else risk getting
taken over by the state.
There’s
some Cold War nostalgia to hoisting shiny objects into orbit—a
telegenic show of America’s technological supremacy. But it may not
be much solace to coastal residents forced to flee in the coming
decades, whose homes are rendered unlivable by a mixture of extreme
weather and crumbling, antiquated infrastructure. And if you’ve
watched any number of big-budget sci-fi productions over the last
several years, it’s not hard to imagine Musk’s Martian colony
spinning off into some Elysium-style eco-apartheid, where the
rich—for the right price—can escape to new worlds while the rest
of us make do on a planet of dystopian slums, swamps and deserts.
Today,
the risk posed by climate change is greater still than that posed by
fascism on the eve of World War II, threatening to bring about a
planet that’s uninhabitable for humans, and plenty hostile to them
in the meantime. In such a context, do we need to
launch cars into space? Maybe not. If the public sector is going to
continue footing the bill for Elon Musk’s fantasies, though, he
should at least have to give back some credit, and a cut of the
profits.
>> The article above was written by Kate Aronoff, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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