Capitalism is dead; long live capitalism


Capitalism is Dead, Long Live Capitalism

January 26, 2012

FTimes Editorial (12-27-11)

Capitalism is dead; long live capitalism

The market economy is the most successful mechanism for creating prosperity humanity knows. Allied to modern science, it has done more than transform the world economy; it has transformed the world. For the first time in history, the world’s principal states rely on the market economy to develop their economies. Almost as important, they rely on a global market economy. Contemporary states are destined to co-operate with one another if they are to prosper.

Yet the market economy is not as unchangeable as the laws of the Medes and the Persians in the book of Daniel. It is successful not because it stays the same, but because it does not. The driving force is the desire of all human beings to work for the betterment of themselves and their families. The mechanism is the equally natural search for a better deal. But institutional settings and relationships with political institutions have always been open to change. This very adaptability has ensured the survival of market economies.

Two centuries ago there was no limited liability, no personal bankruptcy, little central banking, no environmental regulation and no unemployment insurance. All these changes occurred in response to economic or political pressures. All brought with them new solutions and new challenges. At a time of ongoing financial shocks, this need for adaptation has not ended. On the contrary, it is as important as ever.

What, then, are the challenges that matter today? The libertarian movement in the US, whose standard-bearer is Ron Paul, is clear about the answer: abolish nearly all of these policy innovations and go back, as far as possible, to the capitalism of the late 19th century. Outside the US this current of opinion holds little sway. Even inside the US, it is merely a component of the Republican coalition. It is more than a mere curiosity – but it is not going to shape the future.

More relevant is asking how far the resurgent capitalism that emerged in the 1980s, under the leadership of Ronald Reagan in the US and Margaret Thatcher in the UK, now needs to be reformed. The answer is that it must be, for it has proved not just unstable, but, in important respects, unjust. The result has not only been a devastating crisis, but also a sense that the achievement of extraordinary wealth may not reflect exceptional merit. In societies that rely on consent, this is politically corrosive.

At the heart of the renewed debate are three issues: finance, corporate governance, and taxation. These are the questions raised by the “occupy” movements, which, for all their intellectual incoherence, have altered the terms of the political debate.

The financial sector grew too big, partly because risks were misunderstood and partly because it was encouraged by policymakers to expand. It will need to be better constrained in future, partly by ensuring the risks it creates are internalised. Again, corporate management has too often rigged executive compensation in its own interests, rather than that of shareholders. Finally, a plethora of incentives have allowed many of the most successful people to escape taxation. In all these respects, the modern economy needs reform, to become both fairer and more efficient.

Beyond such reforms, the debate over macroeconomic stabilisation that goes back to the 1930s has been renewed. In the years up to the crisis, the broad consensus was that a monetary policy targeted at inflation was enough. This view has been exploded. After the extended period of desperate improvisation now under way, a new synthesis will be required, one that takes proper account of asset prices, leverage and the role of central banks as lenders of last resort.

Capitalism will endure, by changing. That is the lesson of the past. It is just as relevant today.


13 thoughts on “Capitalism is dead; long live capitalism

  1. Ron Paul will be out soon. There is an ongoing fight between Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, both Republicans, for the right to challenge the incumbent President Barack Obama in November 12, 2012.

    New promises and new hopes are being promoted, but the bottom line is going to be about jobs and economic growth. So far, on the basis of his recent State of the Union Address, President Obama seems to know what must and can be done. That makes him a formidable opponent. Can someone in the US reading this thread give us a real feel of what is happening and the mood in America as the Republican primary is heading towards Florida?–Din Merican

  2. Capitalism is not dead. The point is that Capitalism has allowed the crooks to live happily ever after.
    _____________
    Greed, that is the negative side of rabid capitalism. Wall Street capitalism must be monitored and managed. Those who are found guilty should end in Folsom prison.–Din Merican

  3. What is happening is that the ideological rift between Republicans and Democrats has never been wider. The Republicans hate the sight of Obama and are doing all they could to make Obama a one-term president — and chances are they will succeed. Republicans stand for small government and a free market.

    The Democrats see a role for government and that the present economic malaise is due to under regulation and a runaway capitalist system, of collusion between government and big business. Republicans want government to get out of the way as much as possible so they could feed their economic greed. They care less for the widening gap between rich and poor. They do not think rich Americans should be penalised for putting their capital at risk. On the other hand they should be rewarded as their risk taking creates jobs. They hate the idea that they should subsidise those who have less.

    It is the pioneering spirit of the Wild West at its worst. The present primary elections see Mitt Romney as the coach driver, with whip in hand and horses galloping away. And there is Newt Gingrich, bow legged, dirty and unshaven, blocking the way looking threatening with his six shooters half drawn. Then there is Rick Santorium and his wife, the preachers with bible in hand; and Ron Paul has an arrow through his head.

    Back in Malaysia, Din Merican is about to climb on his kerbau and take that slow ride into the sunset.
    _______________
    Yes, Mongkut Bean. I will ride the Kerbau with the Koran in hand and will ask our wannabe monk Tean to recite his mantras in pali/sanskrit.–Din

  4. The editorial has correctly identified the two main villains of the current crisis … who started a chain reaction that has led to the misery facing so much of the world. REAGAN AND THATCHER. Theirs was not just resurgent capitalism but a pernicious attack on a system that only needed some fine tuning.

    It was Thatcher who initiated the slide in British society, from which it has never recovered.

    But the editorial is quite wrong in its second point. The market economy has undoubtedly created enormous prosperity but the most successful would have been the European Social Democracies had their unthinking politicians not embraced the market.

    Some are calling the next years as a possible lost decade. It will more likely be a lost generation unless the slate is wiped clean of debt and the financial houses that drove this fraud are disbanded.

  5. No. ‘Slow ride into the sunset’ means retirement – not an appointment with our Maker. There will be pit stops along the way to change kerbau. One will be in Phuket to pay homage to the neighborhood’s monk Tean-Rean..

  6. The fact that someone like Gingrich is in the race at all shows the sorry state of the Republican Party.

    Ron Paul… that is the man who could give Obama a good run and induce the fresh air that the US needs for a shake up. But great pity… because his party, it appears, has decided to continue sleeping.

  7. Market economy is the same as capitalism?
    A non-economist says:

    The ‘developed’ nations have made “free market” a rallying call for their political institution called Democracy in all it’s myriad distortions and manifestation, and elevated it to the status of god. They have sacrificed their farmers, farmlands, ranges, forests, wetlands, watersheds and other ecosystems. Thus destroying the human sense of Community and substituted it with nebulous concepts of Statehood, Patriotism and Nationalism. This process inculcated a form of chauvinism that drove both businessmen industrialists and their lap-dog politicians to accept universal pollution, global warming and environmental degradation as the normal cost of doing business.

    We can continue to promote unlimited free trade as a panacea for a global economic system, held together by highly vulnerable lines of communication, supply and financial deceit; and which is dependent on hugely expensive ‘police’ force couched in terms of national or regional interests. Or we can promote a decentralized world economy that ensures every nation or region a local self sufficiency in life supporting goods. This will not eliminate international trade, as it will only allow marketing of surplus goods, once local needs are met.

  8. So tell me what a ‘middle income’ trap really means?
    The rich are getting richer and the poor, destitute and starving. Where then does a ‘middle income’ wage earner stand in uncertain times such as this? Are politicians to blame or their consulting economists, who have no idea where they are headed or what they are doing?

  9. I agree with Mr Bean for the most part. The overall ideological positions of both parties have swung to the extremes. But even within parties the positions have spread, so there is little consensus even within the parties. Therefore, it is no surprise that Congress has been deadlocked since the 2010 elections.

    In their attempts to ensure Obama is one-term president, the Republicans have taken the position to oppose anything and everything Obama proposes. I am sure a suggestion by Obama to lower taxes on the rich would even be met with strong opposition. The Republicans have put any effort to help the economy recover on the back burner in order to fight with Obama. This strategy may very well come back to haunt them in the election.

    As far as Republican candidates go, they have expended too much energy bickering with one another. Personally, I find it amazing that with so much effort to get Obama out of office, the Republican Party could not find more electable candidates to reach their goal.
    __________
    After 8 years of Republican rule by GW Bush and the experience of two illegal wars (in Iraq and Afghanistan), Americans should stick with Obama. They should show us, the rest of the world that white supremacy is a thing of the past. Elect Obama because he has a clear agenda for getting America out of the woods and because he is very competent.The fact that he is African-American is reality, but it is not the issue. Obama has the qualities of an enlightened leader who holds family values dear.–Din Merican

  10. Kirk is right about the split even among Republicans. Look who they have chosen to be their star player in giving the Republican response to Obama’s State of the Union Address. It is Mitch Daniel, Governor of Indiana whose Republican supporters rose against him when he stripped them of their union rights. He was also Bush’s Budget Director and just look at the deficit he ran up during his term. He grossly underestimated the cost of the Iraq War – and this is the best guy the Republicans could come up with to deliver their response to the President’s State of the Union Address? If you listen to the talking heads over FOX News you would think Obama caused the recession and the massive unemployment.

  11. Obama has the qualities of an enlightened leader who holds family values dear.–Din Merican

    And look at what Newt Gingrich brings to the table !

    The Republicans think Obama does not have the executive experience necessary to run the White House, is incompetent and has no leadership quality. FOX News beats on Obama every single day (underline every single day) to drive home the point. It is not his color.

  12. Why only Wall Street Capitalism should be monitored by Folsom Prision? All Capitalism must be minitored by Folsom Prision.

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