Terimakasih, akan saya cari. Bung Karno juga telah sering menganjurkan
pemakaian pisau analisis Marxistis, yang ternyata berlaku sampai tidak tahu
kapan.
Salam, Bismo DG

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Sunny
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Wednesday, September 26, 2007 11:54 PM
  Subject: Re: [nasional-list] Mas Bismo ---> Goenawan Mohamad: "Liberalisme 
adalah suatu skandal"


  Silahkan baca ini kalau bisa didapat di perpustakaan setempat :

  John Cassidy, "THE RETURN OF KARL MARX," The New Yorker, October 20, 1997,
  p. 248

  Keywords
  Capitalism;
  Communism;
  Economics;
  Marx, Karl
  THE NEXT THINKER about Karl Marx's influence as an economist... Writer was
  talking with a college friend who now worked at a big Wall Street investment
  bank... To my surprise, he brought up Karl Marx. "The longer I spend on Wall
  Street, the more convinced I am that Marx was right," he said. I assumed he
  was joking. "There is a Nobel Prize waiting for the economist who resurrects
  Marx and puts it all together in a coherent model," he continued, quite
  seriously. "I am absolutely convinced that Marx's approach is the best way
  to look at capitalism." I didn't hide my astonishment. We had both studied
  economics during the early eighties at Oxford, where most of our teachers
  agreed with Keynes that Marx's economic theories were "complicated
  hocus-pocus" and Communism was "an insult to our intelligence." The
  prevailing attitude among bright students of our generation was that Marx's
  arguments were fit only for polytechnic lecturers and aspiring Labour Party
  politicians... More than fifty years ago, Edmund Wilson noted that much of
  Marx's prose "hypnotizes the reader with its paradoxes and eventually puts
  him to sleep." The passing decades have not made the going any easier. Marx
  was ludicrously prolix... The writer gradually began to understand what his
  friend meant. In many ways, Marx's legacy has been obscured by the failure
  of Communism, which wasn't his primary interest. In fact, he had little to
  say about how a socialist society should operate, and what he did write,
  about the withering away of the state and so on, wasn't very
  helpful--something Lenin and his comrades quickly discovered after seizing
  power... When Marx wasn't driving the reader to distraction, he wrote
  riveting passages about globalization, inequality, political corruption,
  monopolization, technical progress, the decline of high culture, and the
  enervating nature of modern existence--issues that economists are now
  confronting anew... Marx was born in 1818, and died in 1883... Marx wasn't a
  crude reductionist, but he did believe that the way in which society
  organized production ultimately shaped people's attitudes and beliefs.
  Capitalism, for example, made human beings subjugate themselves to base
  avarice... "Globalization" is the buzzword of the late twentieth century, on
  the lips of everybody from Jiang Zemin to Tony Blair, but Marx predicted
  most of its ramifications a hundred and fifty years ago... Globalization is
  set to become the biggest political issue of the next century... In one way,
  Marx's efforts were a failure. His mathematical model of the economy, which
  depended on the idea that labor is the source of all value, was riven with
  internal inconsistencies and is rarely studied these days.... One important
  lesson Marx taught is that capitalism tends toward monopoly--an observation
  that was far from obvious in his day--giving rise to a need for strong
  regulation.... Likewise endogenous-growth theory models are undoubtedly
  Marxist in spirit, since their main aim is to demonstrate how technical
  progress emerges from the competitive process, and not from Heaven, as in
  the neoclassical model. Describes Marx's "theory of immiseration" which says
  that profits would increase faster than wages, so that workers would become
  poorer relative to capitalists over time, and this is what happened during
  the last two decades. Inflation-adjusted wages are still below their 1973
  levels, but profits have soared. ... A key question for the future, the
  answer to which will determine the fate of the soaring slock market and much
  else, is whether capital can hold on to its recent gains. Writer visits
  Highgate Cemetery, where he visited Marx's grave... Perhaps me most enduring
  element of Marx's work is his discussion of where power lies in a capitalist
  society. This is a subject that economists, with their fixation on consumer
  choice, have neglected for decades, but recently a few of them have returned
  to Marx's idea that the circumstances in which people are forced to make
  choices are often just as important as the choices... Marx, of course,
  delighted in declaring that politicians merely carry water for their
  corporate paymasters... The sight of a President granting shady businessmen
  access to the White House in return for campaign contributions would have
  shocked him not at all. Despite his errors, he was a man for whom our
  economic system held few surprises. His books will be worth reading as long
  as capitalism endures.

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