Hi all,

This article by Mariana Mazzucato sounds a lot to me like the current campaign 
motto of the non-incumbent US political party, i.e., to rebuild a "better" 
version of the US and global economy after Covid-19.

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-10-02/capitalism-after-covid-19-pandemic

The main political question of 2020 then seems to me to be:  will conservative 
entities "pull out all the stops" to prevent the loss of the executive and 
legislative branches next month, because they will not ever accept a Mazzucato 
type agenda?  Or, is it pretty much OK with them so they will let the electoral 
process put them out of power (to some degree) for a cycle or two?

My guess is that total or near-total cancellation of US democratic processes 
carries a cost with it, and US conservatives do not have enough to gain in 
November to make it worth the cost.  So, they accept minority status for a 
while and allow the voting process to go ahead somewhat.  I personally think 
this is an 80% chance.

However, if there is some kind of subterranean agenda like a major war being 
planned by which conservatives will decide to pull out all the stops to win, 
that changes the ratio considerably.  In either case, political economy will 
remain to some degree afflicted by injustice, inequality, and corruption; in my 
opinion much more so if the conservatives go all-out to retain power and less 
so if the centrists are allowed to win.

Clearly the Mazzucato approach includes more of the social conscience which 
even Adam Smith called for, i.e., laws, regulation, and cultural norms to act 
as guardrails against the most vicious and brutal kind of market practices 
exemplified by laissez-faire, chien-mange-chien, and so forth.  At some point 
adamant libertarianism does begin to make literally no sense.

Given the rather loose ties to democratic process that US conservatives adhere 
to, it does seem prudent to me to think in terms of cultural activities which 
may be needed to advance progress, or economic creativity a la Mazzucato, in 
the absence of a genuinely compulsory political structure of authority.

Or to put it another way, if worse comes to worst are there still cultural 
activities which can keep progress resilient after the loss of virtually all 
political agency?  We may find out.

All best wishes and regards,

Max

PS -- fun Leonardo image about the election: The Battle of Anghiari, by Rubens. 
 🙂

From the article:
More than 50 years later, in the midst of a global pandemic, the world has a 
chance to attempt an even more ambitious moonshot: the creation of a better 
economy. This economy would be more inclusive and sustainable. It would emit 
less carbon, generate less inequality, build modern public transport, provide 
digital access for all, and offer universal health care. More immediately, it 
would make a COVID-19 vaccine available to everyone. Creating this type of 
economy will require a type of public-private collaboration that hasn’t been 
seen in decades.

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