Dear All,

I would like to share some ideas contained in my new Verso book The Great
Recoil, which I think some of you will be interested in.

The key argument of the book is that we are moving away from neoliberalism
and towards and neo-statism, a return of the interventionist state
fundamentally concerned with issues of protection and security (in their
manifold, regressive and progressive, manifestations). This neo-statism is
visible at different levels: 1) in massive state mobilisation during the
pandemic, 2) in the return of deficit spending and some elements of trade
protectionism and industrial policy; 3) in the way in which climate change
and the green transition seem to call for a return of state dirigisme.

This neo-statism should be seen as the ideological (or better
meta-ideological) master frame of a new ideological era, comparable to
previous ideological eras (social-democratic and neoliberal as the most
recent ones). It does not automatically mean a return of socialism or
social-democracy. Rather it means that political common sense is changing
and moving away from notion of self-regulating markets, forcing both the
left and the right to find adaptive positions in this new landscape.

The dividing question is who the new post-pandemic state should protect and
from what. For the right it is obviously immigrants and foreign forces
those that pose a threat, as well as the poor that demand redistribution
away from the rich. But also the left is articulating its own discourse of
state protection: from the mending of social safety nets, to the focus on
health and care, to end with the discourse of safe-guarding democracy by
the likes of AOC and Ilhan Omar.

While until recently political debate was focused on the question of how
should we manage the market, the key question now is how to use the state,
with which means and to what ends. This has huge implications for strategy,
discourse and practice. Now that the phantasy of self-regulating market and
anti-power suspicion has partly dissolved the key question becomes what
should be done with the state, and how its complicity in massive social
inequality should be addressed.

I hope this is of interest. I'd be glad to hear your ideas on this and
particularly to what extent you agree with this diagnosis of neo-statism
acquiring centre-stage in post-pandemic politics and what the implications
may be.

For more information on the book:
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3774-the-great-recoil

Best,

Paolo
#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to