I have posted the following message at "Ecological Headstand" --
http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/2010/11/foreword-and-back.html --
with embedded links that are easier to follow.


The day before yesterday, while searching for an online copy of an article
on the rhetoric of Polish accounting he had cited many years ago,
Sandwichman stumbled upon an old email list exchange from thirteen years ago
between himself and the inestimable Miracle Max. The exchange illuminates
the present economic crisis and the inadequate political responses to it
from the left as only "a tiger's leap into the past" can.

(Rhetoric of Polish accounting: http://www.docin.com/p-91689573.html)

The question Max was addressing was the attitude of the left, broadly
defined, toward financial bailouts. At that time, it was South Korea on the
block. Max's instinct was that "we're going to see more rather than less of
these events -- crises that fall short of apocalypse but which reflect
significant acts of economic exploitation and lost political opportunities."
Who can argue with that? "It seems to me," Max mused, "that our politics
lacks the right response to the current and incipient financial events. By
"our" I include both a liberal, muddle-through stance and a radical,
sit-back-and-gawk posture." Thirteen years on and we haven't learned a
bloody thing!

(Max's "Drawing the Line":
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg21668.html)

Sandwichman's reply called for "attention to something the left generally
hasn't been too interested in: accounting standards." Remember, this was
four years before the Enron, Arthur Anderson, etc., etc. debacle. It went on
to contrast the much-hyped public drama of bailout negotiations with the
arcane minutiae of the behind-the-scenes "technical" discourse of accounting
where the conventions of what constitutes the bottom lines are drawn.

(Sandwichman's reply:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg21656.html}

Max answered that he'd "like to hear more on the substance of the accounting
issues, which really get my juices flowing" and Sandwichman replied that he,
too, would like to hear more. "It seems to me that there is a missing link
that I'll call 'labour accounting within capitalism.'  …I have a sense of
what the missing pieces are but the task of pulling the loose threads
together is huge. I could write an article or even a book, but I have a
sense there is an entire missing sub-discipline here."

(Max: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg21652.html)
(S'man: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg23619.html)

Thirteen years later, the Sandwichman retreated to idyllic Mesa Refuge in
Point Reyes Station, California to work on the revision of his manuscript.
The gist of that revision was to bring the topic of social accounting –
which had been buried in the entrails of a pair of chapters dealing with
other matters – to the fore. The book, Jobs, Liberty and the Bottom Line (an
unpublished manuscript), can serve as an introduction to that "missing
sub-discipline" but more urgently it stands as an indictment of broad left
complacency in assenting to the grammar and vocabulary of a bankrupt model
of social accounting, riddled with "wondrous errors and confusions," whose
overt purpose is anathema to the prospects of human emancipation.

(Jobs, Liberty and the Bottom Line:
http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/p/jobs-liberty-and-bottom-line.html)

"One of the most important points in the whole of political economy,"
according to Friedrich Engels, arose out of the problematic relationship
between the ordinary business practice of book-keeping and political economy
proper. Simon Kuznets was no flaming radical but he recognized and warned of
the "dangerous implications that should be obvious" of fetishizing, in the
national income accounts, government itself as the ultimate consumer.
Exactly what Kuznets meant by that hinges on an understanding of such arcane
points such as how to distinguish between intermediate goods and final goods
and just what constitutes "duplication," which I hope this brief historical
note will clarify. The proper response to every assertion that "economic
growth is essential" or that "getting the GDP moving again" would
"strengthen labor" should be "do you want that growth with or without
'double counting'?"

("One of the most important points":
http://econospeak.blogspot.com/2008/10/second-shoe-part-ii.html)
(A note on duplication and intermediate goods:
http://ecologicalheadstand.blogspot.com/p/simon-kuznetss-anti-intellectualism.html
)

-- 
Sandwichman
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