On 2/26/12 12:51 PM, Jim Devine wrote:
> There's an interesting story in today's NY TIMES about the success of
> Bell Labs. [ 
> http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/26/opinion/sunday/innovation-and-the-bell-labs-miracle.html
> ] It would be interesting to compare Bell Labs to Lucent Technologies
> and Alcatel-Lucent, which seem to be a failure compared to BL. I'm no
> expert, but Lucent's history suggests that competitive capitalism can
> slow or even prevent serious invention (while AT&T's monopoly
> capitalism stifled the implementation of inventions). Another thing
> the article should have examined is the role of intellectual property
> rights. While Bell Labs was all about sharing information, the new
> regime is about keeping knowledge secret.
>

Kotz argues that the Soviet economy was closing the gap with the west 
through the 70s until it went into a slump around 1975. That year the 
Soviet economy was rated at 50% of the west's from the standpoint of 
productivity. This slump was possible to overcome within the parameters 
of socialism, but the ruling bodies had already begun considering 
dumping the system for capitalism.

The most interesting points were made around the question of innovation. 
Kotz makes a convincing case that competition such as the kind that 
exists in the Adam Smith model is HOSTILE to technical innovation. 
Capitalist firms would under-invest normally because their competitors 
can easily mimic the new improvements without undergoing the same 
expenditures. In reality, monopolistic firms are generally the ones that 
promote R&D, especially those that receive tax subsidies or have ties to 
the military. Bell Labs was a major innovator for many decades, but as 
soon as the phone companies were broken up, Bell Labs switched to market 
research from pure science or engineering. The implication for 
socialists is clear. Socialism, rather than capitalism, is potentially a 
source of rapid modernization and progress rather than capitalism. Kotz 
mentioned that the most extensive development of these ideas is 
contained in Pat Devine's articles and books.

full: http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/economics/markets.htm
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to