Capitalism and its discontents
 
 
Ernie :
I agree but with a qualification. Something I have said before  but which 
is worth repeating.
 
Capitalism, in whatever form, is larded with contradictions, is flawed in  
100 ways,
is unjust, it breeds financial criminals, it is far more inefficient than  
most people admit,
it results in huge and unjustifiable disparities in wealth, it generates  
social problems
one after another, it often results in environmental crises,  it often  
provides
motivation for war or for exploitation, it often is unethical  generally,
and on and on. 
 
But, to borrow a concept from Winston Churchill and adapt it a  little,
it is better  --by far-- than any other economic system ever  devised.
 
This is the crux of the problem. The alternatives are all worse.
But the objective value of Capitalism is always questionable.  It always is 
in need
of reforms, and always gets half-baked reforms when really hard-nosed
reforms are most needed.
 
I have no solution to this problem.
 
Billy
 
=================================================
 
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 7/22/2010 5:30:06 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
Capitalism looks back to the future
_http://www.johnkay.com/2010/07/19/capitalism-looks-back-to-the-future/_ 
(http://www.johnkay.com/2010/07/19/capitalism-looks-back-to-the-future/)   
____________________________________
  
Capitalism looks back to the future
 
 
 
 
Capitalism looks back to the future
19 July 2010, Financial Times 
 
John reviews Capitalism 4.0: The Birth of a New Economy by  Anatole 
Kaletsky – a provocative review of many current political and economic  
controversies, which includes a substantial section on the failures of  
economic 
theory. 
Capitalism 1 was a world of laisser faire. This concept dominated economics 
 and economic policy from The Wealth of Nations to the Great  Depression. 
Capitalism 2, the product of that depression, recognised the  interdependence 
of politics and economics, and gave government a role in  macroeconomic 
management and the direction of industry. It fell apart in the  inflationary 
malaise of the 1970s. 
The coming of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher inaugurated Capitalism 3, 
 a regime of market fundamentalism in which inequality widened and the  
financial sector flourished. The credit crunch of 2007-08 is the trigger for  
an equally substantial revision. Today we face the prospect, not of the 
demise  of capitalism, but of a new form – Capitalism 4. 
 
That is the thesis of Anatole Kaletsky, an editor-at-large for The Times  
and a prolific commentator. His book is a provocative review of many current  
political and economic controversies, and includes a substantial section on 
 the failures of economic theory. A tone of universal certainty prevails  
throughout – two pages tell us what should be done about Britain’s National  
Health Service, another two pages describe the answer to world energy 
problems  and climate change. 
Such confidence is somewhat inconsistent with the book’s philosophical  
approach: the world is characterised by radical and inescapable uncertainty,  
which we cannot eliminate but can manage. The enduring strength of capitalism 
 is adaptability, which makes it reasonable to have confidence that 
problems  will be solved without specific knowledge of the mechanics of their  
solution. 
This is a very different view of capitalism from market fundamentalism,  
which believes that human progress is best achieved by imposing as few  
restrictions as possible on a natural impetus towards greed, and that economic  
decisions are based on rational expectations in efficient markets in which  
prices incorporate all possible knowledge of the future. In my view Kaletsky  
is absolutely spot on in this analysis of why capitalism works, and in his  
explanation of why market fundamentalism has proved such a dangerously  
misleading guide to policy. 
So what does Kaletsky’s Capitalism 4.0, which rejects both laisser faire  
and any economic model derived from efficient markets or rational  
expectations, look like? Capitalism 4 controls government spending but prefers  
Keynesian stimulus to budget-balancing austerity. It favours free markets, but  
not uncritically, and is concerned to mitigate inequality. Capitalism 4 is,  
above all, pragmatic. In fact, it looks distinctly like Capitalism 2. 
If we could delete the years 1965-85 from history, Capitalism 2 mostly  
worked pretty well. Why did it go wrong? For Kaletsky, the decisive event was  
President Richard Nixon’s abandonment of the dollar’s link to gold in 1971, 
 which inaugurated the era of floating exchange rates. But Nixon’s 
devaluation  was less the cause of inflation than the result: price levels 
around 
the  developed world had been rising at an accelerating rate since the 1950s. 
The explanation lies elsewhere. The stability and widely distributed growth 
 achieved under Capitalism 2 created rising expectations that growth was  
eventually insufficient to satisfy. Inflation was the easiest political  
response. Capitalism 3 was a reaction to that failure. 
It is good to be pragmatic, but pragmatic policies that are not rooted in  
any guiding principles are incoherent. That was the experience of Kaletsky’s 
 two principal villains – Nixon; and the man whom Kaletsky holds personally 
 responsible for the credit crunch, Hank Paulson, the former Treasury  
secretary. The criticism is not unfair – even among politicians Nixon was  
unusually unprincipled and Mr Paulson unusually incompetent. But Kaletsky’s  
view 
of history is one that exaggerates the role of particular individuals and  
decisions. The collapse of Capitalism 2 was not caused by Nixon, nor the  
collapse of Capitalism 3 by Mr Paulson: the collapse of these modes of  
capitalist behaviour was the product of their own internal contradictions, to  
borrow a phrase, and Capitalism 4 can only thrive if it resolves the  
contradictions of Capitalism 2 more effectively than did the politicians of  
the era 
of the Great Society and “you’ve never had it so good”. 
There are now many – too many – books on the credit crunch. Kaletsky’s  
considerable achievement is to put these events in a perspective that looks  
back to history and forward to an extended future, and to do so in a 
framework  which goes far beyond a chronology of events. His book is a major 
contribution  to the debate on the nature of the market economy that needs to 
follow the  practical failures of market fundamentalism. 
Capitalism 4.0: The Birth of a New Economy, by Anatole Kaletsky,  
Bloomsbury, 2010
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_David  Beckham’s career exemplifies the paradox of expertise - the true 
expert cannot  explain how he does it._ 
(http://www.johnkay.com/2006/07/04/footballing-robots-will-never-bend-it-like-beckham/)
 
04 July 2006, Financial Times
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