Let's start the week with this inclusive (and implicitly humanist) message from Philip Schellekens (UNDP).

Of course, there are all sorts of questions this begs, from what actually *is* development to the Q. of whether development should still be pursued in the same way in the face of the climate crisis... but its central message that more links us than divides us remains vital if the human race is to (continue to?) prosper.

#development #climate #politics

h/t LinkedIn

@ChrisMayLA6

The contention in Sullivan & Hickel's 'Capitalism & Extreme Poverty' - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305750X22002169 - that 'the rise of capitalism... is associated with a decline in wages to below subsistence, a deterioration in human stature, and an upturn in premature mortality', and that 'significant improvements in human welfare began only... with the rise of anti-colonial and socialist political movements' - seems to me confirmed by similar evidence of current decline in the 'developed' world.

Bernie Sanders pointed out in the inquest on Trump's election that real wages in the US are lower than 50 years ago, and Kenan Malik recently made the same point about welfare benefits in the UK. The rise in life expectancy that was such a feature of the 20th century has now reversed in the most neoliberal countries like the US and UK.

The 'developing' world is, in fact, just partially recovering from an extreme form of capitalism (slavery and colonialism); the 'developed' world did so over the ''Trente Glorieuses' - the 30 years or so after the war when it built welfare states with 90% marginal tax rates - then has gone backwards, back into the more extreme form of capitalism we know doesn't work.

Capitalism and extreme poverty: A global analysis of real wages, human height, and mortality since the long 16th century

This paper assesses claims that, prior to the 19th century, around 90% of the human population lived in extreme poverty (defined as the inability to a…

@GeofCox @ChrisMayLA6
Wise words. Unfortunately, ‘extreme capitalism’ works extremely well — for those at the top, who gather to themselves not only all the wealth but also most of the political power.

@KimSJ @GeofCox

Indeed; capitalism is a system focussed on finding ways to make a surplus on economic activity, before then directing that surplus towards the richest, which is what Marx pointed out in C19th.

The big Q. is are there forms of capitalism that are less like that & from which greater balanced social welfare can be derived, or is capitalism (in all forms) an engine of increasing inequality & enrichment of the powerful elite?

And if the latter how do we replace it?

@ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @GeofCox

Public ownership of land and natural resources along with nationalised provision of essential services would go a long way towards stifling capitalist exploitation without regulating everything to the point of stagnation.

Making shareholders directly responsible for the actions of the companies they own would also help, as would closing loopholes on financial trusts and offshore savings.

100% IHT would probably be too vindictive.

@ReggieHere @KimSJ @GeofCox

Interestingly, one of the key 'shining examples' of the ultra-capitalists, Singapore, is much nearer this than they might realise (as the vast majority of housing is state/city owned)

@ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @GeofCox

Good point. Telecoms too (or at least it was)

@ReggieHere @ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @urlyman
@thegarbagebird

Ah yes - Singapore, the model small-state-free-market economy of the brexiteers - remember "Singapore on Thames" ? - Singapore, where almost all the land and 85% of housing are in public ownership, and nearly a quarter of national output is from state-owned enterprises...

I have what may be an unusual view of economic systems and how to replace them - which is not to worry about it. They change. All real economies, whatever they call themselves, are mixed - so the task of politics is to change the mix. For me, the core problem confronting us has two main aspects: inequality and climate-ecological breakdown - but at bottom these are the same problem: the over-exploitation (of people and environment) and overconsumption (by the relatively wealthy).

The remedy also has two main aspects: making tax fairer and making big business more socially and environmentally responsible. Pursuing these aims will in effect end capitalism (but not free enterprise - small business will be taxed and regulated differently, but in many ways stay as it is) - but we don't need to talk about ending capitalism, just about the harm that big business and billionaires are doing.

@GeofCox @ReggieHere @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird

Completely agree; there is no one capitalism, or even a pure form to which 'we' might aspire - there are only varieties of capitalism, and depending on how fine grained ones analytical approach, there are either some large groupings or a wide range of different mixtures.... and of course we shouldn't forget the Braudelian & Polanyian points that markets as a economic mechanism far predate modern capitalism!

@ChrisMayLA6

There's an account on here that - without irony - claims that all criticisms of capitalism are meaningless because 'pure' free market capitalism has never been tried.

@GeofCox @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird

@ReggieHere

So, basically this is an admission that capitalism has already failed.

Obvious parallel to how people started talking about how "actual communism" had never been tried.

@ChrisMayLA6 @GeofCox @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird

@androcat

Oh no. Apparently free market capitalism *hasn't* failed, so much as it's being inconvenienced by bad actors who don't know the rules....so much for the famous self-correcting markets!

The parallel with communist idealism is hugely ironic.

@ChrisMayLA6 @GeofCox @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird

@ReggieHere @androcat @ChrisMayLA6 @GeofCox @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird At the current state of consolidation, if the Trump economy tanks, I wouldn't be surprised to see Trump (or Rubio, or Vance, or whoever) introduce something akin to the old Soviet system of gosarbitrage, where Factory A is commanded by firmly worded letter to produce a specific quantity of widgets (or tomatoes, or housing units) for Factory B. The junta loves to lie, and a command economy is such a rich field for it.

@fgbjr

And the fundamental impetus of all right-wing politics (all of it, not just fascist ones) is personal gain.

Traditional conservative parties are all about hoodwinking the middle-class into voting for "pragmatic economic policy" that is actually solely for the benefit of the ultra-rich. This the politicians do for personal gain, usually juicy appointments after their term in office.

Every single time.

A command economy also has great potential for personal enrichment.

@ReggieHere @ChrisMayLA6 @GeofCox @KimSJ @urlyman @thegarbagebird

@androcat @fgbjr @ReggieHere @ChrisMayLA6 @GeofCox @urlyman @thegarbagebird
It didn’t used to be like that. “One nation” Tories genuinely cared about the plight of ordinary people. They just thought that Conservative policies were the best way to address that. People like Hesseltine or Ken Clarke. One might disagree with their solutions but at least one could have a sensible conversation starting from common objectives. Rory Stuart is still such a Tory, I think.

@KimSJ @androcat @fgbjr @ReggieHere @GeofCox @urlyman @thegarbagebird

Yes, I sort of miss One-Nation Toryism - it may have been paternalistic & sometimes its solutions were wrong headed, but as you say at least they were often genuine in the desire to make the UK a better place for all

@ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @androcat @ReggieHere @GeofCox @urlyman @thegarbagebird A question left over from our time in England: would these be the "wets"? And if so (or even if not), why did Thatcher call non-ideologues in her party "wet"?

@fgbjr @KimSJ @androcat @ReggieHere @GeofCox @urlyman @thegarbagebird

there's a collection of sayings - 'damp squib'; 'wet lettuce' etc. - that equate wetness with uselessness...

@ChrisMayLA6 @KimSJ @androcat @ReggieHere @GeofCox @urlyman @thegarbagebird Got it. (In that case Liz Truss' head-of-lettuce measure could be read as a nice bit of rhetorical revenge, come to think of it.)