Showing posts with label 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2019. Show all posts

On Limits: How Wrong Was Malthus?

"Democracy is at odds with capitalism, because capitalism's imperative to expand cannot be questioned. Capitalism's "pseudo-mastery" of nature can never be fulfilled, [Cornelius] Castoriadis* argues, pointing to the unintended consequences of technology. We thought we were mastering nature with fossil fuels, but climate change is the reckoning. This mastery is also "pseudo-rational" because its source is not rational. It stems from a theological duty to subdue nature, which evokes what we saw with Malthus." -Giorgos Kallis, Limits: Why Malthus was wrong and environmentalists should care (2019).

Thomas Malthus, English economist, hugely influential on the study of demography or population growth and so the development of the environmental sciences, emerges increasingly as a supervillain in the origins of modern free market economic fundamentalism. Or the myth of the free market: a religious faith in market growth, wealth accumulation, unimpeded by government regulations and taxes. 

Malthus thought that there will never be enough because of the limitless drive of humans to procreate, mostly because he was a 40-year old virgin himself. But, regardless, his thinly veiled contempt for the procreative vitality of the impoverished masses was immediately a very popular idea with the educated landholding elites in England in the dawn light of the Industrial Revolution's "Satanic Mills." 

Population growth will always push up against the limits of food production, Malthus contended. And so conditions of natural scarcity should rule economic production. 

The terrible implications for the welfare of communities in his teachings are hard to overstate. To Malthus "poor laws," British state welfare programs (mostly ran through churches), tax the productive to subsidize the unproductive. He articulated a creed of Social Darwinism before Darwin, arguing strenuously against English welfare programs as destructive to the natural order. He was a prophet of libertarianism, as a rationale for Christian nationalism and white supremacy and class privilege, and his ideas about scarcity were absolutely elemental to free market, Laissez-faire, neoliberal economic theory.   

Malthusian limits, or conditions of scarcity, are today a foundational principle of modern economics and environmental science. Industry produces goods and services with scarce resources, to maximize profits and minimize the costs of production. In environmental science when population growth exceeds the carrying capacity of a living environment, it generates the degrading conditions of overshoot and overpopulation. 

Malthus was one of the first scholars to raise the question of environmental limits, which it has turned out is a subject we now know should not be ignored, but was wrong in several important ways. 

Foremost, Malthus' conception of food production was too reliant on wheat or staple grain crops. He fails to anticipate the agricultural revolution that grew out of the industrial revolution he saw in its startup infancy: synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, new farm machinery, and bigger irrigation systems would change the game. He also couldn't imagine dietary variety beyond the grain based gruel 95% of the poor peasant populations of England and Europe had lived off for the previous millennia. 

But, let's remember, the industrial and technological development of the 19th century caught many off guard. In world history terms, the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, compresses into a hundred or two hundred years, depending on how deep into it you want to go, radical changes in living the original Agricultural Revolution that began maybe twelve thousand years ago took thousands of years, millennia, to spread around the world. 

So the exponential population growth Malthus observed in the early 19th century was not perpetual but more a feature of the explosive industrial revolution going on in England at that time. As modernizing developments spread around the world after Malthus, women eventually gain individual rights, education, and access to safe forms of birth control and they on average don't start having children until they're a little older and rarely choose to have more than two children. This is known as the demographic transition model, and explains why population growth began to level off in developed countries by the last quarter of the 20th century. 

So Malthus wasn't a prophet but he was absolutely one of the chief architects of scarcity economics. Behind his number crunching graphs was his contemptuous class sympathies: the notion that productive capitalists, landholders, and English nobility, via "free markets" controlled by industrial and financial giants, should absolutely define the limits of the unproductive peasantry and non-Christian foreigners, who Malthus regards with uncomprehending disgust.  

My takeaway from this book by Kallis, who turns out is one of the founding "degrowth" people. I only stumbled onto the book in my Mr. Magoo investigation into books about Malthus. Anyway, Giorgos Kallis credits Malthus for being one of the first to study environmental limits but recognizes all the stupid classist bigotry in his arguments. But he also wants us to look at more than environmental "limits" and create visions of "abundant" environments. Ai yi yi, now I'm finding Abundance content everywhere! 

Kallis relies historically a lot on the gist of Marshall Sahlin's "The Original Affluent Society" (1974). In many primitive societies nature is viewed as abundant, not scarce; Sahlin estimates many groups lived happily working only 10-15 hours a week. These cultures are organized to achieve shared abundance; they adapt to their environmental limit conditions to generate shared abundance or enough for everybody. By contrast, in Malthusian terms, in capitalist societies capital attempts to monopolize scarce resources and profit growth (or abundance), sequestering itself safely away from the grubby rabble and nuisance laws, and imposing conditions of austerity limits on the rest of the economy. 

Anyway, Kallis is interesting. Out of grad school with degrees in Chemistry, and Environmental Engineering and an added Master's in Economics, he's an outsider with the mainstream macro financial economics academic crowd. He was first into the Coevolution thing, which I know very little about. I know Kropotkin's Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution (1902), usually dismissed as anarchist rantings, is really about how coevolutionary patterns of mutual aid in animal species are more common and very likely more important than the conflict and violence that "survival of the fittest" free market Social Darwinists profess. And there is more recent environmental science about coevolution in forests, essential cooperation between trees and plants, that I picked up in Richard Power's novel The Overstory (2018). 

So I'm sympathetic to economic perspectives that emphasize cooperation over competition but what is this Degrowth economics, anyway? Kallis defines it as a process of change that reduces energy and resource consumption while improving the quality of life. I'm certainly open to critiques of economic growth statistics and the poverty they ignore or even stigmatize as criminal. But from what I got out of Wikipedia this sounds a little more like another small is beautiful fad as partisan politics. The real trick in bending the economy towards sustainability will be reducing the production and consumption of carbon energy while at the same time increasing job and living wage growth. Kallis, reportedly, supports Green New Deal legislation but insists it can't be successful without denouncing the tyranny of growth economics and embracing Degrowth, whatever that would exactly mean. It sounds like more "agony of the left" factional fighting over winning political sloganeering. Wears me out fast. 

Still, some Vaclav Smil book I read awhile back raised this interesting question (but didn't really answer it): Is Japan a positive model of a really existing Degrowth economy? I'd still like to know more about that. 

*Cornelius Castoriades, Greek-French philosopher I've never read. Wrote a book provocatively titled The Imaginary Institution of Society (1987), which makes me think of Benedict Anderson's Imagined Communities (1983). In that book imagined communities are nationalism or the development of national feelings about geographic locations. What are the origins and what makes the nation operational and effective as a form of political organization? Maybe significant that Castoriadis uses the singular "institution," and might be curious how his "imagined society" compares with Anderson's plural "imagined communities." Anyway, Castoriades appears to be one of Kallis's key go-to intellectual guides. 


Coalbrooke by Night by Phillippe Jacques de Loutherbourg (1801)

In response to Malthus:

"Nature is bountiful, not mean, and leads inevitably upward towards its creator, not down into misery and penury. Those enmired in the selfishness of calculation are precisely those who create the world in which charity is undermined, social bonds are broken, urban manufactures thrive, and poverty blights the countryside." 

- William Wordsworth, from "Lines Written a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey" (1798), found in Giorgos Kallis Limits: Why Malthus was wrong and why environmentalists should care. (2019)


"What's up, homeslice?": Ichiro Enters Hall of Fame, Of course.

"The history of baseball is very important," Ichiro said. "We're able to play the game today because of players of the past. I really want to understand them and know more about them. I think we all need to know the game of the past, things of the past, so we can keep moving it forward."

Ichiro's plaque in the Hall suggests the closing of a historical, cultural, and symbolic loop that fuses two great baseball cultures:

It was the converging of paths, joining the practice of yakyu [Japanese baseball], with echoes of the code of the samurai, the game Ichiro began playing at age 3, and the pastime of American baseball, the game he played with an ornate, highly ritualistic, flamboyantly stylistic, and yet still always in perfect discipline and equanimity. 

For all of the cultural significance and the historic nature of Ichiro's induction, it's this work ethic and his singular style that is almost certainly going to be his greatest legacy. And it's one that spins into the future, as he blazes a path to serve as a guide for the Japanese and American stars of the future. This exquisite balance of baseball skills fundamentals and personal style. I can't say this is a salient feature with every Japanese baseball player but there is no denying it in Ohtani. 

Before Shohei Ohtani, there was Ichiro. Before Ichiro, there were many but none who followed the path that perhaps only he could. He played professional baseball for 27 years, the last 19 in MLB, 14 for the M's. Amazing contact hitter, fast, great arm, but his athletic skills were not what separated him. It was his expert game. His craft and style. 

Ichiro like his mononymous name was a one of a kind baseball player. 

HOF tells the story of Japanese baseball


White Riot (2019) Directed by Rubika Shah

This is one of those I was alive at the time stories, late 1970s, thought I knew Rock Against Racism (RAR), and liked a lot of the music associated with the organization. But this 2019 documentary reveals I did not know really anything beyond a few music headlines. 

I did not know, for instance, RAR was crucial to a political movement against a racist National Front campaign in England gaining popularity at the time. RAR galvanizes elements of the punk and ska and reggae and new wave communities into a thriving social movement that culminated in an east London Woodstock-like event, drawing over 100,000, including on the bill over 40 bands, and contributing significantly to the defeat of the NF agenda in the general election of 1979.  

Nor did I know the intellectual force behind the NF movement came from Enoch Powell, infamous for his "Rivers of Blood" speech in 1968, a prominent racist political figure in Britain from the 1960s to the 1990s, a classics scholar no less, maybe the British version of William F. Buckley jr., and staunchly hostile to immigration as a threat to the ethno-nationalist (read: racist white) identity of Great Britain. Powell spewed another version of the replacement theory ("In this country in 15 or 20 years' time the black man will have the whip hand over the white man"), and inspired more conservative elite panic over post-WW2 migrations of imperial subjects of the British empire to the metropole, and called for forced deportation of immigrants. 

So another historical episode ringing a lot of bells with the illiberal extremes of now; including violent anti-immigrant hysteria and conservative elite panic over democratic reforms and formerly colonized and still discriminated against groups clamoring, justifiably, for more civil rights. 

Nor did I understand what a pivotal role classic rock played in inspiring the RAR movement. Both Eric Clapton ("The black wogs and coons and Arabs and fucking Jamaicans don’t belong here, we don’t want them here.") and Rod Stewart ("This country is over-crowded. The immigrants should be sent home.") made incendiary public statements in support of Powell's candidacy for Prime Minister in the late 1970s. Clapton's racist rant at a show in 1976 is credited with launching Rock Against Racism.* 

RAR's development centered around this "militant entertainment" fanzine called Temporary Hoarding (lots of cut and paste stark graphics and situationist like sloganeering; looked better than most zines) and, crucially, multiplying small cell groups of RAR music event organizers sprouting up all over Britain and Europe and eventually all around the world; building up over 200 local RAR groups between 1976 and 1982. They'd pull a few bands together, calling the shows "Carnivals Against Racism," and bring together antiracist and antifascist young people. 

All the talking heads behind RAR and Temporary Hoarding that appear in the documentary keep it simple. The story Red Saunders, a photographer and RAR founder, a kind of righteous John Belushi character in the '70s and Baby Gramps as an elderly talking head in the doc, is direct action simple: The NF was inspiring bullying parades of Union Jack-wearing white racists marching through West Indian and Pakistani neighborhoods and triggering increasing street violence against non-white people all over Great Britain. RAR didn't like the racist violence and figured they were not alone. They intrepidly organized antiracist and antifascist music fans, music fans opposed to the NF agenda, white and Black, West Indian, Pakistani, and other foreign immigrant groups, bringing them together to organize more RAR music events. They rallied bands and artists to play these events that opposed the violent racism of the NF: The Clash, Tom Robinson, X-Ray Spex, Steel Pulse, The Specials, The Jam, Dennis Bovell, Linton Kwesi Johnson, the Fall, Buzzcocks, Elvis Costello, Graham Parker, Gang of Four, Mekons, Delta 5, Au Pairs, Misty in Roots, Aswad, etc. Impressive class of '77 list. And Pete Townshend of The Who showed up for the classic rockers. All these people come together in RAR shows, which raised public awareness that antiracists, standing together, unified, overwhelmingly outnumbered the violent racists.  

They didn't vanquish the racists for good, of course, but they contributed to a political defeat of anti-immigrant racism in Great Britain at its wolfish extremes. Powell loses to Thatcher, which brought its own set of reactionary politics but the NF agenda was pushed out of mainstream politics. In comparison with Hitler's Germany or the techno-fascism of Japan in the late '30s, and other catastrophic spasms of reactionary violence, here is a humble victory against racism and fascist violence in the modern culture wars organized, successfully, with music. Yay, our team!

Admittedly, as a pure musical document, even the most exciting moments, The Clash, X-Ray Spex, are little more than a tease. The musical performances are secondary to the RAR story I share above, naturally. Still, I found the coda of Tom Robinson's "Winter of '79" at the mammoth RAR event at Victoria Park touching. And the doc makes a case for the new waver band 999 being underrated. I'm not sure they're right but I like it as a revisionist proposition. Maybe they are? Now I gotta listen to some more 999, which is something music documentaries are supposed to do. 

So Rubika Shaw's documentary, White Riot, does that and tells a still relevant story about the culture wars, fascist violence against multicultural reality and protesting for peace in England in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Good story. 

*- This is also a time, 1976-1979, Powell on the rise, when David Bowie is quoted to have said, "I believe Britain could benefit from a fascist leader" and was accused of throwing a Nazi salute during a publicity event. But at the same time was talking in the press about how Britain needed some strict right wing conservatives to take over and clean up the moral mess liberals have generated, presumably including indulgent libertines like himself. Being provocative, transgressive, was the coin of Bowie's androgynous alien glam rock realm and so a bit of a red herring in this discussion. By the early 1980s he was renouncing all his former remarks glamorizing fascist authority as drug ravings and pointing out his lifelong apolitical multicultural anti-violence bonafides, plays with Nile Rodgers, etc. Not his best moments.   

*-Syd Shelton, photographer, put out a book about RAR in 2023. Haven't read it yet. 

RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW, RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW!

"This is where we draw the line!

People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. 

How dare you!"

"Right Here Right Now" Greta Thunberg remix by Fatboy Slim (2019)

"Alien Point of View," Nervous Gender (1981)

Pounding tribal tempo, alien punk explicit sex body shaming ranting. Electropunk OGs from LA. Wonder if NG ever played a Burning Man, although do BM's go back that far? Speaking of, a missing piece in Erik Davis's otherwise very engaging book, High Weirdness (2019), was more musical analogues to the druggie hippie cyberpunk synthesis networking through California during the 1970s. The Dead were throwbacks and don't seem to count, not techie enough. One strong candidate is Nervous Gender, along with SF's Chrome or Tuxedomoon or even The Residents. All from the same classic punk/New Wave/post-punk 1978 to 1982 window, or that was their wheelhouse anyhow. Technologically mutant punk rock. Psychedelic cyberpunk. Sexually explicit acid-punk. Scifi-punk. Art-punks having sex with cyborgs. A nugget of high weirdness, "Alien Point of View," in '70s/'80s California music. BTW, you might remember lesbian folk singer Phranc from the '80s. Started out in Nervous Gender but was gone before this recording. Many parts of other classic LA punk rock bands, Germs, Screamers, The Bags, support and cycle through NG. Edward Stapleton and Matt Comeione, core band members, are still at it. Gerardo Valazquez, another founding member, died in 1992.  


More background on Nervous Gender

"Christian Nationalism," Anti-Flag (2019)


This one never gets old, unfortunately. More pop punk, so maybe I like more of it than I thought. Straight up radical leftist Antifa on Fox News. As an updating edit, I'm apt to change "you're no better than the rest" to "you're the worst of the worst" but Antiflag nails it with appropriate Swiftian sneer: "We all know who you are." Christian Nationalism is the paranoid style as religious community. It's tough guy Christianity, which means violent, intolerant, and militantly fascist on principles. American Nazis, basically. They're really not pro-life so much as they're in fact anti-women's rights, which we hope is another big reason they lose at the ballot box this fall but there are Billionaires out there more afraid of democratic reforms (or women's rights, apparently) than violent fascist dictatorship. (Again, not unlike with the Nazis in Germany in the 1930s.) So maybe it can happen here after all?! Anyway, Antiflag are from Pittsburgh. They've put out over a dozen albums since 1996, with titles like A New Kind of Army and The General Strike. Maybe the best leftist pop-punk band? 

Late Capitalism and Its Discontents

Cannibal Capitalism: How our System is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet—and What We Can Do About It (2022) By Nancy Fraser

Capitalism Alone: The Future of the System That Rules the World (2019) By Branko Milanovic

Two recent books about Late capitalism that address, even if only glancingly, Karl Polanyi. Right up my retired school teacherly inquiry into political economic history alley. 

Whenever I run into the phrase I just led with, “Late capitalism,” my radar goes off in two ways: 1) Ah, a fellow traveler! Someone interested in political economic history, but also 2) be wary this phrase “Late capitalism” doesn’t betray some wishful thinking, imagining an end to capitalism without any historical evidence for it. If capitalist theory can feel like a shell game sometimes then the corresponding anti-capitalist literature can feel like magical thinking. For example, if macro-economics is largely a hypothetical fiction, as Keynes showed, then the collapse of the capitalist House of Cards is inevitable, right? Not yet, anyway. So, to be clear, I’m using the phrase here, Late capitalism, in a historically specific way to refer to the period 1945 to the present. 

By Late capitalism I'm referring to global capitalist authority after the world wars; after laissez-faire has been devastated and discredited by the global economic collapse of the Great Depression; after the emergence of state communist dictatorships in Russia and China; and after the New Deal in the US and post-WW2 social democratic reforms in Western Europe and Japan usher in a period when capitalist rule is now checked and regulated by the state in way it wasn’t before this period. Although laissez-faire, it should be noted, the ruling authority that came before Late Capitalism, a ruling political-economic ethos that insists markets should be free from State meddling, also known as classical liberal capitalism, or corporate rule, the dominant global economic authority that emerged out of the Industrial Revolution, was always more Big Biz propaganda than any really-existing economy even in the 19th century. 

At any rate, after 1945, during the period I’m calling Late capitalism, capitalist authority no longer rules as it once had. The period might be usefully compared with a periodizing cultural term like post-modernism: Late capitalism refers to a historical period when it is not clear or stabilized yet what new form political-economic authority will take after the old authority, laissez-faire, unfettered capitalism, has failed or lost support. What should we call the new form of political-economic authority after the world wars: social democracy, welfare capitalism, the New Deal Order, the United Nations and the Bretton Woods global banking system, New Deal liberalism or Polanyi’s “embedded liberalism,” or, their Cold War antagonists, Neoliberalism, free market fundamentalism, or extreme capitalism? All have vied for recognition during this period. My point, Late capitalism, the system of political-economic authority in the period 1945 to the present, is still being contested.    

And there are two historical threads to this contest that I will return to in this discussion. On the one side Polanyi’s anti-capitalist call for an “embedded liberalism,” The Great Transformation, and on the other Hayek’s free-market bromide, and “collectivist nightmare,” The Road to Serfdom, insisting on markets free from government oversight, both written in 1944, both recognized as seminal books about modern political economy in history. But I regard Polanyi, crucially, as serious and a credible historical source for speculating about the period of Late capitalism. And Hayek, by contrast, as a crude apology for oligopolistic corporate rule and a humiliating embarrassment to mainstream economics. It’s not that free enterprise does not or cannot exist but that Hayek’s market fundamentalism turns the large business, the corporation, into a blunt dehumanizing instrument of captains of industry. And renders it, primarily, as evidence for a theory that world history is a conspiracy of the rich against the poor, not unlike 19th century ideas like Social Darwinism, Eugenics and Scientific Racism. 

Consider the book Cannibal Capitalism by Nancy Fraser. First, I like the echo of Polanyi’s conception of self-regulating market capitalism as a demolishing force. In his image I saw killer cars of the industrial revolution running over people in a global demolition derby. (Perhaps like fully autopilot Tesla’s in the Bay Area?!) But in Fraser’s vision, even more craven and sinister, cannibal capitalist markets devour people in a slow developing zombie apocalypse. Capitalists, CEOs, donor class billionaires, big Wall Street investors, private equity analysts, all profit-seeking business activity cannibalizes (eating brains or stealing labor value, same diff) the unpaid/non-economic wealth of everyone else, primarily women, involved in raising kids, education, providing health care, childcare, or elderly care in the caring economy. It’s quite an image and once it sinks in feels inescapably obvious. 

This is my first Nancy Fraser book. According to Wikipedia, she is something of a longstanding Dean of academic philosophy. She’s written many books. She’s best known for criticizing identity politics and liberal feminism for ignoring or neglecting economic and social justice issues; she calls liberal feminism the “handmaid of capitalism.” She trashes Sheryl Sandberg’s ode to the woman CEO, Lean In (2013), for example, as a waste of time. Fraser is not for leaning in or infiltrating the system by getting a few more women in positions of power. She’s for overcoming the system, Capitalism, and its cannibalistic gender and class hierarchies. Which, also, is why she is usually identified as Marxist; she’s not for liberal reform but class revolution.

I’m more a liberal reform kind of guy than a violent revolution kind of guy myself, for one simple reason that wars (like economic busts, as another big example) hurt the relatively poor and many most. Always do and always have. It’s like one of those few rules of world history I’ve picked up, or since the emergence of cities and civilizations five or seven thousand years ago, anyway. In retrospect, obviously, the American and French revolutions were good ideas, pushing the Sisyphean boulder of human liberty and rights forward but, nonetheless, violent revolutions in world history (France, Russia, Iran, etc) frequently generate militarized Strongman police-states and violently repressive reactions that can last for decades if not centuries. This risk haunted the framers of the U.S. Constitution, for instance: i.e., how to design a system of democracy that can’t be overthrown by the forces of tyranny; a system of checks and balances, separation of powers, and the rule of law that 250 years later is seriously under threat, by the way. 

I’m not sure where Fraser falls exactly on the liberal reforms to violent revolution spectrum. In recent times I see she has come out anti-war over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, for example. And was canceled for something or other; which she called “philosemitic McCarthyism,” nice. So, I’m not suggesting Cannibal Capitalism is screaming for a violent socialist revolutionary Jan 6 but a complete overthrow of capitalism as opposed to any namby-pamby incrementalist liberal reforms of the prevailing capitalist order is a loud and unmistakable message in her book. “There can be no ‘emancipation of women’ so long as this structure remains intact,” says Fraser. And which sounds true enough but makes me a little wary, anyway. 

Again, I’m drawn to anti-capitalist literature, if also reasonably, I think, skeptical about anti-capitalist politics. I’ve no illusions about Cold War police states in the communist/anti-capitalist USSR and China during the 20th century. Or socialist dictatorship’s, anywhere, violently suppressing dissent. Or, for that matter, the violent suppression of human rights and class inequalities in so-called democratic capitalist countries. Very bad. Crimes against Humanity. 

(Reminder: Vote Blue No Matter Who! Or vote for humanity, NOT for punishing and hurting weak minorities of humanity you don’t like! Don’t be a fascist, it’s not that hard!) 

On the other hand, I like Marxists. Marxists often write my very favorite critical history books: Christopher Hill, E.P. Thompson, and Mike Davis, to name only a few. Marx and Marxists are often good at identifying problems with society that more conventional historians often gloss over. It’s the Marxist’s prescriptive remedies, a Dictatorship of the Proletariat and the like, that deserve scorn and abhorrence. As general historians, leaving the crude revolutionary rhetoric out of it, I’ve found Marxists often make excellent historians. And now Ms. Fraser joins my favorite Marxist historian club with a profoundly simple and critical historical insight: The original sin or fatal flaw in the structure and design of capitalist society is the gender division of labor, designating Men’s labor “productive” and “paid” and Women’s labor as “reproductive” and “unpaid.” 

The labor of men is exploited and cheated, as in all old school Marxist accounts, but Fraser’s case is that in capitalism’s historical origins women’s labor isn’t just cheated but entirely expropriated, taken, cannibalized and this cannibalizing so institutionalized and normalized that claims for the productive value of caring activities today are commonly mocked and dismissed. Parents in the US still can’t get any paid leave for caring for a newborn child, for a headline case in point. The sorry low wage and understaffed frontline conditions of education, childcare and elderly care a few other glaring examples. The materialist fact of the stark gender division Fraser illuminates is undeniable, and could hardly be anymore historically significant: capitalism cannibalizes the unpaid labor of social reproduction, the caring economy, traditionally, women’s labor in society. 

All emphatically true but “What We Can Do About It,” part of the sub-title of Fraser’s book, or what she thinks we should do about it remains fuzzy to me. 

Consider her critique of Polanyi’s “embedded liberalism.” To Polanyi society’s answer, or solution to the demolishing/cannibalizing tendencies of so-called “free markets,” self-regulating markets, or laissez-faire political rule, is to “re-embed” the economy with other governing and social values: labor rights, environmental protections, etc. In short, reforming the political economic order by bringing the predatory excesses of capitalism to heel; making markets subject to the rule of law and social and environmental justice. 

Historically, Polanyi’s “embedded liberalism” is exemplified by the New Deal in the US and social safety net reforms in Europe after World War II; the Bretton Woods international system, IMF/World Bank, etc. But Fraser disparages such reforms, Polanyi’s “double movement,” as tokenistic and thinks liberal reforms perversely only end up reinforcing or rationalizing capitalist rule. I will note, Joan Robinson, close collaborator with Keynes on his General Theory, would probably agree with Fraser, if not Keynes, for what that is worth. This is a leftist critique going back to at least Marx, liberal reforms coopt resistance and essentially reify, or reinforce, capitalist rule and thereby undermine revolutionary change.   

Reminds me of a discussion about the collapse of the Soviet Union I came across once. Political systems need opposition, negative rationality, critical theorists call it, to build robust and resiliently strong societies. Once opposition is snuffed out entirely authority ossifies, detaches from society, and increasingly finds itself in opposition to society, spreading alienation and eventually division and collapse. Fraser seems to view all liberal reforms in this kind of sweeping way, as so much negative rationality preserving a sick cannibalizing economic system. By contrast, I’m quite fond of any number of liberal reforms in modern history, including public education, social security, Medicare, national parks, in general, public infrastructure and social safety net programs that serve the public good. Yay! 

But Fraser is exasperated with liberal reforms and generally dismissive of Polanyi’s “embedded liberalism.” Fraser calls for sterner actions against capitalist rule. Capitalist governments cannot or will not adequately protect social reproduction from the cannibalizing predations of markets. Caring activities and the caring economy (health care, food security, shelter, education, even national security) are commodified and squeezed for profits and profligately cannibalized. But does overcoming cannibal capitalism really require eliminating all private property and markets, is that what we’re talking about here? 

When I finally got around to reading Marx’s magnum opus, Capital, or the first volume anyway, to help me slog through the mammoth text, I tried to keep at the front of my mind a few questions, one of which was: why does Marx advocate for such a fundamentally anti-democratic idea as a “Dictatorship of the Proletariat”? One reason, I concluded, Marx was a journalist reporting on the preposterously mendacious and stubbornly violent resistance of industrial magnates and capitalist elites to democratic pressures for even the most basic labor rights for decades. Labor would squander free time, factory employers argued doggedly, on drink and idle lazy pursuits should they be allowed an 8-hour workday. Industrialists could not afford to pay living wages, they insisted, but they did in fact pay armed militias and thugs to attack worker organizations and labor protesters at every turn. In short, wealthy capital resisted labor reforms with such ridiculously pompous rhetoric and relentless violence for so many decades that Marx likely despaired of capital’s intransigence. I probably would have sooner. In historical fact, however, workers, labor organizing, and democratic pressures on government after decades of struggle against all that corporate resistance did win the measly, if insufficient, but not insignificant labor rights workers enjoy today, like the freakin’ weekend, for instance.       

At any rate, a full Marxist abolition of private property and markets doesn’t sound doable or even desirable. Markets expand exchange and at this point private property is probably as important a human right as free speech or free religion and, anyway, markets and private property are so inextricably “embedded” in modern culture that imagining their complete elimination sounds like another Enlightenment pipe dream; a scientific dream to systematically automate away political conflict and social problems, like Smith’s “invisible hand” or Marx’s stateless utopia. You think reasonable public measures to reduce private gun ownership are hard, imagine the terror and reaction that would be induced by trying to eliminate all private property and markets?!   

The more practical or relevant task at hand is how to democratize the state in a way that factors in the costs of social reproduction or the caring economy. Fraser is right, of course, democratic reforms, “embedded liberalism,” have been coopted and blunted to reinforce corporate rule. Industries capture the departments of government intended to regulate them. It’s a problem, ask Ralph Nader. But completely overthrowing markets and private property sounds like far more of an apocalyptic dystopic fantasy than the possibility of a sustainable and stable liberal democratic order that respects labor and social reproduction. 

Another recent book that engages Late capitalism and Fraser’s and Polanyi’s critiques thereof is Branko Milanovic’s Capitalism, Alone. Milanovic, you might surmise from the title, thinks Fraser’s socialist revolution, or overthrowing Capitalism once and for all, was tossed on the ash heap of history in 1989 or thereabouts, with the fall of the Soviet Union. And, likewise, at first glance anyway, for Milanovic, presumably, Late capitalism ended with that same fall, and the end to any viable socialist/communist alternative to Capitalism.  

Milanovic is an academic economist and a big numbers guy. He’s worked as the lead economist for the World Bank’s research department and focused much of his work on income distribution and inequality. To Milanovic there is no alternative to capitalist rule, call it whatever you like. We’re not in any undecided Late capitalism period. Capitalism rules alone now, says Milanovic, but there has emerged since ’89 two kinds of capitalist rule. And see if you don’t notice how similar his two forms of capitalism sound like the same old either/or binary conflict of the Cold War he thinks is over. 

Milanovic earns his readership first with some rosy econometric observations about economic growth. With graphs and statistics, he argues that capitalism alone is not only not cannibalistic but quite progressive. The globalization of capitalist rule over the last thirty-so years, again, since 1989-ish, and the fall of the socialist alternative to capitalism, has reduced global inequality, he contends, by the tremendous economic growth in China over this time, dramatically reducing the number of people of the world living on $2 a day, a common measure of global poverty. Reducing extreme poverty is a big deal but let’s pull back a bit and consider this achievement with some other history. 

There is an idea in classical capitalist theory, Simon Kuznets, I think, that says, sure, new markets are disruptive, people lose jobs, in the beginning people have to work for low wages, but it is a “creative destruction” that ultimately expands markets and incomes, and as markets mature labor organizes and demands a fair share of profit margins and eventually achieves living wages for all labor. But how long do you suppose it might take global capital to “develop” all the cheap labor of the world, as they have progressed in China over the last half-century before local markets everywhere mature to the point all workers are paid living wages? (And mind you, no way is this the case, universal living wages, I mean, now in China or even the US, for that matter.) I’m guessing a very long time. I’m also guessing if the Reagan Revolution, corporate rule since 1980, or globalization, is a fair historical example, offshoring living-wage Union jobs and expanding so-called Free Trade agreements that spread cheap global sweatshop labor and devastated living-wage working class labor in the US for now going on three generations, capitalist corporations in China, like everywhere else, will pursue and do everything they can to preserve their supply of cheap labor, to thwart labor union organizing, and lowball wages until they are stopped and regulated against the worst extremes of these practices. 

In short, I’m not denying the economic growth miracle of China but suggesting Milanovic might be overstating a tad the prospects of this model of economic growth. By this path of development, we’re at minimum talking many more generations, if not centuries, of workers toiling their lives away before we achieve even anything like universal living wages for labor.

Capitalism rules the world, says Milanovic, but there are two versions of capitalist rule in the world now. The one that has been around the longest, Liberal Capitalism, is based on popular democratic support for “free markets,” opposition to government meddling in markets, laissez-faire, a form of corporate rule in the West that came together in the 19th and 20th centuries; Europe, the US, Canada, Australia, Japan, India, Brazil, and South Korea, etc. And Political Capitalism, or state directed capitalism, like that in the new capitalist growth juggernaut China since the rule of Deng Xiaoping, 1978 to the present. In China, economic growth has—again, since 1989-ish-- far surpassed that in the democratic capitalist countries, often growing at a pace two or three times faster than any Liberal Capitalist nation during the same period. 

Couple things to problematize a little Milanovic’s conception of capitalist rule in the world. The State already has a role in the Liberal Capitalist economy. Liberal Capitalists just like to pretend the State has no role or should have no role in the economy, which, yes, does have consequences, like those mentioned above. And in Political Capitalism, or China’s version, anyway, political authority is a dictatorship, suppressing dissent and self-determination, opposing democracy and basic human rights, wherever it is thought to be in opposition to State authority. 

The Liberal Capitalist propagandists at the Wall Street Journal hate Milanovic’s book: a "stunted recitation of the political and economic crises afflicting Western capitalism, an unpersuasive account of China's economic model as a potential alternative and an implausibly dystopian vision of global capitalism’s future." Right off, you know Milanovic is onto something to make WSJ so mad. But what is it? Essentially, I think, that there is mounting evidence that China’s state-directed Political Capitalism might be better prepared to respond to the challenges facing the world in the coming Century. China’s early dominance of the solar power industry might serve as one bright example. China’s dominant market share of the rare earth elements used in battery technology another. 

Liberal Capitalism, by contrast, is struggling to address the challenges of global warming and climate change. In fact, corporate rule has obstructed such efforts for decades now. And Liberal Capitalism is beset with other problems, extreme inequality, massive tax evasion and self-dealing corruption, underfunded public infrastructure, etc. These are all big challenges that Milanovic’s book argues Political Capitalism either avoids altogether or is better prepared to manage and overcome. 

Corporate capitalists in the US don’t like hearing this kind of talk either, of course. But like Chris Miller’s popular Chip Wars, I take Milanovic’s case as essentially one for more State-directed Industrial Policy in the Liberal Capitalist states. For National Security, in the Chip Wars case. But, for Milanovic, it’s more a question of sustaining global economic power without giving up on democratic freedoms. 

Unfettered markets in Liberal Capitalism are too narrowly preoccupied with profit seeking and market share, they either ignore or actively obstruct democratic governments from addressing problems, climate change, poverty, problems often of corporate rule’s own making, thereby actually weakening their long-term future economic prospects. Sure, China’s police state dictatorship and violent suppression of political dissent is bad but if its State administration has figured out how to grow the economy in a way Liberal Capitalism can’t match this gives Political Capitalism and China an edge on the future. 

Talk about the end of Liberal Capitalism, or the Neoliberal order, or corporate rule, generally strike me as grossly premature but state reforms are long overdue. Just look at all the Big Oil/Big Pharma, Manchinema, obstruction in the last congress; or how the mainstream media are still framing this obstruction as “moderate.” Or look at all the capitalist donor class money going to Republicans in the 2024 election. And this is in spite of the misogyny and massive fraud and criminality and treason and in spite of the violent culture war insanity and open fascist threats to the rule of law and democracy from Trump and his MAGA cult. Many Liberal Capitalists or conservatives or corporatists or “libertarians” in the US fear they are at risk of losing their freedom to gouge profits and wreck the environment in the name of free enterprise. 

Milanovic suggests Political Capitalism, State-directed capitalism, might have some advantages over Liberal Capitalism, unfettered markets, or extreme capitalism, as a model of capitalist rule up to the challenges the future presents. If Liberal Capitalism wants to continue to compete for global hegemony it will have to reform itself and adapt or face increasing marginalization, Milanovic suggests. 

I enjoyed both these books. I think Fraser’s book is more penetrating and insightful, but Milanovic’s book more realpolitik and so closer to current struggles in macro political economy. More generally, though, as already alluded, I think they are both stuck a little in a Cold War binary conception of capitalist political economy. Milanovic thinks the cold war is over and Capitalism won. Total victory! But both his Capitalism’s, for all extensive purposes, still present us with the same Cold War binary between Liberal Capitalism, free market rule, and Political Capitalism, socialist dictatorship. Fraser, meanwhile, is a romantic holdout for a total socialist revolution that can overthrow the cannibalistic brutality of capitalism but then replace it with what? Both are stuck a little in the binary either/or conception of the Cold War. When, really, we’re already living in inextricably mixed economies, a mixture of private property, free markets, and socialist government regulations and taxes, and could no more survive without one (markets) than the other (the State). 

I remain of the thinking that the contest over Late capitalism is ongoing and still undecided. Free market capitalism and state communism, the capitalism vs socialism binary, hardened during the Cold War of the 20th century into dogmatic historical fantasies and myths and power structures, and still largely prevail at the local Chamber of Commerce and in general political discussions but where the rubber meets the road some mixed economy third way is being worked out, whether consciously or not. A hybrid of Political and Liberal Capitalisms, in Milanovic’s parlance, is being forged in markets and state governance. It isn't an either/or but a sustainable balance question and treating the political economy as an either/or question makes achieving a sustainable balance that much harder, if not impossible. The either/or conception of political economy, corporate rule or socialism, “free markets” or the State, Liberal Capitalism or Political Capitalism, obscures more than it illuminates the really-existing economy and, worst of all, obstructs building a more widely shared and sustainable economic prosperity.   

The Code of Capital: How the Law Creates Wealth and Inequality, by Katharina Pistor (2019)

Arguably-- or from my cheap seat in the peanut gallery, anyway-- Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century (2013) is the most important book on economic or political-economic history since Keynes' General Theory (1935) or Marx's Capital, 1867, or Smith's Wealth of Nations, 1776. That big. So one might hope Piketty would inspire more academic research exploring the questions he raises. Not surprisingly, perhaps, what I'm finding mostly comes from outside mainstream academic economics.

Katharina Pistor is a Columbia Law professor. The Code of Capital is a historical review of how wealth is coded into law, going back to the 12th and 13th centuries and even Roman law, but focuses with more detail and specificity on the rise of the modern state and industrial capitalism in the 19th and 20th centuries. 

One of the biggest claims in Piketty's book is an assertion that, based on a review of the economic data for the last 250 years, r > g; or the rate of return on capital assets, r (rents, interest, etc), are greater than general economic growth, g (GDP, wages, etc). In other words, wealth grows faster than the general economy; or the rich-get-richer-the-poor-get-poorer, structurally, built into the free market system, forever. For one, the evidence devastatingly refutes classical economist Simon Kuznet's empirical work in the 1950s showing a narrowing of inequality over time. 

And, anyway, a r > g rigging of the economy has been evident forever, or for as long as workers have been paid less than the marginal product of their labor, less than living wages, but give it to Piketty for pulling together all the receipts. Establishing the veracity of r > g is of no small consequence, of course, and overcoming resistance to its implications no small task. What Pistor's book shows is how r > g has in fact been coded into law with very little push back for a century and a half if not more. Beginning in the U.S. not long, notably, after laissez-faire capitalist rule takes over the British Empire and just about the same time industrial Robber Barons are taking over in the U.S. 

Capital is an asset, a designation of value attached to land, trade goods, buildings, technologies, intellectual property rights, etc. Coding capital into law involves defining an asset, establishing precedent for its legal protection in older property rights law, and thereby securing that its private property value will be backed up by the coercive force of the State. To an extent coding capital into law has probably always been about fortifying class inequality; protecting the richies from the uppity peasants. But, more narrowly, as in examples like English Land Trusts, or Limited Liability Contracts (LLCs), from the first charter companies to later modern corporations, coding capital into law was in the beginning an instrument of the state to reduce risk and encourage private investment and stimulate commercial activity. They began as instruments of state expansion through private investment. Joint-stock  companies, charter companies, explode in number around the world in the wake of Columbus; beginning in the 16th century. 

It's not like the relationships between states and these private companies were ever entirely peaceful, without conflict and corruption, but somewhere along the way, by Pistor's account, fast forward through centuries of gunboat diplomacy and colonialism, with the rise of the modern corporation in the late 19th century the corporate lawyers take over and coding capital into law turns into a racket essentially preserving and maximizing r > g profit returns for corporate wealth interests. 

Even more alarming, Pistor says since the late 19th century the coding of capital into law has fallen almost entirely into private hands; those of corporate lawyers, who write up asset laws that suit their corporate clients and economic overlords. These laws then are rubber stamped by the legal system, never seriously scrutinized for the economic justice or injustice of their terms and barely even reviewed until they blow-up in some general crisis, say, the collapse of the Savings & Loan Industry, and are rarely investigated even then. 

In other words, it is a Casino Capitalist world and the House always wins because corporate lawyers and quants write the rules. Cool. 

As remedy Pistor urges incrementalism, rolling back the rigged codes one by one, not a particularly cheering prospect, another Sisyphean task on our mounting collective pile, but one you presume she makes because anything more sweeping or radical risks collapse of our whole economic House of Cards; smashing the relatively poor first as economic downturns always do. 

So more evidence Too-Big-To-Fail is actually a thing. And another stunning take on modernity turning over the keys to civilization to Captains of Industry now hellbent on cooking the planet to protect their grotesque wealth. The Code of Capital adds to the resistance.