The inherent flaw of capitalism

What can we do to change the minds of decision makers and people in general to actually do something about preparing for the forthcoming economic/energy crises (the ones after this one!)?

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Ludwig
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Post by Ludwig »

Bandidoz wrote:Is it not the case that the teachings of Marx in French universities lead to spirited leaders such as Pol Pot?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khmer_Rouge
The tyrant will always find his ideology, it hardly matters what the ideology is.

There was really remarkably little difference between what Hitler and Stalin were up to. "National socialism" is a perfectly apt term for what the Communist Party's vision.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."
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biffvernon
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Post by biffvernon »

Arghh, Godwin's law.
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emordnilap
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Post by emordnilap »

biffvernon wrote:Arghh, Godwin's law.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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Ludwig
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Post by Ludwig »

biffvernon wrote:Arghh, Godwin's law.
Don't be daft, I was making a perfectly valid and relevant point.
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biffvernon
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Post by biffvernon »

I know it can be frustrating but I don't think Godwin's Law contains a 'making a perfectly valid and relevant point' get out clause.
:)
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Re: The inherent flaw of capitalism

Post by kenneal - lagger »

stevecook172001 wrote:According to Marx, capitalism contains the seeds of its own destruction. What he was essentially getting at is that the endless competition between industrialist bosses would inevitably lead to a collapse of their customer base. This, in turn, would lead to civil unrest and, eventually, revolution.
True and that's why we have laws to restrict the way the system works. Unrestrained anything is not good: there have to be rules within which to work to protect everyone in the system. Without laws there would in the end, be just one company for which everyone worked and from which everyone bought. Not a good idea from anyone's point of view, unless you were the MD of the one company.
The reason for the above is the need for profit. In its most essential form, profit may be defined as a situation whereby you exit an economic transaction with more resources than when you went in.
An economic transaction is an agreement between two parties to purchase and sell an item at an agreed price. If you think that the person selling is asking too much you don't purchase. If the person selling doesn't make a profit he has no money to pay his taxes, he has no money for research, he has no money to invest in future products and he has no money to buy more raw materials to make the next widget that he sells.
In order for anyone to extract a profit, a loss must be incurred by someone, or some thing, somewhere else. Either the supplier of the raw materials makes a loss, or the manufacturer makes a loss, or the retailer makes a loss, or the customer makes a loss, or the workers all the way up the production chain makes a loss. Someone or something has to make a loss.
British Leyland made a loss on every Mini they ever produced. Was that good business? Was that the way we should do our business in the future because that is what you are implying. BL didn't go out of business because the loss was picked up by taxpayer subsidies. The result of this wonderful business practice that you seem to be lauding, Steve, was that every taxpayer in the UK made a loss on every sale of a Mini. On that basis everyone who bought a Mini was guilty of robbing the British taxpayer and should be jailed.

A business has to make a profit to continue trading, to continue paying the wages of its workers and the taxation that the government requires to run the NHS, welfare schemes and to pay for education. A business cannot run at a loss continuously because if it does "a loss must be incurred by someone, or some thing, somewhere else. Either the supplier of the raw materials makes a loss, or the manufacturer makes a loss, or the retailer makes a loss, or the customer makes a loss, or the workers all the way up the production chain makes a loss. Someone or something has to make a loss."

Even a charity or "non profit", as they call them in the US, has to run a surplus on average, something that would be called a profit in private industry. The alternative to the above two situations would be for a business to run to a profit margin of zero every year. If you think that is possible you have clearly never run a sizeable business.

My business never makes a profit as such because all the surplus is called my wages. I am the only employee and I produce drawings for people. I have no investors and no loans on the business so what I charge people only has to cover my meagre expenses. The rest is profit: or my wages. Should I not be able to pay myself wages/make a profit?

Many businesses have investors to pay, and this is where I think your hang up is. You object to people making money from their money. But you, as a teacher, are guilty of this heinous crime. You, as a teacher, will receive a pension from a pension fund which is fully funded, so we are told. It is fully funded because your pension contributions have been invested, on your behalf, in businesses through the stock exchange. (Please note that pension funds are the biggest investors in the country.) For you to receive a pension all those companies that you have invested in have to make a profit in order to pay the dividends that your pension fund requires on your behalf.

Other government and state pensions are not fully funded and they rely on your children and grandchildren paying for those pensions. They are the ones robbing the future.

What is not sustainable is the payment of interest on loans. This means that the payment of pensions at more than the rate of money put into the scheme is also unsustainable. This enhanced payment, like interest on savings and the payment of interest on loans requires the economy to grow to earn the money to pay this extra.

I hope that you are not going to take out of your pension plan more money than you put in.
The above leads to the paradox of a situation where the ideal for any capitalist would be to do away with all workers and automate all production since this would prove to be the most profitable arrangement.

However, those workers are also their customers. Thus, in doing away with them, they have destroyed their customer base's capacity to spend money on buying their products.


I fully agree with you here but it is not a failure of the capitalist system but a failure of the regulation of the capitalist system. It is also a function of the cheap energy from oil and coal that we have been enjoying and, paradoxically, a failure of the system of free trade and globalisation.
.............This is not to say that any system of human organisation would not have run up against the same resource buffers. It's just that capitalism has proved to be very efficient at getting us here. In this sense, whilst resources are available to enable growth to occur, the "loss" is incurred by the Earth itself. [\quote]

True.
................. In a static or contracting economy all profits must be balanced with losses.


True, but not a bad thing. If a new product comes along that displaces another less resource efficient product the company making the new product will displace the old company. A more efficient use of scarce resources will be better for the earth. The resources of the defunct company will be reused/recycled elsewhere and, as long as the profits of the new company are spent, the money will continue to circulate.
Or, to put all of the above more succinctly: Capitalism does not work in a static or contracting economy unless one is prepared to accept considerable levels of bankruptcies/social unrest etc.


That is not true. There is no reason why capitalism should not work in a static economy as long as there is a mechanism to take out businesses that have not improved their products and replace them with businesses that are supplying a similar but more resource efficient product.
Fractional reserve banking (FRB) stimulates and amplifies economic growth by borrowing from the future and so avoids, for a time, the inherent flaw in capitalism. The earth has finite amounts of easily accessible industrial resources eventually resulting in a situation where growth has stopped. Capitalism's inherent flaw is exposed.


You are confusing capitalism with the current system of banking and its requirement for growth. Capitalism existed long before FRB.
... FRB has been yet another weapon in the armoury of capitalism whereby the losses incurred today can be papered over. In FRB's case, by drawing down profits from the future. Thus, economic growth is accelerated under an FRB system of money creation.


You are confusing yourself here because above you were arguing that there should not be profits, now or in the future. And if there are no profits there will be losses, now and in the future.
However, there is a fundamental truth we all know in our guts and which science has merely formalised. Namely, that there is no such thing as free lunch. As long as there are a large amount of resources, we can pretend, for a while, that there is. Once we hit the limits of those resources, though, FRB stops working as a consequence of the future failing to honour the FRB promises of today. At that point, we get economic collapse (the current crisis is the beginning of that collapse). From now on in, in order for profits to be maintained, someone has to lose for someone else to gain.


And so we will all lose because if there is no profit there will be a loss at some time. As long as people add their efforts to the available physical resources they add value to those resources.
Perpetual economic growth is over. A money supply that is increased over time via FRB credit is over. Capitalism is over. The future will be either some form of socialism or a return to serfdom for the majority
Capitalism is not over but the paying and receiving of interest must be over because growth is over. The accumulation of money must be stopped and making money from money, usury, must once again be a crime. In order for any system to work money must circulate continuously. If it doesn't the system will eventually stop working as it is now.

The accumulation of large amounts of money in a few hands and its use to make more money from money rather than from the production of capital goods or works is one of the factors breaking the system. The accumulation of large amounts of money in a few hands has necessitated the creation of money from debt in an effort to keep the system going.

That's not to say that, in the future, some people will not be richer than others in that they will have more stuff than others. The only way to stop that would be to make it illegal for one person to work harder than another!

Paying somebody for something is not a loss to the person who pays the money because they receive something in return that has a value. In the future everything will have value because it will consist of scarce physical/material resources which will have to be continuously reused or recycled. The loss of value in the purchase will come when the purchase ceases to be useful to the purchaser, just as happens now. That loss in value will be the loss of the energy put into making the product and the loss of the input labour. The value of the materials it is made from will be retained, unlike now as it would now be considered rubbish. That total value will be reinstated once someone has put some more physical effort and energy into remaking/remodelling the material resource. There will be no rubbish collections because what is not wanted by one person will have to be reused by another.
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Totally_Baffled
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Post by Totally_Baffled »

Good post Ken +1
TB

Peak oil? ahhh smeg..... :(
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Post by madibe »

I have to say how much I appreciated Steves initial post, which seemed to sum up so many things in quite a succint manner.

It is a shame that he was verbaly castigated by some. (namely Dom)

Steve, I really appreciate your insights - please don't let negative responses disrupt your postings.

Thanks, Maudibe
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Post by kenneal - lagger »

He was castigated in writing because some people believe that what he said, or the inferences that he drew, were wrong. This forum is for discussion of issues not just a place to come and get your back patted for having the right, or should I say left, views. So if you don't like your views contradicted, and can't justify them, don't put them up.

One of the reasons that I didn't want RGR banned was this tendency for groups of people to reject any criticism of what is seen as the correct view. RGR banned first, then The Inspector, then Dom, then Snowhope, me to follow. It would end up with a left wing, PO causes everything, CC can't be argued against, anti Thatcher, anti Tory, Grauniad reading, ego stroking bag of wind with no other sensible content.
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Post by biffvernon »

I think you misrepresent the situation, Ken. Nobody minds reasoned debate between those who hold different viewpoints. Unfortunately some of the names you mention all too often abandon rationalism and revert to personal abuse. I think if you compare the quality of writing in Steve's post with that of his critics...well, 'nuff said.
Little John

Post by Little John »

kenneal wrote:He was castigated in writing because some people believe that what he said, or the inferences that he drew, were wrong. This forum is for discussion of issues not just a place to come and get your back patted for having the right, or should I say left, views. So if you don't like your views contradicted, and can't justify them, don't put them up.

One of the reasons that I didn't want RGR banned was this tendency for groups of people to reject any criticism of what is seen as the correct view. RGR banned first, then The Inspector, then Dom, then Snowhope, me to follow. It would end up with a left wing, PO causes everything, CC can't be argued against, anti Thatcher, anti Tory, Grauniad reading, ego stroking bag of wind with no other sensible content.
I don't mind my views being contradicted at all. I am unsure as to where I have indicated otherwise. Your critical response, to my post, by the way, was a very comprehensive and thougthful one and one I intend to reply to fully.

Of course, I disagree with much, though not all, of it.... :wink:
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Post by emordnilap »

+1 to what Biff said.

Indeed, Kenneal's responses, even though he's on another side of an ideological fence, are always worth reading; it shows what is possible. Others take note.

Steve, you might be interested in this:

http://www.socialistparty.net/theory/75 ... -uncovered

a review of 23 Things They Don’t Tell You About Capitalism by Ha-Joon Chang. Fascinating.
"There are reasons to think", Chang says, "that economists may be positively harmful for the economy" and "for most people".
May? :lol:
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Little John

Post by Little John »

emordnilap wrote:+1 to what Biff said.

Indeed, Kenneal's responses, even though he's on another side of an ideological fence, are always worth reading; it shows what is possible. Others take note.

Steve, you might be interested in this:

http://www.socialistparty.net/theory/75 ... -uncovered

a review of 23 Things They Don’t Tell You About Capitalism by Ha-Joon Chang. Fascinating.
"There are reasons to think", Chang says, "that economists may be positively harmful for the economy" and "for most people".
May? :lol:
Thanks E. I'll take a look.
madibe
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Post by madibe »

Ken, wasn't back patting - and I love a good debate / critique, as long as it is not 'flying off the handle', misintrpretation 'on purpose' (is there a word for that?) or getting personal.

I find the majority of posts, yours included Ken, to be stimulating.

:wink:
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discussion

Post by ujoni08 »

Indeed. A well-rounded discussion is what we need to aim for, with less aggression and sarcasm.

Dom, I'm sorry to say, you seem to have become a lot more angry again lately. The way you present your ideas is aggressive and unnecessary. In fact, you will help your cause greatly by laying out your case calmly and coherently (though in saying that, I expect you to vent some anger at me for asking you please not to. It's just an inkling, based on your other posts, but I could be wrong, and I apologise to you if I have misunderstood you).

Steve makes some good points, as does Ken (if a little strongly put). This is how a good debate should proceed. This forum is a great place for that.

Jon
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