Yeah, I'm pretty fond of the stakeholder model.zompist wrote: ↑Fri Jan 08, 2021 12:22 pm A useful word here is "stakeholder". There was a lot of talk about this in around the 1970s: that companies should be run by a combination of management, workers, customers, and the local community. What the balance should be is a can of worms!
In Germany, large companies must have workers as 1/3 or 1/2 the corporate board, depending on the industry and the size of the firm. My understanding is that this helps, but the owners have ways around it. It may not be coincidental that Germany has retained a robust manufacturing sector when other countries have outsourced most of it.
It's hard to figure out what makes Germany more robust economically in general; it doesn't come out to a single killer feature but to a fairly extensive set of well thought out policies. (Just to give an example, the Kurzarbeit or short-time policy helped a lot back in 2008-2009)
Not at all. I'm very much aware of goes wrong in the US generally worried about any trend that may bring us closer to American-style plutocracy, and I don't think I'm going too far in saying this worry is very much shared in Western Europe.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Fri Jan 08, 2021 2:18 pm I know I harp on the US a lot as an example of what can go wrong in Capitalism, and there seems to be a general attitude in this thread of "Oh, who cares? Look at Belgium. They're doing all right!" I think the US is sort of the canary in the coal mine of Capitalism. Whatever goes wrong there, should be at the top of the crisis report for any other capitalist country.
(Though, to be fair, we should also take into account these areas where the US actually does better than the rest of the world.)
My main objection is why should I throw out entirely a sytem that, with warts and all, and plenty of hidden ugliness of course, kind of works and has been brought into some kind of control? Yes, the system could degenerate into plutocracy... But any political/social system is under constant threat and risks degenerating into something worse.
The other problem is that annoying question of the alternative. The one option available is socialism... which has problems. Let's take the most favorable option: it has never been tested in its pure form(*) Worse, the plan is sort of unclear on the details. It seems to amount to:
0) Capitalism sucks
1) Eat the rich, the workers own the means of production.
2) ???
3) Fully automated luxury communism.
I think some work on what exactly happens in step 2) is in order.
Another objection that I think isn't as well adressed as it should is that parts of capitalism actually work and I'd really love to know how these'd work in the socialist utopia.
(*) All capitalist countries actually implemented socialist institutions. Some still work well, some were unfairly shot down, other were uninteresting or just didn't work. In all cases much depended on the actual implementation.