rotting bones wrote: ↑Thu Jan 21, 2021 5:24 pm
Hopefully, my motivations are now clearer, so here's my unabridged argument: It's impossible to keep society running without financially inefficient enterprises. The real choice is between having these enterprises be capitalist or socialist in character. The unprofitable enterprises that survive under capitalism are heavily skewed towards the interests of the wealthy. Eg. If you believe Chomsky (Manufacturing Consent, Necessary Illusions, ...), even the press is indispensable for shaping a common narrative.
Yes. That's entirely correct.
The question we should be asking is: To what extent would capitalists be motivated to support social programs? Traditionally, they wouldn't have been able to dispense with the working class. As I see it, with the development of industrial automation, they are no longer bound by this restriction.
I don't believe automation really destroys jobs or the working class. The service sector, in particular, isn't going to be eliminated away.
Under an hypothetical scenario where everything could be done by machines (we're talking science-fiction, or fantasy here) it should be remembered that capitalists own capital by common convention -- assuming there'd be no jobs at all and everyone is facing starvation, that convention would fly out of the window.
Now, more realistically, support of social programs is a classic case of prisoner's dilemma. Your individual entrepreneur benefits by paying employees as little as possible but collectively entrepreneurs benefit from having everyone well-educated, in good health, and affluent enough to afford their products!
Judging by 20th century history, entrepreneurs can generally pick the right solution to this dilemma at the cost of a very regular kick in the ass.
More cynically, the Soviet Union did a lot of good to the Western World by constantly reminding everyone that ultimately, the alternative to paying your employees reasonably and doing your taxes is the storming of the Winter Palace and being sent to Siberia to build rail tracks in the middle of winter.
Ares Land wrote: ↑Thu Jan 21, 2021 2:38 am
But I don't think it should apply to the whole economy. There are many cases where companies manage their production and do create jobs; why fix the parts that work?
Of course companies create jobs, but do you think they create enough jobs to facilitate an equitable distribution of resources?
They can but there's no guarantee. Right now the situation seems to be that they can't -- or at the cost of unreasonably low wages.
I agree that additional jobs must be supplied by additional, more socialized ways.
What do you propose that demand by vote be restricted to?
I don't think restrictions should be hard-coded, so to speak. Technically any industry could be helped that way. In practice that would depend on what happens to be profitable at the time. For instance, right now, there's no problem with the food industry in general; but specific projects (such as local food production) need to be helped with a view to future needs.
Proposals to equalize wealth accumulation by law leave me with a sense of foreboding. Assuming the extra capital isn't simply stored abroad, consider that under capitalism, rich allies of the poor are billionaires more often than millionaires. Do we really want to find out what a capitalist society with only millionaires and no billionaires looks like?
I have no particular problem with millionaires, or billionaires who may individually may be good or bad people or vote for whoever they like. The problem is wealth accumulation.
More generally, unless economic growth happens to be very high, money attracts money and wealth distribution will inevitably get inegalitarian and accordingly threaten the livelihood of everyone.
The traditional response to that is that growth is low right now because of socialism, or general laziness, or lack of Protestant work ethic, and that if we make enough tax cuts 5% growth will make a return.
So far it looks like growth under 1% is actually the normal situation, that tax cuts increase national debts to dangerous amounts and while there is some trickling down, it is woefully insufficient. Why do I think it's insufficient? Simple enough: in what are the largest, most developped economies in the history of mankind, we still have people begging in the street, and the hospitals are unable to handle a moderately severe respiratory infection. There is besides, no evidence that growth requires wealth concentration.
That is, of course, only taking into account the Western world. The situation elsewhere else is just frightening.
The current economic wisdom is that economy isn't a zero-sum game (which is true) and that wealth accumulation isn't a problem (which is false). At any given point, there is only so much money to go around, and only so much real estate in London, San Francisco, Beijing or Delhi.