Should we be giving thanks today for our capitalist system? Maybe. But we should certainly be thankful for a 1100-page book about the history of capitalism published this week by the Harvard historian Sven Beckert. Entitled Capitalism: A Global History, this magisterial history, which took Beckert 8 years to write, covers the last thousand years of our increasingly dominant capitalist world. In fact, Beckert suggests, capitalism has become so ubiquitous that most of us canât imagine an alternative economic system. If we are fish, then itâs our water. So what, exactly, were the origins of capitalism? And is there really an alternative economic system? What, if anything, will come after capitalism? A happy (capitalist) Thanksgiving everyone.
1. Capitalism Isnât NaturalâItâs Historical Capitalism is a radical departure from previous forms of economic life, not the default state of human exchange. Because itâs historical, it had a beginningâand anything with a beginning can have an end.
2. The Death of Capitalism Has Been Wrongly Predicted for 200 Years From Marx onward, critics have forecast capitalismâs imminent collapse. Beckert is skeptical of these predictionsâmost of capitalismâs history came after someone declared it finished.
3. Thereâs No Going Back to the Pre-Capitalist Village The nostalgic alternativeâreturning to some pre-modern arrangementâis both impossible and undesirable. Feudal lords extracting surplus from peasants, subsistence farming at the margins of survival: thereâs nothing romantic about scarcity and exploitation.
4. We Have the Means to Solve Our ProblemsâWe Lack the Political Will The capitalist revolution has given us unprecedented productive capacity. We could feed everyone, educate everyone, provide universal healthcare. The obstacles arenât materialâtheyâre political choices.
5. AI Could Liberate Us or Concentrate Wealth FurtherâItâs a Political Decision If artificial intelligence delivers massive productivity gains, those gains could go to a tiny elite or be distributed broadly through shorter work weeks, better wages, expanded education. The technology doesnât determine the outcome. We do.
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