Alex Foti on Tue, 11 Nov 2008 22:09:27 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Keynesianism is IN |
thanx for the krugman. i like when keynes said that economics is about maintaining the conditions for civilization, but i'm a kaleckian (he was a marxist by way of underconsumptionist rosa luxemburg). polanyi is superrelevant (wish had studied him more) and i think the self-defence of society to shape and mould the emerging pattern of regulation is what will determine whether this return to keynesianism is to the left or to the right. union struggles are in the ascendant, new unionization will occur. we'll have to start thinking organizing millions of unemployed. the shift to the right, in europe especially, is an imminent danger, you're right. but ideas especially today, in times of historical bifurcation when ideology affects the emerging makeup of new institutions for macro and microregulation, are the ones that determine a dramatically polar political outcomes. bu whare the opposing ideologies today? if the previous bifurcation was nationalism and fascism vs new deal liberalism allied with communism, the current one is played out by who: a european cultural civil war between a nationalist right and a transnational left, while everything else stays multipolar? emerging powers vs the "west"? multicultural transnational soft capitalism vs authoritarian state hard capitalism of the russian or chinese type? euramerica vs bolivarians and islamists (yuck)? green capitalism vs globalized ecoanarchy? the world split in opposing alliances of regions/powers (euramerica, bolivarian america, panafrica, russia, india, china, japan)? or what else? thanx for helping. best ciaos, watch out for student protests this weekend in rome, lx ps just for econ freaks: in the general theory, investment is what determines aggregate income, not consumption, which is dependent on income. in kalecki investment determines profits (and the profit share, which is dependent on monopoly power, the wage share). great on the political cycle of class struggle about the political impossibility of long spells of full employment in capitalism! pps derivatives are said to be equivalent of ponzi pyramid-like schemes that have existed at least since the times of jp morgan. On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 12:45 PM, Stefan Heidenreich <stefan.heidenreich@rz.hu-berlin.de> wrote: > Hi Brian et all > > i skip as much as possible all the questions - gold, keynes,-ism - where > keynes-specialists might help us further off-list and where your points > in fact seem mostly more precise. In order to come straight to the more > interesting points at the end. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org