Alex Foti on Mon, 25 Jul 2016 13:50:23 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> WG: Fwd: Re: Forms of decisionism |
I totally agree you have to look at productivity distribution regimes (in this boyer-coriat supplemented perez-freeman) - in 1950-1973 it was basically productivity growth out of taylorized assemly-line operation going to wages (in the US, for Germany, Japan and other laggards it kept prices low and enable export-led growth and catch up) - then the 1973-1979 �last spell of working class insurgence and stagflation - Fordist accumulation and Keynesian regulation end in inflatio.� With the 1979-1983 monetarist recession and attendant deindustrialization, the mutation of the economy starts toward informationalism. The productivity growth regime under informationalism is radically different than under mature fordism: productivity now goes either goes to profits or in falling prices (or a combination of the two) but not to wages (the great stagnation). neoliberalism doesn't deliver the goods - if you're a wage earner you have buy em on credit. i submit the hypothesis that that the structural cause of the demand crisis you rightly see as the dominant factor in the Great Recession is in fact the inability of neoliberal (de)regulation of distributing the fruits of technological progress to the population at large, unlike Fordism. However i completely disagree with the the neostagnationist idea (� la Hansen) that demand is now saturated and there is no way to kickstart effective demand and take the economy out of the doldrums where wrong-headed policies have moored it for 8 years already. Poverty and malnutrition are plaguing even western cities. College attendance is falling due to rising costs. Mass youth unemployment is a reality. There's huge need of investment in environmental remediation and public health. Fact is we haven't tried fiscal expansion on the post-WWII scale. Put money in the pockets of the precarious youth and make higher education cheap or free and the economy will recover for real. High concentration of wealth and income is enemy economic health: it was true in the 1920s, it's true in the 2010s.� On Sun, Jul 24, 2016 at 7:12 PM, Dr. Ludger Eversmann <Ludger.Eversmann@t-online.de> wrote: Hi all, let me shortly introduce myself: I worked on this field of cultural and technological progress since my doctoral dissertation in Business Information Systems Engineering in 2002, with focal point on all these resulting questions when it is assumed that technological progress is stepping on and possibly set to a maximum; questions like where actually is a limit to automation (calculable mashines), it it justified to replace human work by mashines, how, what are the conditions, which socioeconic conditions could highly developed industrial production systems lead to.
# 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: