Ludger Eversmann on Wed, 27 Jul 2016 03:38:14 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> WG: Fwd: Re: Forms of decisionism |
The question if there is a way to kickstart effective demand again and all in all to return to the Golden 1960-1970's in terms of strong parliaments, strong labor unions and productivity gains going in high proportions to wages (and resulting demand) may be difficult to answer; allthough in my view there are a lot of indications that support the assumption that it will not, and beyond this question the fact is more and more drastically drawing attention that ecology won't stand a strong and sustaining growth of consumation of ressources. But there is a different question: is the idea of eternal never ending growth the best idea that is possibly imaginable? Is there no idea of progress to define and derive other than progress in the total of produced and available made goods? A related question to this is: is there a criteria of progress for the performance of production systems namable, other than gains of productivity? During the late 1980s through 1990s and the period of the CIM euphory the ideal of the fully automated "factory of the future" was in place. One factory that produces automobiles, one for furniture or one for tires, but all fully automated, at least as fully as possible. Obviously, if this ideal would be possible to reach, economy would collapse, as Karl Marx already wrote in his machine fragment (Mason). From the late 1990s up to day the ideal of the the equally productive and at the same time flexible or universal factory of the future was proclaimed. If we imagine this ideal possibly was driven to reality - would this lead to "better" economical conditions, to sustainable, justifiable, rational and multipliable economic orders? Today i downloaded a paper by Joshua Pierce ([1]http://link.springer.com/article/10.1057%2Fjibs.2015.47) on the impact of additive manufacturing (3D-printing) on global value chains. He finds that "..Potentially, wider adoption of this technology has the potential to partially reverse the trend towards global specialization of production systems into elements that may be geographically dispersed and closer to the end-users (localization). This leaves the question of whether in some industries diffusion of 3D printing technologies may change the role of multinational enterprises as coordinators of global value chains by inducing the engagement of a wider variety of firms, even households." 3D-printing is one of some other digitized production technologies that all together allow for highly productive and at the sime time very flexible up to universal production systems. Now if there are households as creators of some value of use, and additional public enterprises, that offer this kind of universal production capacity, which can be individually transformed into goods like the homogene product of energy suppliers can individually formed into light or heat, the role of multinational enterprises obviously would be changed, depending on the level and the density of "prosumer production" that can be achieved. This could mean for the public to regain political power to install some regulations necessary for the whole of the economy, which to install labor unions and parliaments have become too weak. But, above all, this would mean a change in the direction of development: not everlasting growth, competition, hunting for market shares and profits, but creation of production systems (besides traditional private enterprises) which are located close to the place of consumption, and owned and driven possibly by households, but also by communities or other public subjects on different levels. So in this way indeed the "means of production" could shift into the hands of the public - at least some, a part of them. A society would come to existence which owns a good portion of the high tech and automated machinery that creates her own wealth - a good idea? And the question can be turned the other way round: if it is possible to develop production systems which are able to satisfy a wide range of possible consum wishes of their owners, what is the best economic order to build around them? Anyway, production systems seem to develop into this direction; digital fabrication means to produce on demand instead of on stock, in small batches, close to the place of consumption, and in separation of fabrication and design, which means that fabrication means the realization of digitized models of goods. The more this possible, the less a good remains to be a commodity, instead of a value in use. And, quite obviously, this could have quite far reaching consequences for the surrounding economic order, it seems, at least to me. Regards, Ludger Von meinem iPad gesendet Am 25.07.2016 um 07:10 schrieb Alex Foti <[2]alex.foti@gmail.com>: 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. <...>
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