Ed Phillips on Sun, 27 Jul 2008 03:10:08 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Some reflections on global mapping |
> What strikes me is the speed with which the capitalists adjust to the new > situation: replacing the privatisation of profits with the need to > socialise losses. Even The Economist and the FT recognize that this means > new rules for the market economy and an enhanced role for the state, but > capitalism's critics are slower to acknowledge that neo-liberalism is over. > My guess is that the political pressure for new public safeguards against > what W called Wall Street getting drunk on itself will build up more > gradually. The question is where and how a phase on enhanced regulation will > take place. One recent example was a statement by an EU commissioner that > the credit rating agencies will be forced to erect serious firewalls between > themselves and 'the markets'. But that is just a drop in the ocean. > Keith, I really appreciate your thinking and I've been waiting for you to pull up your stool in the nettime pidgin bar: I'll take a different tack. I too noted what was previously a lefty trope of private profits and social risk making it into the economist and ft. I see that as some acknowledgment of the way in which the banking "markets" are already a shame-faced and inefficient socialist-capitalist synthesis. American market watchers have been watching the Mae/Mac system inefficiently underwrite the housing boom for years, watching a "free market" pull off dazzling aerials of weightless lending with a perfect safety net. Even intellectually honest critics of the conservative stripe such as Gigot at the WSJ have been at the Maes. Where I don't see Liberalism euro-american style going is acknowledgment of or direct open engagement in efficient, people's money, peoples profit and loss governance. I looked at Gigot's recent words on it and found a perfect example of where the ideology of what you are calling neoliberalism is alive and strong and cloaking and masking, and appears to have no end in sight. I don't say this in despair or cynicism but rather in an attempt to intervene in and make distinct the thinking. So here I see less of "a shift in rules for the market economy and more of an enhanced role for the state" because the state has already had the role and the rules in place. The role is now revealed to more people than before. But some serious thinking about investments in ideology will have to take place and I don't see that quite yet with this crisis and at this level of inequality. Remember in the 90's we thought that the inequality was already too great to sustain the illusions? Perhaps the next major crisis when the inequality will be exponentially greater and when the tools of "those who are creating something new" will be that much greater will be a major shift? I don't see it now. Why this crisis is to be drawn out over at least the next year lies somewhat in the waiting game that is happening with those that are holding illiquid paper and those that are waiting to bottom feed. But it does not look this time like collapse nor does it look like the euro-american nations will take more than stopgap piecemeal measures, with little change in role and rules. Much work has to be done to reveal a kind of that is the way things are thinking, an investment in false fig leaf rhetoric, in baldly, ideology. I can do a little bit of what I think is useful revealing by discussing Gigot a little. (this should make sense without having to read Gigot but he is a simple google search away should anyone have interest). Gigot's attacks are very well written and on point, especially when he takes Krugman (third way liberalism) et al. to task for not pointing out the symbiosis between The Street and the taffy candy companies. There is indeed a Countrywide-MacMae-IndyMac continuum. That is an important and intellectually honest point. An enormous synthesis lies in that little sentence (trillions of dollars in value). Gigot attempts to unmask the symbiosis between the street and Washington but he cannot go far enough; the cloak was not just "affordable housing" as he says and apologists for the Maes say, but the very market itself. The pretense of a free market in mortgages and banking and agency securities was the deeper cloak that Gigot can't even see for his own blinding ideology. We are not just talking about a few fat cats at the maes, but the entire housing-cum-banking industry and its rising tide promising not just the affordable "ideology of home beautiful" but the promise of profit to every jane and joe to boot. What a deadly combination that is to the euro-american psyche! Watch the bubble burst. MacMae also propped up IndyMac as its luxury super jumbo supposedly wholly private cousin. The whole rising tide brought all those fat mortgage banking operations up with it. It is decidedly by-partisan, nakedly so, and the fake conservative, tax cut and subsidize Booshies are as naked as any on the left side of the aisle. Furthermore, Gigot over-errs in thinking that Krugman or the chattering liberals had the power to prop up the maes; Gigot has the professional blindness of the pundit to his own powerlessness. The engine here was the perfect combination of apparent profit for all (in the entire housing game) and growth, growth, growth. It has to rise with the bubble, everybody has to appear to get some glucose out of it, for this kind of colossal flimflammery to fly. Krugman could have railed as hard as he did against Booshy's executive power grab. The pundit rages in the wilds of op-ed powerlessly.... Until the bubble bursts. (The pundits are a part of a system of professional intellectual wrestling, staged with mock outrage. The power is with the people if and when they seize it.) On the downside of the bubble, the Agency paper is not worthless at all but rather illiquid and will be very profitable to those that buy it when others need to unload it. (think China and the bottom feeders). Debt will continue to be one of the biggest games in global town, and a very profitable one. I take your point about the Bretton Woods institutions going through major changes and that will be due as much to the rise of the petrodollars and China as crisis in financialization. Such a dramatic shift. I also take your point about not writing off the state, which many never did. Popular wisdom euro-american style often has it that the nominally socialist countries lack the dynamism of the countries with the free market fig leafs. The current irony is that the naked socialist-capitalist synthesis of China is looking decidedly more dynamic at the moment than such popular wisdom would grant. Where looking at the intersections of global capital and the loosely affiliated groups of nation states as a non-determining totality is helpful I think is in both seeing the interdependence and the ways in which certain less "totalized" ways of looking at geoeconomics are inadequate to the unprecedented present. One could miss, for example, the self-scaling of the investment portfolio. I am fond of the failed, frayed in-determinist totality, the globe if you will, as a tool for thinking and mapping out what is the not yet mapped out or unthinkable present. The profit on it is more than learning to curse, but in undramatically seizing a means of understanding. I take an active interest. > It has been obvious enough for some time that world society needs to adjust > to the internet, to the counterrevolution unleashed after Sept 11th, to the > rise of India and China and now to the end of the neoliberal boom. I don't > claim that the new social forms I study and sometimes promote are all that > big, when placed alongside dominant institutions, or that our side will win. > But I do know whose side I am on, the one that would grant more economic > power to the people, economic democracy. And I don't find the idea of > capitalism as a totality all that helpful to that end, even though the idea > has to be taken into account. > sponsoring community currencies. The creation of working syntheses is really interesting and is I think something of a nowtopia as Peter Carlssen is putting it. These forms collecting assumption of means are the future in the present. The optimism that see in these movements the future is in no sense naive. > In my previous post I said we need stories more than maps. I have plenty of > them, have been storing them up for years and refurbish them daily from the > news. But I don't have concrete foresight into institutional possibilities. > When it becomes obvious, the Bretton Woods institutions -- World Bank, IMF, > WTO -- will have to be scrapped. What gets put in their place depends on the > severity of the economic collapse and the combined social forces pushing for > a new deal. I know something of what is going on in the Bank, but nothing > that will keep them going in anything like their present form. The buildings > may still be there, but the functions will take a new form, perhaps even > with some new functions and interests to serve. Sorry that this is so vague, > but it is important to figure out what the political game is right now and > whose side we are on. You can be sure that institutional economics will be > revived, since the problem of saving the economy in practical terms ranks > higher than preaching the virtues of free markets now. > > There are several stories in play: where we are in the history of the > boom/bust cycle; how the BRIC countries and others will use their economic > strength in dealing with the west; what forms a revived state apparatus will > take and not just in relation to the economy; the US empire, the dollar and > the war for oil; the future of European integration in face of a $2 Earp > exchange rate; the future of the internet, especially if revived governments > find new ways to serve corporate interests (see the latest on ISPs and the > record companies); how all this is transformed into a green panic or its > opposite. Take your pick. It's all probably too complex and uncertain to be > mapped as a totality, but some political and intellectual movement is > desirable, rather than pining for a past of greater ideological clarity. > > > > Against fascism and war, a revival of redistributive > > > politics at appropriate levels of world society would be one strategy. > > > > The famous "global Keynesianism" that's been talked about for decades. > > Could it be done? How? By whom? Are there any plans afoot? > > It might have been talked about for decades, but now is a new historical > context for any such strategy. I content myself professionally by writing > about Africa's prospects and motorists (and South Africa in particular). Then > by dusting off the Polanyi via Stiglitz playbook to see if any old tunes can > find a new resonance. My bet is that redistribution will move back up the > political agenda, at least as a way of selling a rescue deal for global > deal, perhaps for more democratic reasons. It means that those of us who > wrote off the state in the dot com boom will have to think again. > > > > Promoting the voluntary reciprocity of decentralized groups another. > > > > Anywhere this is really happening? To any degree? (sincere questions, I > > am ignorant) > > This is where I really put my professional effort, lately supported and > influenced by French economic sociologists such as Jean 'Louis Lilly and > Alain Caille. Brazil and France have both kept the anti-capitalist flame > burning after the demise of the Soviet Union. The very successful > Dictionnaire dye l'autre economie (Milliard 2006), with its origins in Porto > Alegre 2000, is a major source. I have been approached by Brazil's central > bank to see if they can help Lula's programme of economic solidarity by > sponsoring community currencies. A friend in New York who was a derivatives > quant is now a trader in exotic markets specialised in Brazil. I am soon > giving the keynote for a Southern California conference on 'Everyday digital > money' sponsored by Intel. Michael Linton, inventor of LETS, will be > showcasing his plans for smart cards capable of registering 15 alternative > currencies. Kenya is a major centre for new developments in mobile phones, > IT and money using poor people's organization, technology and lout. > > It has been obvious enough for some time that world society needs to adjust > to the internet, to the counterrevolution unleashed after Sept 11th, to the > rise of India and China and now to the end of the neoliberal boom. I don't > claim that the new social forms I study and sometimes promote are all that > big, when placed alongside dominant institutions, or that our side will win. > But I do know whose side I am on, the one that would grant more economic > power to the people, economic democracy. And I don't find the idea of > capitalism as a totality all that helpful to that end, even though the idea > has to be taken into account. > > So your request for clarification, Brian, shows that I have no answers in > those terms, but lots of stories. Want to hear some more over a drink? > > Keith > > www.thememorybank.co.uk <...> LocalWords: Bretton WTO BRIC internet ISPs Keynesianism Polanyi Stiglitz LocalWords: playbook Caille Dictionnaire l'autre economie Alegre programme LocalWords: quant specialised centre neoliberal nettime # 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: [email protected]