Patrice Riemens on Tue, 5 Apr 2016 18:24:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Ten Theses on the Panama Papers |
The theses factory is churning on ... 10 Theses on the Panama Papers 1. Never before have so many people owed so much wealth. Even though an even smaller minority of people owe an increasing proportion of the world's wealth, their absolute number have been rising, especially during the last economic boom of triumphant neo-liberalism. Since the crisis their number has stabilized, or even dwindled a little, but it still remains considerable. 2. Never before has wealth been so 'liquid'. Traditional wealth constituted mainly of material stuff: factories, real estate, land, or even money/gold - and not to forget, 'social capital'. All this is still there, but it has been largely 'securitized', transformed into financial instruments leading their own life. Property titles used to be the token for really existing assets, now the roles have been reversed. 3. Never before has wealth been so mobile. Unlike 'solid' assets, financial instruments can be moved around at will - and will be. Here again, traditional profitability was a measure of the actual performance of the 'real' assets. Now it is their financial profitability, bwo 'virtual' positions, which plays that role. 4. Never before has wealth been so velocious. 'Solid' assets always have been acquired and sold and even speculated with, for sure. But this was a process that took sometimes months or even years to take place, with some exceptions taking may be a few weeks or even days. Money itself was moving faster, but banks took one day or two to clear transactions. Nowadays the latency is rather measured in (micro)seconds. 5. Wealth has been digitized. The above points 2, 3, and 4 have been greatly enhanced by information technology (IT). At the same time IT has become mandatory to achieve the objective of profit maximization. This cycle has become vicious, and is the source of the 'accident' befalling Mossack Fonseca, the Panama law/management firm 'victim' of the massive leak referd to as 'the Panama Papers'. 6. Leaks have become an 'integral accident'. In the 'analog' days, a leak the size of the 'Panama Papers' would entail physically taking over the target's premises, and a fleet of lorries to truck the loot out. Now, this is just one (albeit very sophisticated) mouse-click away. 7. Leaks have become unquestionable. With earlier disclosures, the authenticity of documents leaked could always be credibly disputed. Nowadays the authenticity of materials obtained thru electronic leaks, due to its sheer magnitude and the one to one nature of a digital reproduction, is much more difficult to question. 8. But the more we know for true, the less it bears to consequences ... The Panama Papers will most probably confirm that we have swiftly transitioned from 'after Snowden 1.0' to 'after Snowden 2.0'. At the time of the Snowden revelations, the general mood was one of 'we always suspected something like that, now we know' - and now things must and will change. Now we still know, and then even some more, but we also know that nothing will change. 9. ... rather, it bears to negative consequences. My hunch is that even more cynicism and delusion will result from the 'Panama Papers'. A few individuals may go for the chop, but in most cases, the remaining impact will be PR-massaged away, the more so since a majority of ongoings featured in the leaked materials are probably legit - if ethically spurious/illegitimate. It is the (financial-economic-political-social) system itself that is sick to the core, the Panama Papers merely shed lights on its usually more concealed symptoms. 10A. And the Society of the Spectacle marches on ... 10B. All little bits help to break down the walls of Jericho ... Soon the Saints come marching in ... (choice is yours! ;-) # 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: [email protected] # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: