By Benjamin R. Barber, The Nation. Posted January 28, 2009.
Capitalism is on its knees and now we have a chance to create higher ideals beyond career climbing and mindless consumerism.
As America, recession mired, enters the hope-inspired age of Barack Obama, a silent but fateful struggle for the soul of capitalism is being waged. Can the market system finally be made to serve us? Or will we continue to serve it? George W. Bush argued that the crisis is "not a failure of the free-market system, and the answer is not to try to reinvent that system." But while it is going too far to declare that capitalism is dead, George Soros is right when he says that "there is something fundamentally wrong" with the market theory that stands behind the global economy, a "defect" that is "inherent in the system."
The issue is not the death of capitalism but what kind of capitalism -- standing in which relationship to culture, to democracy and to life? President Obama's Rubinite economic team seems designed to reassure rather than innovate, its members set to fix what they broke. But even if they succeed, will they do more than merely restore capitalism to the status quo ante, resurrecting all the defects that led to the current debacle?
Read on...
This is a pretty upbeat article, but Peacenik isn't convinced that Capitalism can be rejuvenated in any form. It would be nice to think the world was civilized enough to work through and possibly benefit from the economic crisis. But too many people are going to lose too much that they have come to believe they are entitled to. The present system has been tainted by too much corruption. Too many Ponzi Schemes. Too many lies. But the author is right, something new is coming. The status quo is finished.
Capitalism is on its knees and now we have a chance to create higher ideals beyond career climbing and mindless consumerism.
As America, recession mired, enters the hope-inspired age of Barack Obama, a silent but fateful struggle for the soul of capitalism is being waged. Can the market system finally be made to serve us? Or will we continue to serve it? George W. Bush argued that the crisis is "not a failure of the free-market system, and the answer is not to try to reinvent that system." But while it is going too far to declare that capitalism is dead, George Soros is right when he says that "there is something fundamentally wrong" with the market theory that stands behind the global economy, a "defect" that is "inherent in the system."
The issue is not the death of capitalism but what kind of capitalism -- standing in which relationship to culture, to democracy and to life? President Obama's Rubinite economic team seems designed to reassure rather than innovate, its members set to fix what they broke. But even if they succeed, will they do more than merely restore capitalism to the status quo ante, resurrecting all the defects that led to the current debacle?
Read on...
This is a pretty upbeat article, but Peacenik isn't convinced that Capitalism can be rejuvenated in any form. It would be nice to think the world was civilized enough to work through and possibly benefit from the economic crisis. But too many people are going to lose too much that they have come to believe they are entitled to. The present system has been tainted by too much corruption. Too many Ponzi Schemes. Too many lies. But the author is right, something new is coming. The status quo is finished.