We don’t
need anyone these days to tell us that we’re in a mess. Nor to explain why. The
libraries are groaning with books on globalization…… deregulation…..privatization….
debt….neo-liberalism…. greed……inequality…. corruption….. pollution…… austerity………
migration.
I’ve just
finished a book by Jerry Mander - The Capitalism Papers
– Fatal Flaws of an Obsolete System (2012) (the link gives the entire text)
which is as good a moral critique of the system which few dare to name as
you’re likely to read – “Jerry!”, one of his friends, says – “I hope you’re not
going to use the “C” word”!!
I wondered
about this reluctance to talk about capitalism – and duly googled the word,
unearthing quite a few treasures I have so far missed, two of them produced in
1999 and clearly major works. The
New Spirit of Capitalism is a French contribution by L Boltanski and E
Chiapello whose main focus is -
management
literature, and the ways in which it shifted between the 1960s and the 1990s in tone, content, and the
general set of assumptions about capitalism and the role of management. Boltanski and
Chiappello, as their title suggests, draw directly on Weber’s classic analysis
of “The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism”. Put simply, Weber’s
account maintains that the emergence of a full-scale capitalist economy
depended in part on a change in the habits of commercially-successful
merchants, master craftsmen and entrepreneurial farmers, whose forebears might
have spent their profits on luxurious lifestyles and, if sufficient, on the
land, titles and symbolic goods necessary to gain admittance to the
aristocracy.
The pursuit
of such worldly glories might always have diverted resources away from
investment in further productive capital if the ideology of Puritanism had not
motivated the proto-capitalist actively to avoid them in favour of dedication
to the singular vocation of his ‘calling’.
Boltanski and Chiapello derive from
this account the axiom that capitalism requires from its key agents a degree of
dedication, hard work and self-sacrifice which does not come naturally or
easily. As such, capitalism must always be animated by a ‘spirit’, an ideology
which inspires and motivates not the entire population, but the key sections
who must be committed quite explicitly to the project of capital accumulation
if it is to carry on successfully.
Boltanski and
Chiapello identify three such ‘spirits’, the first being Weber’s; the second
being the bureaucratic ‘spirit’ of the era of high Fordist industrialism (the
ideology of the ‘company man’), and the third being the ‘new spirit’ of the
highly flexible, network-intensive knowledge economy
But my failure to register his book makes one wonder about the motives
behind the high profile of writers such as Naomi Klein…..is it just her beauty
that impacts I have to wonder………
Richard Sennett is a better known writer – although hardly a
rabble-rouser…..I was disappointed by his book about cooperation but his The Culture of the new
capitalism (2006) looks much more interesting and seems to link up with The New Spirit of Capitalism – see this
review
Those
preferring more journalistic approaches could do a lot worse than read this
Spiegel article about the world view of the new billionaires.
I’m reminded
of a wave of books in the 1970s which were early harbingers of this sense of
crisis - James Robertson’s The Sane
Alternative (1978) and Ronald Higgins’ “The Seventh Enemy” (1978) were typical
examples. The second described the 7 main threats to human survival as the
population explosion, food shortage, scarcity of natural resources, pollution,
nuclear energy, uncontrolled technology - and ……human nature. The author’s
experience of government and international institutions convinces him that the
most dangerous was the moral blindness of people and the inertia of political
institutions.
A lot has
happened in the subsequent 47 years – new pressing issues have been identified
– but who would gainsay Higgins’ identification of the “seventh” enemy? These
days, there would probably be a majority in favour of stringing up a few
bankers, politicians and economists – “pour encourager le autres” – were it not
illegal…
Over the
years, I’ve read and collected books and articles to help me identify the sort
of agenda and actions which might unite a fair-minded majority.
The folders
in which they have collected have had various names – such as “urgent reading”
or “what is to be done” – but rarely accessed.
Occasionally
I remember one and blog about it.
I need to be
more disciplined………………