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Re: Re: Current implications for South Africa
Michael Perelman wrote:
I don't know what the biggest risk is for capitalism: Third World upheavals,
financial implosion, global warming, overcapacity, or resource constraints. I
think it would be very useful to think about how these various
forces relate to
each other. For example, could resource constraints and
overcapacity cancel one
another out?
In my role as PEN-L's Dr Pangloss, may I point out one thing you
didn't include - human ingenuity, and its specifically capitalist
form of innovation in pursuit of profit. You list every problem and
treat each as a potentially fatal constraint. As the Old Man put it
in the Grundrisse:
"Those economists who, like Ricardo, conceived production as directly
identical with the self-realization of capital -- and hence were
heedless of the barriers to consumption or of the existing barriers
of circulation itself, to the extent that it must represent
counter-values at all points, having in view only the development of
the forces of production and the, growth of the industrial population
-- supply without regard to demand -- have therefore grasped the
positive essence of capital more correctly and deeply than those who,
like Sismondi, emphasized the barriers of consumption and of the
available circle of counter-values, although the latter has better
grasped the limited nature of production based on capital, its
negative one-sidedness. The former more its universal tendency, the
latter its particular restrictedness."
- Thread context:
- Re: energy prices, (continued)
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