Published on Portside (https://portside.org)
A Future
Beyond Capitalism, Or No Future At All
Jason Hickel and Martin Kirk
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
Fast Company
In
February, college sophomore Trevor Hill stood up during a televised town hall
meeting in New York and posed
a simple question [1] to Nancy Pelosi, the
leader of the Democrats in the House of Representatives. He cited a study by
Harvard University showing that 51% of Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 no longer
support the system of capitalism [2], and asked
whether the Democrats could embrace this fast-changing reality and stake out a
clearer contrast to right-wing economics.
Pelosi was
visibly taken aback. “I thank you for your question,” she said, “but I’m sorry
to say we’re capitalists, and that’s just the way it is.”
The footage
went viral. It was powerful because of the clear contrast it set up. Trevor
Hill is no hardened left-winger. He’s just your average millennial—bright,
informed, curious about the world, and eager to imagine a better one. But
Pelosi, a figurehead of establishment politics, refused to–or was just unable
to–entertain his challenge to the status quo.
It’s not
only young voters who feel this way. A YouGov poll in 2015 found that 64% of Britons believe that capitalism is unfair [4], that it
makes inequality worse. Even in the U.S., it’s as high as 55%. In Germany, a
solid 77% are skeptical of capitalism. Meanwhile, a full three-quarters of
people in major capitalist economies believe that big businesses are basically
corrupt.
Why do
people feel this way? Probably not because they deny the abundant material
benefits of modern life that many are able to enjoy. Or because they want to
travel back in time and live in the U.S.S.R. It’s because they realize—either
consciously or at some gut level—that there’s something fundamentally flawed
about a system that has a prime directive to churn nature and humans into
capital, and do it more and more each year, regardless of the costs to human
well-being and to the environment we depend on.
Because
let’s be clear: That’s what capitalism is, at its root. That is the sum total
of the plan. We can see this embodied in the imperative to grow GDP,
everywhere, year on year, at a compound rate, even though we know that GDP
growth, on its own, does nothing to reduce poverty or to make people happier or
healthier. Global GDP has grown 630% since 1980 [5], and in
that same time, by some measures, inequality, poverty, and hunger have all
risen [6].
Just look
at the recent case involving American Airlines. Earlier this year, CEO Doug
Parker tried to raise his employee’s salaries to correct for “years of
incredibly difficult times” suffered by his employees, only to be slapped down
by Wall Street. The day he announced the raise, the company’s shares fell 5.8%.
This is not a case of an industry on the brink, fighting for survival, and
needing to make hard decisions. On the contrary, airlines have been raking in
profits. But the gains are seen as the natural property of the investor class.
This is why JP Morgan criticized the wage increase as a “wealth transfer of nearly $1 billion” to workers [7]. How dare
they?
What
becomes clear here is that ours is a system that is programmed to subordinate
life to the imperative of profit.
For a
startling example of this, consider the horrifying idea to breed brainless chickens and grow them
in huge vertical farms [8], Matrix-style, attached to
tubes and electrodes and stacked one on top of the other, all for the sake of
extracting profit out of their bodies as efficiently as possible. Or take
the Grenfell Tower disaster in London [9], where
dozens of people were incinerated because the building company chose to use
flammable panels in order to save a paltry £5,000 (around $6,500). Over and
over again, profit trumps life.
It all
proceeds from the same deep logic. It’s the same logic that sold lives for
profit in the Atlantic slave trade, it’s the logic that gives us sweatshops and
oil spills, and it’s the logic that is right now pushing us headlong toward
ecological collapse and climate change.
Millennials
can see that capitalism isn’t working for the majority of humanity, and they’re
ready to invent something better.
Once we
realize this, we can start connecting the dots between our different struggles.
There are people in the U.S. fighting against the Keystone pipeline [10]. There are
people in Britain fighting against the privatization of the National Health
Service. There are people in India fighting against corporate land grabs. There
are people in Brazil fighting against the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.
There are people in China fighting against poverty wages. These are all noble
and important movements in their own right. But by focusing on all these
symptoms we risk missing the underlying cause. And the cause is capitalism.
It’s time to name the thing.
What’s so
exciting about our present moment is that people are starting to do exactly
that. And they are hungry for something different. For some, this means
socialism. That YouGov poll showed that Americans under the age of 30 tend to
have a more favorable view of socialism than they do of capitalism, which is
surprising given the sheer scale of the propaganda out there designed to
convince people that socialism is evil. But millennials aren’t bogged down by
these dusty old binaries. For them the matter is simple: They can see that
capitalism isn’t working for the majority of humanity, and they’re ready to
invent something better.
What might
a better world look like? There are a million ideas out there. We can start by
changing how we understand and measure progress. As Robert Kennedy famously
said, GDP “does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their
education, or the joy of their play . . . it measures everything, in short,
except that which makes life worthwhile.”
We can
change that. People want health care and education to be social goods, not
market commodities, so we can choose to put public goods back in public hands.
People want the fruits of production and the yields of our generous planet to
benefit everyone, rather than being siphoned up by the super-rich, so we can
change tax laws and introduce potentially transformative measures like a
universal basic income [11]. People want to live in
balance with the environment on which we all depend for our survival; so we can
adopt regenerative agricultural solutions and even choose, as Ecuador did in
2008, to recognize in law, at the level of the nation’s constitution,
that nature has “the right to exist, persist, maintain, and
regenerate its vital cycles.” [12]
Measures
like these could dethrone capitalism’s prime directive and replace it with a
more balanced logic, that recognizes the many factors required for a healthy
and thriving civilization. If done systematically enough, they could consign
one-dimensional capitalism to the dustbin of history.
None of
this is actually radical. Our leaders will tell us that these ideas are not
feasible, but what is not feasible is the assumption that we can carry on with
the status quo. If we keep pounding on the wedge of inequality and chewing
through our living planet, the whole thing is going to implode. The choice is
stark, and it seems people are waking up to it in large numbers: Either we
evolve into a future beyond capitalism, or we won’t have a future at all.
This story
reflects the views of the authors, but not necessarily the editorial position
of Fast Company.
Dr. Jason
Hickel is an anthropologist at the London School of Economics who works on
international development and global political economy, with an ethnographic
focus on southern Africa. He writes for the Guardian and Al Jazeera
English. His most recent book, The Divide: A Brief History of Global Inequality and Its
Solutions [13], is
available now.
Martin Kirk
is cofounder and director of strategy for The Rules [14], a global
collective of writers, thinkers, and activists dedicated to challenging the
root causes of global poverty and inequality. His work focuses on bringing
insights from the cognitive and complexity sciences to bear on issues of public
understanding of complex global challenges.
Links:
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBAHo3Fu3tI
[2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/04/26/a-majority-of-millennials-now-reject-capitalism-poll-shows/?utm_term=.94c33d58b069
[3] http://portside.org/video/2017-07-12/capitalism
[4] https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/verdict-on-capitalism-unfair-and-corrupt-w6t5q7q52kq
[5] http://www.economywatch.com/economic-statistics/economic-indicators/
[6] http://www.academia.edu/21593862/The_True_Extent_of_Global_Poverty_and_Hunger_Questioning_the_Good_News_Narrative_of_the_Millennium_Development_Goals
[7] http://www.cnbc.com/2017/04/27/airline-shares-decline-amid-worries-the-stocks-will-become-a-poor-investment-again.html
[8] https://www.wired.com/2012/02/headless-chicken-solution
[9] https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/jul/10/grenfell-fire-criminal-investigation-starting-point-is-80-deaths-by-manslaughter-police-say
[10] https://www.fastcompany.com/3068503/indian-winter-documents-the-end-of-standing-rock-and-the-determination-to-fight-on
[11] https://www.fastcompany.com/3066420/what-will-it-take-to-get-a-universal-basic-income-in-the-us
[12] https://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/09/29/ecuador-constitution-grants-nature-rights/?_r=0
[13] https://www.amazon.com/Divide-New-History-Global-Inequality/dp/1785151126
[14] https://therules.org/
[15] https://www.fastcompany.com/newsletters
[16] https://magazine.fastcompany.com/pubs/FC/FST/2for1299.jsp?cds_page_id=206655&cds_mag_code=FST&id=1499900817309&lsid=71931806570021930&vid=1&cds_response_key=IB7FFGSUM
[2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/04/26/a-majority-of-millennials-now-reject-capitalism-poll-shows/?utm_term=.94c33d58b069
[3] http://portside.org/video/2017-07-12/capitalism
[4] https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/verdict-on-capitalism-unfair-and-corrupt-w6t5q7q52kq
[5] http://www.economywatch.com/economic-statistics/economic-indicators/
[6] http://www.academia.edu/21593862/The_True_Extent_of_Global_Poverty_and_Hunger_Questioning_the_Good_News_Narrative_of_the_Millennium_Development_Goals
[7] http://www.cnbc.com/2017/04/27/airline-shares-decline-amid-worries-the-stocks-will-become-a-poor-investment-again.html
[8] https://www.wired.com/2012/02/headless-chicken-solution
[9] https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/jul/10/grenfell-fire-criminal-investigation-starting-point-is-80-deaths-by-manslaughter-police-say
[10] https://www.fastcompany.com/3068503/indian-winter-documents-the-end-of-standing-rock-and-the-determination-to-fight-on
[11] https://www.fastcompany.com/3066420/what-will-it-take-to-get-a-universal-basic-income-in-the-us
[12] https://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/09/29/ecuador-constitution-grants-nature-rights/?_r=0
[13] https://www.amazon.com/Divide-New-History-Global-Inequality/dp/1785151126
[14] https://therules.org/
[15] https://www.fastcompany.com/newsletters
[16] https://magazine.fastcompany.com/pubs/FC/FST/2for1299.jsp?cds_page_id=206655&cds_mag_code=FST&id=1499900817309&lsid=71931806570021930&vid=1&cds_response_key=IB7FFGSUM
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives."
Eugene Victor Debs
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