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Capital in the Twenty-First Century

Started by Sheilbh, April 15, 2014, 05:36:09 PM

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The Minsky Moment

Piketty uses capital and wealth interchangably.  This is a bit odd because many economists would distinguish unimproved land or mineral deposits as natural endownments from capital.  Piketty's explanation is basically that it is too difficult to separate the unimproved value of land from the value of land as improved.  That is where "appropriation" appears as a term - because capital in this broader sense includes not only assets and things that have been accumulated over time but the assertion of rights over unimproved natural endowments as well.  If is a definitional matter, not a value judgment.
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

Admiral Yi

The value-free term to use in that situation would be "bought."

Jacob

Quote from: Admiral Yi on April 28, 2014, 02:46:09 PM
The value-free term to use in that situation would be "bought."

That doesn't seem value-free at all.

Admiral Yi

Quote from: Jacob on April 28, 2014, 02:47:58 PM
That doesn't seem value-free at all.

Do you consider the act of buying a positive or a negative act?

Sheilbh

Quote from: Oexmelin on April 28, 2014, 12:30:59 PM
Goldhammer is an amazing translator. I doubt he introduced such distortion.
And he has a great blog on French politics:
http://artgoldhammer.blogspot.co.uk/
Let's bomb Russia!

The Minsky Moment

Quote from: Admiral Yi on April 28, 2014, 02:46:09 PM
The value-free term to use in that situation would be "bought."

Value-free I don't know.  But it wouldn't be accurate.  "Bought" implies a market transaction.  Piketty is talking about wealth.  One does not buy wealth.  Wealth is either accumulated or it is an underlying natural characteristic that adheres to some package of recognized ownership claims.  "appropriation" is a useful short-cut word for the latter in the common English meaning of asserting exclusive possession.  It certainly doesn't require a market transaction.
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

Jacob

Quote from: Admiral Yi on April 28, 2014, 02:51:31 PM
Quote from: Jacob on April 28, 2014, 02:47:58 PM
That doesn't seem value-free at all.

Do you consider the act of buying a positive or a negative act?

Buying as a form of transaction is neither inherently positive or negative, but it carries with it an implication of legitimacy which is absent with "accumulation". In a sense, it is the mirror image of your complaint about "appropriation" (if I understood you correctly), which does have a whiff of illegitimacy about it.

Admiral Yi

Quote from: The Minsky Moment on April 28, 2014, 03:15:13 PM
Value-free I don't know.  But it wouldn't be accurate.  "Bought" implies a market transaction.  Piketty is talking about wealth.  One does not buy wealth.  Wealth is either accumulated or it is an underlying natural characteristic that adheres to some package of recognized ownership claims.  "appropriation" is a useful short-cut word for the latter in the common English meaning of asserting exclusive possession.  It certainly doesn't require a market transaction.

What exactly do you mean by asserting exclusive possession?

Am I asserting exclusive possession of bank account?  Of the clothes I'm wearing?

grumbler

Quote from: Jacob on April 28, 2014, 03:28:52 PM
In a sense, it is the mirror image of your complaint about "appropriation" (if I understood you correctly), which does have a whiff of illegitimacy about it.

Appropriation has a whiff of compulsion about it; by definition, it is taking against the wishes of the prior possessor or user.  It could be perfectly legitimate, though.  I can appropriate land, or art, or anything that belongs to me and which I used to allow unlimited access to, and control that access.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

citizen k

Quote
http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2014-04-27/piketty-rickety-government-complicity

Piketty Is Rickety On Government Complicity
By George Washington

French economist Thomas Piketty's book on inequality – Capital in the Twenty-First Century [40] – has gone completely viral [41].
Mainstream economists like Paul Krugman [42] and Joseph Stiglitz [43] endorse it.   So does Economist [44] magazine.  The Financial Times [45]and New York [46] magazine both call him a "rock star economist".
Slate notes [47]:

While recently passing through D.C., he took a little time [48] to meet with Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, the Council of Economic Advisers, and the IMF. Even Morning Joe, never exactly on the leading edge of ideas journalism, ran a segment [49] about Capital Tuesday morning.

Is Piketty right or wrong about inequality, its causes and the prescription for addressing inequality?

Piketty Is Right about Inequality
We noted in 2010 that extreme inequality helped cause the Great Depression ... and the 2008 financial crisis [50].  We noted in 2011 that inequality helped cause the fall of the Roman Empire [51].
In a few short years [52], mainstream economists have gone from assuming that inequality doesn't matter, to realizing that runaway inequality cripples the economy.
Pikettey correctly notes that inequality is now the worst in world history ... and will only get worse [53].
Asset Prices Rise Faster than Wages
Piketty argues that the main cause for inequality is that the rate of return on capital – land, natural resources, stocks, bonds and other assets – is far higher than the growth rate of the economy:
[54]
Because the growth rate is much slower than the rate of profit from holding capital assets, the asset-holders' wealth increases much faster than the wealth of workers. In other words, working stiffs can't keep up with those who make their money from investing in (and seeking rent from) land, stocks, bonds and other assets.
Piketty – a rigorous data researcher – is probably right that this is one of the main causes of inequality.
Government and Central Bank Policy Is What Is Making Assets Soar and the Economy Sink
But Piketty underplays the fact that bad government and central bank policy have greatly widened the gap between growth rate. After all, Fed chairman Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Geithner and chief economist Summer's entire strategy was to artificially prop up asset prices [55] – including the stock market [56] – and see this [57], this [58], this [59] and this [60].
At the same time, government policy has harmed the general economy [61], caused unemployment [62] and hurt the average American [63].
Indeed, real wages have actually plummeted since 1969 [64], and most of the new jobs that have been created are part times jobs with no benefit [65].
In other words, bad government and central bank policy have made the rate of return on capital much higher ... but lowered wages.  As such, bad policy is the core cause of the recent increase in inequality.
Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz said [66] in 2009 that the government's toxic asset plan – a scheme to inflate the value of assets held by banks – "amounts to robbery of the American people".
Bailouts Feather the Nests of the Fatcats, While Doing Nothing for the Average American
The American government's top official in charge of the bank bailouts writes [67]:


Americans should lose faith in their government. They should deplore the captured politicians and regulators who distributed tax dollars to the banks without insisting that they be accountable. The American people should be revolted by a financial system that rewards failure and protects those who drove it to the point of collapse and will undoubtedly do so again.

Only with this appropriate and justified rage can we hope for the type of reform that will one day break our system free from the corrupting grasp of the megabanks.
What's he talking about?
Well, the Fed threw money at "several billionaires and tens of multi-millionaires" [68], including billionaire businessman H. Wayne Huizenga, billionaire Michael Dell of Dell computer, billionaire hedge fund manager John Paulson, billionaire private equity honcho J. Christopher Flowers, and the wife of Morgan Stanley CEO John Mack
And the bank bailouts weren't a one-time thing in 2008.  The government has been – continuously and massively – been bailout out the big banks for the last 6 years.
Indeed, virtually all of the banks profits comes from government bailouts [69].  A top banking analyst estimates that subsidies to the giant banks exceeds $780 billion dollars each year [70].
A study of 124 banking crises by the International Monetary Fund found that bailing out banks which are only pretending to be solvent  – like most of the big American banks [71] – harms the economy [72].  So growth is slowed, while the richest fatcat bankers rake in the dough.
Indeed, the bailout money is just going to line the pockets of the wealthy [73], instead of helping to stabilize the economy or even the companies receiving the bailouts:
    •    Bailout money is being used to subsidize [74] companies run by horrible business men, allowing the bankers to receive fat bonuses [75], to redecorate [76] their offices, and to buy gold toilets [77] and prostitutes [78]
    •    A lot of the bailout money is going to the failing companies' shareholders [79]
    •    Indeed, a leading progressive economist says [80] that the true purpose of the bank rescue plans is "a massive redistribution of wealth to the bank shareholders and their top executives"
(Top economists, financial experts and bankers say [81] that the big banks are too large ... and their very size is threatening the economy. They say we need to break up the big banks [82] to stabilize the economy.
If we stop bailing out the Wall Street welfare queens [83], the big banks would focus more on traditional lending and less on speculative casino gambling [84]. Indeed, if we break up the big banks, it will increase the ability of smaller banks to make loans to Main Street [85], which will level the playing field.
We're all for forcibly breaking them up. But we don't even have to use government power to break up the banks ... the big banks would fail on their own [71] if the government just stopped bailing them out [70].)
QE: the Greatest Wealth Transfer in History
It's been known for some time that quantitative easing (QE) increases inequality [86] (and see this [87] and this [88].)  Many economists have said that QE quantitative easing benefits the rich, and hurts the little guy [89].   3 academic studies [61] – and the architect of Japan's quantitative easing program [90] – all say that QE isn't helping the American economy.
The Federal Reserve official responsible for implementing $1.25 trillion of quantitative easing has confirmed that QE is just a massive bailout for the rich [91]:


I can only say: I'm sorry, America. As a former Federal Reserve official, I was responsible for executing the centerpiece program of the Fed's first plunge into the bond-buying experiment known as quantitative easing. The central bank continues to spin QE as a tool for helping Main Street. But I've come to recognize the program for what it really is: the greatest backdoor Wall Street bailout of all time.

***

Trading for the first round of QE ended on March 31, 2010. The final results confirmed that, while there had been only trivial relief for Main Street, the U.S. central bank's bond purchases had been an absolute coup for Wall Street. The banks hadn't just benefited from the lower cost of making loans. They'd also enjoyed huge capital gains on the rising values of their securities holdings and fat commissions from brokering most of the Fed's QE transactions. Wall Street had experienced its most profitable year ever in 2009, and 2010 was starting off in much the same way.

You'd think the Fed would have finally stopped to question the wisdom of QE. Think again. Only a few months later—after a 14% drop in the U.S. stock market and renewed weakening in the banking sector—the Fed announced a new round of bond buying: QE2. Germany's finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, immediately called the decision "clueless."

That was when I realized the Fed had lost any remaining ability to think independently from Wall Street.
Even the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas said that Fed's Fisher said that "QE was a massive gift intended to boost wealth [92]."
Billionaires have admitted that they are the beneficiaries of QE. For example, billionaire hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller said [93] the following about QE:


"This is fantastic for every rich person," he said Thursday, a day after the Fed's stunning decision to delay tightening its monetary policy. "This is the biggest redistribution of wealth from the middle class and the poor to the rich ever."

"Who owns assets—the rich, the billionaires. You think Warren Buffett hates this stuff? You think I hate this stuff? I had a very good day yesterday."

Druckenmiller, whose net worth is estimated at more than $2 billion, said that the implication of the Fed's policy is that the rich will spend their wealth and create jobs—essentially betting on "trickle-down economics."

"I mean, maybe this trickle-down monetary policy that gives money to billionaires and hopefully we go spend it is going to work," he said. "But it hasn't worked for five years."
And Donald Trump said [94]:


"People like me will benefit from this."
Economics professor Randall Wray writes [95]:


Thieves ... took over the whole economy and the political system lock, stock, and barrel. They didn't just blow up finance, they oversaw the swiftest transfer of wealth to the very top the world has ever seen.
Economics professor Michael Hudson says that the big banks are trying to make us all serfs [96].
Economics professor Steve Keen says [96]:


"This is the biggest transfer of wealth in history", as the giant banks have handed their toxic debts from fraudulent activities to the countries and their people.
Money "Creation" Stuffs Bankers' Pockets with Money
The advent of central banks hasn't changed this formula. Specifically, the big banks ("primary dealers") loan money to the Fed, and charge interest for the loan [97].
the banking system is founded upon the counter-intuitive but indisputable fact that banks create loans first, and then create deposits later [98].
In other words, virtually all money is actually created as debt. For example, in a hearing held on September 30, 1941 in the House Committee on Banking and Currency, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve (Mariner S. Eccles) said:


That is what our money system is. If there were no debts in our money system, there wouldn't be any money.
And Robert H. Hemphill, Credit Manager of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said:


If all the bank loans were paid, no one could have a bank deposit, and there would not be a dollar of coin or currency in circulation. This is a staggering thought. We are completely dependent on the commercial Banks. Someone has to borrow every dollar we have in circulation, cash or credit. If the Banks create ample synthetic money we are prosperous; if not, we starve. We are absolutely without a permanent money system. When one gets a complete grasp of the picture, the tragic absurdity of our hopeless position is almost incredible, but there it is. It is the most important subject intelligent persons can investigate and reflect upon. It is so important that our present civilization may collapse unless it becomes widely understood and the defects remedied very soon.
Debt (from the borrower's perspective) owed to banks is profit and income from the bank's perspective. In other words, banks are in the business of creating more debt ... i.e. finding more people who want to borrow larger sums.
Debt is central to our banking system. Indeed, Federal Reserve chairman Greenspan was so worried that the U.S. would pay off it's debt, that he suggested [99] tax cuts for the wealthy to increase the debt.
The big banks ("primary dealers") loan money to the Fed, and charge interest for the loan [97]. This is in contrast [100] to what the Founding Fathers intended [101], and a massive redistribution of wealth ... unnecessarily transferring extra money on every loan to the big primary dealers.
Lawlessness Is a Core Cause of Inequality
Joe Stiglitz said [102]:


Inequality is not inevitable. It is not ... like the weather, something that just happens to us. It is not the result of the laws of nature or the laws of economics. Rather, it is something that we create, by our policies, by what we do.

We created this inequality—chose it, really—with [bad] laws ...
Conservative Ron Paul points out that the system is rigged for the rich and against the poor and the middle class:




We asked the top regulator and prosecutor during the S&L crisis, who obtained over 1,000 felony convictions for major white collar fraud – professor of law and economics, Bill Black – what are the core causes of inequality. Professor Black told Washington's Blog:


The industry that is the largest single driver of surging income inequality is finance. Finance dramatically increases inequality through three primary means. The obvious means is the massive flow of profits out of the productive sector and into finance, particularly compensation for finance elites. We know that a very large amount of that compensation is the product of the "sure thing" of accounting control fraud. They have been able to lead the fraud epidemics with absolute impunity. No Wall Street elite officer who led the frauds that caused the crisis has ever been prosecuted. [Background [103].] There are virtually no cases of "claw backs" from the C-suite perpetrators' compensation even when it is now inescapable that the "income" they reported to "earn" their bonuses were lies and they were actually creating horrific losses.

The second means is that the three most destructive epidemics of financial fraud in history caused our financial crisis and hyper-inflated the bubble. This too was a "sure thing" because of the fraud "recipe." The household sector's wealth loss was over $11 trillion. Over 10 million Americans lost their jobs. The productivity loss is estimated at over $21 trillion. Each of these actions caused a vast loss of wealth suffered disproportionately by the 99%.

Third, finance, even absent fraud, is a major cause of increasing inequality. It is the means of tax evasion, which is (in $ terms) a crime that is all about the 1%, hedge funds, and large corporations. It is also the means, and the excuse, for outsourcing American jobs in the productive sector and extorting domestic tax giveaways by putting U.S. states and cities in competition to induce them to locate in a particular city.

In the savings and loan debacle we sought to remove all the proceeds of fraud from the guilty elites.
Indeed, the big banks continue to manipulate every market [104] and commit crime after crime [105] and ... and profit handsomely from it, while law-abiding citizens slide further and further behind [102].
Yet Obama is prosecuting fewer financial crimes than Bush, or his father, or Ronald Reagan [106].  Indeed, the government has actively covered up for – and encouraged [107] – criminal fraud [108].
Indeed, there are two systems of justice in America [109] ... one for the big banks and other fatcats [110], and one for everyone else [111].
Holding the little guy to the letter of the law – while letting the fatcats run around immune to the law [112]- is making inequality much worse.
Black points out that we should claw back ill-gotten gains [113] from criminals under well-established fraud principles.  Specifically, the government could use existing laws to force ill-gotten gains to be disgorged [114] (see this [115] and this [116]) and fraudulent transfers to be voided.
Economist Michael Hudson also criticizes [117] Piketty for failing to address crime and fraud as core causes of inequality:


The other thing that is left out of the income tax statistics is of course how fortunes are really made, and that's crime and fraud. The good thing about Piketty is he points out, why is it that French novelists and English novelists tell you much more about wealth than economics? And he points out that in the 19th century novels by Jane Austen and Balzac, the way to make a fortune is to marry into it. That's true, but what Balzac also said is that behind every fortune is a great theft.
Government Subsidies to the Biggest Fatcats
The government shovels mass quantities of money to giant corporations through direct and indirect subsidies.
This includes subsidies to:
    •    The giant banks [70]
    •    Defense contractors [118]
    •    Participants in the failed drug war [119]
    •    The nuclear industry [120]
    •    And other already-wealthy recipients [83]
Why You're Paying Too Much In Taxes Today: Because the Ultra-Rich Pay Nothing ... Or Get Tax Refunds
The big boys use loopholes – including claiming their profits in foreign countries – to pay little or no taxes .. or to get tax refunds [121].
The middle class gets saddled with a heavier tax burden because the richest avoid taxes.
Government Creation of Monopolies
Wikipedia notes [122]:


A better explainer of growing inequality, according to Stiglitz, is the use of political power generated by wealth by certain groups to shape government policies financially beneficial to them. This process, known to economists as rent-seeking [123], brings income not from creation of wealth but from "grabbing a larger share of the wealth that would otherwise have been produced without their effort"

Rent seeking is often thought to be the province of societies with weak institutions and weak rule of law, but Stiglitz believes there is no shortage of it in developed societies such as the United States. Examples of rent seeking leading to inequality include
    •    the obtaining of public resources by "rent-collectors" at below market prices (such as granting public land to railroads [124], or selling mineral resources for a nominal price in the US),
    •    selling services and products to the public at above market prices (medicare drug benefit [125] in the US that prohibits government from negotiating [126] prices of drugs with the drug companies, costing the US government an estimated $50 billion or more per year),
    •    securing government tolerance of monopoly power (The richest person in the world in 2011, Carlos Slim, controlled Mexico's newly privatized telecommunication industry).
(Background here [127], here [96] and here [128].)
Stiglitz says [129]:


One big part of the reason we have so much inequality is that the top 1 percent want it that way. The most obvious example involves tax policy .... Monopolies and near monopolies have always been a source of economic power—from John D. Rockefeller at the beginning of the last century to Bill Gates at the end.
Government creates monopolies even in the U.S. [130] (and see below regarding government creation of the too big to fail banks.)
War Makes Us Poor ... But Makes Fatcats Richer Quicker
War makes the bankers and executives in defense companies [131]rich.
But – contrary to a long-standing myth – it makes the rest of us [132] poor.
As such, war is a major cause of inequality.
Over-Financialization
When a country's finance sector becomes too large finance, inequality rises. As Wikipedia notes [133]:


[Economics professor] Jamie Galbraith argues that countries with larger financial sectors have greater inequality, and the link is not an accident.
Government policy has been encouraging the growth of the financial sector for decades:

And see this [134].
Economist Steve Keen has also shown that "a sustainable level of bank profits appears to be about 1% of GDP", and that higher bank profits leads to a ponzi economy and a depression [135].
The government is largely responsible for this over-financialization. For example, MIT economics professor and former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson points out that the government created the giant banks [136], and they were not the product of free market competition.
Inequality Started Soaring When Nixon Took Us Off the Gold Standard
The New York Sun notes [137] that inequality started soaring in 1971 ... the same year [138] that Nixon took the U.S. off of the gold standard. The Sun shows the following chart from Piketty's book:
[139]Zero Hedge emphasizes [140] the inflection point:

Money Being Sucked Out of the U.S. Economy ... But Big Bucks Are Being Made Abroad
Part of the widening gap is due to the fact that most American companies' profits are driven by foreign sales and foreign workers [141]. As AP noted [142] in 2010:


Corporate profits are up. Stock prices are up. So why isn't anyone hiring?
Actually, many American companies are — just maybe not in your town. They're hiring overseas, where sales are surging and the pipeline of orders is fat.

***

The trend helps explain why unemployment remains high in the United States, edging up to 9.8% last month, even though companies are performing well: All but 4% of the top 500 U.S. corporations reported profits this year, and the stock market is close to its highest point since the 2008 financial meltdown.

But the jobs are going elsewhere. The Economic Policy Institute, a Washington think tank, says American companies have created 1.4 million jobs overseas this year, compared with less than 1 million in the U.S. The additional 1.4 million jobs would have lowered the U.S. unemployment rate to 8.9%, says Robert Scott, the institute's senior international economist.

"There's a huge difference between what is good for American companies versus what is good for the American economy," says Scott.

***

Many of the products being made overseas aren't coming back to the United States. Demand has grown dramatically this year in emerging markets like India, China and Brazil.
Government policy has accelerated the growing inequality. It has encouraged American companies to move their facilities, resources and paychecks abroad [141]. And some of the biggest companies in America have a negative tax rate [143] ... that is, not only do they pay no taxes, but they actually get tax refunds.
(And a large percentage of the bailouts [144] actually went to foreign banks (and see this [145]). And so did a huge portion of the money from quantitative easing [146]. More here [147] and here [89].)
Conclusion: Piketty Is Rickety On Government Complicity
The bottom line is that Piketty has done a great job of documenting the extent of inequality, and some of its causes.  But he misses the degree to which bad government and central bank policy is responsible.




citizen k

Quote
The Second Biggest Delusion In US Culture

Submitted by James H. Kunstler of Kunstler.com [6],

The debate over Thomas Piketty's new book Capital in the Twenty-First Century is as dumb as every other issue-set in the public arena these days — a product of failed mental models, historical blindness, hubris, and wishful thinking. Piketty's central idea is that wealth will continue to accumulate and concentrate among individual rich families at ever-greater rates and therefore that nation-states should take a number of steps to prevent that from happening or at least attempt to correct it.

The first mistake of Piketty fans such as New York Times op-ed ass Paul Krugman is the assumption that the dynamic labeled "capitalism" is an ism, a belief system that you can subscribe to or drop out of, depending on your political correctitude. That's just not true. So-called capitalism is more like gravity, a set of laws that apply to and describe the behavior of surplus wealth, in particular wealth generated by industrial societies, which is to say unprecedented massive wealth. The human race never saw anything quite like it before. It became both a moral embarrassment and a political inconvenience. So among the intellectual grandiosities of modern times is the idea that this massive wealth can be politically managed to produce an ideal equitable society — with no side effects.

Hence, the bold but hapless 20th century experiment with statist communism, which pretended to abolish wealth but succeeded mainly in converting wealth into industrial waste and pollution, while directing the remainder to a lawless gangster government elite that ruled an expendable mass peasantry with maximum cruelty and injustice.

In the other industrial nations, loosely called "the west," the pretense to abolish wealth altogether never completely took, but a great deal of wealth was "socialized" for the purpose of delivering public goods. That seemed to work fairly well in post-war Europe and a bit less-well in the USA after the anomalous Eisenhower decade when industrial labor enjoyed a power moment of wage arbitrage. Now that system is unraveling, and for the reason that Piketty & Company largely miss: industrial economies are winding down with the decline of cheap fossil fuels.

Piketty and his fans assume that the industrial orgy will continue one way or another, in other words that some mysterious "they" will "come up with innovative new technologies" to obviate the need for fossil fuels and that the volume of wealth generated will more or less continue to increase. This notion is childish, idiotic, and wrong. Energy and technology are not substitutable with each other. If you run out of the former, you can't replace it with the latter (and by "run out" I mean get it at a return of energy investment that makes sense). The techno-narcissist Jeremy Rifkins and Ray Kurzweils among us propound magical something-for-nothing workarounds for our predicament, but they are just blowing smoke up the collective fundament of a credulous ruling plutocracy. In fact, we're faced with an unprecedented contraction of wealth, and a shocking loss of ability to produce new wealth. That's the real "game-changer," not the delusions about shale oil and the robotic "industrial renaissance" and all the related fantasies circulating among a leadership that checked its brains at the Microsoft window.

Of course, even in a general contraction wealth will still exist, and Piketty is certainly right that it will tend to remain concentrated (where it isn't washed away in the deluge of broken promises to pay this and that obligation). But he is quite incorrect that the general conditions we enjoy at this moment in history will continue a whole lot longer — for instance the organization of giant nation-states and their ability to control populations. I suppose it's counter-intuitive in this moment of the "Deep State" with all its Orwellian overtones of electronic surveillance and omnipotence, but I'd take the less popular view that the Deep State will choke to death on the diminishing returns of technology and that nation-states in general will first degenerate into impotence and then break up into smaller units. What's more, I'd propose that the whole world is apt to be going medieval, so to speak, as we contend with our energy predicament and its effects on wealth generation, banking, and all the other operations of modern capital. That is, they'll become a lot less modern.

As all this occurs, some families and individuals will hang onto wealth, and that wealth is apt to increase, though not at the scales and volumes afforded by industrial activities. Political theorizing a la Marx or Thomas Piketty is not liable to deprive them of it, but other forces will. The most plausible framework for understanding that is the circulation of elites. This refers to the tendency in history for one ruling elite to be overturned and replaced by another group, often by violence, and then become the new ruling elite. It always happens one way or another, and even the case of the Bolsheviks in Russia during the industrial 20th century can be seen this way.

In any case, just because human affairs follow certain patterns these days, don't assume that all these patterns will persist. I doubt that the Warren Buffets and Jamie Dimons of the world will see their wealth confiscated via some new policy of the Internal Revenue Service — e.g. the proposed "tax on wealth." Rather, its more likely that they'll be strung up on lampposts or dragged over three miles of pavement behind their own limousines. After all, the second leading delusion in our culture these days, after the wish for a something-for-nothing magic energy rescue remedy, is the idea that we can politically organize our way out of the epochal predicament of civilization that we face. Piketty just feeds that secondary delusion.


Duque de Bragança

Quote from: Sheilbh on April 28, 2014, 03:10:37 PM
Quote from: Oexmelin on April 28, 2014, 12:30:59 PM
Goldhammer is an amazing translator. I doubt he introduced such distortion.
And he has a great blog on French politics:
http://artgoldhammer.blogspot.co.uk/

Interesting foreign view, thanks.  :)

The Minsky Moment

Quote from: Admiral Yi on April 28, 2014, 04:56:40 PM
What exactly do you mean by asserting exclusive possession?

Am I asserting exclusive possession of bank account?  Of the clothes I'm wearing?

Juridically no, but in common speaking one often talks that way.
I think what may be bothering you is the implication he is talking about appropriation by a person vis-a-vis another person.  As I read it, he isn't.  He is talking about appropriation vis-a-vis "nature"  such that pure natural bounty becomes countable as private wealth (capital). 
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

Jacob

Quote from: grumbler on April 28, 2014, 04:56:58 PM
Quote from: Jacob on April 28, 2014, 03:28:52 PM
In a sense, it is the mirror image of your complaint about "appropriation" (if I understood you correctly), which does have a whiff of illegitimacy about it.

Appropriation has a whiff of compulsion about it; by definition, it is taking against the wishes of the prior possessor or user.  It could be perfectly legitimate, though.  I can appropriate land, or art, or anything that belongs to me and which I used to allow unlimited access to, and control that access.

Yeah, fair enough.

Admiral Yi

Quote from: The Minsky Moment on April 29, 2014, 10:19:08 AM
Juridically no, but in common speaking one often talks that way.
I think what may be bothering you is the implication he is talking about appropriation by a person vis-a-vis another person.  As I read it, he isn't.  He is talking about appropriation vis-a-vis "nature"  such that pure natural bounty becomes countable as private wealth (capital).

I still don't understand what kinds of things he's referring to.  Like extensions of mineral rights in the sea bed?  Those are done by governments, not unilaterally by individuals.

And you certainly have to agree that the term makes no sense in the context of that one sentence quoted in the OP.