by Pops » Wed 24 Aug 2011, 14:54:59
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', 'c')apitalist production is about capital accumulation. what you're describing (in bold) isn't capitalist production but subsistence farming under primitive market conditions.
Certainly capital accumulation is a main feature of capitalism, as is wage exploitation, but neither are it's basis. Private ownership for private profit is the basis of capitalism as it is for mercantilism and simple commodity production of cows. I'm not arguing that
industrialism can continue forever, I'm sure it won't. After all industry and wage exploitation only really got going after we started turning FF heat energy into mechanical energy a couple hundred years ago. I'm arguing
private profit and even capital accumulation through inovation can continue past growth because growth is only required for accumulation of
new capital.
Without growth, capital can still be accumulated but only at the expense of another's accumulation, which is why markets turn evermore to speculation (right?).
But creative destruction (inovation) is the key feature and main advantage of capitalism I think, as valuable or more in a declining economy as one expanding. My little scenario doesn't proscribe inovation in any way. Let's say neighbor improves his genetics, or experiments with some mineral application that gives him an advantage and he could easily take some market share from me and so accumulate capital at my expense - that is capitalism without growth. Also the reason capitalism is superior to other systems in my opinion.
In fact, to Kubies point about profit accumulation with negative growth economy-wide, I'm sure that will happen as well, and case in point, my dairy calves are at record prices today even though the overall beef industry is in the pits and I'm gonna say I'll live to see the day that grain-raised beef is once again the exception and perhaps even grain-finished beef is passé. In that scenario I'll be able to afford some of those multi-colored toothpicks at the expense of Cargil and the other outfits that are now stuck with stranded assets! (I cn dream anyway)
By the way, what I described in my earlier post is exactly what I do in today's market (about the most modern I know of) and it isn't subsistence farming, which is by definition growing enough to merely survive without producing a surplus.
I admit there aren't many low tech niches right now and certainly none with much chance for accumulating capital near term but I'd think capitalists aren't endangered as much as are wage earners and, eventually, industrialists.
[edit for brain methane]
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)