capitalism

Capitalism

Capitalism Jonathan Poland

Capitalism is an economic system based on the principles of economic freedom, private ownership, and the creation of wealth through the pursuit of profit. In a capitalist system, individuals and businesses have the right to own and control their own property, and to use that property to create wealth. This can include starting and running businesses, investing in stocks and other financial assets, and buying and selling goods and services.

Under capitalism, the market is the primary mechanism for coordinating the economy. Prices, supply and demand, and competition are all determined by the forces of the market, rather than by government intervention. This allows for the efficient allocation of resources and the creation of wealth, but it also means that capitalism can be subject to boom and bust cycles and other market failures.

While capitalism has been successful in creating wealth and economic growth, it has also been criticized for its potential to create inequality and social injustice. Critics of capitalism argue that it is a system that primarily benefits the wealthy and powerful, and that it can lead to exploitation and oppression of the poor and marginalized. Despite these criticisms, capitalism remains the dominant economic system in many parts of the world. The following are some concepts within capitalism.

Overwhelming Dominance

Any nation that produces most of its GDP with the profit motive and competitive markets can be viewed as capitalist. In this context, most nations, including former communist and socialist states such as China and Vietnam, are capitalist. There are degrees of capitalism as some industries are still nationalized in some nations. However, capitalism produces most global GDP and is the defacto economic system of most nations.

Private Property

Capitalism is based on property rights whereby if you build something, you can own it, sell it, use it and so forth. Under capitalism, the government doesn’t own and control industries but rather lets them emerge with the ambition and needs of the people.

Profit Motive

Capitalism produces significant productivity, growth and innovation as property rights allow people to profit from value creation. This is known as the profit motive and doesn’t exist in a system of forced sameness whereby outcomes are guaranteed to be the same regardless of contribution or results.

Competitive Markets

A market is a system where agents freely compete to close translations. For example, a market for goods or a market for labor. These generate competition that improves things. For example, a competitive labor market rewards those who acquire the talents, knowledge and skills needed by businesses.

Anti-competitive Practices

Pure capitalism, known as laissez-faire capitalism, is a system where governments don’t interfere in the economy in any way. This doesn’t exist at any scale and probably can’t exist at any scale because without government regulations and enforcement, a monopoly would quickly emerge that would resemble a communist government in that it would eventually control all capital. As such, capitalism can only exist where governments prevent anti-competitive practices that would eventually destroy competitive markets.

Social Classes

Capitalism is based on keeping the value that you can capture or create. Without this, the profit motive doesn’t exist and it’s not capitalism. As such, capitalism inherently leads to social classes such as the upper class, middle class and working class. Governments in developed nations commonly use taxation and limited income redistribution to reduce or prevent poverty.

Social Market Economy

Currently, all developed nations are some variant of a social market economy whereby capitalism is the primary economic system that generates income and wealth but taxation is used to provide some level of redistribution of income, often in the form of free public services such as education. Social market economies should not be confused with socialism as they are capitalist systems that simply use taxation to provide government services and entitlements. Socialism on the other hand, implies that a nation attempts to own and control all or most industries.

Inequality

Capitalism is based on free and open competition. As such, those who produce and capture the most value can end up with a large share of the world’s resources. In practice, most capitalist societies are social market economies that use taxation to redistribute some of this wealth with public services such as education, healthcare and basic income. However, it is common for the wealthy to use aggressive tax structures and strategy to avoid taxes resulting in a high tax burden for the middle class and less resources for those in need.

Consumerism

As capitalism efficiently produces products and services that people want, it is often blamed for social ills related to greed, materialism and consumerism. For example, some feel that capitalism convinces people to be greedy and materialistic with mechanisms such as advertising. It could be argued that as an economic system capitalism fulfills its role of producing goods and it is culture that shapes behavior.

Commoditization

Commoditization is the process by which things that were once viewed as unique become viewed as indistinguishable parts. For example, the commoditization of labor is the process by which firms begin to view workers as interchangeable. This begins with an education system that produces standard skills as opposed to unique humans with special talents.

Monopolies

Under capitalism, firms compete to grow market share. With time these firms can control markets such that competition ceases to exist. When this occurs, customers have no alternatives such that prices rise, quality declines and the firm may impose unfair terms on customers. In order to preserve capitalism, governments may break up firms that control markets. Otherwise, capitalism would begin to resemble socialism whereby a single entity controls all capital.

Monopsony

A monopsony is a large firm that is the only customer for a product or service. This also applies to firms that are the only employer in a particular geographical area or profession. For example, a town that only has a single employer such that the employer can drive down wages and impose poor working conditions as workers have no alternatives. Socialism makes this problem worse by imposing state control of all employment.

Anti-Competitive Practices

Many of the problems with capitalism have to do with anti-competitive practices whereby firms prevent fair competition. For example, a firm that controls what software may be installed on a large number of mobile devices thus preventing open competition for games and other apps†.

Undermining Democracy

Capitalist interests that work to undermine the power of people to shape their own societies. For example, global agreements and backroom deals that have governments ban traditional farming practices in order to push the interests of large agrochemical and biotechnology firms††.

Rent Seeking

Rent seeking is a behavior that seeks to capture value without creating value. For example, an individual who buys medical supplies in the midst of a shortage to resell them at a higher price online.

Crony Capitalism

Crony capitalism is undue influence over a government exercised by firms. Capitalism works when the government serves as a balance to the excesses of firms by regulating and taxing them. Crony capitalism subverts this and allows firms to profit at the expense of the public. For example, a government that conducts spending programs not aimed at improving anything for the people but rather aimed at assigning contracts to friends of the government.

Economic Bads

Economic bads are negative results of the production of economic goods. In many cases, nobody pays the costs of economic bads such as air pollution that damages quality of life. For example, a factory may produce widgets worth $8 that each create $42 in environmental damage. This could be addressed with markets for economic bads whereby producers and consumers pay to damage the environment with total damage capped at a sustainable level. However, these markets are currently missing.

What is a Capitalist?

What is a Capitalist? Jonathan Poland

A capitalist is an individual who supports or practices capitalism, which is an economic system based on the principles of economic freedom, private ownership, and the creation of wealth through the pursuit of profit. In the broadest sense, a capitalist is someone who believes that capitalism is a good and desirable system. In its most specific sense, a capitalist is someone who actively engages in capitalist activities, such as starting or investing in businesses, in order to generate wealth.

Capitalism is based on the idea that individuals have the right to own and control their own property, and to use that property to create wealth. Capitalists believe that this system allows for the most efficient and productive use of resources, and that it encourages innovation, creativity, and economic growth.

While capitalism has been successful in creating wealth and economic growth, it has also been criticized for its potential to create inequality and social injustice. Critics of capitalism argue that it is a system that primarily benefits the wealthy and powerful, and that it can lead to exploitation and oppression of the poor and marginalized. Despite these criticisms, capitalism remains the dominant economic system in many parts of the world.

Almost all countries currently employ some version of capitalism with a handful of exceptions such as North Korea. Countries such as Sweden are often mis-portrayed as socialist when in fact they are social market economies, a type of capitalism. Here are some common examples of capitalists.

Family Business

A family business that puts capital such as money, equipment, buildings and land to work to create value. For example, a farmer who puts land and equipment to work to create food. A farmer may also employ others.

Small Business

Individuals who put their own money into a business to generate value from capital and employ people. For example, a restaurant owner.

Freelancers

Small businesses that don’t have much capital such that they mostly offer their labor.

Entrepreneurs

Individuals who create new industries, business models, products, services or ways of doing things. This can be a self-funded small business or a startup that receives funding from venture capitalists.

Venture Capitalists

Investors that fund entrepreneurial ventures known as startups.

Creditors

Institutions such as banks and individuals that lend money to businesses without taking any ownership interest in the business.

Investors

Individuals who put their money to work in businesses that they may or may not control, direct or influence.

Owners

Individuals who own a large portion of a business such that they have accountability for it.

Board of Directors

The individuals who are accountable for a large business.

Executive Management

The individuals who are responsible for a large business.

Captains of Industry

Individuals who are very wealthy and active in an industry such that they have a large impact on society.

Monopolist

An individual who owns or controls a monopoly that has little or no real competition for their major products and services.

Crony Capitalist

A capitalist who influences a government in a way that benefits them personally. Politicians and government employees who engage in this can also be referred to as crony capitalists.

Good Business

A business that honestly pursues three goals: people, planet and profits as opposed to profits alone. This can be imposed on capitalists with regulations or markets for economic bads.

Capitalist Realism

Capitalist Realism Jonathan Poland

Capitalist realism is the theory that capitalism is the only economic system that is realistically possible or viable. This term is often used to suggest that defenders of capitalism use the notion of realism as a cover for positions that are cold, unimaginative, or fearful of change.

For example, someone who espouses capitalist realism might argue that socialism or communism is not a realistic alternative to capitalism because it has failed in the past and is not feasible in the current global economic environment. They might also argue that capitalism is the only economic system that can provide the necessary incentives and rewards to drive innovation and economic growth.

Overall, capitalist realism is a theory that is often used to argue that there is no realistic alternative to capitalism. While this theory has its supporters, it is also highly contested and has been challenged by those who argue that alternative economic systems are not only possible, but also necessary in order to address the many challenges and inequalities of capitalism. The following are illustrative examples of capitalist realism.

Overwhelming Success

The argument that capitalism is an overwhelming success such as the observation that close to all economic production that supports the current world population of 7.6 billion people stems from capitalist economic systems. All countries, with a handful of exceptions such as North Korea, currently have a capitalist system of one flavor or another including social market economies such as Sweden.

There is No Alternative

The argument that the main alternatives to capitalism such as communism were tried with disastrous results such as the Great Chinese Famine of 1959 – 1961 that claimed the lives of an estimated 20 to 50 million people.

Quality of Life

The observation that the global capitalist economy has raised quality of life on a global basis. For example, no country has a lower expectancy than the country with the highest life expectancy in 1800. World life expectancy increased from 29 years in 1800 to 72.6 in 2019.

Too Big To Fail

The argument that global systems, nations and populations tend towards panic when their capitalist economies experience a few quarters of negative growth as in the case of a recession. From this it can be argued that societies and their populations aren’t inclined towards toppling capitalism but are rather likely to do whatever is necessary to defend it.

Socialist Idealism

The argument that supporters of socialism have a tendency to promote magical thinking that doesn’t align to historical realities or human behavior. For example, the argument that communism would somehow clean up the environment despite the history of ecological mismanagement and disasters in historical communist nations.

Socialist Elites

The argument that communism doesn’t create equality that it just replaces a capitalist elite with a bureaucratic elite that implements central planning of the entire economy.

Human Nature

The argument that the profit motive aligns with human motivations more than working hard day after day for the “greater good” of society in general. This would suggest that productivity, innovation and quality would go into a steep decline without the economic rights and freedoms that form the basis for capitalism.

Learning From History

The argument that modern socialists haven’t learned from history or that they claim “this time it will be different” without sufficient explanation and data.

Capitalist Pragmatism

The argument that problems with capitalism such as inequality and environmental destruction can be solved within the capitalist system itself. For example, taxing the super wealthy and redistributing these resources as education, healthcare and basic income programs. Environmental problems could be addressed with a market for economic bads that caps pollution at some sustainable level.

Socialist Pragmatism

Most developed nations use taxation as a form of limited income redistribution in the form of public services and direct payments such as welfare benefits. This is known as democratic socialism — a variant of socialism that uses the profit motive and markets to achieve efficiency and productivity with social services funded by taxation. This could be described as socialist pragmatism that seeks achievable improvements to a dominant system that isn’t going to be easy to completely replace.

Participation

The more people who participate in capitalism and benefit from it, the more unlikely alternatives may seem. As such, capitalist realism feels all the more realistic in a society with a large and thriving middle class and bourgeoisie. As both of these classes own capital they have little interest in overthrowing capitalism. Without wide participation, capitalist realism begins to look more and more idealistic as it becomes an obvious choice for the masses to simply seize the capital of a relatively small elite.

Complacency

Capitalist realism may create a complacency amongst global elites that their position is secure no matter how far they push things such as rent seeking, crony capitalism, anti-competitive practices, conspicuous consumption, environmental destruction or aggressive tax structures and strategies. Mark Fisher viewed capitalist realism as an oppressive force that may backfire potentially toppling capitalism.

Cold Logic

The term capitalist realism is often used to describe the excesses of capitalism such as cold logic whereby money is used to model human problems without concern for human aspects of the problem. For example, evaluating education programs in terms of the salaries of graduates without considerations such as art, culture and the value of knowledge to humanity.

Failure of Imagination

As capitalism is pervasive and dominant it can be argued that we have acquired a learned inability to imagine systems beyond it.

Defense of the Status Quo

Capitalist realism is a type of defense of the status quo whereby people resist change to a system that sustains them. This isn’t necessarily irrational if there is some reasonable argument for sustaining the present system. Those who view capitalism as an oppressive or destructive force may certainly feel that this is irrational but this requires evidence and debate. In other words, it would be lazy to simply write off capitalists as being unimaginative, biased and fearful of change.

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