Newmedia on Wed, 30 Jan 2013 04:50:22 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Nobel laureate in economics aged 102 endorses the human economy... |
Brian: > Well, in the US from about 1980 onward, the information > age offered a very high return on private finance and a steady > stream of purchasers for govt bonds. Of course it did! Finance is, after all, just "pushing paper" around (i.e. decidedly "post-industrial") and selling those bonds was the necessary corollary to Wal-Mart becoming the FRIENDSHIP store for Chinese industrialization -- given that the US economy had shifted from production to consumption by this time. Mr. Reagan and Mrs. Thatcher had very little to do with any of this -- but, if you must "overlay" reality with *ideological* triggers like this, go right ahead! <g> I have no interest in "dis-entangling" the technology from the political-science but I do have an interest in avoiding CONSPIRACY theories that put decisions in the hands of people who didn't make them and attributing "plans" to people who didn't have them. Alas, the only way to avoid that sort of thinking, other than an over-abundance of caution, seems to be actually know (some of) the people involved. And my 20+ year career on Wall Street gave me the opportunity to meet many of them. For better-and-worse, I don't have to imagine how Bill Gates or George Soros thinks. > In addition to the technological innovation school of > Freeman, Louca, Perez, etc I would suggest you look into > the "Social Structures of Accumulation" theorists who > provide exactly what Perez calls for but does not produce, > namely an understanding of the institutional frameworks in > which the long waves of technological development unfold. >From what I can tell, the SSA folks have little to say about what happened *institutionally* after the 1973 inflection -- which, as you know, was roughly the beginning of the CURRENT *digital* techno-economic paradigm. The founding work seems to have been published in 1978 (i.e. too early) and it doesn't seem to comprehend how things like the Trilateral Commission were an expression of elite power *weakness* not strength. While Victor Lippitt tries to wrestle with some of this in his 2006 "Social Structure of Accumulation Theory," he seems to trip over these problems and end up with an "over-determined" and "anti-essentialist" conclusion. >From what I can tell, he's right -- even if he (and the others?) mistakenly put the beginning of the "current" SSA around 1995 (an error that seems to inflict many who try to piggyback on the Kondratiev Wave people, who, in turn, have little to do with Kondratiev) -- that this theory doesn't work very well when there really aren't any NEW institutions involved. _http://economics.ucr.edu/seminars/fall06/ped/VictorLippit10-20-06.pdf_ (http://economics.ucr.edu/seminars/fall06/ped/VictorLippit10-20-06.pdf) So, the "post-war" SSA "collapsed" in the 1970s but there were no *new* institutions? HUH? Same old "globalist" WTO and same old Federal Reserve? This strikes me as an example of what I was talking about -- putting IDEOLOGY ahead of *understanding* which leads to theories that don't make much sense. Please show me that I'm wrong (really)!! Mark Stahlman Brooklyn NY # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org