Support my team and I to make more videos like this at: https://patreon.com/tomnicholasCapitalism is dead. Killed by its own biggest fans. That's the thesis ...
The difference with Amazon is that you can not browse it like you can do in a regular shop or in a mall, as everything you do is filtered through a personalized search algorithm that opimizes for maximum rent extraction.
Which is why I made the Grocery Store comparison. Grocery stores are filtered for maximum rent extraction. Grocery stores do not place products based on what the customer want but on maximum rent extraction from each and every product on a shelf.
He doesn’t say capitalism is dead because of monopolies alone, but due to how these monopolies shape and restrict the market access.
Which is wrong because Capitalism has always attempted to restrict market access. Cartels, interlocking Directorates, Trusts, and other collusions were all busted by socialists policies to control the fundamental aspect of capitalism- which is a single company gaining total market control. 150 years ago companies not only monopolized their market but owned the town where the workers lived and stores where the workers shopped. That’s the Capitalism that Marx wrote against.
If you look at a single grocery store yes, but that isn’t a market, that is a single store.
Capitalism has a tendency to cause disruptions to itself yes. Hence the regularly reoccurring stock-market crashes and so on. Classic monopolies are also not stable, they might be able to corner the market for a while, but this can only work for so long. What Varoufakis describes is a new equilibrium of feudal like market control das doesn’t work according to classical capitalist principles, even assuming realistically the worst of them, which Varoufakis as a Marxist clearly does.
If you look at a single grocery store yes, but that isn’t a market, that is a single store.
This is because of existing laws to control capitalism which prevents a single grocery store from becoming a monopoly. That the anti monopoly laws are no longer being applied doesn’t make it not capitalism. It’s unrestrained capitalism.
Classic monopolies are also not stable, they might be able to corner the market for a while, but this can only work for so long.
That’s free market libertarian philosophy which was historically proven to not work. The entire reason Trust Busting happened was because classic monopolies are not only stable but continue to grow.
No, a single store can never be a market by definition. Varoufakis actually spends some time in the interview trying to explain that.
Of course if your definition of unrestrained capitalism is entirely devoid of markets and competition than you can argue like you do, but that is really bending the definition even in Marxist terms, no need to go lala-land of libertarians for that.
But if you include those, than Varoufakis is right and what we see these days isn’t really capitalism any more, but something else more akin to feudal rent extraction.
No, a single store can never be a market by definition
I’m not referring to a single store. I’m referring to the laws that prevent a single company from owning ALL stores. That Amazon has gotten away with what would have been Anti Trust if a grocery store chain tried to consolidate doesn’t make Amazon different from capitalism.
Company towns were a thing during the heyday of Capitalism.
Renaming pure Capitalism into Techno feudalism is whitewashing Capitalism.
Oh, that’s not Capitalism. That’s Cronism. Oh that bad thing isn’t Capitalism, it’s techno feudalism.
Ok, so maybe you understand it better if I explain it like that: if a single company would own absolutly everything would that still be capitalism? At least by Marxist and pretty much all other relevant economic theories, no.
And that is not whitewashing anything. That’s just using correct definitions. No one said anything about classical capitalism being good.
if a single company would own absolutly everything would that still be capitalism?
But Amazon doesn’t own everything. There is Google, Meta, Apple and Microsoft. Deregulated capitalism is still capitalism. Company towns were closer to Techno Feudalism that Amazon but Marx called Company Towns Capitalism, not Techno Feudalism.
Obviously it isn’t as clear cut as that hypothetical argument. But we have an oligopol of these companies, each having their own fiefdom and competing very little with each other. And within their fiefdoms there is no such thing as a market, because they control everything.
Company Towns are really of little relevance to the argument as they only applied to the employees of a company and not their customers or how companies compete with each other.
But we have an oligopol of these companies, each having their own fiefdom and competing very little with each other.
Just like Standard Oil and Carnegie Steel.
That’s classic Capitalism.
Company Towns are really of little relevance to the argument
Company towns are relevant in that it represented a total ownership of the workers by the corporation which is far closer to the term “feudalism” than Apple selling smartphones and charging businesses rent to sell on their platform.
Which is why I made the Grocery Store comparison. Grocery stores are filtered for maximum rent extraction. Grocery stores do not place products based on what the customer want but on maximum rent extraction from each and every product on a shelf.
Which is wrong because Capitalism has always attempted to restrict market access. Cartels, interlocking Directorates, Trusts, and other collusions were all busted by socialists policies to control the fundamental aspect of capitalism- which is a single company gaining total market control. 150 years ago companies not only monopolized their market but owned the town where the workers lived and stores where the workers shopped. That’s the Capitalism that Marx wrote against.
If you look at a single grocery store yes, but that isn’t a market, that is a single store.
Capitalism has a tendency to cause disruptions to itself yes. Hence the regularly reoccurring stock-market crashes and so on. Classic monopolies are also not stable, they might be able to corner the market for a while, but this can only work for so long. What Varoufakis describes is a new equilibrium of feudal like market control das doesn’t work according to classical capitalist principles, even assuming realistically the worst of them, which Varoufakis as a Marxist clearly does.
This is because of existing laws to control capitalism which prevents a single grocery store from becoming a monopoly. That the anti monopoly laws are no longer being applied doesn’t make it not capitalism. It’s unrestrained capitalism.
That’s free market libertarian philosophy which was historically proven to not work. The entire reason Trust Busting happened was because classic monopolies are not only stable but continue to grow.
No, a single store can never be a market by definition. Varoufakis actually spends some time in the interview trying to explain that.
Of course if your definition of unrestrained capitalism is entirely devoid of markets and competition than you can argue like you do, but that is really bending the definition even in Marxist terms, no need to go lala-land of libertarians for that.
But if you include those, than Varoufakis is right and what we see these days isn’t really capitalism any more, but something else more akin to feudal rent extraction.
I’m not referring to a single store. I’m referring to the laws that prevent a single company from owning ALL stores. That Amazon has gotten away with what would have been Anti Trust if a grocery store chain tried to consolidate doesn’t make Amazon different from capitalism.
Company towns were a thing during the heyday of Capitalism.
Renaming pure Capitalism into Techno feudalism is whitewashing Capitalism.
Oh, that’s not Capitalism. That’s Cronism. Oh that bad thing isn’t Capitalism, it’s techno feudalism.
Ok, so maybe you understand it better if I explain it like that: if a single company would own absolutly everything would that still be capitalism? At least by Marxist and pretty much all other relevant economic theories, no.
And that is not whitewashing anything. That’s just using correct definitions. No one said anything about classical capitalism being good.
But Amazon doesn’t own everything. There is Google, Meta, Apple and Microsoft. Deregulated capitalism is still capitalism. Company towns were closer to Techno Feudalism that Amazon but Marx called Company Towns Capitalism, not Techno Feudalism.
Obviously it isn’t as clear cut as that hypothetical argument. But we have an oligopol of these companies, each having their own fiefdom and competing very little with each other. And within their fiefdoms there is no such thing as a market, because they control everything.
Company Towns are really of little relevance to the argument as they only applied to the employees of a company and not their customers or how companies compete with each other.
Just like Standard Oil and Carnegie Steel.
That’s classic Capitalism.
Company towns are relevant in that it represented a total ownership of the workers by the corporation which is far closer to the term “feudalism” than Apple selling smartphones and charging businesses rent to sell on their platform.