What is being challenged is nothing less than the most basic premise of the
politics of the centre ground: that you can have free market economics and a
democratic socialist welfare system at the same time. The magic formula in
which the wealth produced by the market economy is redistributed by the
state – from those who produce it to those whom the government believes
deserve it – has gone bust. The crash of 2008 exposed a devastating truth
that went much deeper than the discovery of a generation of delinquent
bankers, or a transitory property bubble. It has become apparent to anyone
with a grip on economic reality that free markets simply cannot produce
enough wealth to support the sort of universal entitlement programmes which
the populations of democratic countries have been led to expect. The fantasy
may be sustained for a while by the relentless production of phoney money to
fund benefits and job-creation projects, until the economy is turned into a
meaningless internal recycling mechanism in the style of the old Soviet
Union.
Or else democratically elected governments can be replaced by puppet austerity
regimes which are free to ignore the protests of the populace when they are
deprived of their promised entitlements. You can, in other words, decide to
debauch the currency which underwrites the market economy, or you can
dispense with democracy. Both of these possible solutions are currently
being tried in the European Union, whose leaders are reduced to talking
sinister gibberish in order to evade the obvious conclusion: the myth of a democratic socialist society funded by capitalism is finished. This is the
defining political problem of the early 21st century.
...my photo. Clouds in the Water.
2 comments:
Wow. This article was a great find. Especially interesting by being written from a Western European perspective.
Yeah. They are in the future.
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