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Title: Despair Fatigue Author: David Graeber Date: March 2016 Language: en Topics: boredom, hope, UK, austerity, Corbyn Source: Retrieved on 3rd September 2020 from https://thebaffler.com/salvos/despair-fatigue-david-graeber Notes: Published in Issue No.30 of The Baffler
Is it possible to become bored with hopelessness?
There is reason to believe something like that is beginning to happen in
Great Britain. Call it despair fatigue.
For nearly half a century, British culture, particularly on the left,
has made an art out of despair. This is the land where âNo Future for
Youâ became the motto of a generation, and then another generation, and
then another. From the crumbling of its empire, to the crumbling of its
industrial cities, to the current crumbling of its welfare state, the
country seemed to be exploring every possible permutation of despair:
despair as rage, despair as resignation, despair as humor, despair as
pride or secret pleasure. Itâs almost as if itâs finally run out.
On the surface, and from a distance, Britain looks like itâs
experiencing one of the stranger paroxysms of masochistic
self-destruction in world history. Since the Conservative victory of
2010, first in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and now on its own,
the British government has set out to systematically unravel much of
what makes life good and decent in the country. Conservative leaders
started by trashing the United Kingdomâs once proud university system,
while eyeing the greatest source of national pride and dignity, the
universal health guarantees of the National Health Service. All of this
is being done in the name of an economic doctrineâausterity, the
imperative need for fiscal disciplineâthat no one genuinely believes in
and whose results pretty much everyone deplores (including prime
minister David Cameron, who in private has denounced the decline of his
local public services), in response to an existential crisis that does
not exist.
How did this happen? It appears that the entire political class has
become trapped in the bizarrely successful narrative that swept the
Tories into power after the crash of 2008 and still sustains them long
after its consequences have run beyond any sort of humanity or common
sense.
Pretty much every major sitting government was booted out after the
crash, and the political complexion of the government in question
largely determined the popular narrative of what had caused the crash to
begin with. In the United States, it was George W. Bushâs fault, so the
popular onus fell on the CEOs and hedge fund managers who Bush used to
refer to, at fundraisers, as his âbase.â None were actually prosecuted,
but most Americans felt strongly that they ought to be. In the United
Kingdom, where Gordon Brownâs Labour Party was sitting in Downing
Street, everyone accepted the oppositionâs narrative that the British
crash resulted from irresponsible social spending and government
deficits. In fact, the Tories found that appealing to a rhetoric of
shared sacrifice, belt-tightening, and even collective suffering struck
a chord in the British public. This was perhaps most true of
working-class voters. Now almost entirely stripped of any sense of
community, neighborhood, or workplace solidarity by decades of
right-wing social engineering, they saw the hard times and rationing of
World War II as the last time Britons had acted with a genuine common
purpose.
The social effects of the spending cutsâall ostensibly aimed at reducing
the supposedly catastrophic government debt overhangâhave been
devastating. British universities, which not so many years ago were (as
in most of Europe) entirely free, have become among the most expensive
in the world. Social housing has been ransacked, subsidies have been
cut, and squatting in residential properties was made illegal at exactly
the moment tens of thousands were being âdecantedâ from their homes. To
be poor now means to be endlessly assessed, monitored, and surveyed, and
almost invariably found wanting. No one really knows how many thousands
of people have died as a result of the freefall in government support,
but to get just an inkling: between December 2011 and February 2014, the
Department of Work and Pensions reported that 2,380 Britons previously
on disability support were found dead no more than six weeks after
receiving notice that they were having their benefits cut because they
had been determined to be âfit for work.â
One reason this could happen is that thereâs been virtually no public
debate on austerity itself. At no point, for example, did a major TV
news outlet host a panel of economists discussing whether public debt
was really the cause of the economic crisis, or debating whether
European-style austerity or Obama-style fiscal stimulus would be a more
appropriate response. The only questions were how much budget cutting
was required and where the cuts should fall. This confident Tory
narrative reigned unchallenged from the rudest hack in the Daily Mail to
the most chiseled eminence of the (supposedly socialist) BBC, and all
figures of public authority held to it even after the immediate effects
of the cuts proved spectacularly ineffective. Even as double dip turned
to triple dip and Tory chancellor George Osborne doubled down by making
increasingly bizarre pledges (that all future governments would run a
surplus, that Britain would completely eliminate its national debt,
etc.), scarcely any major pundit, editorialist, or TV commentator broke
ranks. And when, after years of abject misery, the economy, inevitably,
began to stir a tiny bit, all instantly proclaimed that Osborne was
vindicated.
This consensus, oddly, has next to nothing to do with the opinions of
professional economists. Almost all British economists understood that
the gaping deficits of 2008 and 2009 had been caused by the banking
crisis, not the other way around. Likewise, anyone paying attention knew
that cutbacks of public services to âsave moneyâ reduced economic
activity, and hence government tax revenues, and so really had the
effect of raising, not lowering deficits. Most also understood that
deficits werenât really much of a problem to begin with. But even the
opinion of mainstream economists was, suddenly, excluded from public
debate. By 2012, even the IMF was issuing statements urging the Tories
to lay off. But youâd never learn any of this from the Times, the
Observer, or the BBC.
How could such total, lock-step defiance of reality be maintained in a
country with a formally free press and highly educated population? To
some degree, you find the familiar bubble effect. Politicians,
journalists, lobbyists, CEOs, and corporate bureaucrats rarely talk to
anyone except each other. They constitute a distinct intellectual
universe. Within this universe, economic policies are designed primarily
for political marketability; economic science exists largely to provide
impressive diagrams and equations to sell them with. Phrases designed in
think tanks and focus groups (âfree markets,â âwealth creators,â
âpersonal responsibility,â âshared sacrificeâ) are repeated like
incantations until it all seems like such unthinking common sense that
no one even asks what the resulting picture has to do with social
reality. True, the bubble logic can be maintained only by a certain
studied ignorance of how the economy really works. One 2014 poll
discovered, for instance, that 90 percent of sitting MPs, for all their
endless debates on the need to save money, didnât know where money comes
from. (They thought it was created by the Royal Mint.)
The bubble effect is not unique to Britain, of course. Political debate
in the United States, Japan, or Germany works much the same way. But in
Britain, things have gone so far that we are beginning to see a classic
Big Lie reinforcer effect. When the consensus reality gets this
completely divorced from actually existing reality, when so many
innocent people have suffered as a result, and when anyone pointing this
out has been so consistently and aggressively denounced as a
tinfoil-hat-wearing flat-earther or Trotskyite, to break ranks would
mean admitting that the lunatics were right. There is nothing the
established media is more loath to do.
The divorce between consensus and reality has grown so extreme and
unworkable that even the technocrats charged with running the system
have started to cry foul. In 2014 the Bank of Englandâits economists
apparently exhausted by having to carry out economic policy in a
made-up, topsy-turvy world designed only to benefit the richâissued a
statement on âMoney Creation in the Modern Economyâ that effectively
destroyed the entire theoretical basis for austerity. Money, they noted,
is not created by governments, or even central bankers, who must be
careful not to make too much of it lest they spark inflation; itâs
actually created by private banks making loans. Without debt there would
be no money. The post-Keynesian heterodox economists, regularly
denounced as a lunatic fringe by those commentators willing to
acknowledge their existence, were right.
No major news outlet considered this a story; politicians continued
preaching their morality tales of the evils of debt exactly as they had
before.
So what is the real basis of the British economy? It is, after all, the
fifth largest in the world.
Itâs important to remember that, despite much rhetoric to the contrary,
the economy of the United Kingdom, like those of other wealthy
countries, is largely self-sustaining. There are still farms, factories,
mines, fisheries, and artisanal workshops, and these continue to meet
most of the countryâs material needs. Much of the feeling that Britain
has deindustrialized is due to the decline of the giant factories of
mid-century. But these were always something of an anomaly: from the
heyday of the Industrial Revolution to the Victorian era, when Britain
led the world in production and technological innovation, the economy
was dominated by a combination of high finance and small family
firmsâmuch as it is today.
Still, in many ways Britain resembles an imperial economy: while it does
export machinery, pharmaceuticals, plastics, petrol, and a whole variety
of high-quality artisanal products, in sheer material terms it takes in
far, far more than it sends out. So we must ask a simple question: Why
do other countries continue to send their things to Britain? How is it
that the island manages to take in so much more from the rest of the
world than it gives them in return?
The conventional answer is, of course, âfinancial services.â The economy
of the United Kingdom now turns aroundits financial hub, the City of
London, whose largest firms play an enormous role in coordinating
international trade. The Cityâs advantages are partly just those of
Greenwich Mean Time: a billionaire in Qatar or Mumbai can make a call to
his broker in London with only a few hours difference; in New York, let
alone California, itâs likely to be the middle of the night. Whatâs
more, the same billionaire can speak to a broker with a familiar,
reassuring Oxbridge accent, giving him the pleasant feeling of now
having the grandson of his countryâs former colonial officials at his
beck and call.
Surely there is something in this. But it cannot be the whole
explanation. The scale is just too large. Do people in Brazil or Korea
really send endless container ships full of steel, cars, or computers to
Britain because they are charmed by Oxbridge accents or awed by its
skill at paperwork? Because paperwork, after all, is all that âfinancial
servicesâ ultimately is, and there are plenty of people in Brazil and
Korea who are extremely good at paperwork as well.
Another argument, common in leftist circles, is that Britain is simply
reaping the benefits of its position as loyal lieutenant of the American
empire. The U.S.-sponsored âfinancial systemâ is, as economists like
Michael Hudson have argued, largely a shakedown system, a means of
extracting something if not identical to, then very like imperial
tribute from the rest of the world. Britain, so understood, could then
be seen as facilitating the process within its own former imperial
territories, perhaps with a covert eye to flipping its allegiances to
China and India when their time comes. No doubt there is something to
this too, but again, itâs hardly a complete explanation. In the United
Kingdom, âfinanceâ is based above all in real estate, and the real
estate bubble that sustains the City is itself sustained by the fact
that pretty much every billionaire in the world feels they have to
maintain at least a flat, and more often a townhouse, in a fashionable
part of London. Why? There are plenty of other well-appointed modern
cities in the world, most of which have a decidedly more appealing
climate. Yet even more than, say, New York or San Francisco, London real
estate has become something like U.S. treasury bonds, a basic currency
of the international rich.
Itâs when one asks questions like these that economics and politics
become indistinguishable. Those who have investigated the situation find
that Londonâs appealâand by extension, Britainâsârests on two factors.
First of all, Russian oligarchs or Saudi princesses know they can get
pretty much anything they want in London, from antique candelabras and
high-tech spy devices, to Mary Poppinsâstyle nannies for their children,
fresh lobsters delivered by bicycle in the wee hours, and every
conceivable variety of exotic sexual service, music, and food. Whatâs
more, the boodles will be delivered by a cheerful, creative, and
subservient working-class population who, drawing on centuries of
tradition, know exactly how to be butlers. The second factor is
security. If one is a nouveau riche construction magnate or diamond
trader from Hong Kong, Delhi, or Bahrain, one is keenly aware that at
home, something could still go terribly wrong: revolution, a sudden
U-turn of government policy, expropriation, violent unrest. None of this
could possibly happen in Notting Hill or Chelsea. Any political change
that would significantly affect the most wealthy was effectively taken
off the table with the Glorious Revolution of 1688.
In other words, the historical defeat and humiliation of the British
working classes is now the islandâs primary export product. By
organizing the entire economy around the resultant housing bubble, the
Tories have ensured that the bulk of the British population is aware, at
least on some tacit level, that it is precisely the global appeal of the
English class system, up to and including the contemptuous sneer of the
Oxbridge graduates in Parliament chuckling over the impending removal of
housing benefits, that is also keeping affordable track shoes, beer, and
consumer electronics flowing into the country. Itâs an impossible
dilemma. Itâs hardly surprising, then, that so many turn to cynical
right-wing populists like UKIP, who manipulate the resulting indignation
by fomenting rage against Polish construction workers instead of Russian
oligarchs, Bangladeshi drivers instead of Qatari princes, and West
Indian porters instead of Brazilian steel tycoons.
This marketing of class subservience is the essence of Tory economic
strategy. Industry may be trounced and the university system turned
(back) into a playground for the rich, but even if this leads to a
collapse of technology and the knowledge economy, the end result will
only seal in more firmly the class system that produces Tory
politicians: England will literally have nothing else to sell.
Tony Blairâs New Labour policies, which, despite the Labour Partyâs
working-class funding base, basically represented the sensibilities of
the professional classes, did attempt to forge an alternative vision.
For the Blairites, the United Kingdomâs future lay in what they called
the âcreative industries.â Had not the United Kingdom, regularly since
the sixties, produced waves of popular music and youth culture that had
swept the world, bringing in billions in direct and indirect revenue? It
must have seemed a plausible gambit in the nineties, but it failed
because the Blairites were operating with a completely false
understanding of where cultural creativity comes from.
They naively assumed creativity was basically a middle-class phenomenon,
the product of people like themselves. In fact, almost everything
worthwhile that has come out of British culture for the last century,
from music hall, to street kebabs, to standup comedy, rock ânâ roll, and
the rave scene, has been primarily a working-class phenomenon.
Essentially, these were the things the working class created when they
werenât actually working. The sprouting of British popular culture in
the sixties was entirely a product of the United Kingdomâs then very
generous welfare state. There is a reason that in Cockney rhyming slang,
the word for âdoleâ is ârock ânâ rollâ(âhe got the sack, heâs on the
rock ânâ roll againâ): a surprising proportion of major bands later to
sweep the world spent at least some of their formative years on
unemployment relief. Blairites were stupid enough to combine their
promotion of âCool Britanniaâ with massive welfare reforms, which
effectively guaranteed the entire project would crash and burn, since
they ensured that pretty much everyone with the potential to become the
next John Lennon would instead spend the rest of their lives stacking
boxes in their local Tesco as part of the new welfare conditionality.
In the end, all that the Blairites managed to produce was a world-class
marketing sector (since thatâs what middle-class people are actually
good at); otherwise, they had nothing to show for themselves at all.
All this might seem irredeemably bleak. All the more surprising, then,
that the main reaction on the left, beginning tentatively with the 2010
student movement and now exploding everywhere, has been a wave of almost
insolent optimism and a (admittedly hesitant) return to utopian visions.
This is why I started by speaking of âdespair fatigue.â There is a still
small but growing realization that if Great Britain is going to enter
history againâif there is going to be any sort of grand, positive vision
for its futureâthat vision can come only from the left.
When all is said and done, the Tory and New Labour visions arenât really
visions at all. True, in Thatcherâs time, and even to some degree in
Tony Blairâs, the market reformers managed to pass themselves off as in
some sense the real revolutionaries. But no one makes such a claim
anymore. The same lip service is paid to the idea that market
enthusiasts are young, enthusiastic, and tech-savvy, and that those who
defend the remains of the welfare state are a pack of bitter old geezers
whining at the pub. This pretense is becoming increasingly hollow too.
Having achieved their consensus reality, the only thing the political
classes have left to do is defend it. Everyone knows the Conservatives
hold sway precisely because they have convinced the public they actually
are conservatives; their fabled âcompetenceâ really comes down to the
argument that only they can manage to hold things together, roughly as
they currently exist, before the advent of some inevitable catastrophe
whose precise contours we cannot know.
Meanwhile, on the streets and council estates, Britain is undergoing a
sea change, a veritable efflorescence of resistance. Itâs very hard to
know the real scale of it because, unlike in generations past, the media
largely refuses to report on it. Perhaps this is because when they do,
the results are rarely what they expect. On May 9, 2015, the day after
the Tory election victory was declared, before the inevitable new round
of cuts could even be announced, there was a minor riot in front of the
prime ministerâs offices at 10 Downing Street. Hundreds of student
activists clashed with police; several of them, on being punched and
kicked by uniformed officers, actually punched back; paint bombs were
thrown, flares set off, and the Women of World War II memorial was
daubed with the familiar slogan âFuck Tory Scum.â The editors of the
right-wing tabloid the Daily Mail decided that the public mood was such
that it might even be possible to actually report this, and ran a huge
spread with splashy pictures under the headline âAnarchist Mob Planning
Summer of Thuggery.â Within twenty-four hours, they were horrified to
discover that in the comments section, opinion among their own readers
was running something like five to one in favor of anarchist thuggery.
Even the âdesecrationâ of the memorial didnât raise much in the way of
hackles. After all, most Britons are well aware that the first thing
veterans did, on returning from the war, was oust Churchillâs sitting
Tory government and vote in one that promised to preside over the
creation of a modern welfare state. This is precisely the work the
current inhabitants of Downing Street are trying to dismantle. The
rioters were simply defending those veteransâ legacy and enunciating
what they, if alive, would most likely be saying themselves.
Between student occupations, housing occupations, street actions, and a
revival of radical unionism, there has been an unprecedented upswell of
resistance. But even more important, it has begun, however haltingly, to
take on a very different spirit than the desperate, rear-guard actions
of years past. After all, even the legendary poll-tax riots that
dislodged Thatcher were either backward-looking or, alternately, bitter
and nihilistic. Class Warâs slogans (âThe Royal Question: Hanging or
Shooting?â) were perhaps charmingly provocative, but hardly utopian.
This is where the notion of despair fatigue comes in.
One might argue that its beginnings were already visible in popular
culture. Witness the emergence of the Scottish socialist school of
science fiction, which, after the relentless dystopianism of the
seventies, eighties, and nineties, led the way to a broader trend by
toying with redemptive futures once again. Then there was Steampunk,
surely the most peculiar of countercultural trends, a kind of ungainly
Victorian futurism full of steam-powered computers and airships,
top-hatted cyborgs, floating cities powered by Tesla coils, and an
endless variety of technologies that had never actually emerged. I
remember attending some academic conference on the subject and asking
myself, âOkay, I get the steam part, thatâs obvious, but ... what
exactly does this have to do with punk?â And then it dawned on me. No
Future! The Victorian era was the last time when most people in this
country genuinely believed in a technologically-driven future that was
going to lead to a world not only more prosperous and equal, but
actually more fun and exciting than their own. Then, of course, came the
Great War, and we discovered what the twentieth century was really going
to be like, with its monotonous alternation of terror and boredom in the
trenches. Was not Steampunk a way of saying, canât we just go back,
write off the entire last century as a bad dream, and start over?
And is this not a necessary moment of reset before trying to imagine
what a genuinely revolutionary twenty-first century might actually be
like?
The first stirrings came, appropriately enough, from Scotland, where in
2015 the Scottish National Party made a virtually clean sweep of
Parliamentary seats, running an explicitly socialist, anti-austerity
platform and trouncing a tepid Labour Party unwilling to fundamentally
challenge the Conservative agenda. (Basically no one in Scotland votes
Tory.) But the real earthquake came a few months later, with the
apparently inexplicable rise of Jeremy Corbyn and his shadow chancellor
John McDonnell to the head of the Labour Party in Westminster itself. In
the eyes of the media, whichâeven ostensibly left venues like the
Guardianâis absolutely and unconditionally hostile to the new Labour
team, their success is itself a product of political despair: those
whining old geezers in the pub have given up on even trying to win
elections and have spat in the face of the entire system by electing one
of their own. And itâs true; the new Labour leadership is made up of
genuine radicals. Corbyn and McDonnell represent the activist wing of
the Labour Partyâuntil recently, a very small faction indeed, consisting
of, at best, half a dozen MPs. They have been regular supporters and
even participants in the popular mobilizations.
I am not just talking about speaking at rallies here. I can myself
testify to this. When, in the summer of 2014, activists from Disabled
People Against Cuts were chaining themselves to the âsanctuary lawnâ at
Westminster Abbey in a vain attempt to focus media attention on the
closure of the Independent Living Fund that promised to leave even more
people with disabilities dead, McDonnell and I were part of the crew
carrying spare batteries for their wheelchairs. Both he and Corbyn
openly support a philosophy that insists that social change can never
come from electoral politics alone, but only from a combination of
political mobilization, union organizing, and as McDonnell once
charmingly put it, âwhat in the old days we used to call âinsurrection,â
though nowadays we politely call it âdirect action.ââ One can only
imagine the horror that ensued among the political establishment when
such people were suddenly catapulted to positions of leadership within
one of the countryâs two major parties. From their point of view, itâs
not as if Bernie Sanders had taken over the Democratic Party. Itâs more
as if it had been annexed by a combination of Noam Chomsky and Abbie
Hoffman.
How did it happen? In the immediate sense, Corbynâs rise was precisely a
product of the weird conceptual bubble in which the British political
class operates. The Blairite hacks who dominate the Labour Party were
keen to break any remaining power of the unions, and were so convinced
that their manufactured common sense really was common to everyone that
they decided the best way to do this was to change the rules and allow
the party leader to be elected by popular vote. It never seems to have
occurred to them that a significant percentage of members of a still
ostensibly leftist political party might actually respond positively to
leftist values. In the wake of the Tory victory, McDonnell, at least so
the story goes, convinced a sufficient number of Blairite MPs to support
a hard-left candidate for head of the party to âbroaden the debate,â
which was balanced on the other side by their own hard-right
pro-business candidate, Liz Kendallâa favorite of Englandâs notoriously
clueless pundits. Then those same delegates stared, slack-jawed, as
Corbyn heaped in 59.5 percent of the ballot in a field of four, the
biggest landslide ever won by any candidate for Labour leadership.
(Kendall pulled in last with 4.5 percent.)
On one level, the pundits were probably right: Corbynmania was just a
way of giving the finger to the establishment. The manâs appeal rests
largely on a complete absence of conventional charisma. He has no
rhetorical flair whatsoever. He simply tells you what he thinks. In a
political field so corrupt that it often seems the moral spectrum for
public figures runs roughly from calculating cynic to actual child
molester, the idea that a genuinely honest man could successfully run
for public office was a kind of revelation. Corbyn is rooted in the
socialist tradition, but lacks any specific ideology or agenda. To vote
for him was simply to vote for a set of values. Those who supported him
knew that it was only after the election that the real work would begin,
of figuring out how (or indeed, whether) it was possible for politicians
and street activists to synergize their efforts without co-opting or
destroying one another, what sort of economic model the left can
counterpose to the Toriesâ marketing of class subservience, and what a
ânew politicsâ based on popular participation in decision-making might
actually be like. Itâs still all very much up for grabs, and the whole
project might well shipwreck terribly, leaving the left utterly defeated
for many years to come. Certainly, the entire media and party
establishment have made it clear that they are willing to do almost
anything to reverse the results of the leadership election. But three
things give reason for hope.
First, if a general realignment of British politics really were going
on, this is probably what it would look like. The role of the Bank of
England is crucial here. It has always seen itself as something of a
bellwether. In the mid- to late seventies, the Bank of Englandâs sudden
and unexpected embrace of monetarist economic models paved the way for
the Thatcherite revolution to follow; and Thatcher, it must be
remembered, was considered as much an outrageous insurgent within her
own party at the time as Corbyn is considered now. So itâs possible that
an uncanny parallel is working itself out.
Second, the new Labour leadership does have a fairly clear route to
power. The United Kingdomâs current economy is based on an artificially
maintained housing bubble, and bubbles do invariably burst. Labour has
four years before the next election. The chance of there not being some
kind of economic crisis in those four years is infinitesimal. For the
Corbynites, the task is twofold: first, to create a narrative about the
dangers of private debt in the same way the Tories did about public
debt, so that the Conservatives will be firmly saddled with the blame
(all the easier, perhapsâor perhaps notâbecause this narrative will
actually be true); and second, and more difficult, to remain as the
Labour leadership, resisting any internal Blairite coup, until the
inevitable crash takes place.
Finally, the very fact that Corbyn is something of a tabula rasa has
inspired an onrush of contesting visions, an eager concatenation of new
economic and political models vying for attention, which has begun to
reveal just how rich and diverse possible left-wing visions of the
future might actually be. Itâs not just the predictable arrival of the
economic luminaries to hold court with the new shadow
chancellorâeveryone from Joseph Stiglitz and Ann Pettifor, to Yanis
Varoufakis and Thomas Piketty. Genuinely radical ideas are being debated
and proposed. Should the left be pursuing accelerationism, pushing the
contradictions of capitalism forward with rapid growth and development,
or should it aim toward a total shift of values and radical de-growth?
Or should we be moving toward what Novara, the media initiative that
emerged from the 2010 student movement, began cheerfully referring to as
FALCâor Fully Automated Luxury Communismâencouraging technologies like
3-D printing to aim for a world of Star Trekâstyle replicators where
everything is free? Should the central bank enact âquantitative easing
for the people,â or a universal citizenâs income policy, or should we go
the way of Modern Money Theory and universal jobs guarantees?
All this is being carried on in the knowledge that existing economic
paradigmsâeven insofar as they are not simply being mobilized to justify
policies designed for purely political purposesâare no longer relevant
to the problems humanity is actually facing, in Britain or anywhere
else. True, most mainstream economists are capable of seeing through
obvious nonsense, like the justifications proposed for fiscal austerity.
But the discipline is still trying to solve what is essentially a
nineteenth-century problem: how to allocate scarce resources in such a
way as to optimize productivity to meet rising consumer demand.
Twenty-first century problems are likely to be entirely different: How,
in a world of potentially skyrocketing productivity and decreasing
demand for labor, will it be possible to maintain equitable distribution
without at the same time destroying the earth? Might the United Kingdom
become a pioneer for such a new economic dispensation? The new Labour
leadership is making the initial moves: calling for new economic models
(âsocialism with an iPadâ) and seeking potential allies in high-tech
industry. If we really are moving toward a future of decentralized,
small, high-tech, robotized production, itâs quite possible that the
United Kingdomâs peculiar traditions of small-scale enterprise and
amateur scienceâwhich never made it particularly amenable to the giant
bureaucratized conglomerates that did so well in the United States and
Germany, in either their capitalist or socialist manifestationsâmight
prove unusually apt. Itâs all a colossal gamble. But then, thatâs what
historical change is like.