The meta-crisis of secular capitalism

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The meta-crisis of secular capitalism
Abstract
The current global economic crisis concerns the way in which contemporary capitalism has turned to financialisation as a double cure for both a falling rate of profit and a deficiency of demand. Although this turning is by no means unprecedented, policies of financialisation have depressed demand (in part as a result of the long-term stagnation of average wages) while at the same time not proving adequate to restore profits and growth. This paper argues that the current crisis is less the ‘normal’ one that has to do with a constitutive need to balance growth of abstract wealth with demand for concrete commodities. Rather, it marks a meta-crisis of capitalism that is to do with the difficulties of sustaining abstract growth as such. This meta-crisis is the tendency at once to abstract from the real economy of productive activities and to reduce everything to its bare materiality. By contrast with a market economy that binds material value to symbolic meaning, a capitalist economy tends to separate matter from symbol and reduce materiality to calculable numbers representing ‘wealth’. Such a conception of wealth rests on the aggregation of abstract numbers that cuts out all the relational goods and the ‘commons’ on which shared prosperity depends.
Publication
International Review of Economics
Volume
62
Issue
3
Pages
197-212
Date
2015/09/01
Journal Abbr
Int Rev Econ
Language
English
ISSN
1865-1704, 1863-4613
Accessed
2016-11-22, 4:38 p.m.
Library Catalog
Citation
Milbank, John, and Adrian Pabst. 2015. “The Meta-Crisis of Secular Capitalism.” International Review of Economics 62 (3): 197–212. DOI: 10.1007/s12232-015-0239-7.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • abstraction
  • financialisation
  • financialization
  • materialisation
  • meta-crisis

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