Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

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Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby justdrew » Mon Aug 30, 2010 11:25 am

Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones
Ha-Joon Chang, the new kid on the economics block, is out to bust open a few myths
By Rachel Shields Sunday, 29 August 2010

A leading economist has likened the nation's acceptance of free-market capitalism to that of the brainwashed characters in the film The Matrix, unwitting pawns in a fake reality. In a controversial new book, the Cambridge economist Ha-Joon Chang debunks received wisdom on everything from the importance of the internet to the idea that people in the United States enjoy the highest standard of living in the world; an iconoclastic attitude that has won him fans such as Bob Geldof and Noam Chomsky.

Dr Chang's 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism is one of a spate of tomes published in recent weeks that question the future of the current system, including Capitalism 4.0 by Anatole Kaletsky, and Ian Bremmer's The End of the Free Market. Economists are keen to tap into the market for popular books on seemingly impenetrable subjects - highlighted by the runaway success of Freakonomics, which has sold more than four million copies since it was published in 2005 and is about to be made into a film.

South-Korean born Dr Chang aims to disprove what he sees as economic myths, including the idea that people are paid what they are worth, that the "trickle down" effect of increasing wealth among the rich helps the poor, and that education makes countries more prosperous.

One of the modern idols Dr Chang seeks to bring down is the internet. He claims that we overestimate the importance of new technologies compared to older inventions - such as the washing machine - and criticises the way in which internet access has been seen as key to countries' development.

"If you had everything, then I'm in favour of it. But when children don't have safe drinking water and free school meals, is it really important?" he said. "We have a fascination with the new, and we have to be careful not to project our own vision on to other people's lives."

A leading development economist, Dr Chang was much lauded for his 2007 book Bad Samaritans, which looked at the negative effects of globalisation on developing countries. He is now bringing his focus closer to home, considering problems in the UK. "It is like The Matrix. There is a reality where things could and should be better," he said. "In order to wake people up to that alternative reality, you need to show them that it isn't impossible. I'm not necessarily saying that I have a solution, but we have to recognise that some of the things we accept as inevitable aren't."

But while Dr Chang may not have the answer, he is sure of the problem - arguing that free-market capitalism has left the global economy more unstable, and people with less job security and greater feelings of insecurity, than ever before. His conviction that, post-recession, we should be rebuilding our country in a "moral" way - by acknowledging the social consequences of economic choices such as benefit cuts and job losses - will strike a chord with many.

"Another myth that needs to be busted is the idea that we can discuss economics without any moral implications," he said. "What kind of economy we build changes us, so what we do in terms of monetary policy determines who we are."

Dr Chang also highlights the way in which economics impacts not just on our wages and living standards, but also on our characters. He said: "In conventional economic theory, it is thought that we are born as perfectly formed, rational, self-serving agents. But where you work and what kind of work you do are important in determining your character."

While Dr Chang may have many fans, his belief that the welfare state should be expanded has prompted criticism from some economists.

"It is a very unfashionable thing to say at the moment, but people have to realise that cuts have long-term implications on the fairness of the culture," he said.

Dr Chang, who moved to the UK in 1986 as a 23-year-old graduate student, argues that an emphasis on equality of opportunity is futile - likening life to a race which everyone starts at the same time, but where some have weights strapped to their legs - and that we should instead work towards greater equality of outcome.

"People have been drilled into thinking that there is equality of opportunity and whatever comes out at the end should be accepted. But the effects of not having equality of outcome are felt by the next generation. It is not simply that you don't have enough money; if your parents are from a certain background, you don't even aspire to another background. You can ameliorate some of these things through the school system, but not all of them."

What his peers say...

'I think the internet has probably changed the world more than the washing machine'

Dr Ruth Lea, Economic advisor to Arbuthnot Banking Group

'Different organisations do behave differently, and structures have an effect on our actions'

Professor Robert Wade, London School of Economics

'Of course the crisis revealed the futility of the dominant system of economics'

Professor James Galbraith, Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs

'Just about every economic decision that you make has a moral aspect'

Dr Timothy Leunig, Reader, London School of Economics

'The dominant paradigm about capitalism being best for all is an illusion'

Professor Bob Rowthorn, Professor emeritus, Cambridge University
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Simulist » Mon Aug 30, 2010 11:39 am

Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Either that, or "the Strangers" of capitalism turned a supposedly "shining city on a hill" into Dark City.

"Sleep now..." said Mr. Hand. "Then buy something!"
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby justdrew » Mon Aug 30, 2010 12:14 pm

"nothing happens until somebody buys something"
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Allegro » Wed Sep 01, 2010 12:01 am

justdrew wrote:"nothing happens until somebody buys something"
Truly.

I, your dutiful drone, am prone to remember times when I bought into the old or new advertising with its charmingly chanted idea—meme, keyword—creating innocuous felicity, or maybe I had been persuaded presumptuously by foreordained electromagnetic heat transfers, any one of which may still point my form with fiddling fingers to an area in which I seize just the right toothpaste, text book, small kitchen appliance, shoes, tool sets, towel sets, computer monitor, another printer cartridge; coffee mug, light bulb, door knob, fresh flowers, wall hanging, music dvd; not to mention purchases of auto and house; thusly buying insurances, landscape service, garbage service, too.

      Be Good as in an endearing command
      sorta like seeing yourself performing in the matrix on behalf of viewers of an auto commercial


I can’t even leave the house without everything on my person having been purchased from the matrix. Or by someone else who gifted me with a thing or two purchased in the matrix, you know, the one that’s transfiguring itself and you and me into the next.

As if there could not have been any other way, and I do mean this, that our species might’ve existed—without material commerce, debt, or credits and debits. I don’t know from what points in history to begin imagining, although the topic has been written about in months past at RI, IIRC.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby mentalgongfu2 » Wed Sep 01, 2010 12:14 am

I can’t even leave the house without everything on my person having been purchased from the matrix. Or by someone else who gifted me with a thing or two purchased in the matrix, you know, the one that’s transfiguring itself and you and me into the next.


1) buy from small, local/regional businesses where possible. I am in the process of switching as much of my food supply as possible to local sources and I am willing to pay more for locally produced goods. The added cost amounts to a pittance in the great scheme of things, and it's a better deal when you consider the indirect costs of allowing big box stores to suck all the revenue from your community. I do not shop at Wal Mart. Ever.

2) shop at thrift stores. true, the products did come at one point from 'the matrix,' but you are making use of existing items at extremely low cost, rather than contributing directly to sweatshop labor by buying the same items at a 200 percent increased price that provides direct profit to the sweatshop owners. A bonus is many thrift stores are operated as charities to provide jobs or services to people who are mentally ill, developmentally disabled or otherwise shut out from the capitalist nightmare

3) trade and barter with friends and acquaintances. It's fun and useful and helps build community relations.

4) make your own shit. It's amazing the variety of things you can do onyour own with a little motivation and creativity. and with the Internet, you don't even really need creativity. Sites like instructables.com are great resources.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Sep 01, 2010 10:04 am

^^Also, amass a personal power base of valuable tools and materials and a security infrastructure to protect it. Matrix participation has a lot of outcomes -- you can end up with a McMansion in Virginia or an actual, self-sufficient survival compound in Vermont. Either way, you're emphatically not going to get there by being a conscientious objector to Capitalism.

I am not saying that refusing to participate does the world no good -- just saying that there's a greater good that can be accomplished by participating intelligently.

Thrift Stores are good for consumer goods like clothing, but we get everything else through tubes so it's really a token protest at best.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Wed Sep 01, 2010 5:49 pm

Token protest my arse.

Buying new clothes is a watse of money, unless they are specific for a purpose - like buying a new oilskin coat. There are plenty of good clothes in op shops, and they don't cost more than a couple of bucks.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Sep 01, 2010 6:06 pm

Joe Hillshoist wrote:Token protest my arse.

Buying new clothes is a watse of money, unless they are specific for a purpose - like buying a new oilskin coat. There are plenty of good clothes in op shops, and they don't cost more than a couple of bucks.


Electricity, rent, water, food, yes, compared to those the source of our clothing is down the list a ways, don't you think?

The really meaningful kinds of independence are by far the most difficult/expensive.

I would agree that a better term than "token protest" would have been "gateway drug," because that at least suggests forward motion instead of a backhanded compliment.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Wed Sep 01, 2010 7:10 pm

I get my water from a spring connected to an aquifer that stretches for thousands of miles across the country and to PNG in places (I have even heard rumours that this Aquifer supplied the Navaho, and thats why they traveled here last century to do a ritual on top of Mt Warning saying thanks for the water.) Or from the sky. Most of my food is local or home grown, and that could stretch to all of it if necessary. I even grow my own coffee (and its awesome).

Electricity is an issue tho. (I could build a diesel gennie at a pinch tho, and have most parts necessary all if I bastardise a few vehicles, and there are even coal seams around here that might be used to generate cheap clean fuel if they ever work out how to do coal gassification without poisoning the ground or air.)

Mostly I buy clothes at the op shop cos I'm pretty anti fashion (well don't have a clue) and look good in anything anyway. :P ( :roll: :roll: ) If I ever need a suit tho, I'll spend a few grand and get one tailored.

Basically buying new clothes seems like an indulgent wank to me, especially when you consider the huge amount of new clothes that never get used. But I never got into it as a protest. When I was a kid my mum used to buy me clothes from the op shop cos I trashed them so much ... the imprint must have stuck. Cos I've been doing it all my life. But I never considered it a protest. I did it before I knew anything about how fucked corporates were or sweatshops or anything like that. Why spend 50 to 100 bucks for a pair of jeans when you can spend 4?

I would agree that a better term than "token protest" would have been "gateway drug," because that at least suggests forward motion instead of a backhanded compliment.


:lol:
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Wed Sep 01, 2010 7:56 pm

Hey, is that kind of H20 independence more common in Australia?
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby justdrew » Wed Sep 01, 2010 9:25 pm

those clothes are only in the thrift store to be bought for a few bucks because other people bought them new and donated them before they were completely worn out.

but still, thrift stores are good.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby mentalgongfu2 » Wed Sep 01, 2010 10:54 pm

Electricity, rent, water, food, yes, compared to those the source of our clothing is down the list a ways, don't you think?


Image


If one reads my post, you'll see I qualified my statement about thrift stores. It is not so much a form of protest; it is just an economical way to get what you need while limiting your footprint by making use of existing goods that have been thrown away, rather than contributing to the production of more goods, by workers in oppressive conditions, that are only destined to be thrown away.
Last edited by mentalgongfu2 on Wed Sep 01, 2010 10:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby norton ash » Wed Sep 01, 2010 10:54 pm

Actually, most of the stuff in Canadian thrift stores is like new, for a few bucks.

The cheap durable underpriced clothes explosion really began in the 80's. I would bet base clothing prices, adjusted for inflation, are waaaay down since the 70's. $20 for new, half-decent jeans or dress pants in '76 vs. $30 now, seems to me.

The miracle of slave labour and container ships, I suppose.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby justdrew » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:02 pm

I wonder if, some time ago, there was some cave persons bitching about, "ahhh, all we ever do it wander around... gather foodstuffs, eat foodstuffs, chase animal, run from animal, make fire, pile rocks, dig ditch, ahhh it's all such a bother, I'm sick of listening to the same old stories every night... I might as well be like one of those worker bees..."

and thus another explorer was born. Our fundamental problem is that we've got nowhere left to explore.
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Re: Free market has turned us into 'Matrix' drones

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu Sep 02, 2010 2:46 am

It is outside cities JB. The situation in the cities isn't great either tho - there have been severe water restrictions in most or all major Australian cities in the last 5 years.

But these days even city people are doing what they can to install rainwater tanks. There's an acceptance that we may not be able to rely on mains water in the future in some areas, particularly in Melbourne and SE Queensland, tho most people favour centralised solutions officially, people capturing and storing rainwater is something thats always happened in Australia. There are usually waiting lists to buy water tanks cos demand outstrips supply and every now and then the govt, one branch or other, gives people rebates to buy them.

Its a dry empty continent. In many cases the infrastructure wasn't built till the last 50 years. So water tanks and pumping from springs, dams and aquifers is part of the culture. Especially in rural and remote areas like where I live. (I live in an area thats relatively rich in water resources too. I have a mate who tells me about his old farm in Qld on 8 cm of shit topsoil, then nothing but rotten granite, with an annual rainfall less than a quarter of this part of the world. He was still able to farm tho, permaculture style anyway, he just had to be full on about water management, adapt what he grew (to a point) and spend a bit of money and effort setting up his version of drip feed irrigation.)

Water is probably more on peoples minds in Australia than most other parts of the world.
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