kittin

joined 3 months ago
[–] kittin@hexbear.net 18 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 9 hours ago) (4 children)

Ok fuck you all, I volunteered to read it and this is what I picked out to answer you

TL;DR both china and the US are destined for low growth in the medium future. This means the US is already cooked since high debt-to-GDP in a low growth context means HIGH DEBT and the collapse of public deficit driven growth. China also in trouble since a transition to consumption-driven investment also collapses just later. So communism is the answer with state-directed investment displacing capitalist directed investment as the only plausible solution as the rate of return on investment plunges to zero.

It’s the declining rate of profit argument from Marx, but matching it to observations of the actually existing Chinese and US economies and projections about worker productivity and population growth.

For the US:

If the U.S. labor force stops growing and the labor productivity growth rate reaches about 1 percent, then the U.S. economic growth rate will slow down to about 1 percent by mid-century. In that case, if the financial capitalists continue to demand a real interest rate of 1 percent or more, then any positive primary deficit will lead to indefinite growth of the government debt to GDP ratio.

In reality, before government debt approaches two or three times the GDP (not to say infinity), the U.S. government may be forced to implement a fiscal austerity program, leading to economic crisis and social catastrophe. Alternatively, a failure to restrain the growth of government debt to GDP ratio could eventually lead to a financial crisis resulting from surging interest rates, the collapse of the dollar, or a combination of both, as domestic and foreign capitalists dump U.S. treasury securities when they lose confidence in U.S. capitalism.

That is to say, there is an assumption baked into US public debt that the US will grow at a healthy rate into the future meaning debt today isn’t that big a deal.

But, they argue, due to lowered rate of profit (“productivity”) on investment AND due to probable population decline or stagnation, the economy will not grow strongly in the future and is in fact likely to experience very low growth, they estimate about 1% in GDP growth per year.

Meaning US public debt is a big problem since, in the absence of strong growth in GDP, the only way to handle the debt is either to inflate it away which will wreck the economy or to engage in hard austerity, which will wreck the economy.

US is cooked.

For China

China’s population and labor force have already peaked and are projected to decline at an accelerating pace in the coming decades.

Several studies about the future prospects of China’s economic growth have concluded that China’s annual economic growth rate is likely to slow to about 2 percent by the late 2030s.

The analysis in the previous section has demonstrated that the Chinese economy will face a huge dilemma in the coming decades. Given its current economic structure, China’s economy heavily depends on investment for surplus absorption. If China were to maintain its current investment level relative to GDP, the incremental output-capital ratio would fall toward zero, and private capitalist investment eventually would collapse. However, if China were to make a downward adjustment of its investment level, it immediately would subtract from the disposable capitalist surplus and destabilize the economy.

Could some other factors replace private capitalist investment and help absorb most of the disposable capitalist surplus? In the Chinese context, both capitalists and worker-households have high saving rates. If capitalists and worker-households can increase their consumption propensity, higher household consumption can help absorb some of the capitalist surplus.

Could China use larger government deficits to offset the decline of investment and stabilize the capitalist surplus? In the section on U.S. debt, we have shown that with a future economic growth rate of 1 percent, U.S. government debt would be on an unsustainable path. As China’s labor force is projected to decline rapidly, the Chinese economy is likely to experience zero or negative growth by the mid-twenty-first century. With zero or negative economic growth, any government deficit will translate into an indefinite growth of the government debt to GDP ratio, and only a fiscal balance or surplus could stabilize the debt to GDP ratio.

Thus, at best, increases in capitalist and worker-household consumption may help absorb a small fraction of the disposable capitalist surplus.

When the political conditions are ripe, a progressive government could use state sector investment to raise aggregate demand to a level that is consistent with full employment. This would strengthen the power of the working class to demand higher labor income at the expense of capitalist profit. Moreover, a progressive government could increase taxes on the capitalists in order to finance programs that would help enhance working-class well-being and restore ecological sustainability. These measures gradually would help eliminate the disposable capitalist surplus.

They basically argue against a consumption-driven economy arguing that over the longer term this doesn’t move the needle.

Instead they argue that full communism, state directed investment targeting full employment and the elimination of dependency upon capitalist investment, is required since the surplus collapse inevitably means the capitalist mode of production stops working.

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 54 points 22 hours ago

I think the play is to appoint loud morons who will act as rage bait while they loot the federal government

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 20 points 1 day ago

The goddamn establishment and their age of consent norms

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 42 points 1 day ago

Comrade Stairs

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 8 points 1 day ago

AI is grey goo for technology

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 28 points 2 days ago

Looking forward to Simplicius’ blog post about betrayal in 2 months

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 42 points 2 days ago

That does make him sound qualified for the role

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 24 points 2 days ago (1 children)
[–] kittin@hexbear.net 10 points 3 days ago

The one policy they’ll be popular for and they’re gonna let trump take the credit for it

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 20 points 3 days ago

Holy shit that thread

I'm from Odesa, in fact it is southern Ukraine but usually considered as eastern Ukraine. Initially I didn't like Bandera at all, actually I hate him and didn't like everybody who praised him. But after I carefully studied his biography I changed my mind about him. I didn't find anything really bad about him. He was person of that time and was real patriot. But he also did nothing great. In fact he was a looser and didn't achieve anything. So my view of him is slightly positive, as of Ukrainian patriot who was ready to gave his life for his country, as of philosopher of Ukrainian nation, but nothing more.

I hated Bandera until I learned he killed Polish and Jewish people

[–] kittin@hexbear.net 37 points 3 days ago

And the reason why I’m eating pizza for dinner tonight is not, in fact, because I’m a gluttonous piece of shit but is rather a subtle method of expressing support for southern Europe in this time of economic turmoil for the EU.

 

I have a good friend who is generally good politically, not one of us but not bad. A socdem who is aware enough to know NATO is bad and Palestine deserves justice etc.

They’re very strong on feminism, advanced. More than me by far and I value their pov on feminism. A lot.

But they have Islamophobe brainworms. Mostly surrounding sexual violence in Europe by Muslims. They have a suite of rage bait statistics or anecdotes of sexual violence by Muslim men in Europe.

“See this isolated and context-free statistic which shows really the problem is Islam and the cultural values of these immigrants.”

The discussion for them becomes rooted in feminism.

“Why should women pay the price for all the sexual violence Muslim men bring with them? Honor killings are 100% Muslim!”

“X% of rapes are by muslims when they are only Y% of the population.”

“Why are all the immigrants men? We should ban the male refugees from these places, but as a good pro-refugee progressive we should allow the women and children in because they aren’t a problem.”

It’s tempting to try and fight this on data but I think that would kind of be conceding the deeper clash of civilizations argument in some way?

It’s also tempting to fight this on the grounds of material circumstances and point out that gender equality largely follows economic development but then that’s really just entirely conceding to the world view that Islamic immigration is an affliction upon European women for several generations until they assimilate.

I think a core problem here is that I am completely disconnected and unaware of what feminism looks like in the Muslim worlds and so I can’t speak to or challenge the underlying Islamophobia.

Of course there are issues with patriarchy in the Islamic world and when my friend points to the veil in Iran being enforced by the religious police and it’s impossible for me to deny that and I completely agree with them (while disagreeing with them insofar as I totally accept many Muslim women choose to wear it but then it becomes a complex go-nowhere discussion about peer pressure and bikinis) but then there’s this bridge from that true fact to the assertion that Islamic men are a threat to European women which is just like woah man wtf.

How do I approach this? Where’s my Muslim-world feminist perspective at? What are some considered debunks or analyses of the use of isolated statistics on sexual violence?

Like the best internet gotcha would be a statistical analysis that simply debunks the sexual violence statistics and that would be helpful but I believe there’s a deeper Islamophobia and sense of western cultural supremacy, clash of civilizations, thesis that they don’t explicitly acknowledge and I sense that feminism is being abused to ennoble that.

And on the flip side, I’m a male. I’m very unlikely to be a victim of sexual violence at this point in my life. I’m not going to be a victim of an honor killing. Do I have privilege I need to check here?

Overall I think the best would be for me to discover and learn feminist theory and female perspectives from Muslim / Arabic / Palestinian / Iranian / Afghan / Pakistani authors, both in the “Muslim world” and from those living in the west.

Maybe it would also be useful to look at how panic about black men raping women was used and is used to justify racial oppression as a consciousness raising exercise?

Considered feminist critiques of Islam?

Considered feminist critiques of Islamophobia in Europe?

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