|
|
The Limits of the Capitalism
Every day the great economic theories and the illustrious economists
of all the world try to contain, with new proposals, the
difficulties of the financial economy.
From the collapse of the stock exchanges to the bankruptcy of banks
and immense financial empires, the worsening scenario is, at the
very least, worrying.
The financial vortex created by capitalist economics increasingly
tends to involve both the great and the small with inevitable
planetary repercussions.
Without raising the ghosts of Socialism and Marxism, by now dead and
buried, it must be impartially noted, however, that every thing has
its course.
Nothing is stable and even the strong capitalist system cannot
escape the ineffable law of the progression of time and the
evolution of things.
As already underlined in the article on Economic Heritage (http://www.ecosostenibile.org/patrimoniale.html)
and on the Paradox of the economy (http://www.ecosostenibile.org/paradosso.html),
no economy, be it capitalist or socialist, can do without, or, if we
prefer, detach itself, from the laws that "bind" our Universe.
In our case our Universe (of whatever order and kind) is our planet,
which has limited resources and, even if enough for the whole
population, are distributed differently in quality and quantity.
The model on which our World is based is quite fixed and even if, as
in a buffer system, it can absorb determinate variations, it has
some limits that, if surpassed, have the tendency to remove the
causes that have caused them to be surpassed.
It is on the concept of limits that we will base our analysis of the
crisis and the future transformation (death is an inappropriate
term) of the capitalist system.
We have noticed in the above-mentioned articles that the
monetization of the world’s assets has gone faster than the ability
of the System to regenerate itself, with the consequent
impoverishment of the assets (with all the social and environmental
consequences that we know) and the collateral increase of the
"financial vortex."
We have also noticed that the old axiom that measured the solidity
of a system on the basis of both its financial aspect and its assets
has been passed over, an error that modern finance is beginning to
pay now that the great quantity of (monetary) capital does not
correspond to its equivalent in assets.
This aspect has created a "vortex" system in which capital must
create ever greater capital with the evident incongruities of
entropy in the system. We have seen that the laws of thermodynamics
can be perfectly applied to financial systems and the recent
increasingly evident collapse is the confirmation.
To keeping the vortex high and constant, more and more "fresh"
capital must be introduced into the system, but the paradox is in
the fact that in this way we feed the vortex and as with all
vortexes it is destined sooner or later to collapse for the
well-known laws of thermodynamics (we are in a system with limited
energy).
The real adjustment that the Governments should effect, and which it
inevitably will have to do, is to insert parameters of adjustment in
the financial system in relation to the solidity of the assets of
each economic enterprise and to compare them with its ability to
maintain or increase its own assets.
It should be remembered that in a Complex System like our Planet the
solidity of assets in short is linked to the first solid asset which
is Society itself in all its components.
A Society that is Rich in some components and poor in many others
has the entropic condition of degraded assets and therefore in a bad
condition to create a good and solid economy.
Unfortunately when Governments "prop up" the economy, helping the
"Vortex”, they behave like Firemen that extinguish fires by pouring
gasoline on them.
The result can easily be guessed, but that gasoline was that very
least amount that would have permitted the poorest sectors of
society and a degraded Environment to regenerate small assets of
real economic value.
We have consumed, and we will continue to consume, huge financial
resources in the name of the recovery of the world economy, which,
with its current structure, does not admit solutions.
As could have been expected the System has triggered (just as in the
Theory of Systems) a feedback that tends to make it return within
its given limits.
The question here, however, is more serious. It is not only a
question of financial technique, because human lives are at risk
(millions of people could have eaten and produced with that money).
Only if a person’s personal well-being is of less importance than
that of the financial market can we say that the error committed is
of little consequence.
Unfortunately the world economy has once more to be rethought, but
the price of this rethinking has its cost.
Guido Bissanti
|
|
|