Sunday, May 11, 2014

Andrew Kliman — Clarifying ‘Secular Stagnation’ and the Great Recession



Interesting analysis showing that conventional narrative is wrong.
So, what should be done to confront the prospect of secular stagnation? I wholeheartedly agree with Gindin when he writes that '[if] we don't assert that we refuse to take it anymore, the other side will simply keep demanding more from us,' and when he suggests that working people need to assert their 'independence from capital' and resist 'integration … into the neoliberal project.' Yet I would add that we also need to support and encourage working people's efforts to assert their independence from the trade-union bureaucracy and other pro-capitalist opponents of neoliberalism, whose aims and interests are quite different from theirs. An independent path is also needed because, if there is a pro-capitalist solution to the malaise other than letting it run its course, no one yet knows what it is. The system's leading economists are just now waking up to the possibility that our present predicament is not a mere after-effect of a financial crisis. Austerity policies haven't extricated the economy from the slump but, as the U.S. case shows, neither have wildly expansionary fiscal and monetary policies.

Class struggles, taking a variety of traditional and new forms, have accelerated throughout the world during the crisis, and a late 2011 Pew Research Center poll of U.S. residents found that a large majority of black people, a majority of people under 30, and almost half of low-income people and Hispanics had a positive perception of socialism. The problem is that these struggles have been derailed and confined by attempts to integrate them into the anti-neoliberal-but-pro-capitalist project, and that most of the Left, including the 'socialist' Left, has been backing these attempts instead of listening to the renewed aspiration for a socialist future.

I think a socialist way out of the crisis is a real historical possibility now, but only if the ferment from below is met halfway with a sober, rationalist politics that says, 'the solutions that have been tried to fix capitalism aren't working. We have to find a way out of this system, but we don't really know yet what must be changed in order to transcend it. So the only solution is you. It's up to you to take control of the process of figuring this out. Once you know what you’re doing, you’ll be able to do more than express your anger and appeal to leaders to help you. You can take charge.'

New Left Foundation
Clarifying ‘Secular Stagnation’ and the Great Recession
Andrew Kliman | Professor of Economics at Pace University, New York

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Kliman: "Austerity policies haven't extricated the economy from the slump but, as the U.S. case shows, neither have wildly expansionary fiscal and monetary policies."

Wildly expansionary fiscal policies? What has Kliman been smoking?

Ralph Musgrave said...

Kliman's article is a mixture of waffle, drivel and clap-trap. The solution to secular stagnation is Mosler's law. I.e. whatever demand reducing effects that secular stagnation brings can easily be countered by creating and spending fiat (and/or cutting taxes).

Nebris said...

Yeah, "wildly expansionary fiscal and monetary policies" kind of jumped off the page at me. That falls into the same "I Wish" category as Obama being a Socialist.