Showing posts with label financial capital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial capital. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Alan Rusbridger — Panama: The Hidden Trillions

In a seminar room in Oxford, one of the reporters who worked on the Panama Papers is describing the main conclusion he drew from his months of delving into millions of leaked documents about tax evasion. “Basically, we’re the dupes in this story,” he says. “Previously, we thought that the offshore world was a shadowy, but minor, part of our economic system. What we learned from the Panama Papers is that it is the economic system.” 
Luke Harding, a former Moscow correspondent for The Guardian, was in Oxford to talk about his work as one of four hundred–odd journalists around the world who had access to the 2.6 terabytes of information about tax havens—the so-called Panama Papers—that were revealed to the world in simultaneous publication in eighty countries this spring. “The economic system is, basically, that the rich and the powerful exited long ago from the messy business of paying tax,” Harding told an audience of academics and research students. “They don’t pay tax anymore, and they haven’t paid tax for quite a long time. We pay tax, but they don’t pay tax. The burden of taxation has moved inexorably away from multinational companies and rich people to ordinary people.”
One of the chief objectives of neoliberalism is to remove taxes from capital and put them on labor, while simultaneously increasing capital share over labor share through other institutional arrangements in collusion with politicians on the make and take. The result is populist revolt that the establishment has pulled out all stops to confront.

New York Review of Books
Panama: The Hidden Trillions
Alan Rusbridger
ht Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism

Monday, October 17, 2016

Michael Hudson and Ahmet Öncü — The Legacy of Veblen in the Age of Post-Industrial Capitalism

An important book has just been published from a 2012 conference in Istanbul on Thorstein Veblen: Absentee Ownership and its Discontents, edited by Michael Hudson and Ahmet Öncü. It is published by ISLET and is available on Amazon.…
The present collection of essays trace how Thorstein Veblen described the way in which the mid-19th century’s industrial capitalism was becoming centered on what today is called the Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sector. Each author in this volume discusses the character of today’s capitalism, and how and why the capitalist class remains politically dominant despite the fact that it repeatedly fails to fulfill the requirements of economic leadership it claims to fulfill. Together, these papers contribute to a better understanding of “capital in the twenty first century,” to use the phrase that has become popular following Thomas Piketty’s best seller.…
Excellent post on Veblen's prescience about economic rent and financial rent-seeking by FIRE becoming the basis of late stage capitalism.

Counterpunch
The Legacy of Veblen in the Age of Post-Industrial Capitalism
Michael Hudson and Ahmet Öncü

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Pepe Escobar — Could Trump Pull Off a Post-Party Coalition?


Teaser: 
This all implies Trump should become well versed in the national economy ideas of Friedrich List – whose tariff-protected Zollverein League was essentially the founding method of Prussia to build the German nation.
This election is potentially turning into a battle between the financial and industrial elites. Whatever the outcome, this is only the beginning of it.
Disraeli’s Coningsby was never more appropriate; “So you see, my dear Coningsby, that the world is governed by very different personages from what is imagined by those who are not behind the scenes.”

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Peter Bakker — Accountants Will Save the World

...we need to ensure that corporate reporting makes clear how a company is making its money, not just how much money it has made. For every robust, time-tested measure of return on financial capital, we need another for social capital — the economic benefits that derive from cooperation among groups, and yet another for natural capital — the supply of natural ecosystems (think forests, oceans, mineral deposits) that we turn into valuable goods or services future.
Make no mistake, I am a capitalist: Someone who puts capital to work, and wants something back. But where we've lost the plot is that we only demand — and manage — a return on financial capital. In order to address current economic crises in a systematic way, we must begin to demand a return on social and natural capital as well. That's where we need to change the rules of the game.
Harvard Business Review — HBR Blog Network
Accountants Will Save the World
Peter Bakker | formerly CEO of TNT N.V., now president, World Business Council for Sustainable Development