Sunday, February 22, 2015

Reforming Europe: Thomas Piketty meets Pablo Iglesias


Economist rock star talks with politician rock star.

Some highlights. There's much more of interest since these are two of the rising stars of Europe in the 21st century.
TP: I think that the line between economics, history, sociology and political science is thinner than what economists sometimes tend to affirm. It is tempting for economists to have people believe that they created a separate science, too scientific for the rest of the world to understand. But of course this is a big joke, which has done a lot of harm. I believe we need a modest approach to economics, and that we shouldn't let economists keep economic questions to themselves.…
PI: You are not a Marxist economist. You say it very clearly when you describe your experience of the fall of the Berlin wall as a moment of joy as much as an observation of the failure of real socialist experiences. In that light, then, why is your book called Capital in the Twenty First Century, when it's inevitable that a comparison will be drawn between the work of Marx and any new 'Capital' in the 21st century?… 
TP: The book's title is Capital in the Twenty First Century because I'm trying to return the issue of wealth distribution to the centre of political economy. Authors from the 19th century, such as Ricardo and Marx, put the question of distribution at the core of political economy. However, I'm trying to do it in a different way, because Marx's book was published in 1867 and mine in 2014.… 
Since the Anglo-American conservative revolutions, with Thatcher and Reagan, and even more since the fall of the Berlin wall, we have entered an era of infinite faith in a self-regulating market. The whole movement of financial deregulation has contributed tremendously to higher inequalities, which in some instances have returned to pre-1914 levels. This historical perspective on inequalities in capitalism helps us to understand that there is never anything natural in changing economic situations. These evolutions depend on institutions, laws, political and legal systems. In the twentieth century, it was political shocks that were the first to alter the nature of capitalism, in one way or another. This historical perspective is crucial to conceiving of a new way to regulate today's global, patrimonial capitalism. 
PI: I can't help but ask about what I see as a statement of principle at the beginning of your book, when you refer to the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. The Declaration states that social distinctions may be founded only upon the general good. Is this a way of saying that it is legitimate to intervene against social distinctions when they differ from the common good, the collective interest? 
TP: Yes, this is how I interpret this sentence. It says: if you wish to legitimise social distinctions then you have to prove they contribute to the common good. We can't simply suppose in principle that they do. The first article of the Declaration consists of two sentences. The first one is an absolute statement about equality: 'Men are born and remain free and equal in rights.' Then, immediately after, there is a second sentence which introduces the possibility of inequality: 'Social distinctions may be founded only upon the general good.' After stating an absolute principle of equality, the possibility of inequality in society is introduced, providing that it is for the common good. 
I think these two sentences express very well a contradiction we still have to resolve today, more than two centuries later. Inequality isn't a problem in itself, as long as it can be justified by the common good. The problem is that in real life, elites or winners always mention the general good to legitimise their position. But this is often false. I believe it's very important to think critically, to deconstruct these discourses, and never to take for granted these justifications, which are often extraordinarily hypocritical.…
My book is reasonably optimistic. I want to believe that democratic forces can regain control over inegalitarian forces. At the same time, it's delusional to think that peaceful electoral process is enough to secure the changes we need. Social movements, and sometimes chaotic political movements, are essential for change.
 
There will continue to be several different ways in which the redistribution of wealth is ‘regulated’. Of course, I want to believe in peaceful regulations, such as a progressive tax on wealth. But sometimes inflation, debt cancellation or more chaotic political processes play an important role – and they will continue to play an important role in the future.…
Internationalism of the left versus nationalism of the right.
TP: European leaders would be wise to understand that parties like Syriza or Podemos are fundamentally internationalist and pro-European….
You know, there might be political shocks later this year in France. Regional elections will be held in December and the far right will certainly win several regions. This is far more dangerous for governments in Paris or Berlin than Syriza or Podemos.
Open Democracy
Reforming Europe: Thomas Piketty meets Pablo Iglesias
Pablo Iglesias interviews Thomas Piketty 

8 comments:

Matt Franko said...

If Syriza goes thru with its Piketty Tax and it fails then the whole Piketty thing will be discredited...

Ignacio said...

This people loves their Piketty taxes, but even Iglesias (an other corrupt politician) cannot believe than in Spain there are enough 'riches' to cover the flows necessary on a sustained basis.

It is a one-time thing even if you can pull it out (doubt it, in practice). Is flows, not stocks, what matter here.


As long as this people does not get MMT-competent we are doomed.

Kristjan said...

Thanks Tom, one more reason to distrust the left.

They are the problem just like Krugman is the problem, not solution.

Anonymous said...

One effect of the Piketty phenomenon was to help me see that a lot of MMT rhetoric was a front for Tea Party-style reaction: right-wing nationalism, isolationism, europhobia, and an attempt to keep the tax man away from billionaires by substituting a bullshit, money-printing Keynesian fluff for real social reconstruction and broad prosperity.

Piketty wants to work toward a unified Europe with an egalitarian wealth structure and continental fiscal authority that can redistribute resources and investment opportunities across the continent, and that terrifies the nationalists.

I think people should look more into seeing exactly what is behind the MMT "project" and what makes those people tick. Nothing I ever wrote caused more of an outpouring of panic among key MMT-inclining thought leaders than when I started suggesting wealth should be redistributed.

Ignacio said...

Dan I suggest you take a look at income distribution in Spain, you will quickly discover there are no billionaires to tax year after year and keep the economy afloat thought redistribution.

I'm all for recycling surplus, from nations to nations and from rich to the poor, but the reality is that this used solely on Spain is NOT going to do anything. And what will happen instead is they will keep rising more taxes from the 90% of the population which pays taxes, lowering yet more the little disposable income that we have. I'm prescient? No, I'm just guiding myself from past experiences here, which we have plenty of.

Meanwhile this imaginary left you talk about will keep talking big while the real billionaires evade taxes, and the politicians do too: including Pablo Iglesias and Juan Carlos Monedero (the principal secretary of Podemos), now famously known for being tax evaders like those they accuse (and they are in the top centile of the income distribution too).


So yes, dreaming is nice, and that's all what the left does, dream. But when they come to power they either turn the most incompetent "banana republic" managers or neoliberal-redux. Good luck with the internationalists adventures in a world no one is interested in internationalism (and this includes the ordoliberal/neoliebral central-north of Europe).

Kristjan said...

"So yes, dreaming is nice, and that's all what the left does, dream. But when they come to power they either turn the most incompetent "banana republic" managers or neoliberal-redux. Good luck with the internationalists adventures in a world no one is interested in internationalism (and this includes the ordoliberal/neoliebral central-north of Europe)."

to me it is sickening to see good people, smart people, otherwise reasonable people who understand finances and even MMT to applaud when country's courts decide that joining the ESM, even though it was highly conroversial and some experts are still saying unconsitutional. First I thought this was a phenomena among US left because the US is so big and powerful and these kinds of contracts will not hurt them on the level they would understand because they dominate in everything. But this is not so, It is very common among left in Europe. It is a very dangerous idea to steal democracy from people. The left fucked up with Soviet Union. They are about to do it again. This doesn't mean that democratically elected governments shouldn't cooperate in anything.

NeilW said...

"Piketty wants to work toward a unified Europe with an egalitarian wealth structure and continental fiscal authority that can redistribute resources and investment opportunities across the continent, and that terrifies the nationalists."

He can work towards that as much as he likes. It will never happen in Europe or anywhere else for that matter.

The Utopian Internationalists will go to their graves with their visions unfulfilled as they have for centuries.

Because they never get the simple fact that humans are tribal by nature.

The German public opinion towards the Greeks over the last few days really ought to pour some cold water on the dreamers. But it never will.

The arrow of history has changed and the young are moving towards more diverse cohesive and decoupled groupings. What we are likely to see is more attempted breakaways like Scotland within the UK, and eventually they will start to succeed.

The future is more and smaller nations where people call each other brother and have their own currency and state to be the 'big man' keeping the wealthy in check.

Kristjan said...

I don't know what the future will bring and how it ought to be but It even seems that we are lucky to have euro. Euro will break up their dreams sooner or later.

To construct something socially and geopolitically so gigantic as the EU, there are always many unknowns. They have no social or political theories that can foresee the outcome(god, they can't even understand how a simple public monopoly works). It is just that we have to follow their fantasies (guys like Piketty). And for what? To get rich? The left's and the right's end meet in neoliberal dreamland. Of course It doesn't have to be this way, Europe needs to change, nationalism is no answer, Europe needs to be reformed. If this theory is right then we should have a world government (IMO this is really a minor problem that MEPs can't initiate legislation or the commission is not democratically elected, you can change this but problems remain. Anyone can see that it doesn't work. It does look good in theory just like communism does.


Here is a very good article by John Gray
http://wbs.nl/opinie/blogs/jgray/john-gray-europe-and-dystopia

...Aside from a few relics of monarchy and empire (Spain, Canada, the UK), no contemporary democracy is genuinely multi-national.Even when it is supposedly civic in its values, I am no great fan of the nation-state. The fact remains that it is the effective upper limit of democracy. The US become a modern nation-state only after a devastating civil war. In trying to build a supranational democracy, the EU was launching a strictly utopian project—one that could be known in advance to be unrealisable.......Asking what then can be done means failing to grasp the intractable difficulties that Europe faces. Large utopian projects are rarely deliberately and carefully dismantled. Normally they simply collapse when the strains on them become too much to sustain. There is no sign of that happening anytime soon in Europe. The ruling institutions have been stabilised at the cost of the underlying economies and societies. What we are left with is an unhealthy stasis. To imagine that a failed utopian project could be rationally deconstructed is itself an exercise in utopian thinking. But we can think more clearly, so that when the opportunity for change arises we can respond more intelligently. To think more clearly we need to see more clearly, and happily we can view our utopian/dystopian reality through the penetrating lens of Filip Berte’s work.