Michael Hudson: A Planned Economy for the 1%
By Lambert Strether of Corrente.
In our everyday discourse, there are many tropes, narratives, and models
for elites, elite behavior, and changes in the nature of elites: The
eternal question: Stupid and/or evil?, the Greek’s cycle of democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy, and back to democracy again (OK, oversimplified);
socio- and psychopathy; “big government vs. small government”; William
Black’s accounting control fraud; kleptocracy; and the idea that statism
as such is the problem. (Did I miss one?) The grand theories, and not
conspiracy theories, a la Weber, Marx, Hegel seem not to figure in every
day discourse at all (unless one considers religiously derived theories
of government grand). The most rigorous model in that list — Black’s
model of accounting control fraud — shows that a large number of the
ruling elite (C-level executives of very large institutions) are
unindicted criminals, and exposes their modus operandi — but that’s not the same as having a solidly grounded explanatory narrative of elite behavior as such. Is it?
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
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