Michael Hudson: Productivity, The Miracle of Compound Interest, and Poverty
By Michael Hudson
From Hudson’s presentation at the Italian MMT Summit, which was
also recorded by Bonnie Faulkner of Pacifica Radio’s Guns and Butter
show
Suppose you were alive back in 1945 and were told about all the new
technology that would be invented between then and now: the computers
and internet, mobile phones and other consumer electronics, faster and
cheaper air travel, super trains and even outer space exploration,
higher gas mileage on the ground, plastics, medical breakthroughs and
science in general. You would have imagined what nearly all futurists
expected: that we would be living in a life of leisure society by this
time. Rising productivity would raise wages and living standards,
enabling people to work shorter hours under more relaxed and less
pressured workplace conditions.
Why hasn’t this occurred in recent years? In light of the enormous
productivity gains since the end of World War II – and especially since
1980 – why isn’t everyone rich and enjoying the leisure economy that was
promised? If the 99% is not getting the fruits of higher productivity,
who is? Where has it gone?
Friday, April 27, 2012
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