Abstract

The article explores the potential of a Polanyian analysis for overcoming the current Manichean opposition between cosmopolitan globalizers and reactionary nationalists. For long, Karl Polanyi has inspired socio-economic thinking in different ways. First, his reflections on the end of the first period of globalization in the 1930s offer insights for analysing the current political-economic situation. Furthermore, Polanyi contributes to an institutional analysis and utopian thinking towards a civilization for all. His approach enables a combination of a critique of current neoliberal globalization as a renewed version of the "liberal utopia" with a cultural and ecological critique of capitalism as a mode of production and living. In this respect, Karl Polanyi may be contrasted to Friedrich Hayek, both contemporaries of Red Vienna, an ambitious project of local socialism as a step towards a "good life for all". The social and cultural struggles in Vienna during the 1920s and 1930s offer insights for current confrontations worldwide, but especially in Brazil where the reformist attempts of civilizing capitalism where confronted with severe opposition. Instead of the false polarization between globalization and nationalism, policies “for the select few” are opposed to policies” for all”. Finally, Polanyi´s reflections will be used to shed light onto the current impasse resulting from the illegitimate deposition of president Dilma Rousseff.

Highlights

  • Manichean opposition between cosmopolitan globalizers and reactionary nationalists

  • The struggle against neoliberalism and finance capitalism has been at centre stage in political debate (HARVEY, 2005)

  • Polanyi criticized the liberal utopia of self-regulating markets and a minimal state as illusory and offered a specific utopia “for all”

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Summary

Andreas Novy

Karl Polanyi has inspired socio-economic thinking in different ways His reflections on the end of the first period of globalization in the 1930s offer insights for analysing the current political-economic situation. Polanyi contributes to an institutional analysis and utopian thinking towards a civilization for all His approach enables a combination of a critique of current neoliberal globalization as a renewed version of the “liberal utopia” with a cultural and ecological critique of capitalism as a mode of production and living. In this respect, Karl Polanyi may be contrasted to Friedrich Hayek, both contemporaries of Red Vienna, an ambitious project of local socialism as a step towards a “good life for all”. The three readings of Polanyi as a socioeconomist, exposed on the following pages, presented sequentially, have to be undertaken together to grasp their full potential

Understanding capitalist market societies
Exploring worlds beyond market societies
Utopian thinking for a civilization for all
Double transformation
The liberal illusion of borderless globalization
Two waves of globalisation
Two types of deglobalisation
The good life for all
Producing the Common from below
Full Text
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